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Context: https://fburl.com/tasks/3nhdm1rv and https://fburl.com/test/4i6icfbd

This should fix test_e2e_base_training_wo_prepare_data breakage due to D22598579: when stop time limit https://fburl.com/diffusion/rrp4jst5 gets triggered, a checkpoint isn't saved as it should in https://fburl.com/diffusion/hbn0c6o5. The error isn't related to Manifold usage in export_ensemble - that's just the first place where we notice that no checkpoint was written.

So for toy tests that finish quickly, it's possible for training to end before any checkpoint has been saved.

It was affecting dev-nosan but not opt probably because opt training finishes quickly enough to not hit the stop time limit?

Reviewed By: akinh

Differential Revision: D22639199

fbshipit-source-id: ec4da15bb14e14c2066af6946d7a34db333178eb
c1e734b

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README.md



MIT License Latest Release Build Status Documentation Status


Fairseq(-py) is a sequence modeling toolkit that allows researchers and developers to train custom models for translation, summarization, language modeling and other text generation tasks. We provide reference implementations of various sequence modeling papers:

List of implemented papers

What's New:

Previous updates

Features:

  • multi-GPU training on one machine or across multiple machines (data and model parallel)
  • fast generation on both CPU and GPU with multiple search algorithms implemented:
  • large mini-batch training even on a single GPU via delayed updates
  • mixed precision training (trains faster with less GPU memory on NVIDIA tensor cores)
  • extensible: easily register new models, criterions, tasks, optimizers and learning rate schedulers

We also provide pre-trained models for translation and language modeling with a convenient torch.hub interface:

en2de = torch.hub.load('pytorch/fairseq', 'transformer.wmt19.en-de.single_model')
en2de.translate('Hello world', beam=5)
# 'Hallo Welt'

See the PyTorch Hub tutorials for translation and RoBERTa for more examples.

Requirements and Installation

  • PyTorch version >= 1.4.0
  • Python version >= 3.6
  • For training new models, you'll also need an NVIDIA GPU and NCCL
  • To install fairseq and develop locally:
git clone https://github.com/pytorch/fairseq
cd fairseq
pip install --editable ./

# on MacOS:
# CFLAGS="-stdlib=libc++" pip install --editable ./
  • For faster training install NVIDIA's apex library:
git clone https://github.com/NVIDIA/apex
cd apex
pip install -v --no-cache-dir --global-option="--cpp_ext" --global-option="--cuda_ext" \
  --global-option="--deprecated_fused_adam" --global-option="--xentropy" \
  --global-option="--fast_multihead_attn" ./
  • For large datasets install PyArrow: pip install pyarrow
  • If you use Docker make sure to increase the shared memory size either with --ipc=host or --shm-size as command line options to nvidia-docker run.

Getting Started

The full documentation contains instructions for getting started, training new models and extending fairseq with new model types and tasks.

Pre-trained models and examples

We provide pre-trained models and pre-processed, binarized test sets for several tasks listed below, as well as example training and evaluation commands.

We also have more detailed READMEs to reproduce results from specific papers:

Join the fairseq community

License

fairseq(-py) is MIT-licensed. The license applies to the pre-trained models as well.

Citation

Please cite as:

@inproceedings{ott2019fairseq,
  title = {fairseq: A Fast, Extensible Toolkit for Sequence Modeling},
  author = {Myle Ott and Sergey Edunov and Alexei Baevski and Angela Fan and Sam Gross and Nathan Ng and David Grangier and Michael Auli},
  booktitle = {Proceedings of NAACL-HLT 2019: Demonstrations},
  year = {2019},
}
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