DeepPavlov 1.0 is an open-source NLP framework built on PyTorch and transformers. DeepPavlov 1.0 is created for modular and configuration-driven development of state-of-the-art NLP models and supports a wide range of NLP model applications. DeepPavlov 1.0 is designed for practitioners with limited knowledge of NLP/ML.
name | Description |
---|---|
βοΈ Demo | Check out our NLP models in the online demo |
π Documentation | How to use DeepPavlov 1.0 and its features |
π Model List | Find the NLP model you need in the list of available models |
πͺ Contribution Guide | Please read the contribution guidelines before making a contribution |
π Issues | If you have an issue with DeepPavlov, please let us know |
β© Forum | Please let us know if you have a problem with DeepPavlov |
π¦ Blogs | Read about our current development |
π¦ Extended colab tutorials | Check out the code tutorials for our models |
π Docker Hub | Check out the Docker images for rapid deployment |
π©βπ« Feedback | Please leave us your feedback to make DeepPavlov better |
-
DeepPavlov supports
Linux
,Windows 10+
(through WSL/WSL2),MacOS
(Big Sur+) platforms,Python 3.6
,3.7
,3.8
,3.9
and3.10
. Depending on the model used, you may need from 4 to 16 GB RAM. -
Create and activate a virtual environment:
Linux
python -m venv env source ./env/bin/activate
-
Install the package inside the environment:
pip install deeppavlov
There is a bunch of great pre-trained NLP models in DeepPavlov. Each model is determined by its config file.
List of models is available on
the doc page in
the deeppavlov.configs
(Python):
from deeppavlov import configs
When you're decided on the model (+ config file), there are two ways to train, evaluate and infer it:
- via Command line interface (CLI) and
- via Python.
By default, DeepPavlov installs models requirements from PyPI. PyTorch from PyPI could not support your device CUDA capability. To run supported DeepPavlov models on GPU you should have CUDA compatible with used GPU and PyTorch version required by DeepPavlov models. See docs for details. GPU with Pascal or newer architecture and 4+ GB VRAM is recommended.
To get predictions from a model interactively through CLI, run
python -m deeppavlov interact <config_path> [-d] [-i]
-d
downloads required data - pretrained model files and embeddings (optional).-i
installs model requirements (optional).
You can train it in the same simple way:
python -m deeppavlov train <config_path> [-d] [-i]
Dataset will be downloaded regardless of whether there was -d
flag or not.
To train on your own data you need to modify dataset reader path in the train config doc. The data format is specified in the corresponding model doc page.
There are even more actions you can perform with configs:
python -m deeppavlov <action> <config_path> [-d] [-i]
<action>
can beinstall
to install model requirements (same as-i
),download
to download model's data (same as-d
),train
to train the model on the data specified in the config file,evaluate
to calculate metrics on the same dataset,interact
to interact via CLI,riseapi
to run a REST API server (see doc),predict
to get prediction for samples from stdin or from <file_path> if-f <file_path>
is specified.
<config_path>
specifies path (or name) of model's config file-d
downloads required data-i
installs model requirements
To get predictions from a model interactively through Python, run
from deeppavlov import build_model
model = build_model(<config_path>, install=True, download=True)
# get predictions for 'input_text1', 'input_text2'
model(['input_text1', 'input_text2'])
where
install=True
installs model requirements (optional),download=True
downloads required data from web - pretrained model files and embeddings (optional),<config_path>
is model name (e.g.'ner_ontonotes_bert_mult'
), path to the chosen model's config file (e.g."deeppavlov/configs/ner/ner_ontonotes_bert_mult.json"
), ordeeppavlov.configs
attribute (e.g.deeppavlov.configs.ner.ner_ontonotes_bert_mult
without quotation marks).
You can train it in the same simple way:
from deeppavlov import train_model
model = train_model(<config_path>, install=True, download=True)
To train on your own data you need to modify dataset reader path in the train config doc. The data format is specified in the corresponding model doc page.
You can also calculate metrics on the dataset specified in your config file:
from deeppavlov import evaluate_model
model = evaluate_model(<config_path>, install=True, download=True)
DeepPavlov also allows to build a model from components for inference using Python.
DeepPavlov is Apache 2.0 - licensed.
@inproceedings{savkin-etal-2024-deeppavlov,
title = "DeepPavlov 1.0: Your Gateway to Advanced NLP Models Backed by Transformers and Transfer Learning",
author = "Savkin Maksim and Voznyuk Anastasia and Ignatov Fedor and Korzanova Anna and Karpov Dmitry and Popov Alexander and Konovalov Vasily"
editor = "Hernandez Farias and Delia Irazu and Hope Tom and Li Manling",
booktitle = "Proceedings of the 2024 Conference on Empirical Methods in Natural Language Processing: System Demonstrations",
month = nov,
year = "2024",
address = "Miami, Florida, USA",
publisher = "Association for Computational Linguistics",
url = "https://aclanthology.org/2024.emnlp-demo.47",
pages = "465--474",
abstract = "We present DeepPavlov 1.0, an open-source framework for using Natural Language Processing (NLP) models by leveraging transfer learning techniques. DeepPavlov 1.0 is created for modular and configuration-driven development of state-of-the-art NLP models and supports a wide range of NLP model applications. DeepPavlov 1.0 is designed for practitioners with limited knowledge of NLP/ML. DeepPavlov is based on PyTorch and supports HuggingFace transformers. DeepPavlov is publicly released under the Apache 2.0 license and provides access to an online demo.",
}