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  • faster rcnn训练详解

    http://blog.csdn.net/zy1034092330/article/details/62044941

    py-faster-rcnn训练自己的数据:流程很详细并附代码

    https://huangying-zhan.github.io/2016/09/22/detection-faster-rcnn

    Summary

    This post records my experience with py-faster-rcnn, including how to setup py-faster-rcnn from scratch, how to perform a demo training on PASCAL VOC dataset by py-faster-rcnn, how to train your own dataset, and some errors I encountered. All the steps are based on Ubuntu 14.04 + CUDA 8.0. Faster R-CNN is an important research result for object detection with an end-to-end deep convolutional neural network architure. For the details, please refer to original paper.

    The source code related to adding own dataset is provided at: (https://github.com/Huangying-Zhan/py-faster-rcnn)[https://github.com/Huangying-Zhan/py-faster-rcnn]


    Contents

    1. Setup py-faster-rcnn
    2. Demo Training on PASCAL VOC
    3. Training on new dataset
    4. Error and solution

    Part 1. Setup py-faster-rcnn

    In this part, a simple instruction for install py-faster-rcnn is introduced. The instruction mainly refers to py-faster-rcnn.

    1. Clone the Faster R-CNN repo

       # Make sure to clone with --recursive
       $ git clone --recursive https://github.com/rbgirshick/py-faster-rcnn.git
      
    2. Lets call the directory as $FRCN

    3. Build the Cython modules

       $ cd $FRCN/lib
       $ make
      
    4. Build Caffe and PyCaffe

      For this part, please refer to Caffe official installation instruction or my post about Caffe installation. If you have experience with Caffe, just follow the instruction below.

       $ cd $FRCN/caffe-fast-rcnn
       $ cp Makefile.config.example Makefile.config
          
       # Modify Makefile.config, uncommment this line
       WITH_PYTHON_LAYER := 1
       # Modifiy Makefile.config according to your need, such as setup related to GPU support, cuDNN, CUDA version, Anaconda, OpenCV, etc.
          
       # After modification on Makefile.config
       $ make all -j4 # -j4 is for complilation acceleration only. 4 is the number of core in your CPU, change it according to your computer CPU. 
       # Suppose you have installed prerequites for PyCaffe, otherwise, go back to the Caffe installation instructions.
       $ make pycaffe -j4
      
    5. Download pre-computed Faster R-CNN models

       $ cd $FRCN
       $ ./data/scripts/fetch_faster_rcnn_models.sh
      
    6. Run the demo

      However, in this part you might get into trouble with different errors, such as without some packages. At the end of this post, some encountered errors and solution are provided. For those unexpected error, google the error and you should be able to find a solution.

       $ ./tools/demo.py
      

    Part 2. Demo Training on PASCAL VOC

    In this part, the training of py-faster-rcnn will be explained. Firstly, an original training procedure on PASCAL VOC dataset is provided. The purpose is to understand the structure of dataset and training steps.

    2.1. Prepare dataset and Pre-trained model

    1. Download VOC dataset

       $ cd $FRCN/data
       $ wget http://host.robots.ox.ac.uk/pascal/VOC/voc2007/VOCtrainval_06-Nov-2007.tar
       $ wget http://host.robots.ox.ac.uk/pascal/VOC/voc2007/VOCtest_06-Nov-2007.tar
       $ wget http://host.robots.ox.ac.uk/pascal/VOC/voc2007/VOCdevkit_08-Jun-2007.tar
      
       $ tar xvf VOCdevkit_08-Jun-2007.tar 
       $ tar xvf VOCtrainval_06-Nov-2007.tar
       $ tar xvf VOCtest_06-Nov-2007.tar
      
       $ ln -s VOCdevkit VOCdevkit2007 #create a softlink
      
    2. Download pre-trained models

       $ cd $FRCN
       $ ./data/scripts/fetch_imagenet_models.sh
       $ ./data/scripts/fetch_faster_rcnn_models.sh
      

    2.2. Training

    There are 2 types of training methods provided by py-faster-rcnn. One is using the alternating optimization algrithm while another one is approximate joint training method. In this post, approximate joint training method is introduced. For the details, please refer to the paper, Faster R-CNN.

    $ cd $FRCN
    # ./experiments/scripts/faster_rcnn_end2end.sh [GPU_ID] [NET] [DATASET]
    # Directly run this command might have an error "AssertionError: Selective search data not found at:". For the solution, please refer to Part 4.
    $ ./experiments/scripts/faster_rcnn_end2end.sh 0 ZF pascal_voc
    

    Here is a remark about the logic and idea behind the training script.

    1. faster_rcnn_end2end.sh

      This is a shell script, which is the toppest layer of the whole pipeline, it monitors the input arguments, including GPU ID, network structure(ZF-Net, VGG, or others), dataset (PASCAL VOC, COCO or others), and extra configurations.

       # Part of the script
       GPU_ID=$1
       NET=$2
       NET_lc=${NET,,}
       DATASET=$3
      
       array=( $@ )
       len=${#array[@]}
       EXTRA_ARGS=${array[@]:3:$len}
       EXTRA_ARGS_SLUG=${EXTRA_ARGS// /_}
      

      Then, it will call two programs, train_net.py and followed by test_net.py. As the name given, train_net.py is to train a model while test_net.py is to evaluate performance of the trained model.

       # Part of the script
       time ./tools/train_net.py --gpu ${GPU_ID} 
         --solver models/${PT_DIR}/${NET}/faster_rcnn_end2end/solver.prototxt 
         --weights data/imagenet_models/${NET}.v2.caffemodel 
         --imdb ${TRAIN_IMDB} 
         --iters ${ITERS} 
         --cfg experiments/cfgs/faster_rcnn_end2end.yml 
         ${EXTRA_ARGS}
      
       set +x
       NET_FINAL=`grep -B 1 "done solving" ${LOG} | grep "Wrote snapshot" | awk '{print $4}'`
       set -x
      
       time ./tools/test_net.py --gpu ${GPU_ID} 
         --def models/${PT_DIR}/${NET}/faster_rcnn_end2end/test.prototxt 
         --net ${NET_FINAL} 
         --imdb ${TEST_IMDB} 
         --cfg experiments/cfgs/faster_rcnn_end2end.yml 
         ${EXTRA_ARGS}
      
    2. faster_rcnn_end2end.yml

      As we can see from faster_rcnn_end2end.shcfg comes from faster_rcnn_end2end.yml, which means that this file stores many importatnt configurations. Here shows some original configurations provided.

       EXP_DIR: faster_rcnn_end2end
       TRAIN:
         HAS_RPN: True
         IMS_PER_BATCH: 1
         BBOX_NORMALIZE_TARGETS_PRECOMPUTED: True
         RPN_POSITIVE_OVERLAP: 0.7
         RPN_BATCHSIZE: 256
         PROPOSAL_METHOD: gt
         BG_THRESH_LO: 0.0
       TEST:
         HAS_RPN: True
      

      However, if you wish to add your own configurations, such as number of iterations to take a model snapshot while training, you may refer to $FRCN/lib/fast_rcnn/config.py. This file contains all the configuration parameters. You don’t need to set the configuration in this config.py but just add a statement in faster_rcnn_end2end.yml. The program can parse the arguments automatically. Of course there exists default values if you do not declare the items in the .yml file.

       # Example to add SNAPSHOT_ITERS into the configuration
       EXP_DIR: faster_rcnn_end2end
       TRAIN:
         HAS_RPN: True
         IMS_PER_BATCH: 1
         BBOX_NORMALIZE_TARGETS_PRECOMPUTED: True
         RPN_POSITIVE_OVERLAP: 0.7
         RPN_BATCHSIZE: 256
         PROPOSAL_METHOD: gt
         BG_THRESH_LO: 0.0
         SNAPSHOT_ITERS: 10000 # This line is an example to add arguments.
       TEST:
         HAS_RPN: True
      
    3. train_net.py

      Basically, there are 3 things included in the file.

       # Read dataset
       imdb, roidb = combined_roidb(args.imdb_name)
      
       # Pass configurations from `faster_rcnn_end2end.sh` and `faster_rcnn_end2end.yml` to lower layer programs/functions
       # Call `fast_rcnn.train_net` for training
           train_net(args.solver, roidb, output_dir, pretrained_model=args.pretrained_model, max_iters=args.max_iters)
      
    4. combined_roidb & pascal_voc.py

      Recall that in faster_rcnn_end2end.sh. You have entered an argument,

      –imdb ${TRAIN_IMDB}

      combined_roidb do nothing but just trace back and read the datasets, such as train, val, and test using functions in $FRCN/lib/datasets/pascal_voc.py.

    5. fast_rcnn.train_net

      This function is at $FRCN/lib/fast_rcnn/train.py This function is the core of whole training pipeline since it calls solver.prototxt, but in fact you don’t need to care this part in most of the time.

    6. solver.prototxt & train.prototxt

      If you are familiar with Caffe, you should know the purpose of solver.prototxt and train.prototxt. Otherwise, you are suggested to go through Caffe’s MNIST tutorial. In here, the idea will be described briefly only.

      Basically, solver.prototxt tells the program where to find your ConvNet structure prototxt and some training setups, such as learning rate, learning policy, etc.

       train_net: "models/pascal_voc/ZF/faster_rcnn_end2end/train.prototxt"
       base_lr: 0.001
       lr_policy: "step"
       gamma: 0.1
       stepsize: 50000
       display: 20
       average_loss: 100
       momentum: 0.9
       weight_decay: 0.0005
       snapshot_prefix: "zf_faster_rcnn"
       iter_size: 2
      

      train.prototxt describes the network structure, including number of layer, type of layer, number of neurons in each layer, etc. Again, refer to Caffe’s MNIST tutorial in order to understand train.prototxt.


    Part 3. Training on new dataset

    In this part, basketball detection will be used as an example to illustrate how to train a new dataset using py-faster-rcnn.

    basketball_detection_demo

    3.1. Prepare dataset

    The dataset used in this part is downloaded from ImageNet.

    DISCLAIMER: This dataset should be only used for non-commercial research activities. Please follow the ImageNet rules about the use of the dataset.

    1. Download dataset

      Here provides a link to download Basketball Dataset. This dataset has the following structure.

       |-- basketball
           |-- JPEGImages 
               Contains all raw .JPEG images
           |-- ImageSets
               .txt files state training set, validataion set. Extension is not required in these files
           |-- Annotations
               Bounding boxes annotation for each image. The annotation files are written in .xml format. 
      
       # Unzip the folder
       $ mv basketball.tar.gz $FRCN/data/
       $ cd $FRCN/data
       $ tar xzf basketball.tar.gz
      
    2. Add a dataset python file

      Add a basketball.py to $FRCN/lib/datasets/. You may check on the source code for reference. If you wish to modify this file, basically, you can just find and replace basketball by your new dataset name.

    3. Add basketball_eval.py

      Add a basketball_eval.py to $FRCN/lib/datasets/. Again, check on the source code for reference. Again, find and replace basketabll.

    4. Update /lib/datasets/factory.py

      The purpose of basketball.py is to read a part of whole dataset, such as train_set or val_set. The purpose of function in factory.py is to get all sets of whole dataset.

    5. Add config file

      As mentioned in Part 2.2 (2), we need a config.yml to store configurations. In here, we can use the original faster_rcnn_end2end.yml as a reference. However, there are many configurations you can set in this file. In here, we may set EXP_DIR first and others if necessary.

       $ cd $FRCN/experiments/cfgs
       $ cp faster_rcnn_end2end.yml config.yml
      
    6. Update imdb.py

      Since new dataset may have conflicts in annotation with original PASCAL VOC dataset. For example, ImageNet images start with index 0 in row and col while PASCAL VOC dataset starts with index 1. In imdb.py, a part of code should be inserted in append_flipped_images(). Refer to source code.

    3.2. Prepare network and pre-trained model

    To train our own model, basically we don’t need to train the model from scratch unless you have a huge dataset which is comparable to ImageNet. Otherwise, we can train our model from fine-tuning a pre-trained Faster R-CNN model. The reason is because a pre-trained Faster R-CNN contains a lot of good lower level features, which can be used generally. Even you are using a new and self-defined architure (i.e. no existing pre-trained Faster R-CNN model), follow the training method of Faster R-CNN and train a Faster R-CNN first, followed by fine-tuning on your own dataset is suggested.

    For simplicity, the network and model adopted in this part is ZF-net and a pre-trained Faster R-CNN (ZF) respectively.

    $ cd $FRCN/models
    # copy a well-defined network and make modification based on it
    $ mkdir basketball
    $ cp ./pascal_voc/ZF/faster_rcnn_end2end/* ./basketball/
    $ cd basketball
    

    Now, we should modify all files in basketball/, including,

    • solver.prototxt
      • train_net
      • snapshot_prefix
      • Others if necessary
    • train.prototxt & test.prototxt

      For train.prototxt and val.prototxt, basically we need to update the number of output in final layers. Let’s say, in this basketball dataset, we only need 2 classes (background + basketball) and 8 output for bounding box regressor. Orignial pascal_voc have 21 classes including background and 21*4 bounding box regressor output.

        $ cd $FRCN/models/basketball
        $ grep 21 *
        $ grep 84 *
        # These two commands help you to check the lines that you should modify in the files.
      

      In this part, there are two more items we need to modify. Since we are fine-tuning a pre-trained ConvNet model on our own dataset and the number of output at last fully-connected layers (cls_score & bbox_pred) has been changed, the original weight in pre-trained ConvNet model is not suitable for our current network. The dimension is totally different. The details can be refered to Caffe’s fine-tuning tutorial. The solution is to rename the layers such that the weights for the layers will be initialized randomly instead of copying from pre-trained model (actually copying from pre-trained model will cause error).

        name: "cls_score" -> name: "cls_score_basketball"
        name: "bbox_pred" -> name: "bbox_pred_basketball"
      

      However, renaming the layers may cause problems in later parts since “cls_score” and “bbox_pred” are used as keys in testing. Therefore, in the training part, we can train the model accroding to the following procedure.

    1. Rename the layers to cls_score_basketball and bbox_pred_basketball
    2. Fine-tune pre-trained Faster R-CNN (FRCN) model and snapshot at iteration 0. Let’s call the snapshot Basketball_0.caffemodel. Stop training.
    3. Rename the layers back to cls_score and bbox_pred.
    4. Fine-tune Basketball_0.caffemodel to get our final model.

    The details and code will be explained in the following part.

    3.3. Training and evaluation

    Before training on your new dataset, you may need to check $FRCN/data/cache to remove caches if necessary. Caches stores information of previously trained dataset. It may cause problem while training.

    1. Rename the layers

      As mentions in the previous part, rename the two layers.

      Reminder: if you are using find and replace, please find the name with quotes(i.e. “cls_score”). If you just search for cls_score, without quotes, it may also replace some other layers since there is a layer named rpn_cls_score.

    2. First fine-tuning

      The purpose of first fine-tuning is to get a caffemodel which has two outputs at final fully-connected layers.

       $ ./tools/train_net.py --gpu 0 --weights data/faster_rcnn_models/ZF_faster_rcnn_final.caffemodel --imdb basketball_train --cfg experiments/cfgs/config.yml --solver models/basketball/solver.prototxt --iter 0
      

      After this fine-tuning, we should get the model we needed.

    3. Rename the layers back

      Rename the two layers back to “cls_score” and “bbox_pred”.

    4. Second fine-tuning

      This fine-tuning should train models for our final use. The pre-trained model in this stage is the model we saved in stage 2.

       $ ./tools/train_net.py --gpu 0 --weights output/basketball/train/zf_faster_rcnn_basketball_iter_0.caffemodel --imdb basketball_train --cfg experiments/cfgs/config.yml --solver models/basketball/solver.prototxt --iter 10000
      
    5. Evaluation / Testing

      To test the performance of trained model, we can use the provided test_net.py for the purpose.

       $ ./tools/test_net.py --gpu 0 --def models/basketball/test.prototxt --net output/basketball/train/zf_faster_rcnn_basketball_iter_20000.caffemodel --imdb basketball_val --cfg experiments/cfgs/config.yml
      

      At the end, you should be able to see something like this.

      result_sample

    After going through such long path, training on py-faster-rcnn is completed!


    Part 4. Error and solution

    1. no easydict, cv2

       # Without Anaconda
       $ sudo pip install easydict
       $ sudo apt-get install python-opencv
          
       # With Anaconda
       $ conda install -c verydeep easydict
       $ conda install opencv
       # Normally, people will follow the online instruction at https://anaconda.org/auto/easydict and install auto/easydict. However, this easydict (ver.1.4) has a problem in passing the message of configuration and cause many unexpected error while verydeep/easydict (ver.1.6) won't cause these errors.
      
    2. assertionError: Selective Search data is not found

      Solution: install verydeep/easydict rather than auto/easydict

       $ conda install -c verydeep easydict
      
    3. box [:, 0] > box[:, 2]

      Solution: add the following code block in imdb.py

       def append_flipped_images(self):
           num_images = self.num_images
           widths = self._get_widths()
           for i in xrange(num_images):
               boxes = self.roidb[i]['boxes'].copy()
               oldx1 = boxes[:, 0].copy()
               oldx2 = boxes[:, 2].copy()
               boxes[:, 0] = widths[i] - oldx2
               boxes[:, 2] = widths[i] - oldx1
               for b in range(len(boxes)):
                       if boxes[b][2] < boxes[b][0]:
                           boxes[b][0]=0
               assert (boxes[:, 2] >= boxes[:, 0]).all()
      
    4. For ImageNet detection dataset, no need to minus one on coordinates

       # Load object bounding boxes into a data frame.
       for ix, obj in enumerate(objs):
           bbox = obj.find('bndbox')
           # Make pixel indexes 0-based
           x1 = float(bbox.find('xmin').text)
           y1 = float(bbox.find('ymin').text)
           x2 = float(bbox.find('xmax').text)
           y2 = float(bbox.find('ymax').text)
           cls = self._class_to_ind[obj.find('name').text.lower().strip()]
      

    Reference

    zhang_shuai’s blog

    deboc’s tutorial

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  • 原文地址:https://www.cnblogs.com/haiyang21/p/7755398.html
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