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Prerequisites

In this section, we demonstrate how to prepare an environment with PyTorch.

MMSelfSup works on Linux (Windows and macOS are not officially supported). It requires Python 3.7+, CUDA 9.2+ and PyTorch 1.6+.

Note

If you are experienced with PyTorch and have already installed it, just skip this part and jump to the next Installation section. Otherwise, you can follow these steps for the preparation.

Step 0. Download and install Miniconda from the official website.

Step 1. Create a conda environment and activate it.

conda create --name openmmlab python=3.8 -y
conda activate openmmlab

Step 2. Install PyTorch following official instructions, e.g.

On GPU platforms:

conda install pytorch torchvision -c pytorch

On CPU platforms:

conda install pytorch torchvision cpuonly -c pytorch

Installation

We recommend users to follow our best practices to install MMSelfSup. However, the whole process is highly customizable. See Customize Installation section for more information.

Best practices

Step 0. Install MMEngine and MMCV using MIM.

pip install -U openmim
mim install mmengine
mim install 'mmcv>=2.0.0rc1'

Step 1. Install MMSelfSup.

According to your needs, we support two installation modes:

  • Install from source (Recommended): You want to develop your own self-supervised task or new features based on MMSelfSup framework, e.g., adding new datasets or models. And you can use all tools we provided.

  • Install as a Python package: You just want to call MMSelfSup’s APIs or import MMSelfSup’s modules in your project.

Install from source

In this case, install mmselfsup from source:

git clone https://github.com/open-mmlab/mmselfsup.git
cd mmselfsup
git checkout 1.x
pip install -v -e .
# "-v" means verbose, or more output
# "-e" means installing a project in editable mode,
# thus any local modifications made to the code will take effect without reinstallation.

Optionally, if you want to contribute to MMSelfSup or experience experimental functions, please checkout to the dev-1.x branch:

git checkout dev-1.x

Install as a Python package

Just install with pip.

pip install 'mmselfsup>=1.0.0rc0'

Verify the installation

To verify whether MMSelfSup is installed correctly, you can run the following command.

import mmselfsup
print(mmselfsup.__version__)
# Example output: 1.0.0rc0 or newer

Customize installation

Benchmark

The Best practices is for basic usage. If you need to evaluate your pre-trained model with some downstream tasks such as detection or segmentation, please also install MMDetection and MMSegmentation.

If you don’t run MMDetection and MMSegmentation benchmarks, it is unnecessary to install them.

You can simply install MMDetection and MMSegmentation with the following command:

pip install 'mmdet>=3.0.0rc0' 'mmsegmentation>=1.0.0rc0'

For more details, you can check the installation page of MMDetection and MMSegmentation.

CUDA versions

When installing PyTorch, you need to specify the version of CUDA. If you are not clear on which to choose, follow our recommendations:

  • For Ampere-based NVIDIA GPUs, such as GeForce 30 series and NVIDIA A100, CUDA 11 is a must.

  • For older NVIDIA GPUs, CUDA 11 is backward compatible, but CUDA 10.2 offers better compatibility and is more lightweight.

Please make sure the GPU driver satisfies the minimum version requirements. See this table for more information.

Note

Installing CUDA runtime libraries is enough if you follow our best practices, because no CUDA code will be compiled locally. However if you hope to compile MMCV from source or develop other CUDA operators, you need to install the complete CUDA toolkit from NVIDIA’s website, and its version should match the CUDA version of PyTorch. i.e., the specified version of cudatoolkit in conda install command.

Install MMEngine without MIM

To install MMEngine with pip instead of MIM, please follow MMEngine installation guides.

For example, you can install MMEngine by the following command.

pip install mmengine

Install MMCV without MIM

MMCV contains C++ and CUDA extensions, thus depending on PyTorch in a complex way. MIM solves such dependencies automatically and makes the installation easier. However, it is not a must.

To install MMCV with pip instead of MIM, please follow MMCV installation guides. This requires manually specifying a find-url based on PyTorch version and its CUDA version.

For example, the following command installs mmcv-full built for PyTorch 1.12.0 and CUDA 11.6.

pip install 'mmcv>=2.0.0rc1' -f https://download.openmmlab.com/mmcv/dist/cu116/torch1.12.0/index.html

Install on CPU-only platforms

MMSelfSup can be built for CPU only environment. In CPU mode, you can train, test or inference a model.

Some functionalities are gone in this mode, usually GPU-compiled ops. But don’t worry, almost all models in MMSelfSup don’t depend on these ops.

Install on Google Colab

Google Colab usually has PyTorch installed, thus we only need to install MMCV and MMSeflSup with the following commands.

Step 0. Install MMEngine and MMCV using MIM.

!pip3 install openmim
!mim install mmengine
!mim install 'mmcv>=2.0.0rc1'

Step 1. Install MMSelfSup from the source.

!git clone https://github.com/open-mmlab/mmselfsup.git
%cd mmselfsup
!git checkout 1.x
!pip install -e .

Step 2. Verification.

import mmselfsup
print(mmselfsup.__version__)
# Example output: 1.0.0rc0 or newer

Note

Within Jupyter, the exclamation mark ! is used to call external executables and %cd is a magic command to change the current working directory of Python.

Using MMSelfSup with Docker

We provide a Dockerfile to build an image. Ensure that your docker version >=19.03.

# build an image with PyTorch 1.10.0, CUDA 11.3, CUDNN 8.
docker build -f ./docker/Dockerfile --rm -t mmselfsup:torch1.10.0-cuda11.3-cudnn8 .

Important: Make sure you’ve installed the nvidia-container-toolkit.

Run the following command:

docker run --gpus all --shm-size=8g -it -v {DATA_DIR}:/workspace/mmselfsup/data mmselfsup:torch1.10.0-cuda11.3-cudnn8 /bin/bash

{DATA_DIR} is your local folder containing all these datasets.

Trouble shooting

If you have some issues during the installation, please first view the FAQ page. You may open an issue on GitHub if no solution is found.

Using Multiple MMSelfSup Versions

If there are more than one mmselfsup on your machine, and you want to use them alternatively, the recommended way is to create multiple conda environments and use different environments for different versions.

Another way is to insert the following code to the main scripts (train.py, test.py or any other scripts you run)

import os.path as osp
import sys
sys.path.insert(0, osp.join(osp.dirname(osp.abspath(__file__)), '../'))

Or run the following command in the terminal of corresponding root folder to temporally use the current one.

export PYTHONPATH="$(pwd)":$PYTHONPATH
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