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
- Convolutional Neural Networks (CNN)
- Language Modeling with Gated Convolutional Networks (Dauphin et al., 2017)
- Convolutional Sequence to Sequence Learning (Gehring et al., 2017)
- Classical Structured Prediction Losses for Sequence to Sequence Learning (Edunov et al., 2018)
- Hierarchical Neural Story Generation (Fan et al., 2018)
- wav2vec: Unsupervised Pre-training for Speech Recognition (Schneider et al., 2019)
- LightConv and DynamicConv models
- Long Short-Term Memory (LSTM) networks
- Effective Approaches to Attention-based Neural Machine Translation (Luong et al., 2015)
- Transformer (self-attention) networks
- Attention Is All You Need (Vaswani et al., 2017)
- Scaling Neural Machine Translation (Ott et al., 2018)
- Understanding Back-Translation at Scale (Edunov et al., 2018)
- Adaptive Input Representations for Neural Language Modeling (Baevski and Auli, 2018)
- Mixture Models for Diverse Machine Translation: Tricks of the Trade (Shen et al., 2019)
- RoBERTa: A Robustly Optimized BERT Pretraining Approach (Liu et al., 2019)
- Facebook FAIR's WMT19 News Translation Task Submission (Ng et al., 2019)
- Jointly Learning to Align and Translate with Transformer Models (Garg et al., 2019)
- Multilingual Denoising Pre-training for Neural Machine Translation (Liu et at., 2020)
- Neural Machine Translation with Byte-Level Subwords (Wang et al., 2020)
- wav2vec 2.0: A Framework for Self-Supervised Learning of Speech Representations (Baevski et al., 2019)
- Non-autoregressive Transformers
- Non-Autoregressive Neural Machine Translation (Gu et al., 2017)
- Deterministic Non-Autoregressive Neural Sequence Modeling by Iterative Refinement (Lee et al. 2018)
- Insertion Transformer: Flexible Sequence Generation via Insertion Operations (Stern et al. 2019)
- Mask-Predict: Parallel Decoding of Conditional Masked Language Models (Ghazvininejad et al., 2019)
- Levenshtein Transformer (Gu et al., 2019)
- August 2020: wav2vec2 models and code released
- May 2020: Follow fairseq on Twitter
- April 2020: Monotonic Multihead Attention code released
- April 2020: Quant-Noise code released
- April 2020: Initial model parallel support and 11B parameters unidirectional LM released
- March 2020: Byte-level BPE code released
Previous updates
- February 2020: mBART model and code released
- February 2020: Added tutorial for back-translation
- December 2019: fairseq 0.9.0 released
- November 2019: VizSeq released (a visual analysis toolkit for evaluating fairseq models)
- November 2019: CamemBERT model and code released
- November 2019: BART model and code released
- November 2019: XLM-R models and code released
- September 2019: Nonautoregressive translation code released
- August 2019: WMT'19 models released
- July 2019: fairseq relicensed under MIT license
- July 2019: RoBERTa models and code released
- June 2019: wav2vec models and code released
- 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:
- beam search
- Diverse Beam Search (Vijayakumar et al., 2016)
- sampling (unconstrained, top-k and top-p/nucleus)
- 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.
- 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 tonvidia-docker run
.
The full documentation contains instructions for getting started, training new models and extending fairseq with new model types and tasks.
We provide pre-trained models and pre-processed, binarized test sets for several tasks listed below, as well as example training and evaluation commands.
- Translation: convolutional and transformer models are available
- Language Modeling: convolutional and transformer models are available
We also have more detailed READMEs to reproduce results from specific papers:
- Training with Quantization Noise for Extreme Model Compression
- Neural Machine Translation with Byte-Level Subwords (Wang et al., 2020)
- Multilingual Denoising Pre-training for Neural Machine Translation (Liu et at., 2020)
- Jointly Learning to Align and Translate with Transformer Models (Garg et al., 2019)
- Levenshtein Transformer (Gu et al., 2019)
- Facebook FAIR's WMT19 News Translation Task Submission (Ng et al., 2019)
- RoBERTa: A Robustly Optimized BERT Pretraining Approach (Liu et al., 2019)
- wav2vec: Unsupervised Pre-training for Speech Recognition (Schneider et al., 2019)
- wav2vec 2.0: A Framework for Self-Supervised Learning of Speech Representations (Baevski et al., 2019)
- Mixture Models for Diverse Machine Translation: Tricks of the Trade (Shen et al., 2019)
- Pay Less Attention with Lightweight and Dynamic Convolutions (Wu et al., 2019)
- Understanding Back-Translation at Scale (Edunov et al., 2018)
- Classical Structured Prediction Losses for Sequence to Sequence Learning (Edunov et al., 2018)
- Hierarchical Neural Story Generation (Fan et al., 2018)
- Scaling Neural Machine Translation (Ott et al., 2018)
- Convolutional Sequence to Sequence Learning (Gehring et al., 2017)
- Language Modeling with Gated Convolutional Networks (Dauphin et al., 2017)
- Twitter: https://twitter.com/fairseq
- Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/groups/fairseq.users
- Google group: https://groups.google.com/forum/#!forum/fairseq-users
fairseq(-py) is MIT-licensed. The license applies to the pre-trained models as well.
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},
}