## Step 1: using PGL to create a graph Suppose we have a graph with 10 nodes and 14 edges as shown in the following figure: ![A simple graph](images/quick_start_graph.png) Our purpose is to train a graph neural network to classify yellow and green nodes. So we can create this graph in such way: ```python import pgl from pgl import graph # import pgl module import numpy as np def build_graph(): # define the number of nodes; we can use number to represent every node num_node = 10 # add edges, we represent all edges as a list of tuple (src, dst) edge_list = [(2, 0), (2, 1), (3, 1),(4, 0), (5, 0), (6, 0), (6, 4), (6, 5), (7, 0), (7, 1), (7, 2), (7, 3), (8, 0), (9, 7)] # Each node can be represented by a d-dimensional feature vector, here for simple, the feature vectors are randomly generated. d = 16 feature = np.random.randn(num_node, d).astype("float32") # each edge has it own weight edge_feature = np.random.randn(len(edge_list), 1).astype("float32") # create a graph g = graph.Graph(num_nodes = num_node, edges = edge_list, node_feat = {'feature':feature}, edge_feat ={'edge_feature': edge_feature}) return g # create a graph object for saving graph data g = build_graph() ``` After creating a graph in PGL, we can print out some information in the graph. ```python print('There are %d nodes in the graph.'%g.num_nodes) print('There are %d edges in the graph.'%g.num_edges) # Out: # There are 10 nodes in the graph. # There are 14 edges in the graph. ``` Currently our PGL is developed based on static computational mode of paddle (we’ll support dynamic computational model later). We need to build model upon a virtual data holder. GraphWrapper provide a virtual graph structure that users can build deep learning models based on this virtual graph. And then feed real graph data to run the models. ```python import paddle.fluid as fluid use_cuda = False place = fluid.CUDAPlace(0) if use_cuda else fluid.CPUPlace() # use GraphWrapper as a container for graph data to construct a graph neural network gw = pgl.graph_wrapper.GraphWrapper(name='graph', node_feat=g.node_feat_info()) ``` ## Step 2: create a simple Graph Convolutional Network(GCN) In this tutorial, we use a simple Graph Convolutional Network(GCN) developed by [Kipf and Welling](https://arxiv.org/abs/1609.02907) to perform node classification. Here we use the simplest GCN structure. If readers want to know more about GCN, you can refer to the original paper. * In layer $l$,each node $u_i^l$ has a feature vector $h_i^l$; * In every layer, the idea of GCN is that the feature vector $h_i^{l+1}$ of each node $u_i^{l+1}$ in the next layer are obtained by weighting the feature vectors of all the neighboring nodes and then go through a non-linear transformation. In PGL, we can easily implement a GCN layer as follows: ```python # define GCN layer function def gcn_layer(gw, nfeat, efeat, hidden_size, name, activation): # gw is a GraphWrapper;feature is the feature vectors of nodes # define message function def send_func(src_feat, dst_feat, edge_feat): # In this tutorial, we return the feature vector of the source node as message return src_feat['h'] * edge_feat['e'] # define reduce function def recv_func(feat): # we sum the feature vector of the source node return fluid.layers.sequence_pool(feat, pool_type='sum') # trigger message to passing msg = gw.send(send_func, nfeat_list=[('h', nfeat)], efeat_list=[('e', efeat)]) # recv funciton receives message and trigger reduce funcition to handle message output = gw.recv(msg, recv_func) output = fluid.layers.fc(output, size=hidden_size, bias_attr=False, act=activation, name=name) return output ``` After defining the GCN layer, we can construct a deeper GCN model with two GCN layers. ```python output = gcn_layer(gw, gw.node_feat['feature'], gw.edge_feat['edge_feature'], hidden_size=8, name='gcn_layer_1', activation='relu') output = gcn_layer(gw, output, gw.edge_feat['edge_feature'], hidden_size=1, name='gcn_layer_2', activation=None) ``` ## Step 3: data preprocessing Since we implement a node binary classifier, we can use 0 and 1 to represent two classes respectively. ```python y = [0,1,1,1,0,0,0,1,0,1] label = np.array(y, dtype="float32") label = np.expand_dims(label, -1) ``` ## Step 4: training program The training process of GCN is the same as that of other paddle-based models. - First we create a loss function. - Then we create a optimizer. - Finally, we create a executor and train the model. ```python # create a label layer as a container node_label = fluid.layers.data("node_label", shape=[None, 1], dtype="float32", append_batch_size=False) # using cross-entropy with sigmoid layer as the loss function loss = fluid.layers.sigmoid_cross_entropy_with_logits(x=output, label=node_label) # calculate the mean loss loss = fluid.layers.mean(loss) # choose the Adam optimizer and set the learning rate to be 0.01 adam = fluid.optimizer.Adam(learning_rate=0.01) adam.minimize(loss) # create the executor exe = fluid.Executor(place) exe.run(fluid.default_startup_program()) feed_dict = gw.to_feed(g) # gets graph data for epoch in range(30): feed_dict['node_label'] = label train_loss = exe.run(fluid.default_main_program(), feed=feed_dict, fetch_list=[loss], return_numpy=True) print('Epoch %d | Loss: %f'%(epoch, train_loss[0])) ```