We have implemented shaDow-GNN as a general and powerful pipeline for graph representation learning. For more details, please find our paper titled Deep Graph Neural Networks with Shallow Subgraph Samplers, available on arXiv (https//arxiv.org/abs/2012.01380).

Overview

Deep GNN, Shallow Sampling

Hanqing Zeng, Muhan Zhang, Yinglong Xia, Ajitesh Srivastava, Andrey Malevich, Rajgopal Kannan, Viktor Prasanna, Long Jin, Ren Chen

arxiv paper

Overview

We have implemented shaDow-GNN as a general and powerful pipeline for graph representation learning. The training of shaDow-GNN can be abstracted as three major steps:

Preprocessing

The preprocessing steps may

  • Smooth the node features
  • Augment the node features with training labels.

The first point is similar to what SGC and SIGN did (it's just we convert the original algorithm into the shaDow version). The second point is inspired by the methods on the OGB leaderboard (only applicable under the transductive setting).

Note that preprocessing is turned off in some cases (e.g., for results on ogbn-papers100M).

Training

shaDow-GNN now supports six different backbone architectures, including: GCN, GraphSAGE, GAT, GIN, JK-Net and SGC.

In addition, we support the following architectural extensions:

  • Samplers: k-hop, PPR, and the ensemble of them
  • Subgraph pooling / READOUT: CenterPooling, SortPooling, MaxPooling, MeanPooling, SumPooling

Postprocessing

After the training is finished, we can reload the stored checkpoint to perform the following post-processing steps:

  • C&S (transductive only): we borrow the DGL implementation of C&S to perform smoothening of the predictions generated by shaDow-GNN.
  • Ensemble: Ensemble can be done either in an "end-to-end" fashion during the above training step, or as a postprocessing step. In the paper, our discussion is based on the "end-to-end" ensemble.

Hardware requirements

Due to its flexibility in minibatching, shaDow-GNN requires the minimum hardware for training and inference computation. Most of our experiments can be run on a desktop machine. Even the largest graph of 111 million nodes can be trained on a low-end server.

The main computation operations include:

  • Subgraph sampling, where we construct a local subgraph for each target node independently. This part is parallelized on CPU by C++ and OpenMP.
  • Forward / backward propagation of the GNN model. This part is parallelized on GPU via PyTorch.

We summarize the recommended minimum hardware spec for the three OGB graphs:

Graph Num. nodes CPU cores CPU RAM GPU memory
ogbn-arxiv 0.2M 4 8GB 4GB
ogbn-products 2.4M 4 32GB 4GB
ogbn-papers100M 111.1M 4 128GB 4GB

If you have more powerful machines, you can simply scale up the performance by increasing the batch size. In our experiments, we have tested on GPUs ranging from NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1650 (4GB) to NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3090 (24GB).

Data format

When you run shaDow-GNN for the first time, we will convert the graph data from the OGB or GraphSAINT format into the shaDow-GNN format. The converted data files are (by default) stored in the ./data/<graph_name> directory.

NOTE: the initial data conversion may take a while for large graphs (e.g., for ogbn-papers100M). Please be patient.

General shaDow format

We briefly describe the shaDow data format. You should not need to worry about the details unless you want to prepare your own dataset. Each graph is defined by the following files:

  • adj_full_raw.npz / adj_full_raw.npy: The adjacency matrix of the full graph (consisting of all the train / valid / test nodes). It can either be a *.npz file of type scipy.sparse.csr_matrix, or a *.npy file containing the dictionary {'indptr': numpy.ndarray, 'indices': numpy.ndarray, 'data': numpy.ndarray}.
  • adj_train_raw.npz / adj_train_raw.npy: The adjacency matrix induced by all training nodes (ONLY used in inductive learning).
  • label_full.npy: The numpy.ndarray representing the labels of all the train / valid / test nodes. If this matrix is 2D, then a row is a one-hot encoding of the label(s) of a node. If this is 1D, then an element is the label index of a node. In any case, the first dimension equals the total number of nodes.
  • feat_full.npy: The numpy.ndarray representing the node features. The first dimension of the matrix equals the total number of nodes.
  • split.npy: The file stores a dictionary representing the train / valid / test splitting. The keys are train / valid / test. The values are numpy array of the node indices for the corresponding split.
  • (Optional) adj_full_undirected.npy: This is a cache file storing the graph after converting adj_full_raw into undirected (e.g., the raw graph of ogbn-arxiv is directed).
  • (Optional) adj_train_undirected.npy: Similar as above. Converted from adj_train_raw into undirected.
  • (Optional) cpp/adj_<full|train>_<indices|indptr|data>.bin: These are the cache files for the C++ sampler. We store the corresponding *.npy / *.npz files as binary files so that the C++ sampler can directly load the graph without going through the layer of PyBind11 (see below). For gigantic graphs such as ogbn-papers100M, the conversion from numpy.ndarray to C++ vector seems to be slow (maybe an issue of PyBind11).
  • (Optional) ppr_float/<neighs|scores>_<transductive|inductive>_<ppr params>.bin: These are the cache files for the C++ PPR sampler. We store the PPR values and node indices for the close neighbors of each target as the external binary files. Therefore, we do not need to run PPR multiple times when we perform parameter tuning (even through running PPR from scratch is still much cheaper than the model training).

Graphs tested

To train shaDow-GNN on the six graphs evaluated in the paper:

  • For the three OGB graphs (i.e., ogbn-arxiv, ogbn-products, ogbn-papers100M), you don't need to manually download anything. Just execute the training command (see below).
  • For the three other graphs (i.e., Flickr, Reddit, Yelp), these are listed in the officially GraphSAINT repo. Please manually download from the link provided by GraphSAINT, and place all the downloaded files under the ./data/saint/<graph name>/ directory.
    • E.g., for Flickr, the directory should look something like (note the lower case for graph name)
data/
└───saint/
    └───flickr/
        └───adj_full.npz
            class_map.json
            ...

The script for converting from OGB / SAINT into shaDow format is ./shaDow/data_converter.py. It is automatically invoked when you run training for the first time.

Build and Run

Clone the repo by (you need the --recursive flag to download pybind11 as submodule):

git clone <URL FOR THIS REPO> --recursive

Step 0: Make sure you create a virtual environment with Python 3.8 (lower version of python may not work. The version we use is 3.8.5).

Step 1: We need PyBind11 to link the C++ based sampler with the PyTorch based trainer. The ./shaDow/para_sampler/ParallelSampler.* contains the C++ code for the PPR and k-hop samplers. The ./shaDow/para_sampler/pybind11/ directory contains a copy of PyBind11.

Before training, we need to build the C++ sampler as a python package, so that it can be directly imported by the PyTorch trainer (just like we import any other python module). To do so, you need to install the following:

  • cmake (our version is 3.18.2. May be installed by conda install -c anaconda cmake)
  • ninja (our version is 1.10.2. May be installed by conda install -c conda-forge ninja)
  • pybind11 (our version is 2.6.2. May be installed by pip install pybind11)
  • OpenMP: normally openmp should already be included in the C++ compiler. If not, you may need to install it manually based on your C++ compiler version.

Then build the sampler. Run the following in your terminal

bash install.sh

On Windows machine, you could instead execute .\install.bat.

NOTE: if the above does not work, we provide an alternative script to compile the C++ sampler. See the Troubleshooting section for details.

Step 2: Install all the other Python packages in your virtual environment.

  • pytorch==1.7.1 (CUDA 11)
  • Pytorch Geometric and its dependency packages (torch-scatter, torch-sparse, etc.)
    • Follow the official instructions (see the "Installation via Binaries" section)
    • We also explicitly use the torch_scatter functions to perform some graph operations for shaDow.
  • ogb>=1.2.4
  • dgl>=0.5.3 (only used by the postprocessing of C&S). Can be installed by pip or conda. See the official instruction
  • numpy>=1.19.2
  • scipy>=1.6.0
  • scikit-learn>=0.24.0
  • pyyaml>=5.4.1
  • argparse
  • tqdm

Step 3: Record your system information. We use the CONFIG.yml file to keep track of the meta information of your hardware / software system. Copy CONFIG_TEMPLATE.yml and name it CONFIG.yml. Edit the fields based on your machine specs.

In most cases, the only thing you need to overwrite is the max_threads field. This is used to control the parallelism of the C++ sampler. You can also set it to -1 so that OpenMP will automatically decide the number of threads for you.

Step 4: You should be able to run the training now. In general, just type:

python -m shaDow.main --configs <your config *.yml file> --dataset <name of the graph> --gpu <index of the available GPU>

where the *.yml file specifies the GNN architecture, sampler parameters and other hyperparameters. The name of the graph should correspond to the sub-directory name under ./data/. E.g., the graphs used in the papers correspond to flickr, reddit, yelp, arxiv, products, papers100M (we use all lowercase and omit the ogbn- prefix).

Step 5 Check the logs of the training. We use the following protocol for logging. Our principle is that the logs enable you to completely reproduce your own previous runs.

  • Each run gets its own subdirectory in the format of ./<log dir>/<data>/<running|done|crashed|killed>/<timestamp>-<githash>/..., where the subdirectory indicates the status of the run:
    • running/: the training is still in progress.
    • finished/: the training finishes normally. The logs will be moved from running/ to finished/.
    • killed/: the training is killed (e.g., by CTRL-C).
    • crashed/: the training crashes (e.g., bugs in the code, GPU / CPU out-of-memory, etc.).
  • In the subdirectory we should find the following files:
    • *.yml: a copy of the *.yml file to launch the training
    • epoch_<train|valid|test>.csv: CSV file logging the accuracy of each epoch
    • final.csv: CSV file logging the final accuracy on the full train / valid / test sets.
    • pytorch checkpoint: the model weights and optimizer states.

Reproducing the results

We first describe the command for a single run. At the end of this section, we show the wrapper script for repeating the same configuration for 10 runs.

ogbn-papers100M (leaderboard result)

shaDow-SAGE

Run the following:

python -m shaDow.main --configs config_train/papers100M/sage_5_ppr_ogb.yml --dataset papers100M --gpu 0

shaDow-GAT

Run the following:

python -m shaDow.main --configs config_train/papers100M/gat_5_ppr_ogb.yml --dataset papers100M --gpu 0

We don't fix any random seeds (for C++ sampler, the seed is set by the timestamp of launching the training. See std::srand(std::time(0)) of shaDow/para_samplers/ParallelSampler.h). Over 10 runs, we get 0.6653 test accuracy for the shaDow-GAT model.

Repeat the same configuration 10 times

According to the OGB leaderboard instruction, we need to repeat the same configuration for 10 times, and report the mean and std of accuracy. We provide a wrapper script for this purpose: ./scripts/train_multiple_runs.py.

NOTE: the wrapper script uses python subprocess to launch multiple runs. There seems to be some issue on redirecting the print-out messages of the training subprocess. It may appear that the program stucks without any outputs. This is due to the buffering of output. However, the training should actually be running in the background. You can check the corresponding log files in the running/ directory to see the accuracy per epoch being updated.

For example, to repeat the configuration for 10 times:

python scripts/train_multiple_runs.py --dataset papers100M --configs config_train/papers100M/gat_5_ppr_ogb.yml --gpu 0 --repetition 10

where all the command line arguments are the same as the original training script (i.e., the shaDow.main module). The only additional flag is --repetition.

NOTE: due to the large graph size, each run on ogbn-papers100M takes quite sometime to converge. It may make more sense to manually launch the training 10 times and manually calculate the mean and std based on the log files.

Troubleshooting

What if the sampler does not build successfully?

This may be an issue specific to your machine. You can file an issue or contact [email protected]. Alternatively, you can try another compilation script we provided after manually build pybind11. See this installation instruction and do the following:

  • Download pybind11 from the official GitHub repo. Enter the pybind11 root dir.
  • Install pytest by, e.g., pip install -U pytest
  • mkdir build
  • cd build
  • cmake ..
    • Note: if cmake is not installed, you can install it via Anaconda: conda install -c anaconda cmake
  • make check -j 4 (Windows machine does not seem to be well supported)
  • Install pybind11 package: python -m pip install pybind11

Then go back to the shaDow-GNN root directory and compile the C++ sampler by

./compile.sh

License

shaDow_GNN is released under an MIT license. Find out more about it here.

Owner
Facebook Research
Facebook Research
PyTorch reimplementation of hand-biomechanical-constraints (ECCV2020)

Hand Biomechanical Constraints Pytorch Unofficial PyTorch reimplementation of Hand-Biomechanical-Constraints (ECCV2020). This project reimplement foll

Hao Meng 59 Dec 20, 2022
Gradient representations in ReLU networks as similarity functions

Gradient representations in ReLU networks as similarity functions by Dániel Rácz and Bálint Daróczy. This repo contains the python code related to our

1 Oct 08, 2021
The final project of "Applying AI to 2D Medical Imaging Data" of "AI for Healthcare" nanodegree - Udacity.

Pneumonia Detection from X-Rays Project Overview In this project, you will apply the skills that you have acquired in this 2D medical imaging course t

Omar Laham 1 Jan 14, 2022
Simple and understandable swin-transformer OCR project

swin-transformer-ocr ocr with swin-transformer Overview Simple and understandable swin-transformer OCR project. The model in this repository heavily r

Ha YongWook 67 Dec 31, 2022
A generalist algorithm for cell and nucleus segmentation.

Cellpose | A generalist algorithm for cell and nucleus segmentation. Cellpose was written by Carsen Stringer and Marius Pachitariu. To learn about Cel

MouseLand 733 Dec 29, 2022
The source code and dataset for the RecGURU paper (WSDM 2022)

RecGURU About The Project Source code and baselines for the RecGURU paper "RecGURU: Adversarial Learning of Generalized User Representations for Cross

Chenglin Li 17 Jan 07, 2023
Code for Multinomial Diffusion

Code for Multinomial Diffusion Abstract Generative flows and diffusion models have been predominantly trained on ordinal data, for example natural ima

104 Jan 04, 2023
An Efficient Training Approach for Very Large Scale Face Recognition or F²C for simplicity.

Fast Face Classification (F²C) This is the code of our paper An Efficient Training Approach for Very Large Scale Face Recognition or F²C for simplicit

33 Jun 27, 2021
Improving adversarial robustness by a coupling rejection strategy

Adversarial Training with Rectified Rejection The code for the paper Adversarial Training with Rectified Rejection. Environment settings and libraries

Tianyu Pang 29 Jan 06, 2023
NAS Benchmark in "Prioritized Architecture Sampling with Monto-Carlo Tree Search", CVPR2021

NAS-Bench-Macro This repository includes the benchmark and code for NAS-Bench-Macro in paper "Prioritized Architecture Sampling with Monto-Carlo Tree

35 Jan 03, 2023
Learning from Guided Play: A Scheduled Hierarchical Approach for Improving Exploration in Adversarial Imitation Learning Source Code

Learning from Guided Play: A Scheduled Hierarchical Approach for Improving Exploration in Adversarial Imitation Learning Source Code

STARS Laboratory 8 Sep 14, 2022
Code for Universal Semi-Supervised Semantic Segmentation models paper accepted in ICCV 2019

USSS_ICCV19 Code for Universal Semi Supervised Semantic Segmentation accepted to ICCV 2019. Full Paper available at https://arxiv.org/abs/1811.10323.

Tarun K 68 Nov 24, 2022
BASH - Biomechanical Animated Skinned Human

We developed a method animating a statistical 3D human model for biomechanical analysis to increase accessibility for non-experts, like patients, athletes, or designers.

Machine Learning and Data Analytics Lab FAU 66 Nov 19, 2022
Microsoft Cognitive Toolkit (CNTK), an open source deep-learning toolkit

CNTK Chat Windows build status Linux build status The Microsoft Cognitive Toolkit (https://cntk.ai) is a unified deep learning toolkit that describes

Microsoft 17.3k Dec 29, 2022
Convolutional Neural Network to detect deforestation in the Amazon Rainforest

Convolutional Neural Network to detect deforestation in the Amazon Rainforest This project is part of my final work as an Aerospace Engineering studen

5 Feb 17, 2022
PyTorch implementation for "HyperSPNs: Compact and Expressive Probabilistic Circuits", NeurIPS 2021

HyperSPN This repository contains code for the paper: HyperSPNs: Compact and Expressive Probabilistic Circuits "HyperSPNs: Compact and Expressive Prob

8 Nov 08, 2022
Contenido del curso Bases de datos del DCC PUC versión 2021-2

IIC2413 - Bases de Datos Tabla de contenidos Equipo Profesores Ayudantes Contenidos Calendario Evaluaciones Resumen de notas Foro Política de integrid

54 Nov 23, 2022
Official repository for the ICLR 2021 paper Evaluating the Disentanglement of Deep Generative Models with Manifold Topology

Official repository for the ICLR 2021 paper Evaluating the Disentanglement of Deep Generative Models with Manifold Topology Sharon Zhou, Eric Zelikman

Stanford Machine Learning Group 34 Nov 16, 2022
PyTorch implementation of CloudWalk's recent work DenseBody

densebody_pytorch PyTorch implementation of CloudWalk's recent paper DenseBody. Note: For most recent updates, please check out the dev branch. Update

Lingbo Yang 401 Nov 19, 2022
Semi-supervised learning for object detection

Source code for STAC: A Simple Semi-Supervised Learning Framework for Object Detection STAC is a simple yet effective SSL framework for visual object

Google Research 348 Dec 25, 2022