by The PyTorch Team

Welcome to the migration guide for PyTorch 0.4.0. In this release we introduced many exciting new features and critical bug fixes, with the goal of providing users a better and cleaner interface. In this guide, we will cover the most important changes in migrating existing code from previous versions:

  • Tensors and Variables have merged
  • Support for 0-dimensional (scalar) Tensors
  • Deprecation of the volatile flag
  • dtypes, devices, and Numpy-style Tensor creation functions
  • Writing device-agnostic code
  • New edge-case constraints on names of submodules, parameters, and buffers in nn.Module

Merging Tensor and Variable and classes

torch.Tensor and torch.autograd.Variable are now the same class. More precisely, torch.Tensor is capable of tracking history and behaves like the old Variable; Variable wrapping continues to work as before but returns an object of type torch.Tensor. This means that you don’t need the Variable wrapper everywhere in your code anymore.

The type() of a Tensor has changed

Note also that the type() of a Tensor no longer reflects the data type. Use isinstance() or x.type()instead:

>>> x = torch.DoubleTensor([1, 1, 1])
>>> print(type(x))  # was torch.DoubleTensor
"<class 'torch.Tensor'>"
>>> print(x.type())  # OK: 'torch.DoubleTensor'
'torch.DoubleTensor'
>>> print(isinstance(x, torch.DoubleTensor))  # OK: True
True

When does autograd start tracking history now?

requires_grad, the central flag for autograd, is now an attribute on Tensors. The same rules previously used for Variables applies to Tensors; autograd starts tracking history when any input Tensor of an operation has requires_grad=True. For example,

>>> x = torch.ones(1)  # create a tensor with requires_grad=False (default)
>>> x.requires_grad
False
>>> y = torch.ones(1)  # another tensor with requires_grad=False
>>> z = x + y
>>> # both inputs have requires_grad=False. so does the output
>>> z.requires_grad
False
>>> # then autograd won't track this computation. let's verify!
>>> z.backward()
RuntimeError: element 0 of tensors does not require grad and does not have a grad_fn
>>>
>>> # now create a tensor with requires_grad=True
>>> w = torch.ones(1, requires_grad=True)
>>> w.requires_grad
True
>>> # add to the previous result that has require_grad=False
>>> total = w + z
>>> # the total sum now requires grad!
>>> total.requires_grad
True
>>> # autograd can compute the gradients as well
>>> total.backward()
>>> w.grad
tensor([ 1.])
>>> # and no computation is wasted to compute gradients for x, y and z, which don't require grad
>>> z.grad == x.grad == y.grad == None
True

Manipulating requires_grad flag

Other than directly setting the attribute, you can change this flag in-place using my_tensor.requires_grad_(), or, as in the above example, at creation time by passing it in as an argument (default is False), e.g.,

>>> existing_tensor.requires_grad_()
>>> existing_tensor.requires_grad
True
>>> my_tensor = torch.zeros(3, 4, requires_grad=True)
>>> my_tensor.requires_grad
True

What about .data?

.data was the primary way to get the underlying Tensor from a Variable. After this merge, calling y = x.data still has similar semantics. So y will be a Tensor that shares the same data with x, is unrelated with the computation history of x, and has requires_grad=False.

However, .data can be unsafe in some cases. Any changes on x.data wouldn’t be tracked by autograd, and the computed gradients would be incorrect if x is needed in a backward pass. A safer alternative is to use x.detach(), which also returns a Tensor that shares data with requires_grad=False, but will have its in-place changes reported by autograd if x is needed in backward.

Here is an example of the difference between .data and x.detach() (and why we recommend using detach in general).

If you use Tensor.detach(), the gradient computation is guaranteed to be correct.

>>> a = torch.tensor([1,2,3.], requires_grad = True)
>>> out = a.sigmoid()
>>> c = out.detach()
>>> c.zero_()
tensor([ 0.,  0.,  0.])

>>> out  # modified by c.zero_() !!
tensor([ 0.,  0.,  0.])

>>> out.sum().backward()  # Requires the original value of out, but that was overwritten by c.zero_()
RuntimeError: one of the variables needed for gradient computation has been modified by an

However, using Tensor.data can be unsafe and can easily result in incorrect gradients when a tensor is required for gradient computation but modified in-place.

>>> a = torch.tensor([1,2,3.], requires_grad = True)
>>> out = a.sigmoid()
>>> c = out.data
>>> c.zero_()
tensor([ 0.,  0.,  0.])

>>> out  # out  was modified by c.zero_()
tensor([ 0.,  0.,  0.])

>>> out.sum().backward()
>>> a.grad  # The result is very, very wrong because `out` changed!
tensor([ 0.,  0.,  0.])

Support for 0-dimensional (scalar) Tensors

Previously, indexing into a Tensor vector (1-dimensional tensor) gave a Python number but indexing into a Variable vector gave (inconsistently!) a vector of size (1,)! Similar behavior existed with reduction functions, e.g. tensor.sum() would return a Python number, but variable.sum() would return a vector of size (1,).

Fortunately, this release introduces proper scalar (0-dimensional tensor) support in PyTorch! Scalars can be created using the new torch.tensor function (which will be explained in more detail later; for now just think of it as the PyTorch equivalent of numpy.array). Now you can do things like:

>>> torch.tensor(3.1416)         # create a scalar directly
tensor(3.1416)
>>> torch.tensor(3.1416).size()  # scalar is 0-dimensional
torch.Size([])
>>> torch.tensor([3]).size()     # compare to a vector of size 1
torch.Size([1])
>>>
>>> vector = torch.arange(2, 6)  # this is a vector
>>> vector
tensor([ 2.,  3.,  4.,  5.])
>>> vector.size()
torch.Size([4])
>>> vector[3]                    # indexing into a vector gives a scalar
tensor(5.)
>>> vector[3].item()             # .item() gives the value as a Python number
5.0
>>> mysum = torch.tensor([2, 3]).sum()
>>> mysum
tensor(5)
>>> mysum.size()
torch.Size([])

Accumulating losses

Consider the widely used pattern total_loss += loss.data[0]. Before 0.4.0. loss was a Variable wrapping a tensor of size (1,), but in 0.4.0 loss is now a scalar and has 0 dimensions. Indexing into a scalar doesn’t make sense (it gives a warning now, but will be a hard error in 0.5.0). Use loss.item() to get the Python number from a scalar.

Note that if you don’t convert to a Python number when accumulating losses, you may find increased memory usage in your program. This is because the right-hand-side of the above expression used to be a Python float, while it is now a zero-dim Tensor. The total loss is thus accumulating Tensors and their gradient history, which may keep around large autograd graphs for much longer than necessary.

Deprecation of volatile flag

The volatile flag is now deprecated and has no effect. Previously, any computation that involves a Variable with volatile=True wouldn’t be tracked by autograd. This has now been replaced by a set of more flexible context managers including torch.no_grad(), torch.set_grad_enabled(grad_mode), and others.

>>> x = torch.zeros(1, requires_grad=True)
>>> with torch.no_grad():
...     y = x * 2
>>> y.requires_grad
False
>>>
>>> is_train = False
>>> with torch.set_grad_enabled(is_train):
...     y = x * 2
>>> y.requires_grad
False
>>> torch.set_grad_enabled(True)  # this can also be used as a function
>>> y = x * 2
>>> y.requires_grad
True
>>> torch.set_grad_enabled(False)
>>> y = x * 2
>>> y.requires_grad
False

dtypes, devices and NumPy-style creation functions

In previous versions of PyTorch, we used to specify data type (e.g. float vs double), device type (cpu vs cuda) and layout (dense vs sparse) together as a “tensor type”. For example, torch.cuda.sparse.DoubleTensor was the Tensor type representing the double data type, living on CUDA devices, and with COO sparse tensor layout.

In this release, we introduce torch.dtype, torch.device and torch.layout classes to allow better management of these properties via NumPy-style creation functions.

torch.dtype

Below is a complete list of available torch.dtypes (data types) and their corresponding tensor types.

Data type torch.dtype Tensor types
32-bit floating point torch.float32 or torch.float torch.*.FloatTensor
64-bit floating point torch.float64 or torch.double torch.*.DoubleTensor
16-bit floating point torch.float16 or torch.half torch.*.HalfTensor
8-bit integer (unsigned) torch.uint8 torch.*.ByteTensor
8-bit integer (signed) torch.int8 torch.*.CharTensor
16-bit integer (signed) torch.int16 or torch.short torch.*.ShortTensor
32-bit integer (signed) torch.int32 or torch.int torch.*.IntTensor
64-bit integer (signed) torch.int64 or torch.long torch.*.LongTensor

The dtype of a tensor can be access via its dtype attribute.

torch.device

A torch.device contains a device type ('cpu' or 'cuda') and optional device ordinal (id) for the device type. It can be initialized with torch.device('{device_type}') or torch.device('{device_type}:{device_ordinal}').

If the device ordinal is not present, this represents the current device for the device type; e.g., torch.device('cuda') is equivalent to torch.device('cuda:X') where X is the result of torch.cuda.current_device().

The device of a tensor can be accessed via its device attribute.

torch.layout

torch.layout represents the data layout of a Tensor. Currently torch.strided (dense tensors, the default) and torch.sparse_coo (sparse tensors with COO format) are supported.

The layout of a tensor can be access via its layout attribute.

Creating Tensors

Methods that create a Tensor now also take in dtype, device, layout, and requires_grad options to specify the desired attributes on the returned Tensor. For example,

>>> device = torch.device("cuda:1")
>>> x = torch.randn(3, 3, dtype=torch.float64, device=device)
tensor([[-0.6344,  0.8562, -1.2758],
        [ 0.8414,  1.7962,  1.0589],
        [-0.1369, -1.0462, -0.4373]], dtype=torch.float64, device='cuda:1')
>>> x.requires_grad  # default is False
False
>>> x = torch.zeros(3, requires_grad=True)
>>> x.requires_grad
True
torch.tensor(data, ...)

torch.tensor is one of the newly added tensor creation methods. It takes in array-like data of all kinds and copies the contained values into a new Tensor. As mentioned earlier, torch.tensor is the PyTorch equivalent of NumPy’s numpy.arrayconstructor. Unlike the torch.*Tensor methods, you can also create zero-dimensional Tensors (aka scalars) this way (a single python number is treated as a Size in the torch.*Tensor methods). Moreover, if a dtype argument isn’t given, it will infer the suitable dtype given the data. It is the recommended way to create a tensor from existing data like a Python list. For example,

>>> cuda = torch.device("cuda")
>>> torch.tensor([[1], [2], [3]], dtype=torch.half, device=cuda)
tensor([[ 1],
        [ 2],
        [ 3]], device='cuda:0')
>>> torch.tensor(1)               # scalar
tensor(1)
>>> torch.tensor([1, 2.3]).dtype  # type inferece
torch.float32
>>> torch.tensor([1, 2]).dtype    # type inferece
torch.int64

We’ve also added more tensor creation methods. Some of them have torch.*_like and/or tensor.new_* variants.

  • torch.*_like takes in an input Tensor instead of a shape. It returns a Tensor with same attributes as the input Tensor by default unless otherwise specified:

     >>> x = torch.randn(3, dtype=torch.float64)
     >>> torch.zeros_like(x)
     tensor([ 0.,  0.,  0.], dtype=torch.float64)
     >>> torch.zeros_like(x, dtype=torch.int)
     tensor([ 0,  0,  0], dtype=torch.int32)
    
  • tensor.new_* can also create Tensors with same attributes as tensor, but it always takes in a shape argument:

     >>> x = torch.randn(3, dtype=torch.float64)
     >>> x.new_ones(2)
     tensor([ 1.,  1.], dtype=torch.float64)
     >>> x.new_ones(4, dtype=torch.int)
     tensor([ 1,  1,  1,  1], dtype=torch.int32)
    

To specify the desired shape, you can either use a tuple (e.g., torch.zeros((2, 3))) or variable arguments (e.g., torch.zeros(2, 3)) in most cases.

Name Returned Tensor torch.*_like variant tensor.new_* variant
torch.empty uninitialized memory
torch.zeros all zeros
torch.ones all ones
torch.full filled with a given value
torch.rand i.i.d. continuous Uniform[0, 1)  
torch.randn i.i.d. Normal(0, 1)  
torch.randint i.i.d. discrete Uniform in given range  
torch.randperm random permutation of {0, 1, ..., n - 1}    
torch.tensor copied from existing data (list, NumPy ndarray, etc.)  
torch.from_numpy* from NumPy ndarray (sharing storage without copying)    
torch.arange, torch.range, and torch.linspace uniformly spaced values in a given range    
torch.logspace logarithmically spaced values in a given range    
torch.eye identity matrix    

*: torch.from_numpy only takes in a NumPy ndarray as its input argument.

Writing device-agnostic code

Previous versions of PyTorch made it difficult to write code that was device agnostic (i.e. that could run on both CUDA-enabled and CPU-only machines without modification).

PyTorch 0.4.0 makes this easier in two ways:

  • The device attribute of a Tensor gives the torch.device for all Tensors (get_device only works for CUDA tensors)
  • The to method of Tensors and Modules can be used to easily move objects to different devices (instead of having to call cpu() or cuda() based on the context)

We recommend the following pattern:

# at beginning of the script
device = torch.device("cuda:0" if torch.cuda.is_available() else "cpu")

...

# then whenever you get a new Tensor or Module
# this won't copy if they are already on the desired device
input = data.to(device)
model = MyModule(...).to(device)

New edge-case constraints on names of submodules, parameters, and buffers in nn.Module

name that is an empty string or contains "." is no longer permitted in module.add_module(name, value), module.add_parameter(name, value) or module.add_buffer(name, value) because such names may cause lost data in the state_dict. If you are loading a checkpoint for modules containing such names, please update the module definition and patch the state_dict before loading it.

Code Samples (Putting it all together)

To get a flavor of the overall recommended changes in 0.4.0, let’s look at a quick example for a common code pattern in both 0.3.1 and 0.4.0:

  • 0.3.1 (old):
    model = MyRNN()
    if use_cuda:
        model = model.cuda()
    
    # train
    total_loss = 0
    for input, target in train_loader:
        input, target = Variable(input), Variable(target)
        hidden = Variable(torch.zeros(*h_shape))  # init hidden
        if use_cuda:
            input, target, hidden = input.cuda(), target.cuda(), hidden.cuda()
        ...  # get loss and optimize
        total_loss += loss.data[0]
    
    # evaluate
    for input, target in test_loader:
        input = Variable(input, volatile=True)
        if use_cuda:
            ...
        ...
    
  • 0.4.0 (new):
    # torch.device object used throughout this script
    device = torch.device("cuda" if use_cuda else "cpu")
    
    model = MyRNN().to(device)
    
    # train
    total_loss = 0
    for input, target in train_loader:
        input, target = input.to(device), target.to(device)
        hidden = input.new_zeros(*h_shape)  # has the same device & dtype as `input`
        ...  # get loss and optimize
        total_loss += loss.item()           # get Python number from 1-element Tensor
    
    # evaluate
    with torch.no_grad():                   # operations inside don't track history
        for input, target in test_loader:
            ...
    

Thank you for reading! Please refer to our documentation and release notes for more details.

Happy PyTorch-ing!