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Creating TfRecords from a list of strings and feeding a Graph in tensorflow after decoding

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The aim was to create a database of TfRecords. Given: I have 23 folders each contain 7500 image, and 23 text file, each with 7500 line describing features for the 7500 images in separate folders.

I created the database through this code:

import tensorflow as tf
import numpy as np
from PIL import Image

def _Float_feature(value):
    return tf.train.Feature(float_list=tf.train.FloatList(value=[value]))

def _bytes_feature(value):
    return tf.train.Feature(bytes_list=tf.train.BytesList(value=[value]))

def _int64_feature(value):
    return tf.train.Feature(int64_list=tf.train.Int64List(value=[value]))

def create_image_annotation_data():
    # Code to read images and features.
    # images represent a list of numpy array of images, and features_labels represent a list of strings
    # where each string represent the whole set of features for each image. 
    return images, features_labels

# This is the starting point of the program.
# Now I have the images stored as list of numpy array, and the features as list of strings.
images, annotations = create_image_annotation_data()

tfrecords_filename = "database.tfrecords"
writer = tf.python_io.TFRecordWriter(tfrecords_filename)

for img, ann in zip(images, annotations):

    # Note that the height and width are needed to reconstruct the original image.
    height = img.shape[0]
    width = img.shape[1]

    # This is how data is converted into binary
    img_raw = img.tostring()
    example = tf.train.Example(features=tf.train.Features(feature={
        'height': _int64_feature(height),
        'width': _int64_feature(width),
        'image_raw': _bytes_feature(img_raw),
        'annotation_raw': _bytes_feature(tf.compat.as_bytes(ann))
    }))

    writer.write(example.SerializeToString())

writer.close()

reconstructed_images = []

record_iterator = tf.python_io.tf_record_iterator(path=tfrecords_filename)

for string_record in record_iterator:
    example = tf.train.Example()
    example.ParseFromString(string_record)

    height = int(example.features.feature['height']
                 .int64_list
                 .value[0])

    width = int(example.features.feature['width']
                .int64_list
                .value[0])

    img_string = (example.features.feature['image_raw']
                  .bytes_list
                  .value[0])

    annotation_string = (example.features.feature['annotation_raw']
                         .bytes_list
                         .value[0])

    img_1d = np.fromstring(img_string, dtype=np.uint8)
    reconstructed_img = img_1d.reshape((height, width, -1))
    annotation_reconstructed = annotation_string.decode('utf-8')

Therefore, after converting images and text into tfRecords and after being able to read them and convert images into numpy and the (binary text) into string in python, I tried to go the extra mile by using a filename_queue with a reader (The purpose was to provide the graph with batch of data rather one peace of data at a time. Additionally, the aim was to enqueue and dequeue the queue of examples through different threads, therefore, making training the network faster)

Therefore, I used the following code:

import tensorflow as tf
import numpy as np
import time

image_file_list = ["database.tfrecords"]
batch_size = 16

# Make a queue of file names including all the JPEG images files in the relative
# image directory.
filename_queue = tf.train.string_input_producer(image_file_list, num_epochs=1, shuffle=False)

reader = tf.TFRecordReader()

# Read a whole file from the queue, the first returned value in the tuple is the
# filename which we are ignoring.
_, serialized_example = reader.read(filename_queue)

features = tf.parse_single_example(
      serialized_example,
      # Defaults are not specified since both keys are required.
      features={
          'height': tf.FixedLenFeature([], tf.int64),
          'width': tf.FixedLenFeature([], tf.int64),
          'image_raw': tf.FixedLenFeature([], tf.string),
          'annotation_raw': tf.FixedLenFeature([], tf.string)
      })

image = tf.decode_raw(features['image_raw'], tf.uint8)
annotation = tf.decode_raw(features['annotation_raw'], tf.float32)

height = tf.cast(features['height'], tf.int32)
width = tf.cast(features['width'], tf.int32)

image = tf.reshape(image, [height, width, 3])

# Note that the minimum after dequeue is needed to make sure that the queue is not empty after dequeuing so that
# we don't run into errors
'''
min_after_dequeue = 100
capacity = min_after_dequeue + 3 * batch_size
ann, images_batch = tf.train.batch([annotation, image],
                                   shapes=[[1], [112, 112, 3]],
                                   batch_size=batch_size,
                                   capacity=capacity,
                                   num_threads=1)
'''

# Start a new session to show example output.
with tf.Session() as sess:
    merged = tf.summary.merge_all()
    train_writer = tf.summary.FileWriter('C:/Users/user/Documents/tensorboard_logs/New_Runs', sess.graph)

    # Required to get the filename matching to run.
    tf.global_variables_initializer().run()

    # Coordinate the loading of image files.
    coord = tf.train.Coordinator()
    threads = tf.train.start_queue_runners(coord=coord)

    for steps in range(16):
        t1 = time.time()
        annotation_string, batch, summary = sess.run([annotation, image, merged])
        t2 = time.time()
        print('time to fetch 16 faces:', (t2 - t1))
        print(annotation_string)
        tf.summary.image("image_batch", image)
        train_writer.add_summary(summary, steps)

    # Finish off the filename queue coordinator.
    coord.request_stop()
    coord.join(threads)

Finally, after running the above code, I got the following error: OutOfRangeError (see above for traceback): FIFOQueue '_0_input_producer' is closed and has insufficient elements (requested 1, current size 0) [[Node: ReaderReadV2 = ReaderReadV2[_device="/job:localhost/replica:0/task:0/cpu:0"](TFRecordReaderV2, input_producer)]]

Another Question:

  1. How to decode binary database (tfrecords) to retrieve back the features stored "as python string data structure".
  2. How to use the tf.train.batch to create a batch of examples to feed the network.

Thank you!! Any help is much appreciated.

like image 843
I. A Avatar asked May 18 '17 17:05

I. A


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Which are the three main methods of getting data into a TensorFlow program?

Feeding: Python code provides the data when running each step. Reading from files: an input pipeline reads the data from files at the beginning of a TensorFlow graph. Preloaded data: a constant or variable in the TensorFlow graph holds all the data (for small data sets).


1 Answers

In order to solve this problem, the coordinator along with the queue runner both had to be initialized within a Session. Additionally, since the number of epoch is controlled internally, it is not a global variable, instead, consider a local variable. Therefore, we need to initialize that local variable before telling the queue_runner to start the enqueuing the file_names into the Queue. Therefore, here is the following code:

filename_queue = tf.train.string_input_producer(tfrecords_filename, num_epochs=num_epoch, shuffle=False, name='queue')
reader = tf.TFRecordReader()

key, serialized_example = reader.read(filename_queue)
features = tf.parse_single_example(
    serialized_example,
    # Defaults are not specified since both keys are required.
    features={
        'height': tf.FixedLenFeature([], tf.int64),
        'width': tf.FixedLenFeature([], tf.int64),
        'image_raw': tf.FixedLenFeature([], tf.string),
        'annotation_raw': tf.FixedLenFeature([], tf.string)
    })
...
init_op = tf.group(tf.local_variables_initializer(),
               tf.global_variables_initializer())
with tf.Session() as sess:
    sess.run(init_op)

    coord = tf.train.Coordinator()
    threads = tf.train.start_queue_runners(coord=coord)

And now should work.

Now to gather a batch of images before feeding them into the network, we can use tf.train.shuffle_batch or tf.train.batch. Both works. And the difference is simple. One shuffles the images and the other not. But note that, defining a number a threads and using tf.train.batch might shuffle the data samples because of the race that takes part between the threads that are enqueuing file_names. Anyways, the following code should be inserted directly after initializing the Queue as follows:

min_after_dequeue = 100
num_threads = 1
capacity = min_after_dequeue + num_threads * batch_size
label_batch, images_batch = tf.train.batch([annotation, image],
                                       shapes=[[], [112, 112, 3]],
                                       batch_size=batch_size,
                                       capacity=capacity,
                                       num_threads=num_threads)

Note that here the shape of the tensors could be different. It happened that the reader was decoding a colored image of size [112, 112, 3]. And the annotation has a [] (there is no reason, that was a particular case).

Finally, we can treat the tf.string datatype as a string. In reality, after evaluating the annotation tensor, we can realize that the tensor is treated as a binary string (This is how it is really treated in tensorflow). Therefore, in my case that string was just a set of features related to that particular image. Therefore, in order to extract specific features, here is an example:

# The output of string_split is not a tensor, instead, it is a SparseTensorValue. Therefore, it has a property value that stores the actual values. as a tensor. 
label_batch_splitted = tf.string_split(label_batch, delimiter=', ')
label_batch_values = tf.reshape(label_batch_splitted.values, [batch_size, -1])
# string_to_number will convert the feature's numbers into float32 as I need them. 
label_batch_numbers = tf.string_to_number(label_batch_values, out_type=tf.float32)
# the tf.slice would extract the necessary feature which I am looking.
confidences = tf.slice(label_batch_numbers, begin=[0, 3], size=[-1, 1])

Hope this answer helps.

like image 76
I. A Avatar answered Sep 26 '22 01:09

I. A