Condensa is a framework for programmable model compression in Python. It comes with a set of built-in compression operators which may be used to compose complex compression schemes targeting specific combinations of DNN architecture, hardware platform, and optimization objective. To recover any accuracy lost during compression, Condensa uses a constrained optimization formulation of model compression and employs an Augmented Lagrangian-based algorithm as the optimizer.
Status: Condensa is under active development, and bug reports, pull requests, and other feedback are all highly appreciated. See the contributions section below for more details on how to contribute.
Condensa provides the following set of pre-built compression schemes:
The schemes above are built using one or more compression operators, which may be combined in various ways to define your own custom schemes.
Please refer to the documentation for a detailed description of available operators and schemes.
Condensa requires:
- A working Linux installation (we use Ubuntu 18.04)
- NVIDIA drivers and CUDA 10+ for GPU support
- Python 3.5 or newer
- PyTorch 1.0 or newer
The most straightforward way of installing Condensa is via pip
:
pip install condensa
Retrieve the latest source code from the Condensa repository:
git clone https://github.com/NVlabs/condensa.git
Navigate to the source code directory and run the following:
pip install -e .
To check the installation, run the unit test suite:
bash run_all_tests.sh -v
The AlexNet Notebook contains a simple step-by-step walkthrough of compressing a pre-trained model using Condensa.
Check out the examples
folder for additional, more complex examples of using Condensa (note: some examples require the torchvision
package to be installed).
Documentation is available here. Please also check out the Condensa paper for a detailed description of Condensa's motivation, features, and performance results.
We appreciate all contributions, including bug fixes, new features and documentation, and additional tutorials. You can initiate
contributions via Github pull requests. When making code contributions, please follow the PEP 8
Python coding standard and provide
unit tests for the new features. Finally, make sure to sign off your commits using the -s
flag or adding
Signed-off-By: Name<Email>
in the commit message.
If you use Condensa for research, please consider citing the following paper:
@article{condensa2020,
title={A Programmable Approach to Neural Network Compression},
author={V. {Joseph} and G. L. {Gopalakrishnan} and S. {Muralidharan} and M. {Garland} and A. {Garg}},
journal={IEEE Micro},
year={2020},
volume={40},
number={5},
pages={17-25},
doi={10.1109/MM.2020.3012391}
}
Condensa is a research prototype and not an official NVIDIA product. Many features are still experimental and yet to be properly documented.