# Gated Graph Neural Networks Graph-to-sequence networks allow information representable as a graph (such as an annotated NLP sentence or computer code structured as an AST) to be connected to a sequence generator to produce output which can benefit from the graph structure of the input. The training option `-encoder_type ggnn` implements a GGNN (Gated Graph Neural Network) based on github.com/JamesChuanggg/ggnn.pytorch.git which is based on the paper "Gated Graph Sequence Neural Networks" by Y. Li, D. Tarlow, M. Brockschmidt, and R. Zemel. The ggnn encoder is used for program equivalence proof generation in the paper [Equivalence of Dataflow Graphs via Rewrite Rules Using a Graph-to-Sequence Neural Model](https://arxiv.org/abs/2002.06799). That paper shows the benefit of the graph-to-sequence model over a sequence-to-sequence model for this problem which can be well represented with graphical input. The integration of the ggnn network into the OpenNMT-py system supports attention on the nodes as well as a copy mechanism. ### Dependencies * There are no additional dependencies beyond the rnn-to-rnn sequence2sequence requirements. ### Quick Start To get started, we provide a toy graph-to-sequence example. We assume that the working directory is `OpenNMT-py` throughout this document. 0) Download the data to a sibling directory. ``` cd .. git clone https://github.com/SteveKommrusch/OpenNMT-py-ggnn-example source OpenNMT-py-ggnn-example/env.sh cd OpenNMT-py ``` The YAML configuration for this example is the following: ```yaml # save_data is where the necessary objects will be written save_data: OpenNMT-py-ggnn-example/run/example # Filter long examples src_seq_length: 1000 tgt_seq_length: 30 # Data definition data: cnndm: path_src: OpenNMT-py-ggnn-example/src-train.txt path_tgt: OpenNMT-py-ggnn-example/tgt-train.txt transforms: [filtertoolong] weight: 1 valid: path_src: OpenNMT-py-ggnn-example/src-val.txt path_tgt: OpenNMT-py-ggnn-example/tgt-val.txt src_vocab: OpenNMT-py-ggnn-example/srcvocab.txt tgt_vocab: OpenNMT-py-ggnn-example/tgtvocab.txt save_model: OpenNMT-py-ggnn-example/run/model # Model options train_steps: 10000 save_checkpoint_steps: 5000 encoder_type: ggnn layers: 2 decoder_type: rnn learning_rate: 0.1 start_decay_steps: 5000 learning_rate_decay: 0.8 global_attention: general batch_size: 32 # src_ggnn_size is larger than vocab plus features to allow one-hot settings src_ggnn_size: 100 # src_word_vec_size less than hidden_size allows rnn learning during GGNN steps src_word_vec_size: 16 # Increase tgt_word_vec_size, hidden_size, and state_dim together # to provide larger GGNN embeddings and larger decoder RNN tgt_word_vec_size: 64 hidden_size: 64 state_dim: 64 bridge: true gpu_ranks: 0 n_edge_types: 9 # Increasing n_steps slows model computation but allows information # to be aggregated over more node hops n_steps: 5 n_node: 70 ``` 2) Train the model. ``` python train.py -config examples/ggnn.yaml ``` 3) Translate the graph of 2 equivalent linear algebra expressions into the axiom list which proves them equivalent. ``` python translate.py \ -model ../OpenNMT-py-ggnn-example/run/model_step_10000.pt \ -src ../OpenNMT-py-ggnn-example/src-test.txt \ -beam_size 5 -n_best 5 \ -gpu 0 \ -output ../OpenNMT-py-ggnn-example/run/pred-test_beam5.txt \ > ../OpenNMT-py-ggnn-example/run/translate5.out 2>&1 ``` ### Graph data format The GGNN implementation leverages the sequence processing and vocabulary interface of OpenNMT. Each graph is provided on an input line, much like a sentence is provided on an input line. A graph nearal network input line includes `sentence tokens`, `feature values`, and `edges` separated by `` (end of tokens) tokens. Below is example of the input for a pair of algebraic equations structured as a graph: ``` Sentence tokens Feature values Edges --------------- ------------------ ------------------------------------------------------- - - - 0 a a b b 0 1 2 3 4 4 2 3 12 0 2 1 3 2 4 , 0 6 1 7 2 5 , 0 4 , 0 5 , , , , 8 0 , 8 1 ``` The equations being represented are `((a - a) - b)` and `(0 - b)`, the `sentence tokens` are provided before the first ``. After the first ``, the `features values` are provided. These are extra flags with information on each node in the graph. In this case, the 8 sentence tokens have feature flags ranging from 0 to 4; the 9th feature flag defines a 9th node in the graph which does not have sentence token information, just feature data. Nodes with any non-number flag (such as `-` or `.`) will not have a feature added. Multiple groups of features can be provided by using the `,` delimiter between the first and second '' tokens. After the second `` token, edge information is provided. Edge data is given as node pairs, hence ` 0 2 1 3` indicates that there are edges from node 0 to node 2 and from node 1 to node 3. The GGNN supports multiple edge types (which result mathematically in multiple weight matrices for the model) and the edge types are separated by `,` tokens after the second `` token. Note that the source vocabulary file needs to include the '' token, the ',' token, and all of the numbers used for feature flags and node identifiers in the edge list. ### Vocabulary notes Because edge information and feature data is provided through tokens in the source files, the `-src_vocab` file requires a certain format. The `` token should occur in the vocab files after all tokens which are part of the `sentence tokens` shown above. After the `` token, any remaining numerical tokens appropriate for node numbers or feature values can be included too (it is OK for integers to occur in the `sentence tokens` and such tokens should not be duplicated after the `` token). The full size of the vector used as input per node is the number of tokens up to and including `` plus the largest feature number used in the input. If the optional `src_ggnn_size` parameter is used to create an embedding layer, then its value must be at or above the full node input vector size; the embedding initializes the lower `src_word_vec_size` dimensions of the node value. If `src_ggnn_size` is not used, then `state_dim` must bet at or above the full node input vector size; as there is no embedding layer in this case, the initial value of the node is set directly. Generally, one can use `onmt_build_vocab` to process GGNN input data to create vocab files and then adjust the source vocab appropriately. For an example of generating and adjusting a vocabulary for GGNN, please refer to [GGNN end-to-end example](https://github.com/SteveKommrusch/OpenNMT-py-ggnn-example#graph-input-processing-end-to-end-example). ### Options * `-rnn_type (str)`: style of recurrent unit to use, one of [LSTM] * `src_ggnn_size (int)`: Size of token-to-node embedding input * `src_word_vec_size (int)`: Size of token-to-node embedding output * `-state_dim (int)`: Number of state dimensions in nodes * `-n_edge_types (int)`: Number of edge types * `-bidir_edges (bool)`: True if reverse edges should be automatically created * `-n_node (int)`: Max nodes in graph * `-bridge_extra_node (bool)`: True indicates only the vector from the 1st extra node (after token listing) should be used for decoder initialization; False indicates all node vectors should be averaged together for decoder initialization * `-n_steps (int)`: Steps to advance graph encoder for stabilization * `-src_vocab (int)`: Path to source vocabulary ### Acknowledgement This gated graph neural network is leveraged from https://github.com/JamesChuanggg/ggnn.pytorch.git which is based on the paper [Gated Graph Sequence Neural Networks](https://arxiv.org/abs/1511.05493) by Y. Li, D. Tarlow, M. Brockschmidt, and R. Zemel.