On writing good rrule
/ frule
methods
Code Style
Use named local functions for the pullback
in an rrule
.
# good:
function rrule(::typeof(foo), x)
Y = foo(x)
function foo_pullback(Ȳ)
return NoTangent(), bar(Ȳ)
end
return Y, foo_pullback
end
#== output
julia> rrule(foo, 2)
(4, var"#foo_pullback#11"())
==#
# bad:
function rrule(::typeof(foo), x)
return foo(x), x̄ -> (NoTangent(), bar(x̄))
end
#== output:
julia> rrule(foo, 2)
(4, var"##9#10"())
==#
While this is more verbose, it ensures that if an error is thrown during the pullback
the gensym
name of the local function will include the name you gave it. This makes it a lot simpler to debug from the stacktrace.
Use ZeroTangent()
as the return value
The ZeroTangent()
object exists as an alternative to directly returning 0
or zeros(n)
. It allows more optimal computation when chaining pullbacks/pushforwards, to avoid work. They should be used where possible.
However, sometimes for performance reasons this is not ideal. Especially, if it is to replace a scalar, and is in a type-unstable way. It causes problems if mapping over such pullbacks/pushforwards. This woull be solved once JuliaLang/julia#38241 has been addressed.
Use Thunk
s appropriately
If work is only required for one of the returned differentials, then it should be wrapped in a @thunk
(potentially using a begin
-end
block).
If there are multiple return values, their computation should almost always be wrapped in a @thunk
.
Do not wrap variables in a @thunk
; wrap the computations that fill those variables in @thunk
:
# good:
∂A = @thunk(foo(x))
return ∂A
# bad:
∂A = foo(x)
return @thunk(∂A)
In the bad example foo(x)
gets computed eagerly, and all that the thunk is doing is wrapping the already calculated result in a function that returns it.
Do not use @thunk
if this would be equal or more work than actually evaluating the expression itself. Examples being:
- The expression being a constant
- The expression is merely wrapping something in a
struct
, such asAdjoint(x)
orDiagonal(x)
- The expression being itself a
thunk
- The expression being from another
rrule
orfrule
; it would be@thunk
ed if required by the defining rule already. - There is only one derivative being returned, so from the fact that the user called
frule
/rrule
they clearly will want to use that one.
Structs: constructors and functors
To define an frule
or rrule
for a function foo
we dispatch on the type of foo
, which is typeof(foo)
. For example, the rrule
signature would be like:
function rrule(::typeof(foo), args...; kwargs...)
...
return y, foo_pullback
end
For a struct Bar
,
struct Bar
a::Float64
end
(bar::Bar)(x, y) = return bar.a + x + y # functor (i.e. callable object, overloading the call action)
we can define an frule
/rrule
for the Bar
constructor(s), as well as any Bar
functors.
Constructors
To define an rrule
for a constructor for a type Bar
we need to be careful to dispatch only on Type{Bar}
. For example, the rrule
signature for a Bar
constructor would be like:
function ChainRulesCore.rrule(::Type{Bar}, a)
Bar_pullback(Δbar) = NoTangent(), Δbar.a
return Bar(a), Bar_pullback
end
Use Type{<:Bar}
(with the <:
) for non-concrete types, such that the rrule
is defined for all subtypes. In particular, be careful not to use typeof(Bar)
here. Because typeof(Bar)
is DataType
, using this to define an rrule
/frule
will define an rrule
/frule
for all constructors.
You can check which to use with Core.Typeof
:
julia> function foo end
foo (generic function with 0 methods)
julia> typeof(foo)
typeof(foo)
julia> Core.Typeof(foob)
typeof(foo)
julia> typeof(Bar)
DataType
julia> Core.Typeof(Bar)
Type{Bar}
julia> abstract type AbstractT end
julia> typeof(AbstractT)
DataType
julia> Core.Typeof(AbstractT)
Type{AbstractT}
Functors (callable objects)
In contrast to defining a rule for a constructor, it is possible to define rules for calling an instance of an object. In that case, use bar::Bar
, i.e.
function ChainRulesCore.rrule(bar::Bar, x, y)
# Notice the first return is not `NoTangent()`
Bar_pullback(Δy) = Tangent{Bar}(;a=Δy), Δy, Δy
return bar(x, y), Bar_pullback
end
to define the rules.
Ensure your pullback can accept the right types
As a rule the number of types you need to accept in a pullback is theoretically unlimitted, but practically highly constrained to be in line with the primal return type. The three kinds of inputs you will practically need to accept one or more of: natural tangents, structural tangents, and thunks. You do not in general have to handle AbstractZero
s as the AD system will not call the pullback if the input is a zero, since the output will also be. Some more background information on these types can be found in the design notes. In many cases all these tangents can be treated the same: tangent types overload a bunch of linear-operators, and the majority of functions used inside a pullback are linear operators. If you find linear operators from Base/stdlibs that are not supported, consider opening an issue or a PR on the ChainRulesCore.jl repo.
Natural tangents
Natural tangent types are the types you might feel the tangent should be, to represent a small change in the primal value. For example, if the primal is a Float32
, the natural tangent is also a Float32
. Slightly more complex, for a ComplexF64
the natural tangent is again also a ComplexF64
, we almost never want to use the structural tangent Tangent{ComplexF64}(re=..., im=...)
which is defined. For other cases, this gets a little more complicated, see below. These are a purely human notion, they are the types the user wants to use because they make the math easy. There is currently no formal definition of what constitutes a natural tangent, but there are a few heuristics. For example, if a primal type P
overloads subtraction (-(::P,::P)
) then that generally returns a natural tangent type for P
; but this is not required to be defined and sometimes it is defined poorly.
Common cases for types that represent a vector-space (e.g. Float64
, Array{Float64}
) is that the natural tangent type is the same as the primal type. However, this is not always the case. For example for a PDiagMat
a natural tangent is Diagonal
since there is no requirement that a positive definite diagonal matrix has a positive definite tangent. Another example is for a DateTime
, any Period
subtype, such as Millisecond
or Nanosecond
is a natural differential. There are often many different natural tangent types for a given primal type. However, they are generally closely related and duck-type the same. For example, for most AbstractArray
subtypes, most other AbstractArray
s (of right size and element type) can be considered as natural tangent types.
Not all types have natural tangent types. For example there is no natural differential for a Tuple
. It is not a Tuple
since that doesn't have any method for +
. Similar is true for many struct
s. For those cases there is only a structural differential.
Structural tangents
Structural tangents are tangent types that shadow the structure of the primal type. They are represented by the Tangent
type. They can represent any composite type, such as a tuple, or a structure (or a NamedTuple
) etc.
Technically, you might not actually have to write rules to accept structural tangents; if the AD system never has to decompose down to the level of getfield
. This is common for types that don't support user getfield
/getproperty
access, and that have a lot of rules for the ways they are accessed (such cases include some AbstractArray
subtypes). You really should support it just in case; especially if the primal type in question is not restricted to a well-tested concrete type. But if it is causing struggles, then you can leave it off til someone complains.
Thunks
A thunk (either a Thunk
, or a InplaceableThunk
), represents a delayed computation. They can be thought of as a wrapper of the value the computation returns. In this sense they wrap either a natural or structural tangent.
Unfortunately the AD sytems do not know which rules support thunks and which do not. So all rules have to; at least if they want to play nicely with arbitrary AD systems. Luckily it is not hard: much of the time they will duck-type as the object they wrap. If not, then just add a unthunk
after the start of your pullback. (Even when they do duck-type, if they are used multiple times then unthunking at the start will prevent them from being recomputed.) If you are using @thunk
and the input is only needed for one of them then the unthunk
should be in that one. If not, and you have a bunch of pullbacks you might like to write a little helper unthunking(f) = x̄ -> f(unthunk(x̄))
that you can wrap your pullback function in before returning it from the rrule
. Yes, this is a bit of boiler-plate, and it is unfortunate. Sadly, it is needed because if the AD wants to benefit it can't get that benifit unless things are not unthunked unnecessarily. Which eventually allows them in some cases to never be unthunked at all. There are two ways common things are never unthunked. One is if the unthunking happens inside a @thunk
which is never unthunked itself because it is the tangent for a primal input that never has it's tangent queried. The second is if they are not unthunked because the rule does not need to know what is inside: consider the pullback for identity
: x̄ -> (NoTangent(), x̄)
.
Use @not_implemented
appropriately
You can use @not_implemented
to mark missing differentials. This is helpful if the function has multiple inputs or outputs, and you have worked out analytically and implemented some but not all differentials.
It is recommended to include a link to a GitHub issue about the missing differential in the debugging information:
@not_implemented(
"""
derivatives of Bessel functions with respect to the order are not implemented:
https://github.com/JuliaMath/SpecialFunctions.jl/issues/160
"""
)
Do not use @not_implemented
if the differential does not exist mathematically (use NoTangent()
instead).
Note: ChainRulesTestUtils.jl marks @not_implemented
differentials as "test broken".
Use rule definition tools
Rule definition tools can help you write more frule
s and the rrule
s with less lines of code.
@non_differentiable
For non-differentiable functions the @non_differentiable
macro can be used. For example, instead of manually defining the frule
and the rrule
for string concatenation *(String..)
, the macro call
@non_differentiable *(String...)
defines the following frule
and rrule
automatically
function ChainRulesCore.frule(var"##_#1600", ::Core.Typeof(*), String::Any...; kwargs...)
return (*(String...; kwargs...), NoTangent())
end
function ChainRulesCore.rrule(::Core.Typeof(*), String::Any...; kwargs...)
return (*(String...; kwargs...), function var"*_pullback"(_)
(ZeroTangent(), ntuple((_->NoTangent()), 0 + length(String))...)
end)
end
Note that the types of arguments are propagated to the frule
and rrule
definitions. This is needed in case the function differentiable for some but not for other types of arguments. For example *(1, 2, 3)
is differentiable, and is not defined with the macro call above.
@scalar_rule
For functions involving only scalars, i.e. subtypes of Number
(no struct
s, String
s...), both the frule
and the rrule
can be defined using a single @scalar_rule
macro call.
Note that the function does not have to be $\mathbb{R} \rightarrow \mathbb{R}$. In fact, any number of scalar arguments is supported, as is returning a tuple of scalars.
See docstrings for the comprehensive usage instructions.
Be careful about pullback closures calling other methods of themselves
Due to JuliaLang/Julia#40990, a closure calling another (or the same) method of itself often comes out uninferable (and thus effectively type-unstable). This can be avoided by moving the pullback definition outside the function, so that it is no longer a closure. For example:
double_it(x::AbstractArray) = 2 .* x
function ChainRulesCore.rrule(::typeof(double_it), x)
double_it_pullback(ȳ::AbstractArray) = (NoTangent(), 2 .* ȳ)
double_it_pullback(ȳ::AbstractThunk) = double_it_pullback(unthunk(ȳ))
return double_it(x), double_it_pullback
end
Ends up infering a return type of Any
julia> _, pullback = rrule(double_it, [2.0, 3.0])
([4.0, 6.0], var"#double_it_pullback#8"(Core.Box(var"#double_it_pullback#8"(#= circular reference @-2 =#))))
julia> @code_warntype pullback(@thunk([10.0, 10.0]))
Variables
#self#::var"#double_it_pullback#8"
ȳ::Core.Const(Thunk(var"#9#10"()))
double_it_pullback::Union{}
Body::Any
1 ─ %1 = Core.getfield(#self#, :double_it_pullback)::Core.Box
│ %2 = Core.isdefined(%1, :contents)::Bool
└── goto #3 if not %2
2 ─ goto #4
3 ─ Core.NewvarNode(:(double_it_pullback))
└── double_it_pullback
4 ┄ %7 = Core.getfield(%1, :contents)::Any
│ %8 = Main.unthunk(ȳ)::Vector{Float64}
│ %9 = (%7)(%8)::Any
└── return %9
This can be solved by moving the pullbacks outside the function so they are not closures, and thus to not run into this upstream issue. In this case that is fairly simple, since this example doesn't close over anything (if it did then would need a closure calling an outside function that calls itself. See this example.).
_double_it_pullback(ȳ::AbstractArray) = (NoTangent(), 2 .* ȳ)
_double_it_pullback(ȳ::AbstractThunk) = _double_it_pullback(unthunk(ȳ))
function ChainRulesCore.rrule(::typeof(double_it), x)
return double_it(x), _double_it_pullback
end
This infers just fine:
julia> _, pullback = rrule(double_it, [2.0, 3.0])
([4.0, 6.0], _double_it_pullback)
julia> @code_warntype pullback(@thunk([10.0, 10.0]))
Variables
#self#::Core.Const(_double_it_pullback)
ȳ::Core.Const(Thunk(var"#7#8"()))
Body::Tuple{NoTangent, Vector{Float64}}
1 ─ %1 = Main.unthunk(ȳ)::Vector{Float64}
│ %2 = Main._double_it_pullback(%1)::Core.PartialStruct(Tuple{NoTangent, Vector{Float64}}, Any[Core.Const(NoTangent()), Vector{Float64}])
└── return %2
Though in this particular case, it can also be solved by taking advantage of duck-typing and just writing one method. Thus avoiding the call that confuses the compiler. Thunk
s duck-type as the type they wrap in most cases: including broadcast multiplication.
function ChainRulesCore.rrule(::typeof(double_it), x)
double_it_pullback(ȳ) = (NoTangent(), 2 .* ȳ)
return double_it(x), double_it_pullback
end
This infers perfectly.
CAS systems are your friends.
It is very easy to check gradients or derivatives with a computer algebra system (CAS) like WolframAlpha.
Which functions need rules?
In principle, a perfect AD system only needs rules for basic operations and can infer the rules for more complicated functions automatically. In practice, performance needs to be considered as well.
Some functions use ccall
internally, for example ^
. These functions cannot be differentiated through by AD systems, and need custom rules.
Other functions can in principle be differentiated through by an AD system, but there exists a mathematical insight that can dramatically improve the computation of the derivative. An example is numerical integration, where writing a rule implementing the fundamental theorem of calculus removes the need to perform AD through numerical integration.
Furthermore, AD systems make different trade-offs in performance due to their design. This means that a certain rule will help one AD system, but not improve (and also not harm) another. Below, we list some patterns relevant for the Zygote.jl AD system.
Rules for functions which mutate its arguments, e.g. sort!
, should not be written at the moment. While technically they are supported, they would break Zygote.jl such that it would sometimes quietly return the wrong answer. This may be resolved in the future by allowing AD systems to opt-in or opt-out of certain types of rules.
Patterns that need rules in Zygote.jl
There are a few classes of functions that Zygote cannot differentiate through. Custom rules will need to be written for these to make AD work.
Other patterns can be AD'ed through, but the backward pass performance can be greatly improved by writing a rule.
Functions which mutate arrays
For example,
function addone!(array)
array .+= 1
return sum(array)
end
complains that
julia> using Zygote
julia> gradient(addone!, a)
ERROR: Mutating arrays is not supported
However, upon adding the rrule
(restart the REPL after calling gradient
)
function ChainRules.rrule(::typeof(addone!), a)
y = addone!(a)
function addone!_pullback(ȳ)
return NoTangent(), ones(length(a))
end
return y, addone!_pullback
end
the gradient can be evaluated:
julia> gradient(addone!, a)
([1.0, 1.0, 1.0],)
When gradient
is called in Zygote
for a function with no rrule
defined, a backward pass for the function call is generated and cached. When gradient
is called for the second time on the same function signature, the backward pass is reused without checking whether an an rrule
has been defined between the two calls to gradient
.
If an rrule
is defined before the first call to gradient
it should register the rule and use it, but that prevents comparing what happens before and after the rrule
is defined. To compare both versions with and without an rrule
in the REPL simultaneously, define a function f(x) = <body>
(no rrule
), another function f_cr(x) = f(x)
, and an rrule
for f_cr
.
Exception handling
Zygote does not support differentiating through try
/catch
statements. For example, differentiating through
function exception(x)
try
return x^2
catch e
println("could not square input")
throw(e)
end
end
does not work
julia> gradient(exception, 3.0)
ERROR: Compiling Tuple{typeof(exception),Int64}: try/catch is not supported.
without an rrule
defined (restart the REPL after calling gradient
)
function ChainRulesCore.rrule(::typeof(exception), x)
y = exception(x)
function exception_pullback(ȳ)
return NoTangent(), 2*x
end
return y, exception_pullback
end
julia> gradient(exception, 3.0)
(6.0,)
Loops
Julia runs loops fast. Unfortunately Zygote differentiates through loops slowly. So, for example, computing the mean squared error by using a loop
function mse(y, ŷ)
N = length(y)
s = 0.0
for i in 1:N
s += (y[i] - ŷ[i])^2.0
end
return s/N
end
takes a lot longer to AD through
julia> y = rand(30)
julia> ŷ = rand(30)
julia> @btime gradient(mse, $y, $ŷ)
38.180 μs (993 allocations: 65.00 KiB)
than if we supply an rrule
, (restart the REPL after calling gradient
)
function ChainRules.rrule(::typeof(mse), x, x̂)
output = mse(x, x̂)
function mse_pullback(ȳ)
N = length(x)
g = (2 ./ N) .* (x .- x̂) .* ȳ
return NoTangent(), g, -g
end
return output, mse_pullback
end
which is much faster
julia> @btime gradient(mse, $y, $ŷ)
143.697 ns (2 allocations: 672 bytes)
Inplace accumulation
Inplace accumulation of gradients is slow in Zygote
. The issue, demonstrated in the folowing example, is that the gradient of getindex
allocates an array of zeros with a single non-zero element.
function sum3(array)
x = array[1]
y = array[2]
z = array[3]
return x+y+z
end
julia> @btime gradient(sum3, rand(30))
424.510 ns (9 allocations: 2.06 KiB)
Computing the gradient with only a single array allocation using an rrule
(restart the REPL after calling gradient
)
function ChainRulesCore.rrule(::typeof(sum3), a)
y = sum3(a)
function sum3_pullback(ȳ)
grad = zeros(length(a))
grad[1:3] .+= ȳ
return NoTangent(), grad
end
return y, sum3_pullback
end
turns out to be significantly faster
julia> @btime gradient(sum3, rand(30))
192.818 ns (3 allocations: 784 bytes)