问题
I want to train a model on about 2TB of image data on gcloud storage. I saved the image data as separate tfrecords and tried to use the tensorflow data api following this example
https://medium.com/@moritzkrger/speeding-up-keras-with-tfrecord-datasets-5464f9836c36
But it seems like keras' model.fit(...)
doesn't support validation for tfrecord datasets based on
https://github.com/keras-team/keras/pull/8388
Is there a better approach for processing large amounts of data with keras from ml-engine that I'm missing?
Thanks a lot!
回答1:
If you are willing to use tf.keras
instead of actual Keras, you can instantiate a TFRecordDataset
with the tf.data
API and pass that directly to model.fit()
. Bonus: you get to stream directly from Google Cloud storage, no need to download the data first:
# Construct a TFRecordDataset
ds_train tf.data.TFRecordDataset('gs://') # path to TFRecords on GCS
ds_train = ds_train.shuffle(1000).batch(32)
model.fit(ds_train)
To include validation data, create a TFRecordDataset
with your validation TFRecords and pass that one to the validation_data
argument of model.fit()
. Note: this is possible as of TensorFlow 1.9.
Final note: you'll need to specify the steps_per_epoch
argument. A hack that I use to know the total number of examples in all TFRecordfiles, is to simply iterate over the files and count:
import tensorflow as tf
def n_records(record_list):
"""Get the total number of records in a collection of TFRecords.
Since a TFRecord file is intended to act as a stream of data,
this needs to be done naively by iterating over the file and counting.
See https://stackoverflow.com/questions/40472139
Args:
record_list (list): list of GCS paths to TFRecords files
"""
counter = 0
for f in record_list:
counter +=\
sum(1 for _ in tf.python_io.tf_record_iterator(f))
return counter
Which you can use to compute steps_per_epoch
:
n_train = n_records([gs://path-to-tfrecords/record1,
gs://path-to-tfrecords/record2])
steps_per_epoch = n_train // batch_size
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/54523822/best-way-to-process-terabytes-of-data-on-gcloud-ml-engine-with-keras