LaborSampler¶
-
class
dgl.dataloading.
LaborSampler
(fanouts, edge_dir='in', prob=None, importance_sampling=0, layer_dependency=False, prefetch_node_feats=None, prefetch_labels=None, prefetch_edge_feats=None, output_device=None)[source]¶ Bases:
dgl.dataloading.base.BlockSampler
Sampler that builds computational dependency of node representations via labor sampling for multilayer GNN from (LA)yer-neigh(BOR) Sampling: Defusing Neighborhood Explosion in GNNs
This sampler will make every node gather messages from a fixed number of neighbors per edge type. The neighbors are picked uniformly with default parameters. For every vertex t that will be considered to be sampled, there will be a single random variate r_t.
- Parameters
fanouts (list[int] or list[dict[etype, int]]) –
List of neighbors to sample per edge type for each GNN layer, with the i-th element being the fanout for the i-th GNN layer.
If only a single integer is provided, DGL assumes that every edge type will have the same fanout.
If -1 is provided for one edge type on one layer, then all inbound edges of that edge type will be included.
edge_dir (str, default
'in'
) – Can be either'in'
where the neighbors will be sampled according to incoming edges, or'out'
otherwise, same asdgl.sampling.sample_neighbors()
.prob (str, optional) – If given, the probability of each neighbor being sampled is proportional to the edge feature value with the given name in
g.edata
. The feature must be a scalar on each edge. In this case, the returned blocks edata include'edge_weights'
that needs to be used in the message passing operation.importance_sampling (int, default
0
) – Whether to use importance sampling or uniform sampling, use of negative values optimizes importance sampling probabilities until convergence while use of positive values runs optimization steps that many times. If the value is i, then LABOR-i variant is used. When used with a nonzero parameter, the returned blocks edata include'edge_weights'
that needs to be used in the message passing operation.layer_dependency (bool, default
False
) – Specifies whether different layers should use same random variates. Results into a reduction in the number of vertices sampled, but may degrade the quality slightly.prefetch_node_feats (list[str] or dict[ntype, list[str]], optional) – The source node data to prefetch for the first MFG, corresponding to the input node features necessary for the first GNN layer.
prefetch_labels (list[str] or dict[ntype, list[str]], optional) – The destination node data to prefetch for the last MFG, corresponding to the node labels of the minibatch.
prefetch_edge_feats (list[str] or dict[etype, list[str]], optional) – The edge data names to prefetch for all the MFGs, corresponding to the edge features necessary for all GNN layers.
output_device (device, optional) – The device of the output subgraphs or MFGs. Default is the same as the minibatch of seed nodes.
Examples
Node classification
To train a 3-layer GNN for node classification on a set of nodes
train_nid
on a homogeneous graph where each node takes messages from 5, 10, 15 neighbors for the first, second, and third layer respectively (assuming the backend is PyTorch):>>> sampler = dgl.dataloading.LaborSampler([5, 10, 15]) >>> dataloader = dgl.dataloading.DataLoader( ... g, train_nid, sampler, ... batch_size=1024, shuffle=True, drop_last=False, num_workers=4) >>> for input_nodes, output_nodes, blocks in dataloader: ... train_on(blocks)
If training on a heterogeneous graph and you want different number of neighbors for each edge type, one should instead provide a list of dicts. Each dict would specify the number of neighbors to pick per edge type.
>>> sampler = dgl.dataloading.LaborSampler([ ... {('user', 'follows', 'user'): 5, ... ('user', 'plays', 'game'): 4, ... ('game', 'played-by', 'user'): 3}] * 3)
If you would like non-uniform labor sampling:
>>> # any non-negative 1D vector works >>> g.edata['p'] = torch.rand(g.num_edges()) >>> sampler = dgl.dataloading.LaborSampler([5, 10, 15], prob='p')
Edge classification and link prediction
This class can also work for edge classification and link prediction together with
as_edge_prediction_sampler()
.>>> sampler = dgl.dataloading.LaborSampler([5, 10, 15]) >>> sampler = dgl.dataloading.as_edge_prediction_sampler(sampler) >>> dataloader = dgl.dataloading.DataLoader( ... g, train_eid, sampler, ... batch_size=1024, shuffle=True, drop_last=False, num_workers=4)
See the documentation
as_edge_prediction_sampler()
for more details.Notes
For the concept of MFGs, please refer to User Guide Section 6 and Minibatch Training Tutorials.