Design Doc: Functions, Operators, and Layers¶
In a DL system, we can compose one or more fine grained operators into a coarse grained one. For example, the FC layer can be composed of a multiplication operator and an add operator.
Historically, some fine grained operations are known as operators, and some coarse level ones are known as layers. But we need a well-defined separation.
In general, operators are those very fine grained operations, e.g., mul and add. In the implementation, we can write them as C++ functions:
template <typename T> T add(T x, T y) { return x + y; }
template <typename T> T mul(T x, T y) { return x * y; }
Then we can wrap them into operators which are C++ classes and can be created from Python bindings by name. A C macro can do this. For example, the following macro invocation
#define MAKE_FUNCTION_OPERATOR(mul);
generates
template <typename T> class mulOp : public OperatorBase {...};
REGISTER_OP(mulOp<float32>, "mul");
so that in Python we can create operator mul by:
X1 = Var()
X2 = Var()
Y = Var()
paddle.cpp.create_operator("mul", input=[X1, X2], output=Y)
Also, at the same time, we can compose a coarse level C++ operator class by composing functions mul
and add
:
template <typename T>
class FCOp : public OperatorBase {
public:
void Run(...) {
add(mul(Input<T>("X"), Input<T>("W")), Input<T>("b");
}
};
REGISTER_OP(FCOp, "fc");
We need to support such composition in Python as well. To do so, we need a higher level Python wrapping of operator creation than paddle.cpp.create_operator
. This higher level operator API should be compatible with the layer API.
Let’s explain using an example. Suppose that we are going to compose the FC using mul and add in Python, we’d like to have Python functions mul
and add
defined in module operator
:
def operator.mul(X1, X2):
O = Var()
paddle.cpp.create_operator("mul", input={X1, Y1], output=O)
return O
def operator.add(X1, X2):
O = Var()
paddle.cpp.create_operator("add", input={X1, X2], output=O)
return O
Above code snippets are automatically generated. Given them, users can define
def layer.fc(X):
W = Var()
b = Var()
return operator.add(operator.mul(X, W), b)
If we don’t have operator.mul
and operator.add
, the definiton of layer.fc
would be complicated:
def layer.fc(X):
W = Var()
b = Var()
O1 = Var()
paddle.cpp.create_operator("mul", input=[X, W], output=O1)
O2 = Var()
paddle.cpp.create_operator("add", input=[O1, b], output=O2)
return O2
We’d like to have Python bindings to operators in package paddle.operator
, and Python compositions of operators in package paddle.layer
. So we have the following concepts in above illustrative example:
| C++ functions/functors | mul | add | | | |————————|————–|————–|————-|———-| | C++ operator class | mulOp | addOp | FCOp | | | Python binding | operator.mul | operator.add | operator.fc | | | Python function | | | | layer.fc |
This is how we differentiate layer and operators in PaddlePaddle:
- those defined in C++ and have a lightweighted Python wrapper in module
operators
are operators; whereas - those who don’t have C++ implementations but a Python implementation that compose C++ operators are known as layers.