NAdam¶
- class torch.optim.NAdam(params, lr=0.002, betas=(0.9, 0.999), eps=1e-08, weight_decay=0, momentum_decay=0.004, *, foreach=None, differentiable=False)[source]¶
Implements NAdam algorithm.
For further details regarding the algorithm we refer to Incorporating Nesterov Momentum into Adam.
- Parameters:
params (iterable) – iterable of parameters to optimize or dicts defining parameter groups
lr (float, optional) – learning rate (default: 2e-3)
betas (Tuple[float, float], optional) – coefficients used for computing running averages of gradient and its square (default: (0.9, 0.999))
eps (float, optional) – term added to the denominator to improve numerical stability (default: 1e-8)
weight_decay (float, optional) – weight decay (L2 penalty) (default: 0)
momentum_decay (float, optional) – momentum momentum_decay (default: 4e-3)
foreach (bool, optional) – whether foreach implementation of optimizer is used. If unspecified by the user (so foreach is None), we will try to use foreach over the for-loop implementation on CUDA, since it is usually significantly more performant. (default: None)
differentiable (bool, optional) – whether autograd should occur through the optimizer step in training. Otherwise, the step() function runs in a torch.no_grad() context. Setting to True can impair performance, so leave it False if you don’t intend to run autograd through this instance (default: False)
- add_param_group(param_group)¶
Add a param group to the
Optimizer
s param_groups.This can be useful when fine tuning a pre-trained network as frozen layers can be made trainable and added to the
Optimizer
as training progresses.- Parameters:
param_group (dict) – Specifies what Tensors should be optimized along with group specific optimization options.
- load_state_dict(state_dict)¶
Loads the optimizer state.
- Parameters:
state_dict (dict) – optimizer state. Should be an object returned from a call to
state_dict()
.
- register_step_post_hook(hook)¶
Register an optimizer step post hook which will be called after optimizer step. It should have the following signature:
hook(optimizer, args, kwargs) -> None
The
optimizer
argument is the optimizer instance being used.- Parameters:
hook (Callable) – The user defined hook to be registered.
- Returns:
a handle that can be used to remove the added hook by calling
handle.remove()
- Return type:
torch.utils.hooks.RemoveableHandle
- register_step_pre_hook(hook)¶
Register an optimizer step pre hook which will be called before optimizer step. It should have the following signature:
hook(optimizer, args, kwargs) -> None or modified args and kwargs
The
optimizer
argument is the optimizer instance being used. If args and kwargs are modified by the pre-hook, then the transformed values are returned as a tuple containing the new_args and new_kwargs.- Parameters:
hook (Callable) – The user defined hook to be registered.
- Returns:
a handle that can be used to remove the added hook by calling
handle.remove()
- Return type:
torch.utils.hooks.RemoveableHandle
- state_dict()¶
Returns the state of the optimizer as a
dict
.It contains two entries:
- state - a dict holding current optimization state. Its content
differs between optimizer classes.
- param_groups - a list containing all parameter groups where each
parameter group is a dict
- zero_grad(set_to_none=True)¶
Sets the gradients of all optimized
torch.Tensor
s to zero.- Parameters:
set_to_none (bool) – instead of setting to zero, set the grads to None. This will in general have lower memory footprint, and can modestly improve performance. However, it changes certain behaviors. For example: 1. When the user tries to access a gradient and perform manual ops on it, a None attribute or a Tensor full of 0s will behave differently. 2. If the user requests
zero_grad(set_to_none=True)
followed by a backward pass,.grad
s are guaranteed to be None for params that did not receive a gradient. 3.torch.optim
optimizers have a different behavior if the gradient is 0 or None (in one case it does the step with a gradient of 0 and in the other it skips the step altogether).