NOTE: this answer is outdated and only works with TF1. Check @bers's answer for a solution tested on TF2.
After model compilation, the placeholder tensor for y_true
is in model.targets
and y_pred
is in model.outputs
.
To save the values of these placeholders at each batch, you can:
- First copy the values of these tensors into variables.
- Evaluate these variables in
on_batch_end
, and store the resulting arrays.
Now step 1 is a bit involved because you'll have to add an tf.assign
op to the training function model.train_function
. Using current Keras API, this can be done by providing a fetches
argument to K.function()
when the training function is constructed.
In model._make_train_function()
, there's a line:
self.train_function = K.function(inputs,
[self.total_loss] + self.metrics_tensors,
updates=updates,
name='train_function',
**self._function_kwargs)
The fetches
argument containing the tf.assign
ops can be provided via model._function_kwargs
(only works after Keras 2.1.0).
As an example:
from keras.layers import Dense
from keras.models import Sequential
from keras.callbacks import Callback
from keras import backend as K
import tensorflow as tf
import numpy as np
class CollectOutputAndTarget(Callback):
def __init__(self):
super(CollectOutputAndTarget, self).__init__()
self.targets = [] # collect y_true batches
self.outputs = [] # collect y_pred batches
# the shape of these 2 variables will change according to batch shape
# to handle the "last batch", specify `validate_shape=False`
self.var_y_true = tf.Variable(0., validate_shape=False)
self.var_y_pred = tf.Variable(0., validate_shape=False)
def on_batch_end(self, batch, logs=None):
# evaluate the variables and save them into lists
self.targets.append(K.eval(self.var_y_true))
self.outputs.append(K.eval(self.var_y_pred))
# build a simple model
# have to compile first for model.targets and model.outputs to be prepared
model = Sequential([Dense(5, input_shape=(10,))])
model.compile(loss='mse', optimizer='adam')
# initialize the variables and the `tf.assign` ops
cbk = CollectOutputAndTarget()
fetches = [tf.assign(cbk.var_y_true, model.targets[0], validate_shape=False),
tf.assign(cbk.var_y_pred, model.outputs[0], validate_shape=False)]
model._function_kwargs = {'fetches': fetches} # use `model._function_kwargs` if using `Model` instead of `Sequential`
# fit the model and check results
X = np.random.rand(10, 10)
Y = np.random.rand(10, 5)
model.fit(X, Y, batch_size=8, callbacks=[cbk])
Unless the number of samples can be divided by the batch size, the final batch will have a different size than other batches. So K.variable()
and K.update()
can't be used in this case. You'll have to use tf.Variable(..., validate_shape=False)
and tf.assign(..., validate_shape=False)
instead.
To verify the correctness of the saved arrays, you can add one line in training.py
to print out the shuffled index array:
if shuffle == 'batch':
index_array = _batch_shuffle(index_array, batch_size)
elif shuffle:
np.random.shuffle(index_array)
print('Index array:', repr(index_array)) # Add this line
batches = _make_batches(num_train_samples, batch_size)
The shuffled index array should be printed out during fitting:
Epoch 1/1
Index array: array([8, 9, 3, 5, 4, 7, 1, 0, 6, 2])
10/10 [==============================] - 0s 23ms/step - loss: 0.5670
And you can check if cbk.targets
is the same as Y[index_array]
:
index_array = np.array([8, 9, 3, 5, 4, 7, 1, 0, 6, 2])
print(Y[index_array])
[[ 0.75325592 0.64857277 0.1926653 0.7642865 0.38901153]
[ 0.77567689 0.13573623 0.4902501 0.42897559 0.55825652]
[ 0.33760938 0.68195038 0.12303088 0.83509441 0.20991668]
[ 0.98367778 0.61325065 0.28973401 0.28734073 0.93399794]
[ 0.26097574 0.88219054 0.87951941 0.64887846 0.41996446]
[ 0.97794604 0.91307569 0.93816428 0.2125808 0.94381495]
[ 0.74813435 0.08036688 0.38094272 0.83178364 0.16713736]
[ 0.52609421 0.39218962 0.21022047 0.58569125 0.08012982]
[ 0.61276627 0.20679494 0.24124858 0.01262245 0.0994412 ]
[ 0.6026137 0.25620512 0.7398164 0.52558182 0.09955769]]
print(cbk.targets)
[array([[ 0.7532559 , 0.64857274, 0.19266529, 0.76428652, 0.38901153],
[ 0.77567691, 0.13573623, 0.49025011, 0.42897558, 0.55825651],
[ 0.33760938, 0.68195039, 0.12303089, 0.83509439, 0.20991668],
[ 0.9836778 , 0.61325067, 0.28973401, 0.28734073, 0.93399793],
[ 0.26097575, 0.88219053, 0.8795194 , 0.64887846, 0.41996446],
[ 0.97794604, 0.91307569, 0.93816429, 0.2125808 , 0.94381493],
[ 0.74813437, 0.08036689, 0.38094273, 0.83178365, 0.16713737],
[ 0.5260942 , 0.39218962, 0.21022047, 0.58569127, 0.08012982]], dtype=float32),
array([[ 0.61276627, 0.20679495, 0.24124858, 0.01262245, 0.0994412 ],
[ 0.60261369, 0.25620511, 0.73981643, 0.52558184, 0.09955769]], dtype=float32)]
As you can see, there are two batches in cbk.targets
(one "full batch" of size 8 and the final batch of size 2), and the row order is the same as Y[index_array]
.