View source on GitHub
|
A token indicating how to allocate memory for an autobatched variable.
tfp.experimental.auto_batching.instructions.VariableAllocation(
name
)
In general, a variable holding data with a longer or more complex lifetime will need a more expensive storage strategy.
Specifically, the four variable allocation strategies are:
NULL: Holds nothing. Drops writes, raises on reads. Useful for representing dummy variables that the user program never reads.TEMPORARY: Holds one value per thread, but not across basic block boundaries. Only usable for temporaries that live in a single basic block, and thus never experience joins (or vm execution loop crossings). For such a variable,pushjust overwrites the whole Tensor;popnulls the whole Tensor out.REGISTER: Holds one value per thread, with no associated stack. Useful for representing temporaries that do not cross (recursive) function calls, but do span multiple basic blocks. For such a variable,pushamounts to awhere, with an optional runtime safety check for overwriting a defined value.FULL: Holds a complete stack for each thread. Used as a last resort, when a stack is unavoidable.
The difference between register and temporary is that register is a
[batch_size] + event_shape Tensor in the loop state of the toplevel
while_loop, whereas temporary is represented as an empty tuple in the loop
state, and only holds a Tensor during the execution of the
virtual_machine._run_block call that uses it. Consequently, register
updating involves a where, but writing to a temporary produces 0 TF ops.
Also, in the (envisioned) gather-scatter batching mode, the temporary Tensor
will automatically only hold data for the live threads, whereas reading and
writing a register will still require the gathers and scatters.
Class Variables | |
|---|---|
| FULL |
Instance of tfp.experimental.auto_batching.instructions.VariableAllocation
|
| NULL |
Instance of tfp.experimental.auto_batching.instructions.VariableAllocation
|
| REGISTER |
Instance of tfp.experimental.auto_batching.instructions.VariableAllocation
|
| TEMPORARY |
Instance of tfp.experimental.auto_batching.instructions.VariableAllocation
|
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