Training
From the previous tutorials, you may now have a custom model and data loader.
You are free to create your own optimizer, and write the training logic: it's usually easy with PyTorch, and allow researchers to see the entire training logic more clearly and have full control. One such example is provided in tools/plain_train_net.py.
We also provide a standarized "trainer" abstraction with a minimal hook system that helps simplify the standard types of training.
You can use
SimpleTrainer().train()
which provides minimal abstraction for single-cost single-optimizer single-data-source training.
The builtin train_net.py
script uses
DefaultTrainer().train(),
which includes more standard default behavior that one might want to opt in,
including default configurations for learning rate schedule,
logging, evaluation, checkpointing etc.
This also means that it's less likely to support some non-standard behavior
you might want during research.
To customize the training loops, you can:
- If your customization is similar to what
DefaultTrainer
is already doing, you can change behavior ofDefaultTrainer
by overwriting its methods in a subclass, like what tools/train_net.py does. - If you need something very novel, you can start from tools/plain_train_net.py to implement them yourself.
Logging of Metrics
During training, metrics are saved to a centralized EventStorage. You can use the following code to access it and log metrics to it:
from detectron2.utils.events import get_event_storage
# inside the model:
if self.training:
value = # compute the value from inputs
storage = get_event_storage()
storage.put_scalar("some_accuracy", value)
Refer to its documentation for more details.
Metrics are then saved to various destinations with EventWriter.
DefaultTrainer enables a few EventWriter
with default configurations.
See above for how to customize them.