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import hashlib
import os
import urllib
import warnings
from typing import Union, List
import torch
from PIL import Image
from torchvision.transforms import Compose, Resize, CenterCrop, ToTensor, Normalize
from tqdm import tqdm
from model import build_model
from simple_tokenizer import SimpleTokenizer as _Tokenizer
__all__ = ["available_models", "load", "tokenize"]
_tokenizer = _Tokenizer()
_MODELS = {
"RN50": "https://openaipublic.azureedge.net/clip/models/afeb0e10f9e5a86da6080e35cf09123aca3b358a0c3e3b6c78a7b63bc04b6762/RN50.pt",
"ViT-B/32": "https://openaipublic.azureedge.net/clip/models/40d365715913c9da98579312b702a82c18be219cc2a73407c4526f58eba950af/ViT-B-32.pt",
}
def _download(url: str, root: str = os.path.expanduser("~/.cache/clip")):
os.makedirs(root, exist_ok=True)
filename = os.path.basename(url)
expected_sha256 = url.split("/")[-2]
download_target = os.path.join(root, filename)
if os.path.exists(download_target) and not os.path.isfile(download_target):
raise RuntimeError(f"{download_target} exists and is not a regular file")
if os.path.isfile(download_target):
if hashlib.sha256(open(download_target, "rb").read()).hexdigest() == expected_sha256:
return download_target
else:
warnings.warn(f"{download_target} exists, but the SHA256 checksum does not match; re-downloading the file")
with urllib.request.urlopen(url) as source, open(download_target, "wb") as output:
with tqdm(total=int(source.info().get("Content-Length")), ncols=80) as loop:
while True:
buffer = source.read(8192)
if not buffer:
break
output.write(buffer)
loop.update(len(buffer))
if hashlib.sha256(open(download_target, "rb").read()).hexdigest() != expected_sha256:
raise RuntimeError(f"Model has been downloaded but the SHA256 checksum does not not match")
return download_target
def available_models():
return list(_MODELS.keys())
def load(name: str, device: Union[str, torch.device] = "cuda" if torch.cuda.is_available() else "cpu", jit=True):
if name not in _MODELS:
raise RuntimeError(f"Model {name} not found; available models = {available_models()}")
model_path = _download(_MODELS[name])
model = torch.jit.load(model_path, map_location=device if jit else "cpu").eval()
n_px = model.input_resolution.item()
transform = Compose([
Resize(n_px, interpolation=Image.BICUBIC),
CenterCrop(n_px),
lambda image: image.convert("RGB"),
ToTensor(),
Normalize((0.48145466, 0.4578275, 0.40821073), (0.26862954, 0.26130258, 0.27577711)),
])
if not jit:
model = build_model(model.state_dict()).to(device)
return model, transform
# patch the device names
device_holder = torch.jit.trace(lambda: torch.ones([]).to(torch.device(device)), example_inputs=[])
device_node = [n for n in device_holder.graph.findAllNodes("prim::Constant") if "Device" in repr(n)][-1]
def patch_device(module):
graphs = [module.graph] if hasattr(module, "graph") else []
if hasattr(module, "forward1"):
graphs.append(module.forward1.graph)
for graph in graphs:
for node in graph.findAllNodes("prim::Constant"):
if "value" in node.attributeNames() and str(node["value"]).startswith("cuda"):
node.copyAttributes(device_node)
model.apply(patch_device)
patch_device(model.encode_image)
patch_device(model.encode_text)
# patch dtype to float32 on CPU
if device == "cpu":
float_holder = torch.jit.trace(lambda: torch.ones([]).float(), example_inputs=[])
float_input = list(float_holder.graph.findNode("aten::to").inputs())[1]
float_node = float_input.node()
def patch_float(module):
graphs = [module.graph] if hasattr(module, "graph") else []
if hasattr(module, "forward1"):
graphs.append(module.forward1.graph)
for graph in graphs:
for node in graph.findAllNodes("aten::to"):
inputs = list(node.inputs())
for i in [1, 2]: # dtype can be the second or third argument to aten::to()
if inputs[i].node()["value"] == 5:
inputs[i].node().copyAttributes(float_node)
model.apply(patch_float)
patch_float(model.encode_image)
patch_float(model.encode_text)
model.float()
return model, transform
def tokenize(texts: Union[str, List[str]], context_length: int = 77):
if isinstance(texts, str):
texts = [texts]
sot_token = _tokenizer.encoder["<|startoftext|>"]
eot_token = _tokenizer.encoder["<|endoftext|>"]
all_tokens = [[sot_token] + _tokenizer.encode(text) + [eot_token] for text in texts]
result = torch.zeros(len(all_tokens), context_length, dtype=torch.long)
for i, tokens in enumerate(all_tokens):
if len(tokens) > context_length:
raise RuntimeError(f"Input {texts[i]} is too long for context length {context_length}")
result[i, :len(tokens)] = torch.tensor(tokens)
return result

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# Model Card: CLIP
Inspired by [Model Cards for Model Reporting (Mitchell et al.)](https://arxiv.org/abs/1810.03993) and [Lessons from Archives (Jo & Gebru)](https://arxiv.org/pdf/1912.10389.pdf), were providing some accompanying information about the multimodal model.
## Model Details
The CLIP model was developed by researchers at OpenAI to learn about what contributes to robustness in computer vision tasks. The model was also developed to test the ability of models to generalize to arbitrary image classification tasks in a zero-shot manner. It was not developed for general model deployment - to deploy models like CLIP, researchers will first need to carefully study their capabilities in relation to the specific context theyre being deployed within.
### Model Date
January 2021
### Model Type
The base model uses a ResNet50 with several modifications as an image encoder and uses a masked self-attention Transformer as a text encoder. These encoders are trained to maximize the similarity of (image, text) pairs via a contrastive loss. There is also a variant of the model where the ResNet image encoder is replaced with a Vision Transformer.
### Model Version
Initially weve released one CLIP model based on the Vision Transformer architecture equivalent to ViT-B/32
Please see the paper linked below for further details about their specification.
### Documents
- [Blog Post](https://openai.com/blog/clip/)
- [CLIP Paper](https://cdn.openai.com/papers/Learning_Transferable_Visual_Models_From_Natural_Language_Supervision.pdf)
## Model Use
### Intended Use
The model is intended as a research output for research communities. We hope that this model will enable researchers to better understand and explore zero-shot, arbitrary image classification. We also hope it can be used for interdisciplinary studies of the potential impact of such models - the CLIP paper includes a discussion of potential downstream impacts to provide an example for this sort of analysis.
#### Primary intended uses
The primary intended users of these models are AI researchers.
We primarily imagine the model will be used by researchers to better understand robustness, generalization, and other capabilities, biases, and constraints of computer vision models.
### Out-of-Scope Use Cases
**Any** deployed use case of the model - whether commercial or not - is currently out of scope. Non-deployed use cases such as image search in a constrained environment, are also not recommended unless there is thorough in-domain testing of the model with a specific, fixed class taxonomy. This is because our safety assessment demonstrated a high need for task specific testing especially given the variability of CLIPs performance with different class taxonomies. This makes untested and unconstrained deployment of the model in any use case currently potentially harmful.
Certain use cases which would fall under the domain of surveillance and facial recognition are always out-of-scope regardless of performance of the model. This is because the use of artificial intelligence for tasks such as these can be premature currently given the lack of testing norms and checks to ensure its fair use.
Since the model has not been purposefully trained in or evaluated on any languages other than English, its use should be limited to English language use cases.
## Data
The model was trained on publicly available image-caption data. This was done through a combination of crawling a handful of websites and using commonly-used pre-existing image datasets such as [YFCC100M](http://projects.dfki.uni-kl.de/yfcc100m/). A large portion of the data comes from our crawling of the internet. This means that the data is more representative of people and societies most connected to the internet which tend to skew towards more developed nations, and younger, male users.
### Data Mission Statement
Our goal with building this dataset was to test out robustness and generalizability in computer vision tasks. As a result, the focus was on gathering large quantities of data from different publicly-available internet data sources. The data was gathered in a mostly non-interventionist manner. However, we only crawled websites that had policies against excessively violent and adult images and allowed us to filter out such content. We do not intend for this dataset to be used as the basis for any commercial or deployed model and will not be releasing the dataset.
## Performance and Limitations
### Performance
We have evaluated the performance of CLIP on a wide range of benchmarks across a variety of computer vision datasets such as OCR to texture recognition to fine-grained classification. The paper describes model performance on the following datasets:
- Food101
- CIFAR10
- CIFAR100
- Birdsnap
- SUN397
- Stanford Cars
- FGVC Aircraft
- VOC2007
- DTD
- Oxford-IIIT Pet dataset
- Caltech101
- Flowers102
- MNIST
- SVHN
- IIIT5K
- Hateful Memes
- SST-2
- UCF101
- Kinetics700
- Country211
- CLEVR Counting
- KITTI Distance
- STL-10
- RareAct
- Flickr30
- MSCOCO
- ImageNet
- ImageNet-A
- ImageNet-R
- ImageNet Sketch
- ObjectNet (ImageNet Overlap)
- Youtube-BB
- ImageNet-Vid
## Limitations
CLIP and our analysis of it have a number of limitations. CLIP currently struggles with respect to certain tasks such as fine grained classification and counting objects. CLIP also poses issues with regards to fairness and bias which we discuss in the paper and briefly in the next section. Additionally, our approach to testing CLIP also has an important limitation- in many cases we have used linear probes to evaluate the performance of CLIP and there is evidence suggesting that linear probes can underestimate model performance.
### Bias and Fairness
We find that the performance of CLIP - and the specific biases it exhibits - can depend significantly on class design and the choices one makes for categories to include and exclude. We tested the risk of certain kinds of denigration with CLIP by classifying images of people from [Fairface](https://arxiv.org/abs/1908.04913) into crime-related and non-human animal categories. We found significant disparities with respect to race and gender. Additionally, we found that these disparities could shift based on how the classes were constructed. (Details captured in the Broader Impacts Section in the paper).
We also tested the performance of CLIP on gender, race and age classification using the Fairface dataset (We default to using race categories as they are constructed in the Fairface dataset.) in order to assess quality of performance across different demographics. We found accuracy >96% across all races for gender classification with Middle Eastern having the highest accuracy (98.4%) and White having the lowest (96.5%). Additionally, CLIP averaged ~93% for racial classification and ~63% for age classification. Our use of evaluations to test for gender, race and age classification as well as denigration harms is simply to evaluate performance of the model across people and surface potential risks and not to demonstrate an endorsement/enthusiasm for such tasks.
## Feedback
### Where to send questions or comments about the model
Please use [this Google Form](https://forms.gle/Uv7afRH5dvY34ZEs9)

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from collections import OrderedDict
from typing import Tuple, Union
import torch
import torch.nn.functional as F
from torch import nn
class Bottleneck(nn.Module):
expansion = 4
def __init__(self, inplanes, planes, stride=1):
super().__init__()
# all conv layers have stride 1. an avgpool is performed after the second convolution when stride > 1
self.conv1 = nn.Conv2d(inplanes, planes, 1, bias=False)
self.bn1 = nn.BatchNorm2d(planes)
self.conv2 = nn.Conv2d(planes, planes, 3, padding=1, bias=False)
self.bn2 = nn.BatchNorm2d(planes)
self.avgpool = nn.AvgPool2d(stride) if stride > 1 else nn.Identity()
self.conv3 = nn.Conv2d(planes, planes * self.expansion, 1, bias=False)
self.bn3 = nn.BatchNorm2d(planes * self.expansion)
self.relu = nn.ReLU(inplace=True)
self.downsample = None
self.stride = stride
if stride > 1 or inplanes != planes * Bottleneck.expansion:
# downsampling layer is prepended with an avgpool, and the subsequent convolution has stride 1
self.downsample = nn.Sequential(OrderedDict([
("-1", nn.AvgPool2d(stride)),
("0", nn.Conv2d(inplanes, planes * self.expansion, 1, stride=1, bias=False)),
("1", nn.BatchNorm2d(planes * self.expansion))
]))
def forward(self, x: torch.Tensor):
identity = x
out = self.relu(self.bn1(self.conv1(x)))
out = self.relu(self.bn2(self.conv2(out)))
out = self.avgpool(out)
out = self.bn3(self.conv3(out))
if self.downsample is not None:
identity = self.downsample(x)
out += identity
out = self.relu(out)
return out
class AttentionPool2d(nn.Module):
def __init__(self, spacial_dim: int, embed_dim: int, num_heads: int, output_dim: int = None):
super().__init__()
self.positional_embedding = nn.Parameter(torch.randn(spacial_dim ** 2 + 1, embed_dim) / embed_dim ** 0.5)
self.k_proj = nn.Linear(embed_dim, embed_dim)
self.q_proj = nn.Linear(embed_dim, embed_dim)
self.v_proj = nn.Linear(embed_dim, embed_dim)
self.c_proj = nn.Linear(embed_dim, output_dim or embed_dim)
self.num_heads = num_heads
def forward(self, x):
x = x.reshape(x.shape[0], x.shape[1], x.shape[2] * x.shape[3]).permute(2, 0, 1) # NCHW -> (HW)NC
x = torch.cat([x.mean(dim=0, keepdim=True), x], dim=0) # (HW+1)NC
x = x + self.positional_embedding[:, None, :].to(x.dtype) # (HW+1)NC
x, _ = F.multi_head_attention_forward(
query=x, key=x, value=x,
embed_dim_to_check=x.shape[-1],
num_heads=self.num_heads,
q_proj_weight=self.q_proj.weight,
k_proj_weight=self.k_proj.weight,
v_proj_weight=self.v_proj.weight,
in_proj_weight=None,
in_proj_bias=torch.cat([self.q_proj.bias, self.k_proj.bias, self.v_proj.bias]),
bias_k=None,
bias_v=None,
add_zero_attn=False,
dropout_p=0,
out_proj_weight=self.c_proj.weight,
out_proj_bias=self.c_proj.bias,
use_separate_proj_weight=True,
training=self.training,
need_weights=False
)
return x[0]
class ModifiedResNet(nn.Module):
"""
A ResNet class that is similar to torchvision's but contains the following changes:
- There are now 3 "stem" convolutions as opposed to 1, with an average pool instead of a max pool.
- Performs anti-aliasing strided convolutions, where an avgpool is prepended to convolutions with stride > 1
- The final pooling layer is a QKV attention instead of an average pool
"""
def __init__(self, layers, output_dim, heads, input_resolution=224, width=64):
super().__init__()
self.output_dim = output_dim
self.input_resolution = input_resolution
# the 3-layer stem
self.conv1 = nn.Conv2d(3, width // 2, kernel_size=3, stride=2, padding=1, bias=False)
self.bn1 = nn.BatchNorm2d(width // 2)
self.conv2 = nn.Conv2d(width // 2, width // 2, kernel_size=3, padding=1, bias=False)
self.bn2 = nn.BatchNorm2d(width // 2)
self.conv3 = nn.Conv2d(width // 2, width, kernel_size=3, padding=1, bias=False)
self.bn3 = nn.BatchNorm2d(width)
self.avgpool = nn.AvgPool2d(2)
self.relu = nn.ReLU(inplace=True)
# residual layers
self._inplanes = width # this is a *mutable* variable used during construction
self.layer1 = self._make_layer(width, layers[0])
self.layer2 = self._make_layer(width * 2, layers[1], stride=2)
self.layer3 = self._make_layer(width * 4, layers[2], stride=2)
self.layer4 = self._make_layer(width * 8, layers[3], stride=2)
embed_dim = width * 32 # the ResNet feature dimension
self.attnpool = AttentionPool2d(input_resolution // 32, embed_dim, heads, output_dim)
def _make_layer(self, planes, blocks, stride=1):
layers = [Bottleneck(self._inplanes, planes, stride)]
self._inplanes = planes * Bottleneck.expansion
for _ in range(1, blocks):
layers.append(Bottleneck(self._inplanes, planes))
return nn.Sequential(*layers)
def forward(self, x):
def stem(x):
for conv, bn in [(self.conv1, self.bn1), (self.conv2, self.bn2), (self.conv3, self.bn3)]:
x = self.relu(bn(conv(x)))
x = self.avgpool(x)
return x
x = x.type(self.conv1.weight.dtype)
x = stem(x)
x = self.layer1(x)
x = self.layer2(x)
x = self.layer3(x)
x = self.layer4(x)
x = self.attnpool(x)
return x
class LayerNorm(nn.LayerNorm):
"""Subclass torch's LayerNorm to handle fp16."""
def forward(self, x: torch.Tensor):
orig_type = x.dtype
ret = super().forward(x.type(torch.float32))
return ret.type(orig_type)
class QuickGELU(nn.Module):
def forward(self, x: torch.Tensor):
return x * torch.sigmoid(1.702 * x)
class ResidualAttentionBlock(nn.Module):
def __init__(self, d_model: int, n_head: int, attn_mask: torch.Tensor = None):
super().__init__()
self.attn = nn.MultiheadAttention(d_model, n_head)
self.ln_1 = LayerNorm(d_model)
self.mlp = nn.Sequential(OrderedDict([
("c_fc", nn.Linear(d_model, d_model * 4)),
("gelu", QuickGELU()),
("c_proj", nn.Linear(d_model * 4, d_model))
]))
self.ln_2 = LayerNorm(d_model)
self.attn_mask = attn_mask
def attention(self, x: torch.Tensor):
self.attn_mask = self.attn_mask.to(dtype=x.dtype, device=x.device) if self.attn_mask is not None else None
return self.attn(x, x, x, need_weights=False, attn_mask=self.attn_mask)[0]
def forward(self, x: torch.Tensor):
x = x + self.attention(self.ln_1(x))
x = x + self.mlp(self.ln_2(x))
return x
class Transformer(nn.Module):
def __init__(self, width: int, layers: int, heads: int, attn_mask: torch.Tensor = None):
super().__init__()
self.width = width
self.layers = layers
self.resblocks = nn.Sequential(*[ResidualAttentionBlock(width, heads, attn_mask) for _ in range(layers)])
def forward(self, x: torch.Tensor):
return self.resblocks(x)
class VisualTransformer(nn.Module):
def __init__(self, input_resolution: int, patch_size: int, width: int, layers: int, heads: int, output_dim: int):
super().__init__()
self.input_resolution = input_resolution
self.output_dim = output_dim
self.conv1 = nn.Conv2d(in_channels=3, out_channels=width, kernel_size=patch_size, stride=patch_size, bias=False)
scale = width ** -0.5
self.class_embedding = nn.Parameter(scale * torch.randn(width))
self.positional_embedding = nn.Parameter(scale * torch.randn((input_resolution // patch_size) ** 2 + 1, width))
self.ln_pre = LayerNorm(width)
self.transformer = Transformer(width, layers, heads)
self.ln_post = LayerNorm(width)
self.proj = nn.Parameter(scale * torch.randn(width, output_dim))
def forward(self, x: torch.Tensor):
x = self.conv1(x) # shape = [*, width, grid, grid]
x = x.reshape(x.shape[0], x.shape[1], -1) # shape = [*, width, grid ** 2]
x = x.permute(0, 2, 1) # shape = [*, grid ** 2, width]
x = torch.cat([self.class_embedding.to(x.dtype) + torch.zeros(x.shape[0], 1, x.shape[-1], dtype=x.dtype, device=x.device), x], dim=1) # shape = [*, grid ** 2 + 1, width]
x = x + self.positional_embedding.to(x.dtype)
x = self.ln_pre(x)
x = x.permute(1, 0, 2) # NLD -> LND
x = self.transformer(x)
x = x.permute(1, 0, 2) # LND -> NLD
x = self.ln_post(x[:, 0, :])
if self.proj is not None:
x = x @ self.proj
return x
class CLIP(nn.Module):
def __init__(self,
embed_dim: int,
# vision
image_resolution: int,
vision_layers: Union[Tuple[int, int, int, int], int],
vision_width: int,
vision_patch_size: int,
# text
context_length: int,
vocab_size: int,
transformer_width: int,
transformer_heads: int,
transformer_layers: int
):
super().__init__()
self.context_length = context_length
if isinstance(vision_layers, (tuple, list)):
vision_heads = vision_width * 32 // 64
self.visual = ModifiedResNet(
layers=vision_layers,
output_dim=embed_dim,
heads=vision_heads,
input_resolution=image_resolution,
width=vision_width
)
else:
vision_heads = vision_width // 64
self.visual = VisualTransformer(
input_resolution=image_resolution,
patch_size=vision_patch_size,
width=vision_width,
layers=vision_layers,
heads=vision_heads,
output_dim=embed_dim
)
self.transformer = Transformer(
width=transformer_width,
layers=transformer_layers,
heads=transformer_heads,
attn_mask=self.build_attention_mask()
)
self.vocab_size = vocab_size
self.token_embedding = nn.Embedding(vocab_size, transformer_width)
self.positional_embedding = nn.Parameter(torch.empty(self.context_length, transformer_width))
self.ln_final = LayerNorm(transformer_width)
self.text_projection = nn.Parameter(torch.empty(transformer_width, embed_dim))
self.logit_scale = nn.Parameter(torch.ones([]))
def build_attention_mask(self):
# lazily create causal attention mask, with full attention between the vision tokens
# pytorch uses additive attention mask; fill with -inf
mask = torch.empty(self.context_length, self.context_length)
mask.fill_(float("-inf"))
mask.triu_(1) # zero out the lower diagonal
return mask
@property
def dtype(self):
return self.visual.conv1.weight.dtype
def encode_image(self, image):
return self.visual(image.type(self.dtype))
def encode_text(self, text):
x = self.token_embedding(text).type(self.dtype) # [batch_size, n_ctx, d_model]
x = x + self.positional_embedding.type(self.dtype)
x = x.permute(1, 0, 2) # NLD -> LND
x = self.transformer(x)
x = x.permute(1, 0, 2) # LND -> NLD
x = self.ln_final(x).type(self.dtype)
# x.shape = [batch_size, n_ctx, transformer.width]
# take features from the eot embedding (eot_token is the highest number in each sequence)
x = x[torch.arange(x.shape[0]), text.argmax(dim=-1)] @ self.text_projection
return x
def forward(self, image, text):
image_features = self.encode_image(image)
text_features = self.encode_text(text)
# normalized features
image_features = image_features / image_features.norm(dim=-1, keepdim=True)
text_features = text_features / text_features.norm(dim=-1, keepdim=True)
# cosine similarity as logits
logit_scale = self.logit_scale.exp()
logits_per_iamge = logit_scale * image_features @ text_features.t()
logits_per_text = logit_scale * text_features @ image_features.t()
# shape = [global_batch_size, global_batch_size]
return logits_per_iamge, logits_per_text
def convert_weights(model: nn.Module):
"""Convert applicable model parameters to fp16"""
def _convert_weights_to_fp16(l):
if isinstance(l, (nn.Conv1d, nn.Conv2d, nn.Linear)):
l.weight.data = l.weight.data.half()
if l.bias is not None:
l.bias.data = l.bias.data.half()
if isinstance(l, nn.MultiheadAttention):
for attr in [*[f"{s}_proj_weight" for s in ["in", "q", "k", "v"]], "in_proj_bias", "bias_k", "bias_v"]:
tensor = getattr(l, attr)
if tensor is not None:
tensor.data = tensor.data.half()
for name in ["text_projection", "proj"]:
if hasattr(l, name):
attr = getattr(l, name)
if attr is not None:
attr.data = attr.data.half()
model.apply(_convert_weights_to_fp16)
def build_model(state_dict: dict):
vit = "visual.proj" in state_dict
if vit:
vision_width = state_dict["visual.conv1.weight"].shape[0]
vision_layers = len([k for k in state_dict.keys() if k.startswith("visual.") and k.endswith(".attn.in_proj_weight")])
vision_patch_size = state_dict["visual.conv1.weight"].shape[-1]
grid_size = round((state_dict["visual.positional_embedding"].shape[0] - 1) ** 0.5)
image_resolution = vision_patch_size * grid_size
else:
counts: list = [len(set(k.split(".")[2] for k in state_dict if k.startswith(f"visual.layer{b}"))) for b in [1, 2, 3, 4]]
vision_layers = tuple(counts)
vision_width = state_dict["visual.layer1.0.conv1.weight"].shape[0]
output_width = round((state_dict["visual.attnpool.positional_embedding"].shape[0] - 1) ** 0.5)
vision_patch_size = None
assert output_width ** 2 + 1 == state_dict["visual.attnpool.positional_embedding"].shape[0]
image_resolution = output_width * 32
embed_dim = state_dict["text_projection"].shape[1]
context_length = state_dict["positional_embedding"].shape[0]
vocab_size = state_dict["token_embedding.weight"].shape[0]
transformer_width = state_dict["ln_final.weight"].shape[0]
transformer_heads = transformer_width // 64
transformer_layers = len(set(k.split(".")[2] for k in state_dict if k.startswith(f"transformer.resblocks")))
model = CLIP(
embed_dim,
image_resolution, vision_layers, vision_width, vision_patch_size,
context_length, vocab_size, transformer_width, transformer_heads, transformer_layers
)
for key in ["input_resolution", "context_length", "vocab_size"]:
del state_dict[key]
convert_weights(model)
model.load_state_dict(state_dict)
return model.eval()

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import gzip
import html
import os
from functools import lru_cache
import ftfy
import regex as re
@lru_cache()
def default_bpe():
return os.path.join(os.path.dirname(os.path.abspath(__file__)), "bpe_simple_vocab_16e6.txt.gz")
@lru_cache()
def bytes_to_unicode():
"""
Returns list of utf-8 byte and a corresponding list of unicode strings.
The reversible bpe codes work on unicode strings.
This means you need a large # of unicode characters in your vocab if you want to avoid UNKs.
When you're at something like a 10B token dataset you end up needing around 5K for decent coverage.
This is a signficant percentage of your normal, say, 32K bpe vocab.
To avoid that, we want lookup tables between utf-8 bytes and unicode strings.
And avoids mapping to whitespace/control characters the bpe code barfs on.
"""
bs = list(range(ord("!"), ord("~")+1))+list(range(ord("¡"), ord("¬")+1))+list(range(ord("®"), ord("ÿ")+1))
cs = bs[:]
n = 0
for b in range(2**8):
if b not in bs:
bs.append(b)
cs.append(2**8+n)
n += 1
cs = [chr(n) for n in cs]
return dict(zip(bs, cs))
def get_pairs(word):
"""Return set of symbol pairs in a word.
Word is represented as tuple of symbols (symbols being variable-length strings).
"""
pairs = set()
prev_char = word[0]
for char in word[1:]:
pairs.add((prev_char, char))
prev_char = char
return pairs
def basic_clean(text):
text = ftfy.fix_text(text)
text = html.unescape(html.unescape(text))
return text.strip()
def whitespace_clean(text):
text = re.sub(r'\s+', ' ', text)
text = text.strip()
return text
class SimpleTokenizer(object):
def __init__(self, bpe_path: str = default_bpe()):
self.byte_encoder = bytes_to_unicode()
self.byte_decoder = {v: k for k, v in self.byte_encoder.items()}
merges = gzip.open(bpe_path).read().decode("utf-8").split('\n')
merges = merges[1:49152-256-2+1]
merges = [tuple(merge.split()) for merge in merges]
vocab = list(bytes_to_unicode().values())
vocab = vocab + [v+'</w>' for v in vocab]
for merge in merges:
vocab.append(''.join(merge))
vocab.extend(['<|startoftext|>', '<|endoftext|>'])
self.encoder = dict(zip(vocab, range(len(vocab))))
self.decoder = {v: k for k, v in self.encoder.items()}
self.bpe_ranks = dict(zip(merges, range(len(merges))))
self.cache = {'<|startoftext|>': '<|startoftext|>', '<|endoftext|>': '<|endoftext|>'}
self.pat = re.compile(r"""<\|startoftext\|>|<\|endoftext\|>|'s|'t|'re|'ve|'m|'ll|'d|[\p{L}]+|[\p{N}]|[^\s\p{L}\p{N}]+""", re.IGNORECASE)
def bpe(self, token):
if token in self.cache:
return self.cache[token]
word = tuple(token[:-1]) + ( token[-1] + '</w>',)
pairs = get_pairs(word)
if not pairs:
return token+'</w>'
while True:
bigram = min(pairs, key = lambda pair: self.bpe_ranks.get(pair, float('inf')))
if bigram not in self.bpe_ranks:
break
first, second = bigram
new_word = []
i = 0
while i < len(word):
try:
j = word.index(first, i)
new_word.extend(word[i:j])
i = j
except:
new_word.extend(word[i:])
break
if word[i] == first and i < len(word)-1 and word[i+1] == second:
new_word.append(first+second)
i += 2
else:
new_word.append(word[i])
i += 1
new_word = tuple(new_word)
word = new_word
if len(word) == 1:
break
else:
pairs = get_pairs(word)
word = ' '.join(word)
self.cache[token] = word
return word
def encode(self, text):
bpe_tokens = []
text = whitespace_clean(basic_clean(text)).lower()
for token in re.findall(self.pat, text):
token = ''.join(self.byte_encoder[b] for b in token.encode('utf-8'))
bpe_tokens.extend(self.encoder[bpe_token] for bpe_token in self.bpe(token).split(' '))
return bpe_tokens
def decode(self, tokens):
text = ''.join([self.decoder[token] for token in tokens])
text = bytearray([self.byte_decoder[c] for c in text]).decode('utf-8', errors="replace").replace('</w>', ' ')
return text