Franck Dernoncourt
Franck Dernoncourt

Reputation: 83387

How can I fine-tune mBART-50 for machine translation in the transformers Python library so that it learns a new word?

I try to fine-tune mBART-50 (paper, pre-trained model on Hugging Face) for machine translation in the transformers Python library. To test the fine-tuning, I am trying to simply teach mBART-50 a new word that I made up.

I use the following code. Over 95% of the code is from the Hugging Face documentation:

from transformers import MBartForConditionalGeneration, MBart50TokenizerFast

print('Model loading started')
model = MBartForConditionalGeneration.from_pretrained("facebook/mbart-large-50")
tokenizer = MBart50TokenizerFast.from_pretrained("facebook/mbart-large-50", src_lang="fr_XX", tgt_lang="en_XX")
print('Model loading done')

src_text = " billozarion "
tgt_text =  " plorization "

model_inputs = tokenizer(src_text, return_tensors="pt")
with tokenizer.as_target_tokenizer():
    labels = tokenizer(tgt_text, return_tensors="pt").input_ids

print('Fine-tuning started')
for i in range(1000):
    #pass
    model(**model_inputs, labels=labels) # forward pass
print('Fine-tuning ended')
    
# Testing whether the model learned the new word. Translate French to English
tokenizer = MBart50TokenizerFast.from_pretrained("facebook/mbart-large-50-many-to-many-mmt")
tokenizer.src_lang = "fr_XX"
article_fr = src_text
encoded_fr = tokenizer(article_fr, return_tensors="pt")
generated_tokens = model.generate(**encoded_fr, forced_bos_token_id=tokenizer.lang_code_to_id["en_XX"])
translation = tokenizer.batch_decode(generated_tokens, skip_special_tokens=True)
print(translation)

However, the new word wasn't learned. The output is "billozarion" instead of "plorization". Why?

I'm strictly following the Hugging Face documentation, unless I missed something. The # forward pass does make me concerned, as one would need a backward pass to update the gradients. Maybe this means that the documentation is incorrect, however I can't test that hypothesis as I don't know how to add the backward pass.


Environment that I used to run the code: Ubuntu 20.04.5 LTS with an NVIDIA A100 40GB GPU (I also tested with an NVIDIA T4 Tensor Core GPU) and CUDA 12.0 with the following conda environment:

conda create --name mbart-python39 python=3.9
conda activate mbart-python39 
pip install transformers==4.28.1
pip install chardet==5.1.0
pip install sentencepiece==0.1.99
pip install protobuf==3.20

Upvotes: 2

Views: 3372

Answers (1)

Franck Dernoncourt
Franck Dernoncourt

Reputation: 83387

One could add the following to fine-tune mBART-50:

from transformers.optimization import AdamW

# Set up the optimizer and training settings
optimizer = AdamW(model.parameters(), lr=1e-4)
model.train()

print('Fine-tuning started')
for i in range(100):
    optimizer.zero_grad()
    output = model(**model_inputs, labels=labels) # forward pass
    loss = output.loss
    loss.backward()
    optimizer.step()
print('Fine-tuning ended')

Full code:

from transformers import MBartForConditionalGeneration, MBart50TokenizerFast
from transformers.optimization import AdamW
import os
os.environ["TOKENIZERS_PARALLELISM"] = "false"


print('Model loading started')
model = MBartForConditionalGeneration.from_pretrained("facebook/mbart-large-50")
tokenizer = MBart50TokenizerFast.from_pretrained("facebook/mbart-large-50", src_lang="fr_XX", tgt_lang="en_XX")
print('Model loading done')

src_text = " billozarion "
tgt_text =  " plorizatizzzon "

model_inputs = tokenizer(src_text, return_tensors="pt")
with tokenizer.as_target_tokenizer():
    labels = tokenizer(tgt_text, return_tensors="pt").input_ids

# Set up the optimizer and training settings
optimizer = AdamW(model.parameters(), lr=1e-4)
model.train()

print('Fine-tuning started')
for i in range(100):
    optimizer.zero_grad()
    output = model(**model_inputs, labels=labels) # forward pass
    loss = output.loss
    loss.backward()
    optimizer.step()
print('Fine-tuning ended')
    
# translate French to English
tokenizer = MBart50TokenizerFast.from_pretrained("facebook/mbart-large-50-many-to-many-mmt")
tokenizer.src_lang = "fr_XX"
article_fr = src_text
encoded_fr = tokenizer(article_fr, return_tensors="pt")
generated_tokens = model.generate(**encoded_fr, forced_bos_token_id=tokenizer.lang_code_to_id["en_XX"])
translation =tokenizer.batch_decode(generated_tokens, skip_special_tokens=True)
print(translation)

It outputs the correct made up translation "plorizatizzzon".

I reported the documentation issue on https://github.com/huggingface/transformers/issues/23185


https://github.com/huggingface/transformers/tree/main/examples/pytorch/translation contains two more advanced scripts to fine-tune mBART and T5 (thanks sgugger for pointing me to it). Here is how to use the script to fine-tune mBART:

Create a new conda environment:

conda create --name mbart-source-transformers-python39 python=3.9
conda activate mbart-source-transformers-python39 
git clone https://github.com/huggingface/transformers.git
cd transformers
pip install git+https://github.com/huggingface/transformers
pip install datasets evaluate accelerate sacrebleu
conda install pytorch torchvision torchaudio pytorch-cuda=11.8 -c pytorch -c nvidia
pip install sentencepiece==0.1.99
pip install protobuf==3.20
pip install --force-reinstall charset-normalizer==3.1.0

Command:

python examples/pytorch/translation/run_translation.py \
    --model_name_or_path facebook/mbart-large-50 \
    --do_train \
    --do_eval \
    --source_lang fr_XX \
    --target_lang en_XX \
    --source_prefix "translate French to English: " \
    --train_file finetuning-translation-train.json \
    --validation_file finetuning-translation-validation.json  \
    --test_file finetuning-translation-test.json \
    --output_dir tmp/tst-translation4 \
    --per_device_train_batch_size=4 \
    --per_device_eval_batch_size=4 \
    --overwrite_output_dir \
    --do_predict \
    --predict_with_generate

(Note: the readme seems to have missed --do_predict)

with finetuning-translation-train.json, finetuning-translation-validation.json and finetuning-translation-test.json formatted as follows with the JSON Lines format:

{"translation": {"en": "20 year-old male tennis player.", "fr": "Joueur de tennis de 12 ans"}}
{"translation": {"en": "2 soldiers in an old military Jeep", "fr": "2 soldats dans une vielle Jeep militaire"}}

(Note: one must use double quotes in the .json files. Single quotes e.g. 'en' will make the script crash.)

I run the code on Ubuntu 20.04.5 LTS with an NVIDIA T4 Tensor Core GPU (16GB memory) and CUDA 12.0. The mBART-50 model takes around 15GB of GPU memory.

Upvotes: 2

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