ONNX Operator lists算子列表
ai.onnx (default)
Abs
Absolute takes one input data (Tensor) and produces one output data (Tensor) where absolute value, y = abs(x), is applied to the tensor elementwise.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 13 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 1, 6
Inputs
- X (differentiable) : T
- Input tensor
Outputs
- Y (differentiable) : T
- Output tensor
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(uint8), tensor(uint16), tensor(uint32), tensor(uint64), tensor(int8), tensor(int16), tensor(int32), tensor(int64), tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(bfloat16)
- Constrain input and output types to all numeric tensors.
Examples
absSample Implementation
AbsAcos
Calculates the arccosine (inverse of cosine) of the given input tensor, element-wise.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 7 of the default ONNX operator set.
Inputs
- input (differentiable) : T
- Input tensor
Outputs
- output (differentiable) : T
- The arccosine of the input tensor computed element-wise
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double)
- Constrain input and output types to float tensors.
Examples
acosAcosh
Calculates the hyperbolic arccosine of the given input tensor element-wise.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 9 of the default ONNX operator set.
Inputs
- input (differentiable) : T
- Input tensor
Outputs
- output (differentiable) : T
- The hyperbolic arccosine values of the input tensor computed element-wise
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double)
- Constrain input and output types to float tensors.
Examples
acoshAdd
Performs element-wise binary addition (with Numpy-style broadcasting support).
This operator supports multidirectional (i.e., Numpy-style) broadcasting; for more details please check the doc.
(Opset 14 change): Extend supported types to include uint8, int8, uint16, and int16.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 14 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 1, 6, 7, 13
Inputs
- A (differentiable) : T
- First operand.
- B (differentiable) : T
- Second operand.
Outputs
- C (differentiable) : T
- Result, has same element type as two inputs
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(uint8), tensor(uint16), tensor(uint32), tensor(uint64), tensor(int8), tensor(int16), tensor(int32), tensor(int64), tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(bfloat16)
- Constrain input and output types to all numeric tensors.
Examples
addadd_broadcastadd_uint8And
Returns the tensor resulted from performing the and
logical operation elementwise on the input tensors A
and B
(with Numpy-style broadcasting support).
This operator supports multidirectional (i.e., Numpy-style) broadcasting; for more details please check the doc.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 7 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 1
Inputs
- A (non-differentiable) : T
- First input operand for the logical operator.
- B (non-differentiable) : T
- Second input operand for the logical operator.
Outputs
- C (non-differentiable) : T1
- Result tensor.
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(bool)
- Constrain input to boolean tensor.
- T1 : tensor(bool)
- Constrain output to boolean tensor.
Examples
andand_broadcastArgMax
Computes the indices of the max elements of the input tensor's element along the provided axis. The resulting tensor has the same rank as the input if keepdims equals 1. If keepdims equals 0, then the resulting tensor has the reduced dimension pruned. If select_last_index is True (default False), the index of the last occurrence of the max is selected if the max appears more than once in the input. Otherwise the index of the first occurrence is selected. The type of the output tensor is integer.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 13 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 1, 11, 12
Attributes
- axis : int (default is 0)
- The axis in which to compute the arg indices. Accepted range is [-r, r-1] where r = rank(data).
- keepdims : int (default is 1)
- Keep the reduced dimension or not, default 1 means keep reduced dimension.
- select_last_index : int (default is 0)
- Whether to select the last index or the first index if the {name} appears in multiple indices, default is False (first index).
Inputs
- data (non-differentiable) : T
- An input tensor.
Outputs
- reduced (non-differentiable) : tensor(int64)
- Reduced output tensor with integer data type.
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(uint8), tensor(uint16), tensor(uint32), tensor(uint64), tensor(int8), tensor(int16), tensor(int32), tensor(int64), tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(bfloat16)
- Constrain input and output types to all numeric tensors.
Examples
default_axes_keepdimsdefault_axes_keepdims_select_last_indexkeepdimskeepdims_select_last_indexnegative_axis_keepdimsnegative_axis_keepdims_select_last_indexno_keepdimsno_keepdims_select_last_indexArgMin
Computes the indices of the min elements of the input tensor's element along the provided axis. The resulting tensor has the same rank as the input if keepdims equals 1. If keepdims equals 0, then the resulting tensor has the reduced dimension pruned. If select_last_index is True (default False), the index of the last occurrence of the min is selected if the min appears more than once in the input. Otherwise the index of the first occurrence is selected. The type of the output tensor is integer.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 13 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 1, 11, 12
Attributes
- axis : int (default is 0)
- The axis in which to compute the arg indices. Accepted range is [-r, r-1] where r = rank(data).
- keepdims : int (default is 1)
- Keep the reduced dimension or not, default 1 means keep reduced dimension.
- select_last_index : int (default is 0)
- Whether to select the last index or the first index if the {name} appears in multiple indices, default is False (first index).
Inputs
- data (non-differentiable) : T
- An input tensor.
Outputs
- reduced (non-differentiable) : tensor(int64)
- Reduced output tensor with integer data type.
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(uint8), tensor(uint16), tensor(uint32), tensor(uint64), tensor(int8), tensor(int16), tensor(int32), tensor(int64), tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(bfloat16)
- Constrain input and output types to all numeric tensors.
Examples
default_axes_keepdimsdefault_axes_keepdims_select_last_indexkeepdimskeepdims_select_last_indexnegative_axis_keepdimsnegative_axis_keepdims_select_last_indexno_keepdimsno_keepdims_select_last_indexAsin
Calculates the arcsine (inverse of sine) of the given input tensor, element-wise.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 7 of the default ONNX operator set.
Inputs
- input (differentiable) : T
- Input tensor
Outputs
- output (differentiable) : T
- The arcsine of the input tensor computed element-wise
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double)
- Constrain input and output types to float tensors.
Examples
asinAsinh
Calculates the hyperbolic arcsine of the given input tensor element-wise.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 9 of the default ONNX operator set.
Inputs
- input (differentiable) : T
- Input tensor
Outputs
- output (differentiable) : T
- The hyperbolic arcsine values of the input tensor computed element-wise
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double)
- Constrain input and output types to float tensors.
Examples
asinhAtan
Calculates the arctangent (inverse of tangent) of the given input tensor, element-wise.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 7 of the default ONNX operator set.
Inputs
- input (differentiable) : T
- Input tensor
Outputs
- output (differentiable) : T
- The arctangent of the input tensor computed element-wise
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double)
- Constrain input and output types to float tensors.
Examples
atanAtanh
Calculates the hyperbolic arctangent of the given input tensor element-wise.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 9 of the default ONNX operator set.
Inputs
- input (differentiable) : T
- Input tensor
Outputs
- output (differentiable) : T
- The hyperbolic arctangent values of the input tensor computed element-wise
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double)
- Constrain input and output types to float tensors.
Examples
atanhAveragePool
AveragePool consumes an input tensor X and applies average pooling across the tensor according to kernel sizes, stride sizes, and pad lengths. average pooling consisting of computing the average on all values of a subset of the input tensor according to the kernel size and downsampling the data into the output tensor Y for further processing. The output spatial shape will be following:
output_spatial_shape[i] = floor((input_spatial_shape[i] + pad_shape[i] - ((kernel_spatial_shape[i] - 1) * dilations[i] + 1)) / strides_spatial_shape[i] + 1)
or
output_spatial_shape[i] = ceil((input_spatial_shape[i] + pad_shape[i] - ((kernel_spatial_shape[i] - 1) * dilations[i] + 1)) / strides_spatial_shape[i] + 1)
if ceil_mode is enabled pad_shape[i]
is the sum of pads along axis i
.
auto_pad
is a DEPRECATED attribute. If you are using them currently, the output spatial shape will be following:
VALID: output_spatial_shape[i] = ceil((input_spatial_shape[i] - ((kernel_spatial_shape[i] - 1) * dilations[i] + 1) + 1) / strides_spatial_shape[i])
SAME_UPPER or SAME_LOWER: output_spatial_shape[i] = ceil(input_spatial_shape[i] / strides_spatial_shape[i])
And pad shape will be following if SAME_UPPER
or SAME_LOWER
:
pad_shape[i] = (output_spatial_shape[i] - 1) * strides_spatial_shape[i] + ((kernel_spatial_shape[i] - 1) * dilations[i] + 1) - input_spatial_shape[i]
The output of each pooling window is divided by the number of elements (exclude pad when attribute count_include_pad is zero).
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 19 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 1, 7, 10, 11
Attributes
- auto_pad : string (default is NOTSET)
- auto_pad must be either NOTSET, SAME_UPPER, SAME_LOWER or VALID. Where default value is NOTSET, which means explicit padding is used. SAME_UPPER or SAME_LOWER mean pad the input so that `output_shape[i] = ceil(input_shape[i] / strides[i])` for each axis `i`. The padding is split between the two sides equally or almost equally (depending on whether it is even or odd). In case the padding is an odd number, the extra padding is added at the end for SAME_UPPER and at the beginning for SAME_LOWER.
- ceil_mode : int (default is 0)
- Whether to use ceil or floor (default) to compute the output shape.
- count_include_pad : int (default is 0)
- Whether include pad pixels when calculating values for the edges. Default is 0, doesn't count include pad.
- dilations : list of ints
- Dilation value along each spatial axis of filter. If not present, the dilation defaults to 1 along each spatial axis.
- kernel_shape : list of ints (required)
- The size of the kernel along each axis.
- pads : list of ints
- Padding for the beginning and ending along each spatial axis, it can take any value greater than or equal to 0. The value represent the number of pixels added to the beginning and end part of the corresponding axis. `pads` format should be as follow [x1_begin, x2_begin...x1_end, x2_end,...], where xi_begin the number of pixels added at the beginning of axis `i` and xi_end, the number of pixels added at the end of axis `i`. This attribute cannot be used simultaneously with auto_pad attribute. If not present, the padding defaults to 0 along start and end of each spatial axis.
- strides : list of ints
- Stride along each spatial axis. If not present, the stride defaults to 1 along each spatial axis.
Inputs
- X (differentiable) : T
- Input data tensor from the previous operator; dimensions for image case are (N x C x H x W), where N is the batch size, C is the number of channels, and H and W are the height and the width of the data. For non image case, the dimensions are in the form of (N x C x D1 x D2 ... Dn), where N is the batch size. Optionally, if dimension denotation is in effect, the operation expects the input data tensor to arrive with the dimension denotation of [DATA_BATCH, DATA_CHANNEL, DATA_FEATURE, DATA_FEATURE ...].
Outputs
- Y (differentiable) : T
- Output data tensor from average or max pooling across the input tensor. Dimensions will vary based on various kernel, stride, and pad sizes. Floor value of the dimension is used
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double)
- Constrain input and output types to float tensors.
Examples
averagepool_1d_defaultaveragepool_2d_ceilaveragepool_2d_defaultaveragepool_2d_dilationsaveragepool_2d_padsaveragepool_2d_pads_count_include_padaveragepool_2d_precomputed_padsaveragepool_2d_precomputed_pads_count_include_padaveragepool_2d_precomputed_same_upperaveragepool_2d_precomputed_stridesaveragepool_2d_same_loweraveragepool_2d_same_upperaveragepool_2d_stridesaveragepool_3d_defaultBatchNormalization
Carries out batch normalization as described in the paper https://arxiv.org/abs/1502.03167. Depending on the mode it is being run, There are five required inputs 'X', 'scale', 'B', 'input_mean' and 'input_var'. Note that 'input_mean' and 'input_var' are expected to be the estimated statistics in inference mode (training_mode=False, default), and the running statistics in training mode (training_mode=True). There are multiple cases for the number of outputs, which we list below:
- Output case #1: Y, running_mean, running_var (training_mode=True)
- Output case #2: Y (training_mode=False)
When training_mode=False, extra outputs are invalid. The outputs are updated as follows when training_mode=True:
running_mean = input_mean * momentum + current_mean * (1 - momentum)
running_var = input_var * momentum + current_var * (1 - momentum)
Y = (X - current_mean) / sqrt(current_var + epsilon) * scale + B
where:
current_mean = ReduceMean(X, axis=all_except_channel_index)
current_var = ReduceVar(X, axis=all_except_channel_index)
Notice that ReduceVar
refers to the population variance, and it equals to sum(sqrd(x_i - x_avg)) / N
where N
is the population size (this formula does not use sample size N - 1
).
The computation of ReduceMean and ReduceVar uses float to avoid overflow for float16 inputs.
When training_mode=False:
Y = (X - input_mean) / sqrt(input_var + epsilon) * scale + B
For previous (depreciated) non-spatial cases, implementors are suggested to flatten the input shape to (N x C * D1 * D2 * ... * Dn) before a BatchNormalization Op. This operator has optional inputs/outputs. See the doc for more details about the representation of optional arguments. An empty string may be used in the place of an actual argument's name to indicate a missing argument. Trailing optional arguments (those not followed by an argument that is present) may also be simply omitted.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 15 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 1, 6, 7, 9, 14
Attributes
- epsilon : float (default is 1e-05)
- The epsilon value to use to avoid division by zero.
- momentum : float (default is 0.9)
- Factor used in computing the running mean and variance.e.g., running_mean = running_mean * momentum + mean * (1 - momentum).
- training_mode : int (default is 0)
- If set to true, it indicates BatchNormalization is being used for training, and outputs 1, 2, 3, and 4 would be populated.
Inputs
- X (differentiable) : T
- Input data tensor from the previous operator; dimensions are in the form of (N x C x D1 x D2 ... Dn), where N is the batch size, C is the number of channels. Statistics are computed for every channel of C over N and D1 to Dn dimensions. For image data, input dimensions become (N x C x H x W). The op also accepts single dimension input of size N in which case C is assumed to be 1
- scale (differentiable) : T1
- Scale tensor of shape (C).
- B (differentiable) : T1
- Bias tensor of shape (C).
- input_mean (differentiable) : T2
- running (training) or estimated (testing) mean tensor of shape (C).
- input_var (differentiable) : T2
- running (training) or estimated (testing) variance tensor of shape (C).
Outputs (1 - 3)
- Y (differentiable) : T
- The output tensor of the same shape as X
- running_mean (optional, non-differentiable) : T2
- The running mean after the BatchNormalization operator.
- running_var (optional, non-differentiable) : T2
- The running variance after the BatchNormalization operator. This op uses the population size (N) for calculating variance, and not the sample size N-1.
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(bfloat16)
- Constrain input and output types to float tensors.
- T1 : tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(bfloat16)
- Constrain scale and bias types to float tensors.
- T2 : tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(bfloat16)
- Constrain mean and variance types to float tensors.
Examples
batchnormalizationtrainBernoulli
Draws binary random numbers (0 or 1) from a Bernoulli distribution. The input tensor should be a tensor containing probabilities p (a value in the range [0,1]) to be used for drawing the binary random number, where an output of 1 is produced with probability p and an output of 0 is produced with probability (1-p).
This operator is non-deterministic and may not produce the same values in different implementations (even if a seed is specified).
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 15 of the default ONNX operator set.
Attributes
- dtype : int
- The data type for the elements of the output tensor. if not specified, we will use the data type of the input tensor.
- seed : float
- (Optional) Seed to the random generator, if not specified we will auto generate one.
Inputs
- input : T1
- All values in input have to be in the range:[0, 1].
Outputs
- output : T2
- The returned output tensor only has values 0 or 1, same shape as input tensor.
Type Constraints
- T1 : tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double)
- Constrain input types to float tensors.
- T2 : tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(bfloat16), tensor(uint8), tensor(uint16), tensor(uint32), tensor(uint64), tensor(int8), tensor(int16), tensor(int32), tensor(int64), tensor(bool)
- Constrain output types to all numeric tensors and bool tensors.
Examples
bernoulli_with_dtypebernoulli_with_seedbernoulli_without_dtypeBitShift
Bitwise shift operator performs element-wise operation. For each input element, if the attribute "direction" is "RIGHT", this operator moves its binary representation toward the right side so that the input value is effectively decreased. If the attribute "direction" is "LEFT", bits of binary representation moves toward the left side, which results the increase of its actual value. The input X is the tensor to be shifted and another input Y specifies the amounts of shifting. For example, if "direction" is "Right", X is [1, 4], and S is [1, 1], the corresponding output Z would be [0, 2]. If "direction" is "LEFT" with X=[1, 2] and S=[1, 2], the corresponding output Y would be [2, 8].
Because this operator supports Numpy-style broadcasting, X's and Y's shapes are not necessarily identical. This operator supports multidirectional (i.e., Numpy-style) broadcasting; for more details please check the doc.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 11 of the default ONNX operator set.
Attributes
- direction : string (required)
- Direction of moving bits. It can be either "RIGHT" (for right shift) or "LEFT" (for left shift).
Inputs
- X (non-differentiable) : T
- First operand, input to be shifted.
- Y (non-differentiable) : T
- Second operand, amounts of shift.
Outputs
- Z (non-differentiable) : T
- Output tensor
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(uint8), tensor(uint16), tensor(uint32), tensor(uint64)
- Constrain input and output types to integer tensors.
Examples
left_unit16left_unit32left_unit64left_unit8right_unit16right_unit32right_unit64right_unit8BitwiseAnd
Returns the tensor resulting from performing the bitwise and
operation elementwise on the input tensors A
and B
(with Numpy-style broadcasting support).
This operator supports multidirectional (i.e., Numpy-style) broadcasting; for more details please check the doc.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 18 of the default ONNX operator set.
Inputs
- A (non-differentiable) : T
- First input operand for the bitwise operator.
- B (non-differentiable) : T
- Second input operand for the bitwise operator.
Outputs
- C (non-differentiable) : T
- Result tensor.
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(uint8), tensor(uint16), tensor(uint32), tensor(uint64), tensor(int8), tensor(int16), tensor(int32), tensor(int64)
- Constrain input to integer tensors.
Examples
bitwiseandbitwiseand_broadcastBitwiseNot
Returns the bitwise not of the input tensor element-wise.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 18 of the default ONNX operator set.
Inputs
- X (non-differentiable) : T
- Input tensor
Outputs
- Y (non-differentiable) : T
- Output tensor
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(uint8), tensor(uint16), tensor(uint32), tensor(uint64), tensor(int8), tensor(int16), tensor(int32), tensor(int64)
- Constrain input/output to integer tensors.
Examples
bitwisenotBitwiseOr
Returns the tensor resulting from performing the bitwise or
operation elementwise on the input tensors A
and B
(with Numpy-style broadcasting support).
This operator supports multidirectional (i.e., Numpy-style) broadcasting; for more details please check the doc.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 18 of the default ONNX operator set.
Inputs
- A (non-differentiable) : T
- First input operand for the bitwise operator.
- B (non-differentiable) : T
- Second input operand for the bitwise operator.
Outputs
- C (non-differentiable) : T
- Result tensor.
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(uint8), tensor(uint16), tensor(uint32), tensor(uint64), tensor(int8), tensor(int16), tensor(int32), tensor(int64)
- Constrain input to integer tensors.
Examples
bitwiseorbitwiseor_broadcastBitwiseXor
Returns the tensor resulting from performing the bitwise xor
operation elementwise on the input tensors A
and B
(with Numpy-style broadcasting support).
This operator supports multidirectional (i.e., Numpy-style) broadcasting; for more details please check the doc.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 18 of the default ONNX operator set.
Inputs
- A (non-differentiable) : T
- First input operand for the bitwise operator.
- B (non-differentiable) : T
- Second input operand for the bitwise operator.
Outputs
- C (non-differentiable) : T
- Result tensor.
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(uint8), tensor(uint16), tensor(uint32), tensor(uint64), tensor(int8), tensor(int16), tensor(int32), tensor(int64)
- Constrain input to integer tensors.
Examples
bitwiseor_broadcastbitwisexorBlackmanWindow
Generates a Blackman window as described in the paper https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/1455106.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 17 of the default ONNX operator set.
Attributes
- output_datatype : int (default is 1)
- The data type of the output tensor. Strictly must be one of the values from DataType enum in TensorProto whose values correspond to T2. The default value is 1 = FLOAT.
- periodic : int (default is 1)
- If 1, returns a window to be used as periodic function. If 0, return a symmetric window. When 'periodic' is specified, hann computes a window of length size + 1 and returns the first size points. The default value is 1.
Inputs
- size (non-differentiable) : T1
- A scalar value indicating the length of the window.
Outputs
- output (non-differentiable) : T2
- A Blackman window with length: size. The output has the shape: [size].
Type Constraints
- T1 : tensor(int32), tensor(int64)
- Constrain the input size to int64_t.
- T2 : tensor(uint8), tensor(uint16), tensor(uint32), tensor(uint64), tensor(int8), tensor(int16), tensor(int32), tensor(int64), tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(bfloat16)
- Constrain output types to numeric tensors.
Examples
blackmanwindowCast
The operator casts the elements of a given input tensor to a data type specified by the 'to' argument and returns an output tensor of the same size in the converted type. The 'to' argument must be one of the data types specified in the 'DataType' enum field in the TensorProto message.
Casting from string tensor in plain (e.g., "3.14" and "1000") and scientific numeric representations (e.g., "1e-5" and "1E8") to float types is supported. For example, converting string "100.5" to an integer may yield result 100. There are some string literals reserved for special floating-point values; "+INF" (and "INF"), "-INF", and "NaN" are positive infinity, negative infinity, and not-a-number, respectively. Any string which can exactly match "+INF" in a case-insensitive way would be mapped to positive infinite. Similarly, this case-insensitive rule is applied to "INF" and "NaN". When casting from numeric tensors to string tensors, plain floating-point representation (such as "314.15926") would be used. Converting non-numerical-literal string such as "Hello World!" is an undefined behavior. Cases of converting string representing floating-point arithmetic value, such as "2.718", to INT is an undefined behavior.
Conversion from a numerical type to any numerical type is always allowed. User must be aware of precision loss and value change caused by range difference between two types. For example, a 64-bit float 3.1415926459 may be round to a 32-bit float 3.141592. Similarly, converting an integer 36 to Boolean may produce 1 because we truncate bits which can't be stored in the targeted type.
In more detail, the conversion among numerical types should follow these rules if the destination type is not a float 8 type.
- Casting from floating point to:
- floating point: +/- infinity if OOR (out of range).
- fixed point: undefined if OOR.
- bool: +/- 0.0 to False; all else to True.
- Casting from fixed point to:
- floating point: +/- infinity if OOR. (+ infinity in the case of uint)
- fixed point: when OOR, discard higher bits and reinterpret (with respect to two's complement representation for signed types). For example, 200 (int16) -> -56 (int8).
- bool: zero to False; nonzero to True.
- Casting from bool to:
- floating point:
{1.0, 0.0}
. - fixed point:
{1, 0}
. - bool: no change.
- floating point:
Float 8 type were introduced to speed up the training of deep models. By default the conversion of a float x obeys to the following rules. [x]
means the value rounded to the target mantissa width.
x | E4M3FN | E4M3FNUZ | E5M2 | E5M2FNUZ |
---|---|---|---|---|
0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
-0 | -0 | 0 | -0 | 0 |
NaN | NaN | NaN | NaN | NaN |
+/- Inf | +/- FLT_MAX | NaN | FLT_MAX | NaN |
[x] > FLT_MAX | FLT_MAX | FLT_MAX | FLT_MAX | FLT_MAX |
[x] < -FLT_MAX | -FLT_MAX | -FLT_MAX | -FLT_MAX | -FLT_MAX |
else | RNE | RNE | RNE | RNE |
The behavior changes if the parameter 'saturate' is set to False. The rules then become:
x | E4M3FN | E4M3FNUZ | E5M2 | E5M2FNUZ |
---|---|---|---|---|
0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
-0 | -0 | 0 | -0 | 0 |
NaN | NaN | NaN | NaN | NaN |
+/- Inf | NaN | NaN | +/- Inf | NaN |
[x] > FLT_MAX | NaN | NaN | Inf | NaN |
[x] < -FLT_MAX | NaN | NaN | -Inf | NaN |
else | RNE | RNE | RNE | RNE |
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 19 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 1, 6, 9, 13
Attributes
- saturate : int (default is 1)
- The parameter defines how the conversion behaves if an input value is out of range of the destination type. It only applies for float 8 conversion (float8e4m3fn, float8e4m3fnuz, float8e5m2, float8e5m2fnuz). It is true by default. All cases are fully described in two tables inserted in the operator description.
- to : int (required)
- The data type to which the elements of the input tensor are cast. Strictly must be one of the types from DataType enum in TensorProto
Inputs
- input (differentiable) : T1
- Input tensor to be cast.
Outputs
- output (differentiable) : T2
- Output tensor with the same shape as input with type specified by the 'to' argument
Type Constraints
- T1 : tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(int8), tensor(int16), tensor(int32), tensor(int64), tensor(uint8), tensor(uint16), tensor(uint32), tensor(uint64), tensor(bool), tensor(string), tensor(bfloat16), tensor(float8e4m3fn), tensor(float8e4m3fnuz), tensor(float8e5m2), tensor(float8e5m2fnuz)
- Constrain input types. Casting from complex is not supported.
- T2 : tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(int8), tensor(int16), tensor(int32), tensor(int64), tensor(uint8), tensor(uint16), tensor(uint32), tensor(uint64), tensor(bool), tensor(string), tensor(bfloat16), tensor(float8e4m3fn), tensor(float8e4m3fnuz), tensor(float8e5m2), tensor(float8e5m2fnuz)
- Constrain output types. Casting to complex is not supported.
Examples
castsaturate_falseCastLike
The operator casts the elements of a given input tensor (the first input) to the same data type as the elements of the second input tensor. See documentation of the Cast operator for further details.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 19 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 15
Attributes
- saturate : int (default is 1)
- The parameter defines how the conversion behaves if an input value is out of range of the destination type. It only applies for float 8 conversion (float8e4m3fn, float8e4m3fnuz, float8e5m2, float8e5m2fnuz). It is true by default. Please refer to operator Cast description for further details.
Inputs
- input (differentiable) : T1
- Input tensor to be cast.
- target_type (non-differentiable) : T2
- The (first) input tensor will be cast to produce a tensor of the same type as this (second input) tensor.
Outputs
- output (differentiable) : T2
- Output tensor produced by casting the first input tensor to have the same type as the second input tensor.
Type Constraints
- T1 : tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(int8), tensor(int16), tensor(int32), tensor(int64), tensor(uint8), tensor(uint16), tensor(uint32), tensor(uint64), tensor(bool), tensor(string), tensor(bfloat16), tensor(float8e4m3fn), tensor(float8e4m3fnuz), tensor(float8e5m2), tensor(float8e5m2fnuz)
- Constrain input types. Casting from complex is not supported.
- T2 : tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(int8), tensor(int16), tensor(int32), tensor(int64), tensor(uint8), tensor(uint16), tensor(uint32), tensor(uint64), tensor(bool), tensor(string), tensor(bfloat16), tensor(float8e4m3fn), tensor(float8e4m3fnuz), tensor(float8e5m2), tensor(float8e5m2fnuz)
- Constrain output types. Casting to complex is not supported.
Examples
castlikeCeil
Ceil takes one input data (Tensor) and produces one output data (Tensor) where the ceil is, y = ceil(x), is applied to the tensor elementwise. If x is integral, +0, -0, NaN, or infinite, x itself is returned.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 13 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 1, 6
Inputs
- X (non-differentiable) : T
- Input tensor
Outputs
- Y (non-differentiable) : T
- Output tensor
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(bfloat16)
- Constrain input and output types to float tensors.
Examples
ceilCelu
Continuously Differentiable Exponential Linear Units: Perform the linear unit element-wise on the input tensor X using formula:
max(0,x) + min(0,alpha*(exp(x/alpha)-1))
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 12 of the default ONNX operator set.
Attributes
- alpha : float (default is 1.0)
- The Alpha value in Celu formula which control the shape of the unit. The default value is 1.0.
Inputs
- X (differentiable) : T
- Input tensor
Outputs
- Y (differentiable) : T
- Output tensor
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(float)
- Constrain input and output types to float32 tensors.
Examples
celuCenterCropPad
Center crop or pad an input to given dimensions.
The crop/pad dimensions can be specified for a subset of the axes
. Non-specified dimensions will not be cropped or padded.
If the input dimensions are bigger than the crop shape, a centered cropping window is extracted from the input. If the input dimensions are smaller than the crop shape, the input is padded on each side equally, so that the input is centered in the output.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 18 of the default ONNX operator set.
Attributes
- axes : list of ints
- If provided, it specifies a subset of axes that 'shape' refer to. If not provided, all axes are assumed [0, 1, ..., r-1], where r = rank(data). Negative value means counting dimensions from the back. Accepted range is [-r, r-1], where r = rank(data). Behavior is undefined if an axis is repeated.
Inputs
- input_data (differentiable) : T
- Input to extract the centered crop from.
- shape (non-differentiable) : Tind
- 1-D tensor representing the cropping window dimensions.
Outputs
- output_data (differentiable) : T
- Output data.
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(uint8), tensor(uint16), tensor(uint32), tensor(uint64), tensor(int8), tensor(int16), tensor(int32), tensor(int64), tensor(bfloat16), tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(string), tensor(bool), tensor(complex64), tensor(complex128)
- Constrain input and output types to all tensor types.
- Tind : tensor(int32), tensor(int64)
- Constrain indices to integer types
Examples
center_crop_pad_cropcenter_crop_pad_crop_and_padcenter_crop_pad_crop_axes_chwcenter_crop_pad_crop_axes_hwccenter_crop_pad_crop_negative_axes_hwccenter_crop_pad_padClip
Clip operator limits the given input within an interval. The interval is specified by the inputs 'min' and 'max'. They default to numeric_limits::lowest() and numeric_limits::max(), respectively.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 13 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 1, 6, 11, 12
Inputs (1 - 3)
- input (differentiable) : T
- Input tensor whose elements to be clipped
- min (optional, non-differentiable) : T
- Minimum value, under which element is replaced by min. It must be a scalar(tensor of empty shape).
- max (optional, non-differentiable) : T
- Maximum value, above which element is replaced by max. It must be a scalar(tensor of empty shape).
Outputs
- output (differentiable) : T
- Output tensor with clipped input elements
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(uint8), tensor(uint16), tensor(uint32), tensor(uint64), tensor(int8), tensor(int16), tensor(int32), tensor(int64), tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(bfloat16)
- Constrain input and output types to all numeric tensors.
Examples
clipclip_defaultclip_default_int8Col2Im
The operator rearranges column blocks back into a multidimensional image
Col2Im behaves similarly to PyTorch's fold https://pytorch.org/docs/stable/generated/torch.nn.Fold.html, but it only supports batched multi-dimensional image tensors. Another implementation in Python with N-dimension support can be found at https://github.com/f-dangel/unfoldNd/.
NOTE: Although specifying image_shape looks redundant because it could be calculated from convolution formulas, it is required as input for more advanced scenarios as explained at PyTorch's implementation (https://github.com/pytorch/pytorch/blob/master/aten/src/ATen/native/Col2Im.cpp#L10)
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 18 of the default ONNX operator set.
Attributes
- dilations : list of ints
- 1-dimensional tensor with dilation value along each spatial axis of the image. If not present, the dilation defaults to 1 along each spatial axis of the image.
- pads : list of ints
- 1-dimensional tensor with padding value for the beginning and ending along each spatial axis, it can take any value greater than or equal to 0. The value represent the number of pixels added to the beginning and end part of the corresponding axis. `pads` format should be as follow [x1_begin, x2_begin...x1_end, x2_end,...], where xi_begin is the number of pixels added at the beginning of axis `i` and xi_end is the number of pixels added at the end of axis `i`. If not present, the padding defaults to 0 along start and end of each spatial axis.
- strides : list of ints
- 1-dimensional tensor with stride value along each spatial axis. If not present, the stride defaults to 1 along each spatial axis.
Inputs
- input (differentiable) : T
- Input data tensor to be rearranged from column blocks back into an image. This is a 3-dimensional tensor containing [N, C * n-ary-product(block_shape), L], where N is batch dimension, C is image channel dimension and L is number of blocks.The blocks are enumerated in increasing lexicographic-order of their indices.For example, with an image-size 10*20 and block-size 9*18, there would be 2*3 blocks, enumerated in the order block(0, 0), block(0, 1), block(0, 2), block(1, 0), block(1, 1), block(1, 2).
- image_shape (non-differentiable) : tensor(int64)
- The shape of the spatial dimensions of the image after rearranging the column blocks.This is a 1-dimensional tensor with size of at least 2, containing the value [H_img, W_img] for a 2-D image or [dim_i1, dim_i2, ..., dim_iN] for a N-D image.
- block_shape (non-differentiable) : tensor(int64)
- The shape of the block to apply on the input.This is a 1-dimensional tensor of size of at least 2, containing the value [H_block, W_block] for a 2-D image or [dim_b1, dim_b2, ..., dim_bN] for a N-D block.This is the block-shape before dilation is applied to it.
Outputs
- output (differentiable) : T
- Output tensor produced by rearranging blocks into an image.
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(uint8), tensor(uint16), tensor(uint32), tensor(uint64), tensor(int8), tensor(int16), tensor(int32), tensor(int64), tensor(bfloat16), tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(string), tensor(bool), tensor(complex64), tensor(complex128)
- Constrain input and output types to all numeric tensor types.
Examples
col2imcol2im_5dcol2im_dilationscol2im_padscol2im_stridesCompress
Selects slices from an input tensor along a given axis where condition evaluates to True for each axis index. In case axis is not provided, input is flattened before elements are selected. Compress behaves like numpy.compress: https://docs.scipy.org/doc/numpy/reference/generated/numpy.compress.html
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 11 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 9
Attributes
- axis : int
- (Optional) Axis along which to take slices. If not specified, input is flattened before elements being selected. Negative value means counting dimensions from the back. Accepted range is [-r, r-1] where r = rank(input).
Inputs
- input (differentiable) : T
- Tensor of rank r >= 1.
- condition (non-differentiable) : T1
- Rank 1 tensor of booleans to indicate which slices or data elements to be selected. Its length can be less than the input length along the axis or the flattened input size if axis is not specified. In such cases data slices or elements exceeding the condition length are discarded.
Outputs
- output (differentiable) : T
- Tensor of rank r if axis is specified. Otherwise output is a Tensor of rank 1.
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(uint8), tensor(uint16), tensor(uint32), tensor(uint64), tensor(int8), tensor(int16), tensor(int32), tensor(int64), tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(string), tensor(bool), tensor(complex64), tensor(complex128)
- Constrain input and output types to all tensor types.
- T1 : tensor(bool)
- Constrain to boolean tensors.
Examples
compress_0compress_1compress_default_axiscompress_negative_axisConcat
Concatenate a list of tensors into a single tensor. All input tensors must have the same shape, except for the dimension size of the axis to concatenate on.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 13 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 1, 4, 11
Attributes
- axis : int (required)
- Which axis to concat on. A negative value means counting dimensions from the back. Accepted range is [-r, r-1] where r = rank(inputs)..
Inputs (1 - ∞)
- inputs (variadic, differentiable) : T
- List of tensors for concatenation
Outputs
- concat_result (differentiable) : T
- Concatenated tensor
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(uint8), tensor(uint16), tensor(uint32), tensor(uint64), tensor(int8), tensor(int16), tensor(int32), tensor(int64), tensor(bfloat16), tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(string), tensor(bool), tensor(complex64), tensor(complex128)
- Constrain output types to any tensor type.
Examples
concatConcatFromSequence
Concatenate a sequence of tensors into a single tensor. All input tensors must have the same shape, except for the dimension size of the axis to concatenate on. By default 'new_axis' is 0, the behavior is similar to numpy.concatenate. When 'new_axis' is 1, the behavior is similar to numpy.stack.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 11 of the default ONNX operator set.
Attributes
- axis : int (required)
- Which axis to concat on. Accepted range in `[-r, r - 1]`, where `r` is the rank of input tensors. When `new_axis` is 1, accepted range is `[-r - 1, r]`.
- new_axis : int (default is 0)
- Insert and concatenate on a new axis or not, default 0 means do not insert new axis.
Inputs
- input_sequence : S
- Sequence of tensors for concatenation
Outputs
- concat_result : T
- Concatenated tensor
Type Constraints
- S : seq(tensor(uint8)), seq(tensor(uint16)), seq(tensor(uint32)), seq(tensor(uint64)), seq(tensor(int8)), seq(tensor(int16)), seq(tensor(int32)), seq(tensor(int64)), seq(tensor(float16)), seq(tensor(float)), seq(tensor(double)), seq(tensor(string)), seq(tensor(bool)), seq(tensor(complex64)), seq(tensor(complex128))
- Constrain input types to any tensor type.
- T : tensor(uint8), tensor(uint16), tensor(uint32), tensor(uint64), tensor(int8), tensor(int16), tensor(int32), tensor(int64), tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(string), tensor(bool), tensor(complex64), tensor(complex128)
- Constrain output types to any tensor type.
Constant
This operator produces a constant tensor. Exactly one of the provided attributes, either value, sparse_value, or value_* must be specified.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 19 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 1, 9, 11, 12, 13
Attributes
- sparse_value : sparse_tensor
- The value for the elements of the output tensor in sparse format.
- value : tensor
- The value for the elements of the output tensor.
- value_float : float
- The value for the sole element for the scalar, float32, output tensor.
- value_floats : list of floats
- The values for the elements for the 1D, float32, output tensor.
- value_int : int
- The value for the sole element for the scalar, int64, output tensor.
- value_ints : list of ints
- The values for the elements for the 1D, int64, output tensor.
- value_string : string
- The value for the sole element for the scalar, UTF-8 string, output tensor.
- value_strings : list of strings
- The values for the elements for the 1D, UTF-8 string, output tensor.
Inputs
Outputs
- output : T
- Output tensor containing the same value of the provided tensor.
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(uint8), tensor(uint16), tensor(uint32), tensor(uint64), tensor(int8), tensor(int16), tensor(int32), tensor(int64), tensor(bfloat16), tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(string), tensor(bool), tensor(complex64), tensor(complex128), tensor(float8e4m3fn), tensor(float8e4m3fnuz), tensor(float8e5m2), tensor(float8e5m2fnuz)
- Constrain input and output types to all tensor types.
Examples
constantConstantOfShape
Generate a tensor with given value and shape.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 9 of the default ONNX operator set.
Attributes
- value : tensor
- (Optional) The value of the output elements.Should be a one-element tensor. If not specified, it defaults to a tensor of value 0 and datatype float32
Inputs
- input : T1
- 1D tensor. The shape of the expected output tensor. If empty tensor is given, the output would be a scalar. All values must be >= 0.
Outputs
- output : T2
- Output tensor of shape specified by 'input'.If attribute 'value' is specified, the value and datatype of the output tensor is taken from 'value'.If attribute 'value' is not specified, the value in the output defaults to 0, and the datatype defaults to float32.
Type Constraints
- T1 : tensor(int64)
- Constrain input types.
- T2 : tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(int8), tensor(int16), tensor(int32), tensor(int64), tensor(uint8), tensor(uint16), tensor(uint32), tensor(uint64), tensor(bool)
- Constrain output types to be numerics.
Examples
float_onesint32_shape_zeroint32_zerosConv
The convolution operator consumes an input tensor and a filter, and computes the output.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 11 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 1
Attributes
- auto_pad : string (default is NOTSET)
- auto_pad must be either NOTSET, SAME_UPPER, SAME_LOWER or VALID. Where default value is NOTSET, which means explicit padding is used. SAME_UPPER or SAME_LOWER mean pad the input so that `output_shape[i] = ceil(input_shape[i] / strides[i])` for each axis `i`. The padding is split between the two sides equally or almost equally (depending on whether it is even or odd). In case the padding is an odd number, the extra padding is added at the end for SAME_UPPER and at the beginning for SAME_LOWER.
- dilations : list of ints
- dilation value along each spatial axis of the filter. If not present, the dilation defaults is 1 along each spatial axis.
- group : int (default is 1)
- number of groups input channels and output channels are divided into.
- kernel_shape : list of ints
- The shape of the convolution kernel. If not present, should be inferred from input W.
- pads : list of ints
- Padding for the beginning and ending along each spatial axis, it can take any value greater than or equal to 0. The value represent the number of pixels added to the beginning and end part of the corresponding axis. `pads` format should be as follow [x1_begin, x2_begin...x1_end, x2_end,...], where xi_begin the number of pixels added at the beginning of axis `i` and xi_end, the number of pixels added at the end of axis `i`. This attribute cannot be used simultaneously with auto_pad attribute. If not present, the padding defaults to 0 along start and end of each spatial axis.
- strides : list of ints
- Stride along each spatial axis. If not present, the stride defaults is 1 along each spatial axis.
Inputs (2 - 3)
- X (differentiable) : T
- Input data tensor from previous layer; has size (N x C x H x W), where N is the batch size, C is the number of channels, and H and W are the height and width. Note that this is for the 2D image. Otherwise the size is (N x C x D1 x D2 ... x Dn). Optionally, if dimension denotation is in effect, the operation expects input data tensor to arrive with the dimension denotation of [DATA_BATCH, DATA_CHANNEL, DATA_FEATURE, DATA_FEATURE ...].
- W (differentiable) : T
- The weight tensor that will be used in the convolutions; has size (M x C/group x kH x kW), where C is the number of channels, and kH and kW are the height and width of the kernel, and M is the number of feature maps. For more than 2 dimensions, the kernel shape will be (M x C/group x k1 x k2 x ... x kn), where (k1 x k2 x ... kn) is the dimension of the kernel. Optionally, if dimension denotation is in effect, the operation expects the weight tensor to arrive with the dimension denotation of [FILTER_OUT_CHANNEL, FILTER_IN_CHANNEL, FILTER_SPATIAL, FILTER_SPATIAL ...]. Assuming zero based indices for the shape array, X.shape[1] == (W.shape[1] * group) == C and W.shape[0] mod G == 0. Or in other words FILTER_IN_CHANNEL multiplied by the number of groups should be equal to DATA_CHANNEL and the number of feature maps M should be a multiple of the number of groups G.
- B (optional, differentiable) : T
- Optional 1D bias to be added to the convolution, has size of M.
Outputs
- Y (differentiable) : T
- Output data tensor that contains the result of the convolution. The output dimensions are functions of the kernel size, stride size, and pad lengths.
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double)
- Constrain input and output types to float tensors.
Examples
convconv_with_autopad_sameconv_with_stridesConvInteger
The integer convolution operator consumes an input tensor, its zero-point, a filter, and its zero-point, and computes the output. The production MUST never overflow. The accumulation may overflow if and only if in 32 bits.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 10 of the default ONNX operator set.
Attributes
- auto_pad : string (default is NOTSET)
- auto_pad must be either NOTSET, SAME_UPPER, SAME_LOWER or VALID. Where default value is NOTSET, which means explicit padding is used. SAME_UPPER or SAME_LOWER mean pad the input so that `output_shape[i] = ceil(input_shape[i] / strides[i])` for each axis `i`. The padding is split between the two sides equally or almost equally (depending on whether it is even or odd). In case the padding is an odd number, the extra padding is added at the end for SAME_UPPER and at the beginning for SAME_LOWER.
- dilations : list of ints
- dilation value along each spatial axis of the filter. If not present, the dilation defaults to 1 along each axis.
- group : int (default is 1)
- number of groups input channels and output channels are divided into. default is 1.
- kernel_shape : list of ints
- The shape of the convolution kernel. If not present, should be inferred from input 'w'.
- pads : list of ints
- Padding for the beginning and ending along each spatial axis, it can take any value greater than or equal to 0.The value represent the number of pixels added to the beginning and end part of the corresponding axis.`pads` format should be as follow [x1_begin, x2_begin...x1_end, x2_end,...], where xi_begin the number ofpixels added at the beginning of axis `i` and xi_end, the number of pixels added at the end of axis `i`.This attribute cannot be used simultaneously with auto_pad attribute. If not present, the padding defaultsto 0 along start and end of each spatial axis.
- strides : list of ints
- Stride along each spatial axis. If not present, the stride defaults to 1 along each axis.
Inputs (2 - 4)
- x : T1
- Input data tensor from previous layer; has size (N x C x H x W), where N is the batch size, C is the number of channels, and H and W are the height and width. Note that this is for the 2D image. Otherwise the size is (N x C x D1 x D2 ... x Dn). Optionally, if dimension denotation is in effect, the operation expects input data tensor to arrive with the dimension denotation of [DATA_BATCH, DATA_CHANNEL, DATA_FEATURE, DATA_FEATURE ...].
- w : T2
- The weight tensor that will be used in the convolutions; has size (M x C/group x kH x kW), where C is the number of channels, and kH and kW are the height and width of the kernel, and M is the number of feature maps. For more than 2 dimensions, the kernel shape will be (M x C/group x k1 x k2 x ... x kn), where (k1 x k2 x ... kn) is the dimension of the kernel. Optionally, if dimension denotation is in effect, the operation expects the weight tensor to arrive with the dimension denotation of [FILTER_OUT_CHANNEL, FILTER_IN_CHANNEL, FILTER_SPATIAL, FILTER_SPATIAL ...]. X.shape[1] == (W.shape[1] * group) == C (assuming zero based indices for the shape array). Or in other words FILTER_IN_CHANNEL should be equal to DATA_CHANNEL.
- x_zero_point (optional) : T1
- Zero point tensor for input 'x'. It's optional and default value is 0. It's a scalar, which means a per-tensor/layer quantization.
- w_zero_point (optional) : T2
- Zero point tensor for input 'w'. It's optional and default value is 0. It could be a scalar or a 1-D tensor, which means a per-tensor/layer or per output channel quantization. If it's a 1-D tensor, its number of elements should be equal to the number of output channels (M)
Outputs
- y : T3
- Output data tensor that contains the result of the convolution. The output dimensions are functions of the kernel size, stride size, and pad lengths.
Type Constraints
- T1 : tensor(int8), tensor(uint8)
- Constrain input x and its zero point data type to 8-bit integer tensor.
- T2 : tensor(int8), tensor(uint8)
- Constrain input w and its zero point data type to 8-bit integer tensor.
- T3 : tensor(int32)
- Constrain output y data type to 32-bit integer tensor.
Examples
with_paddingwithout_paddingConvTranspose
The convolution transpose operator consumes an input tensor and a filter, and computes the output.
If the pads parameter is provided the shape of the output is calculated via the following equation:
output_shape[i] = stride[i] * (input_size[i] - 1) + output_padding[i] + ((kernel_shape[i] - 1) * dilations[i] + 1) - pads[start_i] - pads[end_i]
output_shape can also be explicitly specified in which case pads values are auto generated using these equations:
total_padding[i] = stride[i] * (input_size[i] - 1) + output_padding[i] + ((kernel_shape[i] - 1) * dilations[i] + 1) - output_shape[i]
If (auto_pads == SAME_UPPER): pads[start_i] = total_padding[i]/2; pads[end_i] = total_padding[i] - (total_padding[i]/2)
Else: pads[start_i] = total_padding[i] - (total_padding[i]/2); pads[end_i] = (total_padding[i]/2).
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 11 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 1
Attributes
- auto_pad : string (default is NOTSET)
- auto_pad must be either NOTSET, SAME_UPPER, SAME_LOWER or VALID. Where default value is NOTSET, which means explicit padding is used. SAME_UPPER or SAME_LOWER mean pad the input so that `output_shape[i] = input_shape[i] * strides[i]` for each axis `i`. The padding is split between the two sides equally or almost equally (depending on whether it is even or odd). In case the padding is an odd number, the extra padding is added at the end for SAME_UPPER and at the beginning for SAME_LOWER.
- dilations : list of ints
- dilation value along each spatial axis of the filter. If not present, the dilation defaults to 1 along each spatial axis.
- group : int (default is 1)
- number of groups input channels and output channels are divided into.
- kernel_shape : list of ints
- The shape of the convolution kernel. If not present, should be inferred from input W.
- output_padding : list of ints
- Additional elements added to the side with higher coordinate indices in the output. Each padding value in "output_padding" must be less than the corresponding stride/dilation dimension. By default, this attribute is a zero vector. Note that this attribute doesn't directly affect the computed output values. It only controls the selection of the computed values, so changing this attribute only adds or removes output elements. If "output_shape" is explicitly provided, "output_padding" does not contribute additional size to "output_shape" but participates in the computation of the needed padding amount. This is also called adjs or adjustment in some frameworks.
- output_shape : list of ints
- The shape of the output can be explicitly set which will cause pads values to be auto generated. If output_shape is specified pads values are ignored. See doc for details for equations to generate pads
- pads : list of ints
- Padding for the beginning and ending along each spatial axis, it can take any value greater than or equal to 0. The value represent the number of pixels added to the beginning and end part of the corresponding axis. `pads` format should be as follow [x1_begin, x2_begin...x1_end, x2_end,...], where xi_begin the number of pixels added at the beginning of axis `i` and xi_end, the number of pixels added at the end of axis `i`. This attribute cannot be used simultaneously with auto_pad attribute. If not present, the padding defaults to 0 along start and end of each spatial axis.
- strides : list of ints
- Stride along each spatial axis. If not present, the stride defaults to 1 along each spatial axis.
Inputs (2 - 3)
- X (differentiable) : T
- Input data tensor from previous layer; has size (N x C x H x W), where N is the batch size, C is the number of channels, and H and W are the height and width. Note that this is for the 2D image. Otherwise the size is (N x C x D1 x D2 ... x Dn)
- W (differentiable) : T
- The weight tensor that will be used in the convolutions; has size (C x M/group x kH x kW), where C is the number of channels, and kH and kW are the height and width of the kernel, and M is the number of feature maps. For more than 2 dimensions, the weight shape will be (C x M/group x k1 x k2 x ... x kn), where (k1 x k2 x ... x kn) is the dimension of the kernel. The number of channels in the output should be equal to W.shape[1] * group (assuming zero based indices of the shape array)
- B (optional, differentiable) : T
- Optional 1D bias to be added to the convolution, has size of M.
Outputs
- Y (differentiable) : T
- Output data tensor that contains the result of the convolution. The output dimensions are functions of the kernel size, stride size, pad lengths and group count. The number of channels in the output should be equal to W.shape[1] * group (assuming zero based indices of the shape array)
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double)
- Constrain input and output types to float tensors.
Examples
convtransposeconvtranspose_1dconvtranspose_3dconvtranspose_attributesconvtranspose_autopad_sameconvtranspose_dilationsconvtranspose_padsCos
Calculates the cosine of the given input tensor, element-wise.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 7 of the default ONNX operator set.
Inputs
- input (differentiable) : T
- Input tensor
Outputs
- output (differentiable) : T
- The cosine of the input tensor computed element-wise
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double)
- Constrain input and output types to float tensors.
Examples
cosCosh
Calculates the hyperbolic cosine of the given input tensor element-wise.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 9 of the default ONNX operator set.
Inputs
- input (differentiable) : T
- Input tensor
Outputs
- output (differentiable) : T
- The hyperbolic cosine values of the input tensor computed element-wise
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double)
- Constrain input and output types to float tensors.
Examples
coshCumSum
Performs cumulative sum of the input elements along the given axis. By default, it will do the sum inclusively meaning the first element is copied as is. Through an exclusive
attribute, this behavior can change to exclude the first element. It can also perform summation in the opposite direction of the axis. For that, set reverse
attribute to 1.
Example:
input_x = [1, 2, 3]
axis=0
output = [1, 3, 6]
exclusive=1
output = [0, 1, 3]
exclusive=0
reverse=1
output = [6, 5, 3]
exclusive=1
reverse=1
output = [5, 3, 0]
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 14 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 11
Attributes
- exclusive : int (default is 0)
- If set to 1 will return exclusive sum in which the top element is not included. In other terms, if set to 1, the j-th output element would be the sum of the first (j-1) elements. Otherwise, it would be the sum of the first j elements.
- reverse : int (default is 0)
- If set to 1 will perform the sums in reverse direction.
Inputs
- x (differentiable) : T
- An input tensor that is to be processed.
- axis (non-differentiable) : T2
- A 0-D tensor. Must be in the range [-rank(x), rank(x)-1]. Negative value means counting dimensions from the back.
Outputs
- y (differentiable) : T
- Output tensor of the same type as 'x' with cumulative sums of the x's elements
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(uint32), tensor(uint64), tensor(int32), tensor(int64), tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(bfloat16)
- Constrain input and output types to high-precision numeric tensors.
- T2 : tensor(int32), tensor(int64)
- axis tensor can be int32 or int64 only
Examples
cumsum_1dcumsum_1d_exclusivecumsum_1d_reversecumsum_1d_reverse_exclusivecumsum_2d_axis_0cumsum_2d_axis_1cumsum_2d_negative_axisDFT
Computes the discrete Fourier transform of input.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 17 of the default ONNX operator set.
Attributes
- axis : int (default is 1)
- The axis on which to perform the DFT. By default this value is set to 1, which corresponds to the first dimension after the batch index.
- inverse : int (default is 0)
- Whether to perform the inverse discrete fourier transform. By default this value is set to 0, which corresponds to false.
- onesided : int (default is 0)
- If onesided is 1, only values for w in [0, 1, 2, ..., floor(n_fft/2) + 1] are returned because the real-to-complex Fourier transform satisfies the conjugate symmetry, i.e., X[m, w] = X[m,w]=X[m,n_fft-w]*. Note if the input or window tensors are complex, then onesided output is not possible. Enabling onesided with real inputs performs a Real-valued fast Fourier transform (RFFT). When invoked with real or complex valued input, the default value is 0. Values can be 0 or 1.
Inputs (1 - 2)
- input (non-differentiable) : T1
- For real input, the following shape is expected: [batch_idx][signal_dim1][signal_dim2]...[signal_dimN][1]. For complex input, the following shape is expected: [batch_idx][signal_dim1][signal_dim2]...[signal_dimN][2]. The first dimension is the batch dimension. The following N dimentions correspond to the signal's dimensions. The final dimension represents the real and imaginary parts of the value in that order.
- dft_length (optional, non-differentiable) : T2
- The length of the signal.If greater than the axis dimension, the signal will be zero-padded up to dft_length. If less than the axis dimension, only the first dft_length values will be used as the signal. It's an optional value.
Outputs
- output : T1
- The Fourier Transform of the input vector.If onesided is 0, the following shape is expected: [batch_idx][signal_dim1][signal_dim2]...[signal_dimN][2]. If axis=1 and onesided is 1, the following shape is expected: [batch_idx][floor(signal_dim1/2)+1][signal_dim2]...[signal_dimN][2]. If axis=2 and onesided is 1, the following shape is expected: [batch_idx][signal_dim1][floor(signal_dim2/2)+1]...[signal_dimN][2]. If axis=N and onesided is 1, the following shape is expected: [batch_idx][signal_dim1][signal_dim2]...[floor(signal_dimN/2)+1][2]. The signal_dim at the specified axis is equal to the dft_length.
Type Constraints
- T1 : tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(bfloat16)
- Constrain input and output types to float tensors.
- T2 : tensor(int32), tensor(int64)
- Constrain scalar length types to int64_t.
Examples
dftDeformConv
Performs deformable convolution as described in https://arxiv.org/abs/1703.06211 and https://arxiv.org/abs/1811.11168. This operator specification supports the general N-D case. Note that most common use cases have 2D or 3D data.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 19 of the default ONNX operator set.
Attributes
- dilations : list of ints
- Dilation value along each spatial axis of the kernel. Default is 1 along each axis.
- group : int (default is 1)
- Number of groups the input and output channels, C and oC, are divided into. C and oC must both be divisible by group. Default is 1.
- kernel_shape : list of ints
- Shape of the convolution kernel. If not present, it is inferred from the shape of input W.
- offset_group : int (default is 1)
- Number of groups of offset. C must be divisible by offset_group. Default is 1.
- pads : list of ints
- Padding for the beginning and end along each spatial axis. The values represent the number of pixels added to the beginning and end of the corresponding axis and can take any nonnegative value. The format should be as follows: [x1_begin, x2_begin, ..., x1_end, x2_end, ...], where xi_begin is the number of pixels added at the beginning of axis `i` and xi_end is the number of pixels added at the end of axis `i`. Default is 0 along each axis.
- strides : list of ints
- Stride along each spatial axis. Default is 1 along each axis.
Inputs (3 - 5)
- X : T
- Input data tensor. For 2D image data, it has shape (N, C, H, W) where N is the batch size, C is the number of input channels, and H and W are the height and width. In general, the shape is (N, C, D1, D2, ... , Dn) for n-dimensional data, where D1 to Dn are the spatial dimension sizes. Most common use cases have n = 2 or 3.
- W : T
- Weight tensor that will be used in the convolutions. It has shape (oC, C/group, kH, kW), where oC is the number of output channels and kH and kW are the kernel height and width. For more than 2 dimensions, it has shape (oC, C/group, k1, k2, ... , kn).
- offset : T
- Offset tensor denoting the offset for the sampling locations in the convolution kernel. It has shape (N, offset_group * kH * kW * 2, oH, oW) for 2D data or (N, offset_group * k1 * k2 * ... * kn * n, o1, o2, ... , on) for nD data. Use linear interpolationfor fractional offset values. Sampling locations outside of the padded input tensor gives zero.
- B (optional) : T
- Optional 1D bias of length oC to be added to the convolution. Default is a tensor of zeros.
- mask (optional) : T
- The mask tensor to be applied to each position in the convolution kernel. It has shape (N, offset_group * kH * kW, oH, oW) for 2D data or (N, offset_group * k1 * k2 * ... * kn * n, o1, o2, ... , on) for nD data. Default is a tensor of ones.
Outputs
- Y : T
- Output data tensor that contains the result of convolution. It has shape (N, oC, oH, oW) for 2D data or (N, oC, o1, o2, ..., on) for nD data
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double)
- Constrain input and output types to float tensors.
Examples
deformconvdeformconv_with_mask_biasdeformconv_with_multiple_offset_groupsDepthToSpace
DepthToSpace rearranges (permutes) data from depth into blocks of spatial data. This is the reverse transformation of SpaceToDepth. More specifically, this op outputs a copy of the input tensor where values from the depth dimension are moved in spatial blocks to the height and width dimensions. By default, mode
= DCR
. In the DCR mode, elements along the depth dimension from the input tensor are rearranged in the following order: depth, column, and then row. The output y is computed from the input x as below:
b, c, h, w = x.shape
tmp = np.reshape(x, [b, blocksize, blocksize, c // (blocksize**2), h, w])
tmp = np.transpose(tmp, [0, 3, 4, 1, 5, 2])
y = np.reshape(tmp, [b, c // (blocksize**2), h * blocksize, w * blocksize])
In the CRD mode, elements along the depth dimension from the input tensor are rearranged in the following order: column, row, and the depth. The output y is computed from the input x as below:
b, c, h, w = x.shape
tmp = np.reshape(x, [b, c // (blocksize ** 2), blocksize, blocksize, h, w])
tmp = np.transpose(tmp, [0, 1, 4, 2, 5, 3])
y = np.reshape(tmp, [b, c // (blocksize ** 2), h * blocksize, w * blocksize])
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 13 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 1, 11
Attributes
- blocksize : int (required)
- Blocks of [blocksize, blocksize] are moved.
- mode : string (default is DCR)
- DCR (default) for depth-column-row order re-arrangement. Use CRD for column-row-depth order.
Inputs
- input (differentiable) : T
- Input tensor of [N,C,H,W], where N is the batch axis, C is the channel or depth, H is the height and W is the width.
Outputs
- output (differentiable) : T
- Output tensor of [N, C/(blocksize * blocksize), H * blocksize, W * blocksize].
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(uint8), tensor(uint16), tensor(uint32), tensor(uint64), tensor(int8), tensor(int16), tensor(int32), tensor(int64), tensor(bfloat16), tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(string), tensor(bool), tensor(complex64), tensor(complex128)
- Constrain input and output types to all tensor types.
Examples
crd_mode_exampledefault_mode_exampleDequantizeLinear
The linear dequantization operator. It consumes a quantized tensor, a scale, and a zero point to compute the full precision tensor. The dequantization formula is y = (x - x_zero_point) * x_scale
. x_scale
and x_zero_point
must have same shape, and can be either a scalar for per-tensor / per layer quantization, or a 1-D tensor for per-axis quantization. x_zero_point
and x
must have same type. x
and y
must have same shape. In the case of dequantizing int32, there's no zero point (zero point is supposed to be 0). zero-point
is usually not used in the case of float8e4m3fn, float8e4m3fnuz, float8e5m2, float8e5m2fnuz quantization, but the dequantization formula remains the same for consistency and 'x_scale' still determines the output type.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 19 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 10, 13
Attributes
- axis : int (default is 1)
- (Optional) The axis of the dequantizing dimension of the input tensor. Ignored for per-tensor quantization. Negative value means counting dimensions from the back. Accepted range is [-r, r-1] where r = rank(input).
Inputs (2 - 3)
- x : T1
- N-D quantized input tensor to be de-quantized.
- x_scale : T2
- Scale for input 'x'. It can be a scalar, which means a per-tensor/layer dequantization, or a 1-D tensor for per-axis dequantization.
- x_zero_point (optional) : T1
- Zero point for input 'x'. Shape must match x_scale. It's optional. Zero point is 0 when it's not specified.
Outputs
- y : T2
- N-D full precision output tensor. It has same shape as input 'x'.
Type Constraints
- T1 : tensor(int8), tensor(uint8), tensor(int32), tensor(float8e4m3fn), tensor(float8e4m3fnuz), tensor(float8e5m2), tensor(float8e5m2fnuz)
- Constrain 'x_zero_point' and 'x' to 8-bit integer or float, or /32-bit integer tensor.
- T2 : tensor(float), tensor(float16), tensor(bfloat16)
- 'y_scale' determines the output type.
Examples
axisdequantizelineare4m3fne5m2Det
Det calculates determinant of a square matrix or batches of square matrices. Det takes one input tensor of shape [*, M, M]
, where *
is zero or more batch dimensions, and the inner-most 2 dimensions form square matrices. The output is a tensor of shape [*]
, containing the determinants of all input submatrices. e.g., When the input is 2-D, the output is a scalar(shape is empty: []
).
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 11 of the default ONNX operator set.
Inputs
- X (differentiable) : T
- Input tensor
Outputs
- Y (differentiable) : T
- Output tensor
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double)
- Constrain input and output types to floating-point tensors.
Examples
2dndDiv
Performs element-wise binary division (with Numpy-style broadcasting support).
This operator supports multidirectional (i.e., Numpy-style) broadcasting; for more details please check the doc.
(Opset 14 change): Extend supported types to include uint8, int8, uint16, and int16.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 14 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 1, 6, 7, 13
Inputs
- A (differentiable) : T
- First operand.
- B (differentiable) : T
- Second operand.
Outputs
- C (differentiable) : T
- Result, has same element type as two inputs
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(uint8), tensor(uint16), tensor(uint32), tensor(uint64), tensor(int8), tensor(int16), tensor(int32), tensor(int64), tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(bfloat16)
- Constrain input and output types to all numeric tensors.
Examples
divdiv_broadcastDropout
Dropout takes an input floating-point tensor, an optional input ratio (floating-point scalar) and an optional input training_mode (boolean scalar). It produces two tensor outputs, output (floating-point tensor) and mask (optional Tensor<bool>
). If training_mode
is true then the output Y will be a random dropout; Note that this Dropout scales the masked input data by the following equation, so to convert the trained model into inference mode, the user can simply not pass training_mode
input or set it to false.
output = scale * data * mask,
where
scale = 1. / (1. - ratio).
This operator has optional inputs/outputs. See the doc for more details about the representation of optional arguments. An empty string may be used in the place of an actual argument's name to indicate a missing argument. Trailing optional arguments (those not followed by an argument that is present) may also be simply omitted.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 13 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 1, 6, 7, 10, 12
Attributes
- seed : int
- (Optional) Seed to the random generator, if not specified we will auto generate one.
Inputs (1 - 3)
- data (differentiable) : T
- The input data as Tensor.
- ratio (optional, non-differentiable) : T1
- The ratio of random dropout, with value in [0, 1). If this input was not set, or if it was set to 0, the output would be a simple copy of the input. If it's non-zero, output will be a random dropout of the scaled input, which is typically the case during training. It is an optional value, if not specified it will default to 0.5.
- training_mode (optional, non-differentiable) : T2
- If set to true then it indicates dropout is being used for training. It is an optional value hence unless specified explicitly, it is false. If it is false, ratio is ignored and the operation mimics inference mode where nothing will be dropped from the input data and if mask is requested as output it will contain all ones.
Outputs (1 - 2)
- output (differentiable) : T
- The output.
- mask (optional, non-differentiable) : T2
- The output mask.
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(bfloat16)
- Constrain input and output types to float tensors.
- T1 : tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double)
- Constrain input 'ratio' types to float tensors.
- T2 : tensor(bool)
- Constrain output 'mask' types to boolean tensors.
Examples
defaultdefault_maskdefault_mask_ratiodefault_olddefault_ratiorandom_oldtrainingtraining_defaulttraining_default_ratio_masktraining_default_zero_ratiotraining_default_zero_ratio_masktraining_ratio_maskDynamicQuantizeLinear
A Function to fuse calculation for Scale, Zero Point and FP32->8Bit convertion of FP32 Input data. Outputs Scale, ZeroPoint and Quantized Input for a given FP32 Input. Scale is calculated as:
y_scale = (max(x) - min(x))/(qmax - qmin)
- where qmax and qmin are max and min values for quantization range .i.e [0, 255] in case of uint8
- data range is adjusted to include 0.
Zero point is calculated as:
intermediate_zero_point = qmin - min(x)/y_scale
y_zero_point = cast(round(saturate(itermediate_zero_point)))
- where qmax and qmin are max and min values for quantization range .i.e [0, 255] in case of uint8
- for saturation, it saturates to [0, 255] if it's uint8, or [-127, 127] if it's int8. Right now only uint8 is supported.
- rounding to nearest ties to even.
Data quantization formula is:
y = saturate (round (x / y_scale) + y_zero_point)
- for saturation, it saturates to [0, 255] if it's uint8, or [-127, 127] if it's int8. Right now only uint8 is supported.
- rounding to nearest ties to even.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 11 of the default ONNX operator set.
Inputs
- x : T1
- Input tensor
Outputs
- y : T2
- Quantized output tensor
- y_scale : tensor(float)
- Output scale. It's a scalar, which means a per-tensor/layer quantization.
- y_zero_point : T2
- Output zero point. It's a scalar, which means a per-tensor/layer quantization.
Type Constraints
- T1 : tensor(float)
- Constrain 'x' to float tensor.
- T2 : tensor(uint8)
- Constrain 'y_zero_point' and 'y' to 8-bit unsigned integer tensor.
Examples
dynamicquantizelinearEinsum
An einsum of the form term1, term2 -> output-term
produces an output tensor using the following equation
output[output-term] = reduce-sum( input1[term1] * input2[term] )
where the reduce-sum performs a summation over all the indices occurring in the input terms (term1, term2) that do not occur in the output-term.
The Einsum operator evaluates algebraic tensor operations on a sequence of tensors, using the Einstein summation convention. The equation string contains a comma-separated sequence of lower case letters. Each term corresponds to an operand tensor, and the characters within the terms correspond to operands dimensions.
This sequence may be followed by "->" to separate the left and right hand side of the equation. If the equation contains "->" followed by the right-hand side, the explicit (not classical) form of the Einstein summation is performed, and the right-hand side indices indicate output tensor dimensions. In other cases, output indices are (implicitly) set to the alphabetically sorted sequence of indices appearing exactly once in the equation.
When a dimension character is repeated in the left-hand side, it represents summation along the dimension.
The equation may contain ellipsis ("...") to enable broadcasting. Ellipsis must indicate a fixed number of dimensions. Specifically, every occurrence of ellipsis in the equation must represent the same number of dimensions. The right-hand side may contain exactly one ellipsis. In implicit mode, the ellipsis dimensions are set to the beginning of the output. The equation string may contain space (U+0020) character.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 12 of the default ONNX operator set.
Attributes
- equation : string (required)
- Einsum expression string.
Inputs (1 - ∞)
- Inputs (variadic, differentiable) : T
- Operands
Outputs
- Output (differentiable) : T
- Output tensor
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(uint8), tensor(uint16), tensor(uint32), tensor(uint64), tensor(int8), tensor(int16), tensor(int32), tensor(int64), tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double)
- Constrain input and output types to all numerical tensor types.
Examples
einsum_batch_diagonaleinsum_batch_matmuleinsum_inner_prodeinsum_sumeinsum_transposeElu
Elu takes one input data (Tensor) and produces one output data (Tensor) where the function f(x) = alpha * (exp(x) - 1.) for x < 0
, f(x) = x for x >= 0
., is applied to the tensor elementwise.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 6 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 1
Attributes
- alpha : float (default is 1.0)
- Coefficient of ELU.
Inputs
- X (differentiable) : T
- 1D input tensor
Outputs
- Y (differentiable) : T
- 1D output tensor
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double)
- Constrain input and output types to float tensors.
Examples
eluelu_defaultEqual
Returns the tensor resulted from performing the equal
logical operation elementwise on the input tensors A
and B
(with Numpy-style broadcasting support).
This operator supports multidirectional (i.e., Numpy-style) broadcasting; for more details please check the doc.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 19 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 1, 7, 11, 13
Inputs
- A (non-differentiable) : T
- First input operand for the logical operator.
- B (non-differentiable) : T
- Second input operand for the logical operator.
Outputs
- C (non-differentiable) : T1
- Result tensor.
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(bool), tensor(uint8), tensor(uint16), tensor(uint32), tensor(uint64), tensor(int8), tensor(int16), tensor(int32), tensor(int64), tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(bfloat16), tensor(string)
- Constrain input types to all (non-complex) tensors.
- T1 : tensor(bool)
- Constrain output to boolean tensor.
Examples
equalequal_broadcastequal_stringequal_string_broadcastErf
Computes the error function of the given input tensor element-wise.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 13 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 9
Inputs
- input (differentiable) : T
- Input tensor
Outputs
- output (differentiable) : T
- The error function of the input tensor computed element-wise. It has the same shape and type of the input.
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(uint8), tensor(uint16), tensor(uint32), tensor(uint64), tensor(int8), tensor(int16), tensor(int32), tensor(int64), tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(bfloat16)
- Constrain input and output types to all numeric tensors.
Examples
erfExp
Calculates the exponential of the given input tensor, element-wise.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 13 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 1, 6
Inputs
- input (differentiable) : T
- Input tensor
Outputs
- output (differentiable) : T
- The exponential of the input tensor computed element-wise
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(bfloat16)
- Constrain input and output types to float tensors.
Examples
expExpand
Broadcast the input tensor following the given shape and the broadcast rule. The broadcast rule is similar to numpy.array(input) * numpy.ones(shape): Dimensions are right alignment; Two corresponding dimensions must have the same value, or one of them is equal to 1. Also, this operator is similar to numpy.broadcast_to(input, shape), but the major difference is numpy.broadcast_to() does not allow shape to be smaller than input.size(). It is possible that the output.shape is not equal to shape, when some dimensions in shape is equal to 1, or the shape.ndim < input.shape.ndim.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 13 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 8
Inputs
- input (differentiable) : T
- Input tensor
- shape (non-differentiable) : tensor(int64)
- A 1-D tensor indicates the shape you want to expand to, following the broadcast rule
Outputs
- output (differentiable) : T
- Output tensor
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(uint8), tensor(uint16), tensor(uint32), tensor(uint64), tensor(int8), tensor(int16), tensor(int32), tensor(int64), tensor(bfloat16), tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(string), tensor(bool), tensor(complex64), tensor(complex128)
- Constrain input and output types to all tensors.
Examples
dim_changeddim_unchangedEyeLike
Generate a 2D tensor (matrix) with ones on the diagonal and zeros everywhere else. Only 2D tensors are supported, i.e. input T1 must be of rank 2. The shape of the output tensor is the same as the input tensor. The data type can be specified by the 'dtype' argument. If 'dtype' is not specified, then the type of input tensor is used. By default, the main diagonal is populated with ones, but attribute 'k' can be used to populate upper or lower diagonals. The 'dtype' argument must be one of the data types specified in the 'DataType' enum field in the TensorProto message and be valid as an output type.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 9 of the default ONNX operator set.
Attributes
- dtype : int
- (Optional) The data type for the elements of the output tensor. If not specified,the data type of the input tensor T1 is used. If input tensor T1 is also notspecified, then type defaults to 'float'.
- k : int (default is 0)
- (Optional) Index of the diagonal to be populated with ones. Default is 0. If T2 is the output, this op sets T2[i, i+k] = 1. k = 0 populates the main diagonal, k > 0 populates an upper diagonal, and k < 0 populates a lower diagonal.
Inputs
- input : T1
- 2D input tensor to copy shape, and optionally, type information from.
Outputs
- output : T2
- Output tensor, same shape as input tensor T1.
Type Constraints
- T1 : tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(int8), tensor(int16), tensor(int32), tensor(int64), tensor(uint8), tensor(uint16), tensor(uint32), tensor(uint64), tensor(bool)
- Constrain input types. Strings and complex are not supported.
- T2 : tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(int8), tensor(int16), tensor(int32), tensor(int64), tensor(uint8), tensor(uint16), tensor(uint32), tensor(uint64), tensor(bool)
- Constrain output types. Strings and complex are not supported.
Examples
populate_off_main_diagonalwith_dtypewithout_dtypeFlatten
Flattens the input tensor into a 2D matrix. If input tensor has shape (d_0, d_1, ... d_n) then the output will have shape (d_0 X d_1 ... d_(axis-1), d_axis X d_(axis+1) ... X dn).
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 13 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 1, 9, 11
Attributes
- axis : int (default is 1)
- Indicate up to which input dimensions (exclusive) should be flattened to the outer dimension of the output. The value for axis must be in the range [-r, r], where r is the rank of the input tensor. Negative value means counting dimensions from the back. When axis = 0, the shape of the output tensor is (1, (d_0 X d_1 ... d_n), where the shape of the input tensor is (d_0, d_1, ... d_n).
Inputs
- input (differentiable) : T
- A tensor of rank >= axis.
Outputs
- output (differentiable) : T
- A 2D tensor with the contents of the input tensor, with input dimensions up to axis flattened to the outer dimension of the output and remaining input dimensions flattened into the inner dimension of the output.
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(uint8), tensor(uint16), tensor(uint32), tensor(uint64), tensor(int8), tensor(int16), tensor(int32), tensor(int64), tensor(bfloat16), tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(string), tensor(bool), tensor(complex64), tensor(complex128)
- Constrain input and output to all tensor types.
Examples
flattenflatten_negative_axisflatten_with_default_axisFloor
Floor takes one input data (Tensor) and produces one output data (Tensor) where the floor is, y = floor(x), is applied to the tensor elementwise. If x is integral, +0, -0, NaN, or infinite, x itself is returned.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 13 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 1, 6
Inputs
- X (non-differentiable) : T
- Input tensor
Outputs
- Y (non-differentiable) : T
- Output tensor
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(bfloat16)
- Constrain input and output types to float tensors.
Examples
floorGRU
Computes an one-layer GRU. This operator is usually supported via some custom implementation such as CuDNN.
Notations:
X
- input tensorz
- update gater
- reset gateh
- hidden gatet
- time step (t-1 means previous time step)W[zrh]
- W parameter weight matrix for update, reset, and hidden gatesR[zrh]
- R recurrence weight matrix for update, reset, and hidden gatesWb[zrh]
- W bias vectors for update, reset, and hidden gatesRb[zrh]
- R bias vectors for update, reset, and hidden gatesWB[zrh]
- W parameter weight matrix for backward update, reset, and hidden gatesRB[zrh]
- R recurrence weight matrix for backward update, reset, and hidden gatesWBb[zrh]
- W bias vectors for backward update, reset, and hidden gatesRBb[zrh]
- R bias vectors for backward update, reset, and hidden gatesH
- Hidden statenum_directions
- 2 if direction == bidirectional else 1
Activation functions:
- Relu(x) - max(0, x)
- Tanh(x) - (1 - e^{-2x})/(1 + e^{-2x})
- Sigmoid(x) - 1/(1 + e^{-x})
NOTE: Below are optional
- Affine(x) - alpha * x + beta
- LeakyRelu(x) - x if x >= 0 else alpha * x
- ThresholdedRelu(x) - x if x >= alpha else 0
- ScaledTanh(x) - alpha * Tanh(beta * x)
- HardSigmoid(x) - min(max(alpha * x + beta, 0), 1)
- Elu(x) - x if x >= 0 else alpha * (e^x - 1)
- Softsign(x) - x/(1 + |x|)
- Softplus(x) - log(1 + e^x)
Equations (Default: f=Sigmoid, g=Tanh):
- zt = f(Xt*(Wz^T) + Ht-1*(Rz^T) + Wbz + Rbz)
- rt = f(Xt*(Wr^T) + Ht-1*(Rr^T) + Wbr + Rbr)
- ht = g(Xt*(Wh^T) + (rt (.) Ht-1)*(Rh^T) + Rbh + Wbh) # default, when linear_before_reset = 0
- ht = g(Xt*(Wh^T) + (rt (.) (Ht-1*(Rh^T) + Rbh)) + Wbh) # when linear_before_reset != 0
- Ht = (1 - zt) (.) ht + zt (.) Ht-1 This operator has optional inputs/outputs. See the doc for more details about the representation of optional arguments. An empty string may be used in the place of an actual argument's name to indicate a missing argument. Trailing optional arguments (those not followed by an argument that is present) may also be simply omitted.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 14 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 1, 3, 7
Attributes
- activation_alpha : list of floats
- Optional scaling values used by some activation functions. The values are consumed in the order of activation functions, for example (f, g, h) in LSTM. Default values are the same as of corresponding ONNX operators.For example with LeakyRelu, the default alpha is 0.01.
- activation_beta : list of floats
- Optional scaling values used by some activation functions. The values are consumed in the order of activation functions, for example (f, g, h) in LSTM. Default values are the same as of corresponding ONNX operators.
- activations : list of strings
- A list of 2 (or 4 if bidirectional) activation functions for update, reset, and hidden gates. The activation functions must be one of the activation functions specified above. Optional: See the equations for default if not specified.
- clip : float
- Cell clip threshold. Clipping bounds the elements of a tensor in the range of [-threshold, +threshold] and is applied to the input of activations. No clip if not specified.
- direction : string (default is forward)
- Specify if the RNN is forward, reverse, or bidirectional. Must be one of forward (default), reverse, or bidirectional.
- hidden_size : int
- Number of neurons in the hidden layer
- layout : int (default is 0)
- The shape format of inputs X, initial_h and outputs Y, Y_h. If 0, the following shapes are expected: X.shape = [seq_length, batch_size, input_size], Y.shape = [seq_length, num_directions, batch_size, hidden_size], initial_h.shape = Y_h.shape = [num_directions, batch_size, hidden_size]. If 1, the following shapes are expected: X.shape = [batch_size, seq_length, input_size], Y.shape = [batch_size, seq_length, num_directions, hidden_size], initial_h.shape = Y_h.shape = [batch_size, num_directions, hidden_size].
- linear_before_reset : int (default is 0)
- When computing the output of the hidden gate, apply the linear transformation before multiplying by the output of the reset gate.
Inputs (3 - 6)
- X (differentiable) : T
- The input sequences packed (and potentially padded) into one 3-D tensor with the shape of `[seq_length, batch_size, input_size]`.
- W (differentiable) : T
- The weight tensor for the gates. Concatenation of `W[zrh]` and `WB[zrh]` (if bidirectional) along dimension 0. This tensor has shape `[num_directions, 3*hidden_size, input_size]`.
- R (differentiable) : T
- The recurrence weight tensor. Concatenation of `R[zrh]` and `RB[zrh]` (if bidirectional) along dimension 0. This tensor has shape `[num_directions, 3*hidden_size, hidden_size]`.
- B (optional, differentiable) : T
- The bias tensor for the gates. Concatenation of `[Wb[zrh], Rb[zrh]]` and `[WBb[zrh], RBb[zrh]]` (if bidirectional) along dimension 0. This tensor has shape `[num_directions, 6*hidden_size]`. Optional: If not specified - assumed to be 0
- sequence_lens (optional, non-differentiable) : T1
- Optional tensor specifying lengths of the sequences in a batch. If not specified - assumed all sequences in the batch to have length `seq_length`. It has shape `[batch_size]`.
- initial_h (optional, non-differentiable) : T
- Optional initial value of the hidden. If not specified - assumed to be 0. It has shape `[num_directions, batch_size, hidden_size]`.
Outputs (0 - 2)
- Y (optional, differentiable) : T
- A tensor that concats all the intermediate output values of the hidden. It has shape `[seq_length, num_directions, batch_size, hidden_size]`.
- Y_h (optional, differentiable) : T
- The last output value of the hidden. It has shape `[num_directions, batch_size, hidden_size]`.
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double)
- Constrain input and output types to float tensors.
- T1 : tensor(int32)
- Constrain seq_lens to integer tensor.
Examples
batchwisedefaultsinitial_biasseq_lengthGather
Given data
tensor of rank r >= 1, and indices
tensor of rank q, gather entries of the axis dimension of data
(by default outer-most one as axis=0) indexed by indices
, and concatenates them in an output tensor of rank q + (r - 1).
If axis = 0
, let k = indices[i_{0}, ..., i_{q-1}]
then output[i_{0}, ..., i_{q-1}, j_{0}, ..., j_{r-2}] = input[k , j_{0}, ..., j_{r-2}]
:
data = [
[1.0, 1.2],
[2.3, 3.4],
[4.5, 5.7],
]
indices = [
[0, 1],
[1, 2],
]
output = [
[
[1.0, 1.2],
[2.3, 3.4],
],
[
[2.3, 3.4],
[4.5, 5.7],
],
]
If axis = 1
, let k = indices[i_{0}, ..., i_{q-1}]
then output[j_{0}, i_{0}, ..., i_{q-1}, j_{1}, ..., j_{r-2}] = input[j_{0}, k, j_{1}, ..., j_{r-2}]
:
data = [
[1.0, 1.2, 1.9],
[2.3, 3.4, 3.9],
[4.5, 5.7, 5.9],
]
indices = [
[0, 2],
]
axis = 1,
output = [
[[1.0, 1.9]],
[[2.3, 3.9]],
[[4.5, 5.9]],
]
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 13 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 1, 11
Attributes
- axis : int (default is 0)
- Which axis to gather on. Negative value means counting dimensions from the back. Accepted range is [-r, r-1] where r = rank(data).
Inputs
- data (differentiable) : T
- Tensor of rank r >= 1.
- indices (non-differentiable) : Tind
- Tensor of int32/int64 indices, of any rank q. All index values are expected to be within bounds [-s, s-1] along axis of size s. It is an error if any of the index values are out of bounds.
Outputs
- output (differentiable) : T
- Tensor of rank q + (r - 1).
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(uint8), tensor(uint16), tensor(uint32), tensor(uint64), tensor(int8), tensor(int16), tensor(int32), tensor(int64), tensor(bfloat16), tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(string), tensor(bool), tensor(complex64), tensor(complex128)
- Constrain input and output types to any tensor type.
- Tind : tensor(int32), tensor(int64)
- Constrain indices to integer types
Examples
gather_0gather_1gather_2d_indicesgather_negative_indicesGatherElements
GatherElements takes two inputs data
and indices
of the same rank r >= 1 and an optional attribute axis
that identifies an axis of data
(by default, the outer-most axis, that is axis 0). It is an indexing operation that produces its output by indexing into the input data tensor at index positions determined by elements of the indices
tensor. Its output shape is the same as the shape of indices
and consists of one value (gathered from the data
) for each element in indices
.
For instance, in the 3-D case (r = 3), the output produced is determined by the following equations:
out[i][j][k] = input[index[i][j][k]][j][k] if axis = 0,
out[i][j][k] = input[i][index[i][j][k]][k] if axis = 1,
out[i][j][k] = input[i][j][index[i][j][k]] if axis = 2,
This operator is also the inverse of ScatterElements. It is similar to Torch's gather operation.
Example 1:
data = [
[1, 2],
[3, 4],
]
indices = [
[0, 0],
[1, 0],
]
axis = 1
output = [
[1, 1],
[4, 3],
]
Example 2:
data = [
[1, 2, 3],
[4, 5, 6],
[7, 8, 9],
]
indices = [
[1, 2, 0],
[2, 0, 0],
]
axis = 0
output = [
[4, 8, 3],
[7, 2, 3],
]
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 13 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 11
Attributes
- axis : int (default is 0)
- Which axis to gather on. Negative value means counting dimensions from the back. Accepted range is [-r, r-1] where r = rank(data).
Inputs
- data (differentiable) : T
- Tensor of rank r >= 1.
- indices (non-differentiable) : Tind
- Tensor of int32/int64 indices, with the same rank r as the input. All index values are expected to be within bounds [-s, s-1] along axis of size s. It is an error if any of the index values are out of bounds.
Outputs
- output (differentiable) : T
- Tensor of the same shape as indices.
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(uint8), tensor(uint16), tensor(uint32), tensor(uint64), tensor(int8), tensor(int16), tensor(int32), tensor(int64), tensor(bfloat16), tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(string), tensor(bool), tensor(complex64), tensor(complex128)
- Constrain input and output types to any tensor type.
- Tind : tensor(int32), tensor(int64)
- Constrain indices to integer types
Examples
gather_elements_0gather_elements_1gather_elements_negative_indicesGatherND
Given data
tensor of rank r
>= 1, indices
tensor of rank q
>= 1, and batch_dims
integer b
, this operator gathers slices of data
into an output tensor of rank q + r - indices_shape[-1] - 1 - b
.
indices
is an q-dimensional integer tensor, best thought of as a (q-1)
-dimensional tensor of index-tuples into data
, where each element defines a slice of data
batch_dims
(denoted as b
) is an integer indicating the number of batch dimensions, i.e the leading b
number of dimensions of data
tensor and indices
are representing the batches, and the gather starts from the b+1
dimension.
Some salient points about the inputs' rank and shape:
-
r >= 1 and q >= 1 are to be honored. There is no dependency condition to be met between ranks
r
andq
-
The first
b
dimensions of the shape ofindices
tensor anddata
tensor must be equal. -
b < min(q, r) is to be honored.
-
The
indices_shape[-1]
should have a value between 1 (inclusive) and rankr-b
(inclusive) -
All values in
indices
are expected to be within bounds [-s, s-1] along axis of sizes
(i.e.)-data_shape[i] <= indices[...,i] <= data_shape[i] - 1
. It is an error if any of the index values are out of bounds.
The output is computed as follows:
The output tensor is obtained by mapping each index-tuple in the indices
tensor to the corresponding slice of the input data
.
-
If
indices_shape[-1] > r-b
=> error condition -
If
indices_shape[-1] == r-b
, since the rank ofindices
isq
,indices
can be thought of asN
(q-b-1)
-dimensional tensors containing 1-D tensors of dimensionr-b
, whereN
is an integer equals to the product of 1 and all the elements in the batch dimensions of the indices_shape. Let us think of each suchr-b
ranked tensor asindices_slice
. Each scalar value corresponding todata[0:b-1,indices_slice]
is filled into the corresponding location of the(q-b-1)
-dimensional tensor to form theoutput
tensor (Example 1 below) -
If
indices_shape[-1] < r-b
, since the rank ofindices
isq
,indices
can be thought of asN
(q-b-1)
-dimensional tensor containing 1-D tensors of dimension< r-b
. Let us think of each such tensors asindices_slice
. Each tensor slice corresponding todata[0:b-1, indices_slice , :]
is filled into the corresponding location of the(q-b-1)
-dimensional tensor to form theoutput
tensor (Examples 2, 3, 4 and 5 below)
This operator is the inverse of ScatterND
.
Example 1
batch_dims = 0
data = [[0,1],[2,3]] # data_shape = [2, 2]
indices = [[0,0],[1,1]] # indices_shape = [2, 2]
output = [0,3] # output_shape = [2]
Example 2
batch_dims = 0
data = [[0,1],[2,3]] # data_shape = [2, 2]
indices = [[1],[0]] # indices_shape = [2, 1]
output = [[2,3],[0,1]] # output_shape = [2, 2]
Example 3
batch_dims = 0
data = [[[0,1],[2,3]],[[4,5],[6,7]]] # data_shape = [2, 2, 2]
indices = [[0,1],[1,0]] # indices_shape = [2, 2]
output = [[2,3],[4,5]] # output_shape = [2, 2]
Example 4
batch_dims = 0
data = [[[0,1],[2,3]],[[4,5],[6,7]]] # data_shape = [2, 2, 2]
indices = [[[0,1]],[[1,0]]] # indices_shape = [2, 1, 2]
output = [[[2,3]],[[4,5]]] # output_shape = [2, 1, 2]
Example 5
batch_dims = 1
data = [[[0,1],[2,3]],[[4,5],[6,7]]] # data_shape = [2, 2, 2]
indices = [[1],[0]] # indices_shape = [2, 1]
output = [[2,3],[4,5]] # output_shape = [2, 2]
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 13 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 11, 12
Attributes
- batch_dims : int (default is 0)
- The number of batch dimensions. The gather of indexing starts from dimension of data[batch_dims:]
Inputs
- data (differentiable) : T
- Tensor of rank r >= 1.
- indices (non-differentiable) : tensor(int64)
- Tensor of rank q >= 1. All index values are expected to be within bounds [-s, s-1] along axis of size s. It is an error if any of the index values are out of bounds.
Outputs
- output (differentiable) : T
- Tensor of rank q + r - indices_shape[-1] - 1.
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(uint8), tensor(uint16), tensor(uint32), tensor(uint64), tensor(int8), tensor(int16), tensor(int32), tensor(int64), tensor(bfloat16), tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(string), tensor(bool), tensor(complex64), tensor(complex128)
- Constrain input and output types to any tensor type.
Examples
float32int32int32_batchdim_1Gemm
General Matrix multiplication: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Basic_Linear_Algebra_Subprograms#Level_3
- A' = transpose(A) if transA else A
- B' = transpose(B) if transB else B
Compute Y = alpha * A' * B' + beta * C, where input tensor A has shape (M, K) or (K, M), input tensor B has shape (K, N) or (N, K), input tensor C is broadcastable to shape (M, N), and output tensor Y has shape (M, N). A will be transposed before doing the computation if attribute transA is non-zero, same for B and transB. This operator supports unidirectional broadcasting (tensor C should be unidirectional broadcastable to tensor A * B); for more details please check the doc. This operator has optional inputs/outputs. See the doc for more details about the representation of optional arguments. An empty string may be used in the place of an actual argument's name to indicate a missing argument. Trailing optional arguments (those not followed by an argument that is present) may also be simply omitted.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 13 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 1, 6, 7, 9, 11
Attributes
- alpha : float (default is 1.0)
- Scalar multiplier for the product of input tensors A * B.
- beta : float (default is 1.0)
- Scalar multiplier for input tensor C.
- transA : int (default is 0)
- Whether A should be transposed
- transB : int (default is 0)
- Whether B should be transposed
Inputs (2 - 3)
- A (differentiable) : T
- Input tensor A. The shape of A should be (M, K) if transA is 0, or (K, M) if transA is non-zero.
- B (differentiable) : T
- Input tensor B. The shape of B should be (K, N) if transB is 0, or (N, K) if transB is non-zero.
- C (optional, differentiable) : T
- Optional input tensor C. If not specified, the computation is done as if C is a scalar 0. The shape of C should be unidirectional broadcastable to (M, N).
Outputs
- Y (differentiable) : T
- Output tensor of shape (M, N).
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(uint32), tensor(uint64), tensor(int32), tensor(int64), tensor(bfloat16)
- Constrain input and output types to float/int tensors.
Examples
all_attributesalphabetadefault_matrix_biasdefault_no_biasdefault_scalar_biasdefault_single_elem_vector_biasdefault_vector_biasdefault_zero_biastransposeAtransposeBGlobalAveragePool
GlobalAveragePool consumes an input tensor X and applies average pooling across the values in the same channel. This is equivalent to AveragePool with kernel size equal to the spatial dimension of input tensor.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 1 of the default ONNX operator set.
Inputs
- X (differentiable) : T
- Input data tensor from the previous operator; dimensions for image case are (N x C x H x W), where N is the batch size, C is the number of channels, and H and W are the height and the width of the data. For non image case, the dimensions are in the form of (N x C x D1 x D2 ... Dn), where N is the batch size.
Outputs
- Y (differentiable) : T
- Output data tensor from pooling across the input tensor. The output tensor has the same rank as the input. The first two dimensions of output shape are the same as the input (N x C), while the other dimensions are all 1.
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double)
- Constrain input and output types to float tensors.
Examples
globalaveragepoolglobalaveragepool_precomputedGlobalLpPool
GlobalLpPool consumes an input tensor X and applies lp pool pooling across the values in the same channel. This is equivalent to LpPool with kernel size equal to the spatial dimension of input tensor.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 2 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 1
Attributes
- p : int (default is 2)
- p value of the Lp norm used to pool over the input data.
Inputs
- X (differentiable) : T
- Input data tensor from the previous operator; dimensions for image case are (N x C x H x W), where N is the batch size, C is the number of channels, and H and W are the height and the width of the data. For non image case, the dimensions are in the form of (N x C x D1 x D2 ... Dn), where N is the batch size.
Outputs
- Y (differentiable) : T
- Output data tensor from pooling across the input tensor. The output tensor has the same rank as the input. The first two dimensions of output shape are the same as the input (N x C), while the other dimensions are all 1.
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double)
- Constrain input and output types to float tensors.
GlobalMaxPool
GlobalMaxPool consumes an input tensor X and applies max pooling across the values in the same channel. This is equivalent to MaxPool with kernel size equal to the spatial dimension of input tensor.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 1 of the default ONNX operator set.
Inputs
- X (differentiable) : T
- Input data tensor from the previous operator; dimensions for image case are (N x C x H x W), where N is the batch size, C is the number of channels, and H and W are the height and the width of the data. For non image case, the dimensions are in the form of (N x C x D1 x D2 ... Dn), where N is the batch size.
Outputs
- Y (differentiable) : T
- Output data tensor from pooling across the input tensor. The output tensor has the same rank as the input. The first two dimensions of output shape are the same as the input (N x C), while the other dimensions are all 1.
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double)
- Constrain input and output types to float tensors.
Examples
globalmaxpoolglobalmaxpool_precomputedGreater
Returns the tensor resulted from performing the greater
logical operation elementwise on the input tensors A
and B
(with Numpy-style broadcasting support).
This operator supports multidirectional (i.e., Numpy-style) broadcasting; for more details please check the doc.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 13 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 1, 7, 9
Inputs
- A (non-differentiable) : T
- First input operand for the logical operator.
- B (non-differentiable) : T
- Second input operand for the logical operator.
Outputs
- C (non-differentiable) : T1
- Result tensor.
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(uint8), tensor(uint16), tensor(uint32), tensor(uint64), tensor(int8), tensor(int16), tensor(int32), tensor(int64), tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(bfloat16)
- Constrain input types to all numeric tensors.
- T1 : tensor(bool)
- Constrain output to boolean tensor.
Examples
greatergreatergreater_broadcastgreater_broadcastGreaterOrEqual
Returns the tensor resulted from performing the greater_equal
logical operation elementwise on the input tensors A
and B
(with Numpy-style broadcasting support).
This operator supports multidirectional (i.e., Numpy-style) broadcasting; for more details please check the doc.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 16 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 12
Inputs
- A (non-differentiable) : T
- First input operand for the logical operator.
- B (non-differentiable) : T
- Second input operand for the logical operator.
Outputs
- C (non-differentiable) : T1
- Result tensor.
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(uint8), tensor(uint16), tensor(uint32), tensor(uint64), tensor(int8), tensor(int16), tensor(int32), tensor(int64), tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(bfloat16)
- Constrain input types to all numeric tensors.
- T1 : tensor(bool)
- Constrain output to boolean tensor.
GridSample
Given an input X
and a flow-field grid
, computes the output Y
using X
values and pixel locations from the grid
. For spatial input X
with shape (N, C, H, W), the grid
will have shape (N, H_out, W_out, 2), the output Y
will have shape (N, C, H_out, W_out). For volumetric input X
with shape (N, C, D, H, W), the grid
will have shape (N, D_out, H_out, W_out, 3), the output Y
will have shape (N, C, D_out, H_out, W_out). More generally, for an input X
of rank r+2 with shape (N, C, d1, d2, ..., dr), the grid
will have shape (N, D1_out, D2_out, ..., Dr_out, r), the output Y
will have shape (N, C, D1_out, D2_out, ..., Dr_out).
The tensor X
contains values at centers of square pixels (voxels, etc) locations such as (n, c, d1_in, d2_in, ..., dr_in). The (n, d1_out, d2_out, ..., dr_out, :) values from the tensor grid
are the normalized positions for interpolating the values at the (n, c, d1_out, d2_out, ..., dr_out) locations from the output tensor Y
using a specified interpolation method (the mode) and a padding mode (for grid
positions falling outside the 2-dimensional image).
For example, the values in grid[n, h_out, w_out, :]
are size-2 vectors specifying normalized positions in the 2-dimensional space of X
. They are used to interpolate output values of Y[n, c, h_out, w_out]
.
The GridSample operator is often used in doing grid generator and sampler in the Spatial Transformer Networks. See also in torch.nn.functional.grid_sample.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 20 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 16
Attributes
- align_corners : int (default is 0)
- If align_corners=1, the extrema (-1 and 1) are considered as referring to the center points of the input's corner pixels (voxels, etc.). If align_corners=0, they are instead considered as referring to the corner points of the input's corner pixels (voxels, etc.), making the sampling more resolution agnostic.
- mode : string (default is linear)
- Three interpolation modes: linear (default), nearest and cubic. The "linear" mode includes linear and N-linear interpolation modes depending on the number of spatial dimensions of the input tensor (i.e. linear for 1 spatial dimension, bilinear for 2 spatial dimensions, etc.). The "cubic" mode also includes N-cubic interpolation modes following the same rules. The "nearest" mode rounds to the nearest even index when the sampling point falls halfway between two indices.
- padding_mode : string (default is zeros)
- Support padding modes for outside grid values: `zeros`(default), `border`, `reflection`. zeros: use 0 for out-of-bound grid locations, border: use border values for out-of-bound grid locations, reflection: use values at locations reflected by the border for out-of-bound grid locations. If index 0 represents the margin pixel, the reflected value at index -1 will be the same as the value at index 1. For location far away from the border, it will keep being reflected until becoming in bound. If pixel location x = -3.5 reflects by border -1 and becomes x' = 1.5, then reflects by border 1 and becomes x'' = 0.5.
Inputs
- X (differentiable) : T1
- Input tensor of rank r+2 that has shape (N, C, D1, D2, ..., Dr), where N is the batch size, C is the number of channels, D1, D2, ..., Dr are the spatial dimensions.
- grid (non-differentiable) : T2
- Input offset of shape (N, D1_out, D2_out, ..., Dr_out, r), where D1_out, D2_out, ..., Dr_out are the spatial dimensions of the grid and output, and r is the number of spatial dimensions. Grid specifies the sampling locations normalized by the input spatial dimensions. Therefore, it should have most values in the range of [-1, 1]. If the grid has values outside the range of [-1, 1], the corresponding outputs will be handled as defined by padding_mode. Following computer vision convention, the coordinates in the length-r location vector are listed from the innermost tensor dimension to the outermost, the opposite of regular tensor indexing.
Outputs
- Y (differentiable) : T1
- Output tensor of rank r+2 that has shape (N, C, D1_out, D2_out, ..., Dr_out) of the sampled values. For integer input types, intermediate values are computed as floating point and cast to integer at the end.
Type Constraints
- T1 : tensor(uint8), tensor(uint16), tensor(uint32), tensor(uint64), tensor(int8), tensor(int16), tensor(int32), tensor(int64), tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(string), tensor(bool), tensor(complex64), tensor(complex128)
- Constrain input `X` and output `Y` types to all tensor types.
- T2 : tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double)
- Constrain grid types to float tensors.
Examples
gridsamplegridsample_mode_aligncornersgridsample_paddingmodevolumeetric_gridsample_mode_aligncornersGroupNormalization
A GroupNormalization function. Carries out group normalization as described in the paper https://arxiv.org/abs/1803.08494
This operator transforms input according to
y = scale * (x - mean) / sqrt(variance + epsilon) + bias,
where the mean and variance are computed per instance per group of channels, and scale
and bias
should be specified for each group of channels. The number of groups num_groups
should be divisible by the number of channels so that there are an equal number of channels per group.
When the number of groups is the same as the number of channels, this operator is equivalent to InstanceNormalization. When there is only one group, this operator is equivalent to LayerNormalization.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 18 of the default ONNX operator set.
Attributes
- epsilon : float (default is 1e-05)
- The epsilon value to use to avoid division by zero.
- num_groups : int (required)
- The number of groups of channels. It should be a divisor of the number of channels `C`.
Inputs
- X (differentiable) : T
- Input data tensor. Dimensions for image cases are `(N x C x H x W)`, where `N` is the batch size, `C` is the number of channels, and `H` and `W` are the height and width of the data. Statistics are computed for every group of channels over `C`, `H`, and `W`. For non-image cases, the dimensions are in the form of `(N x C x D1 x D2 ... Dn)`.
- scale (differentiable) : T
- Scale tensor of shape `(num_groups)`.
- bias (differentiable) : T
- Bias tensor of shape `(num_groups)`.
Outputs
- Y (differentiable) : T
- The output tensor of the same shape as `X`.
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(bfloat16)
- Constrain input and output types to float tensors.
Examples
groupnormalizationHammingWindow
Generates a Hamming window as described in the paper https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/1455106.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 17 of the default ONNX operator set.
Attributes
- output_datatype : int (default is 1)
- The data type of the output tensor. Strictly must be one of the values from DataType enum in TensorProto whose values correspond to T2. The default value is 1 = FLOAT.
- periodic : int (default is 1)
- If 1, returns a window to be used as periodic function. If 0, return a symmetric window. When 'periodic' is specified, hann computes a window of length size + 1 and returns the first size points. The default value is 1.
Inputs
- size (non-differentiable) : T1
- A scalar value indicating the length of the window.
Outputs
- output (non-differentiable) : T2
- A Hamming window with length: size. The output has the shape: [size].
Type Constraints
- T1 : tensor(int32), tensor(int64)
- Constrain the input size to int64_t.
- T2 : tensor(uint8), tensor(uint16), tensor(uint32), tensor(uint64), tensor(int8), tensor(int16), tensor(int32), tensor(int64), tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(bfloat16)
- Constrain output types to numeric tensors.
Examples
hammingwindowHannWindow
Generates a Hann window as described in the paper https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/1455106.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 17 of the default ONNX operator set.
Attributes
- output_datatype : int (default is 1)
- The data type of the output tensor. Strictly must be one of the values from DataType enum in TensorProto whose values correspond to T2. The default value is 1 = FLOAT.
- periodic : int (default is 1)
- If 1, returns a window to be used as periodic function. If 0, return a symmetric window. When 'periodic' is specified, hann computes a window of length size + 1 and returns the first size points. The default value is 1.
Inputs
- size (non-differentiable) : T1
- A scalar value indicating the length of the window.
Outputs
- output (non-differentiable) : T2
- A Hann window with length: size. The output has the shape: [size].
Type Constraints
- T1 : tensor(int32), tensor(int64)
- Constrain the input size to int64_t.
- T2 : tensor(uint8), tensor(uint16), tensor(uint32), tensor(uint64), tensor(int8), tensor(int16), tensor(int32), tensor(int64), tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(bfloat16)
- Constrain output types to numeric tensors.
Examples
hannwindowHardSigmoid
HardSigmoid takes one input data (Tensor) and produces one output data (Tensor) where the HardSigmoid function, y = max(0, min(1, alpha * x + beta)), is applied to the tensor elementwise.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 6 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 1
Attributes
- alpha : float (default is 0.2)
- Value of alpha.
- beta : float (default is 0.5)
- Value of beta.
Inputs
- X (differentiable) : T
- Input tensor
Outputs
- Y (differentiable) : T
- Output tensor
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double)
- Constrain input and output types to float tensors.
Examples
hardsigmoidhardsigmoid_defaultHardSwish
HardSwish takes one input data (Tensor) and produces one output data (Tensor) where the HardSwish function, y = x * max(0, min(1, alpha * x + beta)) = x * HardSigmoid<alpha, beta>(x), where alpha = 1/6 and beta = 0.5, is applied to the tensor elementwise.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 14 of the default ONNX operator set.
Inputs
- X (differentiable) : T
- Input tensor
Outputs
- Y (differentiable) : T
- Output tensor
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double)
- Constrain input and output types to float tensors.
Examples
hardswishHardmax
The operator computes the hardmax values for the given input:
Hardmax(element in input, axis) = 1 if the element is the first maximum value along the specified axis, 0 otherwise
The "axis" attribute indicates the dimension along which Hardmax will be performed. The output tensor has the same shape and contains the Hardmax values of the corresponding input.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 13 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 1, 11
Attributes
- axis : int (default is -1)
- Describes the dimension Hardmax will be performed on. Negative value means counting dimensions from the back. Accepted range is [-r, r-1] where r = rank(input).
Inputs
- input (differentiable) : T
- The input tensor of rank >= axis.
Outputs
- output (differentiable) : T
- The output values with the same shape as the input tensor.
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(bfloat16)
- Constrain input and output types to float tensors.
Examples
hardmaxhardmax_axisIdentity
Identity operator
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 19 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 1, 13, 14, 16
Inputs
- input (differentiable) : V
- Input tensor
Outputs
- output (differentiable) : V
- Tensor to copy input into.
Type Constraints
- V : tensor(uint8), tensor(uint16), tensor(uint32), tensor(uint64), tensor(int8), tensor(int16), tensor(int32), tensor(int64), tensor(bfloat16), tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(string), tensor(bool), tensor(complex64), tensor(complex128), tensor(float8e4m3fn), tensor(float8e4m3fnuz), tensor(float8e5m2), tensor(float8e5m2fnuz), seq(tensor(uint8)), seq(tensor(uint16)), seq(tensor(uint32)), seq(tensor(uint64)), seq(tensor(int8)), seq(tensor(int16)), seq(tensor(int32)), seq(tensor(int64)), seq(tensor(float16)), seq(tensor(float)), seq(tensor(double)), seq(tensor(string)), seq(tensor(bool)), seq(tensor(complex64)), seq(tensor(complex128)), optional(seq(tensor(uint8))), optional(seq(tensor(uint16))), optional(seq(tensor(uint32))), optional(seq(tensor(uint64))), optional(seq(tensor(int8))), optional(seq(tensor(int16))), optional(seq(tensor(int32))), optional(seq(tensor(int64))), optional(seq(tensor(float16))), optional(seq(tensor(float))), optional(seq(tensor(double))), optional(seq(tensor(string))), optional(seq(tensor(bool))), optional(seq(tensor(complex64))), optional(seq(tensor(complex128))), optional(tensor(uint8)), optional(tensor(uint16)), optional(tensor(uint32)), optional(tensor(uint64)), optional(tensor(int8)), optional(tensor(int16)), optional(tensor(int32)), optional(tensor(int64)), optional(tensor(float16)), optional(tensor(float)), optional(tensor(double)), optional(tensor(string)), optional(tensor(bool)), optional(tensor(complex64)), optional(tensor(complex128))
- Constrain input and output types to all tensor, sequence, and optional types.
Examples
identityidentity_optsequenceIf
If conditional
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 19 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 1, 11, 13, 16
Attributes
- else_branch : graph (required)
- Graph to run if condition is false. Has N outputs: values you wish to be live-out to the enclosing scope. The number of outputs must match the number of outputs in the then_branch.
- then_branch : graph (required)
- Graph to run if condition is true. Has N outputs: values you wish to be live-out to the enclosing scope. The number of outputs must match the number of outputs in the else_branch.
Inputs
- cond : B
- Condition for the if
Outputs (1 - ∞)
- outputs (variadic, heterogeneous) : V
- Values that are live-out to the enclosing scope. The return values in the `then_branch` and `else_branch` must be of the same data type. The `then_branch` and `else_branch` may produce tensors with the same element type and different shapes. If corresponding outputs from the then-branch and the else-branch have static shapes S1 and S2, then the shape of the corresponding output variable of the if-node (if present) must be compatible with both S1 and S2 as it represents the union of both possible shapes.For example, if in a model file, the first output of `then_branch` is typed float tensor with shape [2] and the first output of `else_branch` is another float tensor with shape [3], If's first output should have (a) no shape set, or (b) a shape of rank 1 with neither `dim_value` nor `dim_param` set, or (c) a shape of rank 1 with a unique `dim_param`. In contrast, the first output cannot have the shape [2] since [2] and [3] are not compatible.
Type Constraints
- V : tensor(uint8), tensor(uint16), tensor(uint32), tensor(uint64), tensor(int8), tensor(int16), tensor(int32), tensor(int64), tensor(bfloat16), tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(string), tensor(bool), tensor(complex64), tensor(complex128), tensor(float8e4m3fn), tensor(float8e4m3fnuz), tensor(float8e5m2), tensor(float8e5m2fnuz), seq(tensor(uint8)), seq(tensor(uint16)), seq(tensor(uint32)), seq(tensor(uint64)), seq(tensor(int8)), seq(tensor(int16)), seq(tensor(int32)), seq(tensor(int64)), seq(tensor(bfloat16)), seq(tensor(float16)), seq(tensor(float)), seq(tensor(double)), seq(tensor(string)), seq(tensor(bool)), seq(tensor(complex64)), seq(tensor(complex128)), seq(tensor(float8e4m3fn)), seq(tensor(float8e4m3fnuz)), seq(tensor(float8e5m2)), seq(tensor(float8e5m2fnuz)), optional(seq(tensor(uint8))), optional(seq(tensor(uint16))), optional(seq(tensor(uint32))), optional(seq(tensor(uint64))), optional(seq(tensor(int8))), optional(seq(tensor(int16))), optional(seq(tensor(int32))), optional(seq(tensor(int64))), optional(seq(tensor(bfloat16))), optional(seq(tensor(float16))), optional(seq(tensor(float))), optional(seq(tensor(double))), optional(seq(tensor(string))), optional(seq(tensor(bool))), optional(seq(tensor(complex64))), optional(seq(tensor(complex128))), optional(tensor(uint8)), optional(tensor(uint16)), optional(tensor(uint32)), optional(tensor(uint64)), optional(tensor(int8)), optional(tensor(int16)), optional(tensor(int32)), optional(tensor(int64)), optional(tensor(bfloat16)), optional(tensor(float16)), optional(tensor(float)), optional(tensor(double)), optional(tensor(string)), optional(tensor(bool)), optional(tensor(complex64)), optional(tensor(complex128)), optional(tensor(float8e4m3fn)), optional(tensor(float8e4m3fnuz)), optional(tensor(float8e5m2)), optional(tensor(float8e5m2fnuz))
- All Tensor, Sequence(Tensor), Optional(Tensor), and Optional(Sequence(Tensor)) types up to IRv9.
- B : tensor(bool)
- Only bool
Examples
ifif_optionalif_seqInstanceNormalization
Carries out instance normalization as described in the paper https://arxiv.org/abs/1607.08022.
y = scale * (x - mean) / sqrt(variance + epsilon) + B, where mean and variance are computed per instance per channel.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 6 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 1
Attributes
- epsilon : float (default is 1e-05)
- The epsilon value to use to avoid division by zero.
Inputs
- input (differentiable) : T
- Input data tensor from the previous operator; dimensions for image case are (N x C x H x W), where N is the batch size, C is the number of channels, and H and W are the height and the width of the data. For non image case, the dimensions are in the form of (N x C x D1 x D2 ... Dn), where N is the batch size.
- scale (differentiable) : T
- The input 1-dimensional scale tensor of size C.
- B (differentiable) : T
- The input 1-dimensional bias tensor of size C.
Outputs
- output (differentiable) : T
- The output tensor of the same shape as input.
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double)
- Constrain input and output types to float tensors.
Examples
instancenormalizationIsInf
Map infinity to true and other values to false.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 10 of the default ONNX operator set.
Attributes
- detect_negative : int (default is 1)
- (Optional) Whether map negative infinity to true. Default to 1 so that negative infinity induces true. Set this attribute to 0 if negative infinity should be mapped to false.
- detect_positive : int (default is 1)
- (Optional) Whether map positive infinity to true. Default to 1 so that positive infinity induces true. Set this attribute to 0 if positive infinity should be mapped to false.
Inputs
- X (non-differentiable) : T1
- input
Outputs
- Y (non-differentiable) : T2
- output
Type Constraints
- T1 : tensor(float), tensor(double)
- Constrain input types to float tensors.
- T2 : tensor(bool)
- Constrain output types to boolean tensors.
Examples
infinitynegative_infinity_onlypositive_infinity_onlyIsNaN
Returns which elements of the input are NaN.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 13 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 9
Inputs
- X (non-differentiable) : T1
- input
Outputs
- Y (non-differentiable) : T2
- output
Type Constraints
- T1 : tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(bfloat16)
- Constrain input types to float tensors.
- T2 : tensor(bool)
- Constrain output types to boolean tensors.
Examples
isnanLRN
Local Response Normalization proposed in the AlexNet paper. It normalizes over local input regions. The local region is defined across the channels. For an element X[n, c, d1, ..., dk]
in a tensor of shape (N x C x D1 x D2, ..., Dk)
, its region is {X[n, i, d1, ..., dk] | max(0, c - floor((size - 1) / 2)) <= i <= min(C - 1, c + ceil((size - 1) / 2))}
.
square_sum[n, c, d1, ..., dk] = sum(X[n, i, d1, ..., dk] ^ 2)
, where max(0, c - floor((size - 1) / 2)) <= i <= min(C - 1, c + ceil((size - 1) / 2))
.
Y[n, c, d1, ..., dk] = X[n, c, d1, ..., dk] / (bias + alpha / size * square_sum[n, c, d1, ..., dk] ) ^ beta
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 13 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 1
Attributes
- alpha : float (default is 0.0001)
- Scaling parameter.
- beta : float (default is 0.75)
- The exponent.
- bias : float (default is 1.0)
- size : int (required)
- The number of channels to sum over
Inputs
- X (differentiable) : T
- Input data tensor from the previous operator; dimensions for image case are (N x C x H x W), where N is the batch size, C is the number of channels, and H and W are the height and the width of the data. For non image case, the dimensions are in the form of (N x C x D1 x D2 ... Dn), where N is the batch size. Optionally, if dimension denotation is in effect, the operation expects the input data tensor to arrive with the dimension denotation of [DATA_BATCH, DATA_CHANNEL, DATA_FEATURE, DATA_FEATURE ...].
Outputs
- Y (differentiable) : T
- Output tensor, which has the shape and type as input tensor
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(bfloat16)
- Constrain input and output types to float tensors.
Examples
defaultlrnLSTM
Computes an one-layer LSTM. This operator is usually supported via some custom implementation such as CuDNN.
Notations:
X
- input tensori
- input gateo
- output gatef
- forget gatec
- cell gatet
- time step (t-1 means previous time step)W[iofc]
- W parameter weight matrix for input, output, forget, and cell gatesR[iofc]
- R recurrence weight matrix for input, output, forget, and cell gatesWb[iofc]
- W bias vectors for input, output, forget, and cell gatesRb[iofc]
- R bias vectors for input, output, forget, and cell gatesP[iof]
- P peephole weight vector for input, output, and forget gatesWB[iofc]
- W parameter weight matrix for backward input, output, forget, and cell gatesRB[iofc]
- R recurrence weight matrix for backward input, output, forget, and cell gatesWBb[iofc]
- W bias vectors for backward input, output, forget, and cell gatesRBb[iofc]
- R bias vectors for backward input, output, forget, and cell gatesPB[iof]
- P peephole weight vector for backward input, output, and forget gatesH
- Hidden statenum_directions
- 2 if direction == bidirectional else 1
Activation functions:
- Relu(x) - max(0, x)
- Tanh(x) - (1 - e^{-2x})/(1 + e^{-2x})
- Sigmoid(x) - 1/(1 + e^{-x})
NOTE: Below are optional
- Affine(x) - alpha*x + beta
- LeakyRelu(x) - x if x >= 0 else alpha * x
- ThresholdedRelu(x) - x if x >= alpha else 0
- ScaledTanh(x) - alphaTanh(betax)
- HardSigmoid(x) - min(max(alpha*x + beta, 0), 1)
- Elu(x) - x if x >= 0 else alpha*(e^x - 1)
- Softsign(x) - x/(1 + |x|)
- Softplus(x) - log(1 + e^x)
Equations (Default: f=Sigmoid, g=Tanh, h=Tanh):
- it = f(Xt*(Wi^T) + Ht-1*(Ri^T) + Pi (.) Ct-1 + Wbi + Rbi)
- ft = f(Xt*(Wf^T) + Ht-1*(Rf^T) + Pf (.) Ct-1 + Wbf + Rbf)
- ct = g(Xt*(Wc^T) + Ht-1*(Rc^T) + Wbc + Rbc)
- Ct = ft (.) Ct-1 + it (.) ct
- ot = f(Xt*(Wo^T) + Ht-1*(Ro^T) + Po (.) Ct + Wbo + Rbo)
- Ht = ot (.) h(Ct) This operator has optional inputs/outputs. See the doc for more details about the representation of optional arguments. An empty string may be used in the place of an actual argument's name to indicate a missing argument. Trailing optional arguments (those not followed by an argument that is present) may also be simply omitted.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 14 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 1, 7
Attributes
- activation_alpha : list of floats
- Optional scaling values used by some activation functions. The values are consumed in the order of activation functions, for example (f, g, h) in LSTM. Default values are the same as of corresponding ONNX operators.For example with LeakyRelu, the default alpha is 0.01.
- activation_beta : list of floats
- Optional scaling values used by some activation functions. The values are consumed in the order of activation functions, for example (f, g, h) in LSTM. Default values are the same as of corresponding ONNX operators.
- activations : list of strings
- A list of 3 (or 6 if bidirectional) activation functions for input, output, forget, cell, and hidden. The activation functions must be one of the activation functions specified above. Optional: See the equations for default if not specified.
- clip : float
- Cell clip threshold. Clipping bounds the elements of a tensor in the range of [-threshold, +threshold] and is applied to the input of activations. No clip if not specified.
- direction : string (default is forward)
- Specify if the RNN is forward, reverse, or bidirectional. Must be one of forward (default), reverse, or bidirectional.
- hidden_size : int
- Number of neurons in the hidden layer
- input_forget : int (default is 0)
- Couple the input and forget gates if 1.
- layout : int (default is 0)
- The shape format of inputs X, initial_h, initial_c and outputs Y, Y_h, Y_c. If 0, the following shapes are expected: X.shape = [seq_length, batch_size, input_size], Y.shape = [seq_length, num_directions, batch_size, hidden_size], initial_h.shape = Y_h.shape = initial_c.shape = Y_c.shape = [num_directions, batch_size, hidden_size]. If 1, the following shapes are expected: X.shape = [batch_size, seq_length, input_size], Y.shape = [batch_size, seq_length, num_directions, hidden_size], initial_h.shape = Y_h.shape = initial_c.shape = Y_c.shape = [batch_size, num_directions, hidden_size].
Inputs (3 - 8)
- X (differentiable) : T
- The input sequences packed (and potentially padded) into one 3-D tensor with the shape of `[seq_length, batch_size, input_size]`.
- W (differentiable) : T
- The weight tensor for the gates. Concatenation of `W[iofc]` and `WB[iofc]` (if bidirectional) along dimension 0. The tensor has shape `[num_directions, 4*hidden_size, input_size]`.
- R (differentiable) : T
- The recurrence weight tensor. Concatenation of `R[iofc]` and `RB[iofc]` (if bidirectional) along dimension 0. This tensor has shape `[num_directions, 4*hidden_size, hidden_size]`.
- B (optional, differentiable) : T
- The bias tensor for input gate. Concatenation of `[Wb[iofc], Rb[iofc]]`, and `[WBb[iofc], RBb[iofc]]` (if bidirectional) along dimension 0. This tensor has shape `[num_directions, 8*hidden_size]`. Optional: If not specified - assumed to be 0.
- sequence_lens (optional, non-differentiable) : T1
- Optional tensor specifying lengths of the sequences in a batch. If not specified - assumed all sequences in the batch to have length `seq_length`. It has shape `[batch_size]`.
- initial_h (optional, non-differentiable) : T
- Optional initial value of the hidden. If not specified - assumed to be 0. It has shape `[num_directions, batch_size, hidden_size]`.
- initial_c (optional, non-differentiable) : T
- Optional initial value of the cell. If not specified - assumed to be 0. It has shape `[num_directions, batch_size, hidden_size]`.
- P (optional, differentiable) : T
- The weight tensor for peepholes. Concatenation of `P[iof]` and `PB[iof]` (if bidirectional) along dimension 0. It has shape `[num_directions, 3*hidde_size]`. Optional: If not specified - assumed to be 0.
Outputs (0 - 3)
- Y (optional, differentiable) : T
- A tensor that concats all the intermediate output values of the hidden. It has shape `[seq_length, num_directions, batch_size, hidden_size]`.
- Y_h (optional, differentiable) : T
- The last output value of the hidden. It has shape `[num_directions, batch_size, hidden_size]`.
- Y_c (optional, differentiable) : T
- The last output value of the cell. It has shape `[num_directions, batch_size, hidden_size]`.
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double)
- Constrain input and output types to float tensors.
- T1 : tensor(int32)
- Constrain seq_lens to integer tensor.
Examples
batchwisedefaultsinitial_biaspeepholesLayerNormalization
This is layer normalization defined in ONNX as function. The overall computation can be split into two stages. The first stage is standardization, which makes the normalized elements have zero mean and unit variances. The computation required by standardization can be described by the following equations. Mean = ReduceMean<axes=normalized_axes>(X) D = Sub(X, Mean) DD = Mul(D, D) Var = ReduceMean<axes=normalized_axes>(DD) VarEps = Add(Var, epsilon) StdDev = Sqrt(VarEps) InvStdDev = Reciprocal(StdDev) Normalized = Mul(D, InvStdDev)
where normalized_axes
is [axis, ..., rank of X - 1]
. The variables Var
and StdDev
stand for variance and standard deviation, respectively. The second output is Mean
and the last one is InvStdDev
. Depending on stash_type
attribute, the actual computation must happen in different floating-point precision. For example, if stash_type
is 1, this operator casts all input variables to 32-bit float, perform the computation, and finally cast Normalized
back to the original type of X
. The second stage then scales and shifts the outcome of the first stage using NormalizedScaled = Mul(Normalized, Scale) Y = Add(NormalizedScaled, B)
The second stage doesn't depends on stash_type
. All equations are in this syntax. The same variable (i.e., input, output, and attribute) uses the same name in the equations above and this operator's definition. Let d[i]
indicate the i-th dimension of X
. If X
's shape is [d[0], ..., d[axis-1], d[axis], ..., d[rank-1]]
, the shape of Mean
and InvStdDev
is [d[0], ..., d[axis-1], 1, ..., 1]
. Y
and X
have the same shape.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 17 of the default ONNX operator set.
Attributes
- axis : int (default is -1)
- The first normalization dimension. If rank(X) is r, axis' allowed range is [-r, r]. Negative value means counting dimensions from the back.
- epsilon : float (default is 1e-05)
- The epsilon value to use to avoid division by zero.
- stash_type : int (default is 1)
- Type of Mean and InvStdDev. This also specifies stage one's computation precision.
Inputs (2 - 3)
- X : T
- Tensor to be normalized.
- Scale : T
- Scale tensor.
- B (optional) : T
- Bias tensor.
Outputs (1 - 3)
- Y : T
- Normalized tensor.
- Mean (optional) : U
- Saved mean used during training to speed up gradient computation
- InvStdDev (optional) : U
- Saved inverse standard deviation used during training to speed up gradient computation.
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(bfloat16)
- Constrain input types and output Y type to float tensors.
- U : tensor(float), tensor(bfloat16)
- Type of Mean and InvStdDev tensors.
Examples
dd_epsilondefault_axislayernormalizationLeakyRelu
LeakyRelu takes input data (Tensor) and an argument alpha, and produces one output data (Tensor) where the function f(x) = alpha * x for x < 0
, f(x) = x for x >= 0
, is applied to the data tensor elementwise.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 16 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 1, 6
Attributes
- alpha : float (default is 0.01)
- Coefficient of leakage.
Inputs
- X (differentiable) : T
- Input tensor
Outputs
- Y (differentiable) : T
- Output tensor
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(bfloat16), tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double)
- Constrain input and output types to float tensors.
Examples
leakyreluleakyrelu_defaultLess
Returns the tensor resulted from performing the less
logical operation elementwise on the input tensors A
and B
(with Numpy-style broadcasting support).
This operator supports multidirectional (i.e., Numpy-style) broadcasting; for more details please check the doc.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 13 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 1, 7, 9
Inputs
- A (non-differentiable) : T
- First input operand for the logical operator.
- B (non-differentiable) : T
- Second input operand for the logical operator.
Outputs
- C (non-differentiable) : T1
- Result tensor.
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(uint8), tensor(uint16), tensor(uint32), tensor(uint64), tensor(int8), tensor(int16), tensor(int32), tensor(int64), tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(bfloat16)
- Constrain input types to all numeric tensors.
- T1 : tensor(bool)
- Constrain output to boolean tensor.
Examples
lesslessless_broadcastless_broadcastLessOrEqual
Returns the tensor resulted from performing the less_equal
logical operation elementwise on the input tensors A
and B
(with Numpy-style broadcasting support).
This operator supports multidirectional (i.e., Numpy-style) broadcasting; for more details please check the doc.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 16 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 12
Inputs
- A (non-differentiable) : T
- First input operand for the logical operator.
- B (non-differentiable) : T
- Second input operand for the logical operator.
Outputs
- C (non-differentiable) : T1
- Result tensor.
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(uint8), tensor(uint16), tensor(uint32), tensor(uint64), tensor(int8), tensor(int16), tensor(int32), tensor(int64), tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(bfloat16)
- Constrain input types to all numeric tensors.
- T1 : tensor(bool)
- Constrain output to boolean tensor.
Log
Calculates the natural log of the given input tensor, element-wise.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 13 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 1, 6
Inputs
- input (differentiable) : T
- Input tensor
Outputs
- output (differentiable) : T
- The natural log of the input tensor computed element-wise
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(bfloat16)
- Constrain input and output types to float tensors.
Examples
logLogSoftmax
The operator computes the log of softmax values for the given input:
LogSoftmax(input, axis) = Log(Softmax(input, axis=axis))
The "axis" attribute indicates the dimension along which LogSoftmax will be performed. The output tensor has the same shape and contains the LogSoftmax values of the corresponding input.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 13 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 1, 11
Attributes
- axis : int (default is -1)
- Describes the dimension LogSoftmax will be performed on. Negative value means counting dimensions from the back. Accepted range is [-r, r-1] where r = rank(input).
Inputs
- input (differentiable) : T
- The input tensor of rank >= axis.
Outputs
- output (differentiable) : T
- The output values with the same shape as the input tensor.
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(bfloat16)
- Constrain input and output types to float tensors.
Examples
logsoftmaxlogsoftmax_axisLoop
Generic Looping construct. This loop has multiple termination conditions:
- Trip count. Iteration count specified at runtime. Set by specifying the input M. Optional. Set to empty string to omit. Note that a static trip count (specified at graph construction time) can be specified by passing in a constant node for input M.
- Loop termination condition. This is an input to the op that determines whether to run the first iteration and also a loop-carried dependency for the body graph. The body graph must yield a value for the condition variable, whether this input is provided or not.
This table summarizes the operating modes of this operator with equivalent C-style code:
Operator inputs defined as (max_trip_count, condition_var).
-
input ("", ""): for (int i=0; ; ++i) { cond = ... // Note this value is ignored, but is required in the body }
-
input ("", cond) // Note this is analogous to a while loop bool cond = ...; for (int i=0; cond; ++i) { cond = ...; }
-
input ("", 1) // Note this is analogous to a do-while loop bool cond = true for (int i=0; cond; ++i) { cond = ...; }
-
input (trip_count, "") // Note this is analogous to a for loop int trip_count = ... for (int i=0; i < trip_count; ++i) { cond = ...; // ignored }
-
input (trip_count, cond) int trip_count = ...; bool cond = ...; for (int i=0; i < trip_count && cond; ++i) { cond = ...; }
Sample usage - cond as well as trip count
graph predict-net {
%a = Constant[value = <Scalar Tensor [3]>]()
%b = Constant[value = <Scalar Tensor [6]>]()
%keepgoing = Constant[value = <Scalar Tensor [1]>]()
%max_trip_count = Constant[value = <Scalar Tensor [10]>]()
%keepgoing_out, %b_out, %user_defined_vals = Loop[body = <graph body-net>](%max_trip_count, %keepgoing, %b)
return
}
graph body-net (
%i[INT32, scalar] // iteration number
%keepgoing_in[BOOL, scalar] // incoming loop-termination-condition; not used
%b_in[INT32, scalar] // incoming value of loop-carried-dependency b
) {
%my_local = Add(%a, %b_in)
%b_out = Sub(%a, %b_in) // outgoing value of loop-carried-dependency b
%keepgoing_out = Greater(%my_local, %b_out) // outgoing loop-termination-condition
%user_defined_val = Add(%b_in, %b_in) // scan-output value to be accumulated
return %keepgoing_out, %b_out, %user_defined_val
}
Sample equivalent C code
{
/* User-defined code (enclosing scope) */
int a = 3, b = 6;
bool keepgoing = true; // Analogous to input cond
/* End user-defined code */
/* Implicitly-defined code */
const int max_trip_count = 10; // Analogous to input M
int user_defined_vals[]; // Imagine this is resizable
/* End implicitly-defined code */
/* initialize loop-carried variables and scan-output variables */
bool keepgoing_out = keepgoing
int b_out = b
for (int i=0; i < max_trip_count && keepgoing_out; ++i) {
/* Implicitly-defined code: bind actual parameter values
to formal parameter variables of loop-body */
bool keepgoing_in = keepgoing_out;
bool b_in = b_out;
/* User-defined code (loop body) */
int my_local = a + b_in; // Reading value "a" from the enclosing scope is fine
b_out = a - b_in;
keepgoing_out = my_local > b_out;
user_defined_val = b_in + b_in; // b_in and b_out are different variables
/* End user-defined code */
/* Implicitly defined-code */
user_defined_vals[i] = user_defined_val // accumulate scan-output values
}
// int t = my_local; // Can't do this. my_local is not accessible here.
// The values below are bound to the output variables of the loop and therefore accessible
// b_out; user_defined_vals; keepgoing_out;
}
There are several things of note in this code snippet:
- Values from the enclosing scope (i.e. variable "a" here) are in scope and can be referenced in the inputs of the loop.
- Any values computed in the loop body that needs to be used in a subsequent iteration or after the loop are modelled using a pair of variables in the loop-body, consisting of an input variable (eg., b_in) and an output variable (eg., b_out). These are referred to as loop-carried dependences. The loop operation node supplies the input value of the input variable for the first iteration, and returns the output value of the output variable produced by the final iteration.
- Scan_output variables are used to implicitly concatenate values computed across all the iterations. In the above example, the value of user_defined_val computed over all iterations are concatenated and returned as the value of user_defined_vals after the loop.
- Values created in the body cannot be accessed in the enclosing scope, except using the mechanism described above.
Note that the semantics of this op support "diagonal" or "wavefront" execution. (See Step 3 here for an example: https://devblogs.nvidia.com/optimizing-recurrent-neural-networks-cudnn-5/). Frontends should emit multi-layer RNNs as a series of While operators (with time being the inner looping dimension), with each successive layer consuming the scan_outputs from the previous layer, possibly going through several point-wise operators (e.g. dropout, residual connections, linear layer).
The input/output of subgraph (produced by loop node) matching is based on order instead of name. The implementation will figure out the names based on this order.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 19 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 1, 11, 13, 16
Attributes
- body : graph (required)
- The graph run each iteration. It has 2+N inputs: (iteration_num, condition, loop carried dependencies...). It has 1+N+K outputs: (condition, loop carried dependencies..., scan_outputs...). Each scan_output is created by concatenating the value of the specified output value at the end of each iteration of the loop. It is an error if the dimensions or data type of these scan_outputs change across loop iterations.
Inputs (2 - ∞)
- M (optional) : I
- A maximum trip-count for the loop specified at runtime. Optional. Pass empty string to skip.
- cond (optional) : B
- A boolean termination condition. Optional. Pass empty string to skip.
- v_initial (variadic, heterogeneous) : V
- The initial values of any loop-carried dependencies (values that change across loop iterations)
Outputs (1 - ∞)
- v_final_and_scan_outputs (variadic, heterogeneous) : V
- Final N loop carried dependency values then K scan_outputs. Scan outputs must be Tensors.
Type Constraints
- V : tensor(uint8), tensor(uint16), tensor(uint32), tensor(uint64), tensor(int8), tensor(int16), tensor(int32), tensor(int64), tensor(bfloat16), tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(string), tensor(bool), tensor(complex64), tensor(complex128), tensor(float8e4m3fn), tensor(float8e4m3fnuz), tensor(float8e5m2), tensor(float8e5m2fnuz), seq(tensor(uint8)), seq(tensor(uint16)), seq(tensor(uint32)), seq(tensor(uint64)), seq(tensor(int8)), seq(tensor(int16)), seq(tensor(int32)), seq(tensor(int64)), seq(tensor(bfloat16)), seq(tensor(float16)), seq(tensor(float)), seq(tensor(double)), seq(tensor(string)), seq(tensor(bool)), seq(tensor(complex64)), seq(tensor(complex128)), seq(tensor(float8e4m3fn)), seq(tensor(float8e4m3fnuz)), seq(tensor(float8e5m2)), seq(tensor(float8e5m2fnuz)), optional(seq(tensor(uint8))), optional(seq(tensor(uint16))), optional(seq(tensor(uint32))), optional(seq(tensor(uint64))), optional(seq(tensor(int8))), optional(seq(tensor(int16))), optional(seq(tensor(int32))), optional(seq(tensor(int64))), optional(seq(tensor(bfloat16))), optional(seq(tensor(float16))), optional(seq(tensor(float))), optional(seq(tensor(double))), optional(seq(tensor(string))), optional(seq(tensor(bool))), optional(seq(tensor(complex64))), optional(seq(tensor(complex128))), optional(tensor(uint8)), optional(tensor(uint16)), optional(tensor(uint32)), optional(tensor(uint64)), optional(tensor(int8)), optional(tensor(int16)), optional(tensor(int32)), optional(tensor(int64)), optional(tensor(bfloat16)), optional(tensor(float16)), optional(tensor(float)), optional(tensor(double)), optional(tensor(string)), optional(tensor(bool)), optional(tensor(complex64)), optional(tensor(complex128)), optional(tensor(float8e4m3fn)), optional(tensor(float8e4m3fnuz)), optional(tensor(float8e5m2)), optional(tensor(float8e5m2fnuz))
- All Tensor, Sequence(Tensor), Optional(Tensor), and Optional(Sequence(Tensor)) types up to IRv9.
- I : tensor(int64)
- tensor of int64, which should be a scalar.
- B : tensor(bool)
- tensor of bool, which should be a scalar.
Examples
loop_11loop_13loop_16_noneLpNormalization
Given a matrix, apply Lp-normalization along the provided axis.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 1 of the default ONNX operator set.
Attributes
- axis : int (default is -1)
- The axis on which to apply normalization, -1 mean last axis.
- p : int (default is 2)
- The order of the normalization, only 1 or 2 are supported.
Inputs
- input (differentiable) : T
- Input matrix
Outputs
- output (differentiable) : T
- Matrix after normalization
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double)
- Constrain input and output types to float tensors.
LpPool
LpPool consumes an input tensor X and applies Lp pooling across the tensor according to kernel sizes, stride sizes, and pad lengths. Lp pooling consisting of computing the Lp norm on all values of a subset of the input tensor according to the kernel size and downsampling the data into the output tensor Y for further processing. The output spatial shape will be following:
output_spatial_shape[i] = floor((input_spatial_shape[i] + pad_shape[i] - {kernelSpatialShape}) / strides_spatial_shape[i] + 1)
or
output_spatial_shape[i] = ceil((input_spatial_shape[i] + pad_shape[i] - {kernelSpatialShape}) / strides_spatial_shape[i] + 1)
if ceil_mode is enabled pad_shape[i]
is the sum of pads along axis i
.
auto_pad
is a DEPRECATED attribute. If you are using them currently, the output spatial shape will be following:
VALID: output_spatial_shape[i] = ceil((input_spatial_shape[i] - {kernelSpatialShape} + 1) / strides_spatial_shape[i])
SAME_UPPER or SAME_LOWER: output_spatial_shape[i] = ceil(input_spatial_shape[i] / strides_spatial_shape[i])
And pad shape will be following if SAME_UPPER
or SAME_LOWER
:
pad_shape[i] = (output_spatial_shape[i] - 1) * strides_spatial_shape[i] + {kernelSpatialShape} - input_spatial_shape[i]
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 18 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 1, 2, 11
Attributes
- auto_pad : string (default is NOTSET)
- auto_pad must be either NOTSET, SAME_UPPER, SAME_LOWER or VALID. Where default value is NOTSET, which means explicit padding is used. SAME_UPPER or SAME_LOWER mean pad the input so that `output_shape[i] = ceil(input_shape[i] / strides[i])` for each axis `i`. The padding is split between the two sides equally or almost equally (depending on whether it is even or odd). In case the padding is an odd number, the extra padding is added at the end for SAME_UPPER and at the beginning for SAME_LOWER.
- ceil_mode : int (default is 0)
- Whether to use ceil or floor (default) to compute the output shape.
- dilations : list of ints
- dilation value along each spatial axis of the filter. If not present, the dilation defaults is 1 along each spatial axis.
- kernel_shape : list of ints (required)
- The size of the kernel along each axis.
- p : int (default is 2)
- p value of the Lp norm used to pool over the input data.
- pads : list of ints
- Padding for the beginning and ending along each spatial axis, it can take any value greater than or equal to 0. The value represent the number of pixels added to the beginning and end part of the corresponding axis. `pads` format should be as follow [x1_begin, x2_begin...x1_end, x2_end,...], where xi_begin the number of pixels added at the beginning of axis `i` and xi_end, the number of pixels added at the end of axis `i`. This attribute cannot be used simultaneously with auto_pad attribute. If not present, the padding defaults to 0 along start and end of each spatial axis.
- strides : list of ints
- Stride along each spatial axis. If not present, the stride defaults to 1 along each spatial axis.
Inputs
- X (differentiable) : T
- Input data tensor from the previous operator; dimensions for image case are (N x C x H x W), where N is the batch size, C is the number of channels, and H and W are the height and the width of the data. For non image case, the dimensions are in the form of (N x C x D1 x D2 ... Dn), where N is the batch size.
Outputs
- Y (differentiable) : T
- Output data tensor from Lp pooling across the input tensor. Dimensions will vary based on various kernel, stride, and pad sizes.
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double)
- Constrain input and output types to float tensors.
Examples
lppool_1d_defaultlppool_2d_defaultlppool_2d_dilationslppool_2d_padslppool_2d_same_lowerlppool_2d_same_upperlppool_2d_strideslppool_3d_defaultMatMul
Matrix product that behaves like numpy.matmul: https://docs.scipy.org/doc/numpy-1.13.0/reference/generated/numpy.matmul.html
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 13 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 1, 9
Inputs
- A (differentiable) : T
- N-dimensional matrix A
- B (differentiable) : T
- N-dimensional matrix B
Outputs
- Y (differentiable) : T
- Matrix multiply results from A * B
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(uint32), tensor(uint64), tensor(int32), tensor(int64), tensor(bfloat16)
- Constrain input and output types to float/int tensors.
Examples
matmulMatMulInteger
Matrix product that behaves like numpy.matmul: https://docs.scipy.org/doc/numpy-1.13.0/reference/generated/numpy.matmul.html. The production MUST never overflow. The accumulation may overflow if and only if in 32 bits.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 10 of the default ONNX operator set.
Inputs (2 - 4)
- A (non-differentiable) : T1
- N-dimensional matrix A
- B (non-differentiable) : T2
- N-dimensional matrix B
- a_zero_point (optional, non-differentiable) : T1
- Zero point tensor for input 'A'. It's optional and default value is 0. It could be a scalar or N-D tensor. Scalar refers to per tensor quantization whereas N-D refers to per row quantization. If the input is 2D of shape [M, K] then zero point tensor may be an M element vector [zp_1, zp_2, ..., zp_M]. If the input is N-D tensor with shape [D1, D2, M, K] then zero point tensor may have shape [D1, D2, M, 1].
- b_zero_point (optional, non-differentiable) : T2
- Zero point tensor for input 'B'. It's optional and default value is 0. It could be a scalar or a N-D tensor, Scalar refers to per tensor quantization whereas N-D refers to per col quantization. If the input is 2D of shape [K, N] then zero point tensor may be an N element vector [zp_1, zp_2, ..., zp_N]. If the input is N-D tensor with shape [D1, D2, K, N] then zero point tensor may have shape [D1, D2, 1, N].
Outputs
- Y (non-differentiable) : T3
- Matrix multiply results from A * B
Type Constraints
- T1 : tensor(int8), tensor(uint8)
- Constrain input A data type to 8-bit integer tensor.
- T2 : tensor(int8), tensor(uint8)
- Constrain input B data type to 8-bit integer tensor.
- T3 : tensor(int32)
- Constrain output Y data type as 32-bit integer tensor.
Examples
matmulintegerMax
Element-wise max of each of the input tensors (with Numpy-style broadcasting support). All inputs and outputs must have the same data type. This operator supports multidirectional (i.e., Numpy-style) broadcasting; for more details please check the doc.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 13 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 1, 6, 8, 12
Inputs (1 - ∞)
- data_0 (variadic, differentiable) : T
- List of tensors for max.
Outputs
- max (differentiable) : T
- Output tensor.
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(uint8), tensor(uint16), tensor(uint32), tensor(uint64), tensor(int8), tensor(int16), tensor(int32), tensor(int64), tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(bfloat16)
- Constrain input and output types to numeric tensors.
Examples
maxmax_all_numeric_typesMaxPool
MaxPool consumes an input tensor X and applies max pooling across the tensor according to kernel sizes, stride sizes, and pad lengths. max pooling consisting of computing the max on all values of a subset of the input tensor according to the kernel size and downsampling the data into the output tensor Y for further processing. The output spatial shape will be following:
output_spatial_shape[i] = floor((input_spatial_shape[i] + pad_shape[i] - ((kernel_spatial_shape[i] - 1) * dilations[i] + 1)) / strides_spatial_shape[i] + 1)
or
output_spatial_shape[i] = ceil((input_spatial_shape[i] + pad_shape[i] - ((kernel_spatial_shape[i] - 1) * dilations[i] + 1)) / strides_spatial_shape[i] + 1)
if ceil_mode is enabled pad_shape[i]
is the sum of pads along axis i
.
auto_pad
is a DEPRECATED attribute. If you are using them currently, the output spatial shape will be following:
VALID: output_spatial_shape[i] = ceil((input_spatial_shape[i] - ((kernel_spatial_shape[i] - 1) * dilations[i] + 1) + 1) / strides_spatial_shape[i])
SAME_UPPER or SAME_LOWER: output_spatial_shape[i] = ceil(input_spatial_shape[i] / strides_spatial_shape[i])
And pad shape will be following if SAME_UPPER
or SAME_LOWER
:
pad_shape[i] = (output_spatial_shape[i] - 1) * strides_spatial_shape[i] + ((kernel_spatial_shape[i] - 1) * dilations[i] + 1) - input_spatial_shape[i]
The output of each pooling window is maximum number of elements exclude pad.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 12 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 1, 8, 10, 11
Attributes
- auto_pad : string (default is NOTSET)
- auto_pad must be either NOTSET, SAME_UPPER, SAME_LOWER or VALID. Where default value is NOTSET, which means explicit padding is used. SAME_UPPER or SAME_LOWER mean pad the input so that `output_shape[i] = ceil(input_shape[i] / strides[i])` for each axis `i`. The padding is split between the two sides equally or almost equally (depending on whether it is even or odd). In case the padding is an odd number, the extra padding is added at the end for SAME_UPPER and at the beginning for SAME_LOWER.
- ceil_mode : int (default is 0)
- Whether to use ceil or floor (default) to compute the output shape.
- dilations : list of ints
- Dilation value along each spatial axis of filter. If not present, the dilation defaults to 1 along each spatial axis.
- kernel_shape : list of ints (required)
- The size of the kernel along each axis.
- pads : list of ints
- Padding for the beginning and ending along each spatial axis, it can take any value greater than or equal to 0. The value represent the number of pixels added to the beginning and end part of the corresponding axis. `pads` format should be as follow [x1_begin, x2_begin...x1_end, x2_end,...], where xi_begin the number of pixels added at the beginning of axis `i` and xi_end, the number of pixels added at the end of axis `i`. This attribute cannot be used simultaneously with auto_pad attribute. If not present, the padding defaults to 0 along start and end of each spatial axis.
- storage_order : int (default is 0)
- The storage order of the tensor. 0 is row major, and 1 is column major. This attribute is used only to convert an n-tuple index value into a single integer value for producing the second output.
- strides : list of ints
- Stride along each spatial axis. If not present, the stride defaults to 1 along each spatial axis.
Inputs
- X (differentiable) : T
- Input data tensor from the previous operator; dimensions for image case are (N x C x H x W), where N is the batch size, C is the number of channels, and H and W are the height and the width of the data. For non image case, the dimensions are in the form of (N x C x D1 x D2 ... Dn), where N is the batch size. Optionally, if dimension denotation is in effect, the operation expects the input data tensor to arrive with the dimension denotation of [DATA_BATCH, DATA_CHANNEL, DATA_FEATURE, DATA_FEATURE ...].
Outputs (1 - 2)
- Y (differentiable) : T
- Output data tensor from average or max pooling across the input tensor. Dimensions will vary based on various kernel, stride, and pad sizes. Floor value of the dimension is used
- Indices (optional, non-differentiable) : I
- Indices tensor from max pooling across the input tensor. The dimensions of indices are the same as output tensor. The values in indices of are the indices of the selected values during pooling. The indices are computed as flatten 1-D tensor, and the indices do not consider padding. So the values in indices are in [0, N x C x D1 x ... x Dn).
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(int8), tensor(uint8)
- Constrain input and output types to float and 8 bit tensors.
- I : tensor(int64)
- Constrain index tensor to int64
Examples
maxpool_1d_defaultmaxpool_2d_ceilmaxpool_2d_defaultmaxpool_2d_dilationsmaxpool_2d_padsmaxpool_2d_precomputed_padsmaxpool_2d_precomputed_same_uppermaxpool_2d_precomputed_stridesmaxpool_2d_same_lowermaxpool_2d_same_uppermaxpool_2d_stridesmaxpool_2d_uint8maxpool_3d_defaultmaxpool_with_argmax_2d_precomputed_padsmaxpool_with_argmax_2d_precomputed_stridesMaxRoiPool
ROI max pool consumes an input tensor X and region of interests (RoIs) to apply max pooling across each RoI, to produce output 4-D tensor of shape (num_rois, channels, pooled_shape[0], pooled_shape[1]).
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 1 of the default ONNX operator set.
Attributes
- pooled_shape : list of ints (required)
- ROI pool output shape (height, width).
- spatial_scale : float (default is 1.0)
- Multiplicative spatial scale factor to translate ROI coordinates from their input scale to the scale used when pooling.
Inputs
- X (differentiable) : T
- Input data tensor from the previous operator; dimensions for image case are (N x C x H x W), where N is the batch size, C is the number of channels, and H and W are the height and the width of the data.
- rois (non-differentiable) : T
- RoIs (Regions of Interest) to pool over. Should be a 2-D tensor of shape (num_rois, 5) given as [[batch_id, x1, y1, x2, y2], ...].
Outputs
- Y (differentiable) : T
- RoI pooled output 4-D tensor of shape (num_rois, channels, pooled_shape[0], pooled_shape[1]).
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double)
- Constrain input and output types to float tensors.
MaxUnpool
MaxUnpool essentially computes the partial inverse of the MaxPool op. The input information to this op is typically the output information from a MaxPool op. The first input tensor X is the tensor that needs to be unpooled, which is typically the pooled tensor (first output) from MaxPool. The second input tensor, I, contains the indices to the (locally maximal) elements corrsponding to the elements in the first input tensor X. Input tensor I is typically the second output of the MaxPool op. The third (optional) input is a tensor that specifies the output size of the unpooling operation.
MaxUnpool is intended to do 'partial' inverse of the MaxPool op. 'Partial' because all the non-maximal values from the original input to MaxPool are set to zero in the output of the MaxUnpool op. Pooling the result of an unpooling operation should give back the original input to the unpooling op.
MaxUnpool can produce the same output size for several input sizes, which makes unpooling op ambiguous. The third input argument, output_size, is meant to disambiguate the op and produce output tensor of known/predictable size.
In addition to the inputs, MaxUnpool takes three attributes, namely kernel_shape, strides, and pads, which define the exact unpooling op. The attributes typically have the same values as the corrsponding pooling op that the unpooling op is trying to invert.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 11 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 9
Attributes
- kernel_shape : list of ints (required)
- The size of the kernel along each axis.
- pads : list of ints
- Padding for the beginning and ending along each spatial axis, it can take any value greater than or equal to 0. The value represent the number of pixels added to the beginning and end part of the corresponding axis. `pads` format should be as follow [x1_begin, x2_begin...x1_end, x2_end,...], where xi_begin the number of pixels added at the beginning of axis `i` and xi_end, the number of pixels added at the end of axis `i`. This attribute cannot be used simultaneously with auto_pad attribute. If not present, the padding defaults to 0 along start and end of each spatial axis.
- strides : list of ints
- Stride along each spatial axis. If not present, the stride defaults to 1 along each spatial axis.
Inputs (2 - 3)
- X (differentiable) : T1
- Input data tensor that has to be unpooled. This tensor is typically the first output of the MaxPool op.Dimensions for image case are (N x C x H x W), where N is the batch size, C is the number of channels, and H and W are the height and the width of the data. For non-image case, the dimensions are in the form of (N x C x D1 x D2 ... Dn), where N is the batch size. Optionally, if dimension denotation is in effect, the operation expects the input data tensor to arrive with the dimension denotation of [DATA_BATCH, DATA_CHANNEL, DATA_FEATURE, DATA_FEATURE ...].
- I (non-differentiable) : T2
- Input data tensor containing the indices corresponding to elements in the first input tensor X.This tensor is typically the second output of the MaxPool op.Dimensions must be the same as input tensor X. The indices are linear, i.e. computed considering the tensor as flattened 1-D tensor, assuming row-major storage. Also, the linear indices should not consider padding. So the values in indices are in the range [0, N x C x D1 x ... x Dn).
- output_shape (optional, non-differentiable) : T2
- The shape of the output can be explicitly set which will cause pads values to be auto generated. If 'output_shape' is specified, 'pads' values are ignored.
Outputs
- output (differentiable) : T1
- Output data tensor that contains the result of the unpooling.
Type Constraints
- T1 : tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double)
- Constrain input and output types to float tensors.
- T2 : tensor(int64)
- Constrain index tensor to int64
Examples
with_output_shapewithout_output_shapeMean
Element-wise mean of each of the input tensors (with Numpy-style broadcasting support). All inputs and outputs must have the same data type. This operator supports multidirectional (i.e., Numpy-style) broadcasting; for more details please check the doc.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 13 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 1, 6, 8
Inputs (1 - ∞)
- data_0 (variadic, differentiable) : T
- List of tensors for mean.
Outputs
- mean (differentiable) : T
- Output tensor.
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(bfloat16)
- Constrain input and output types to float tensors.
Examples
meanMeanVarianceNormalization
A MeanVarianceNormalization Function: Perform mean variance normalization on the input tensor X using formula: (X-EX)/sqrt(E(X-EX)^2)
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 13 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 9
Attributes
- axes : list of ints (default is ['0', '2', '3'])
- A list of integers, along which to reduce. The default is to caculate along axes [0,2,3] for calculating mean and variance along each channel. Two variables with the same C-coordinate are associated with the same mean and variance.
Inputs
- X (differentiable) : T
- Input tensor
Outputs
- Y (differentiable) : T
- Output tensor
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(bfloat16)
- Constrain input and output types to all numeric tensors.
Examples
meanvariancenormalizationMelWeightMatrix
Generate a MelWeightMatrix that can be used to re-weight a Tensor containing a linearly sampled frequency spectra (from DFT or STFT) into num_mel_bins frequency information based on the [lower_edge_hertz, upper_edge_hertz] range on the mel scale. This function defines the mel scale in terms of a frequency in hertz according to the following formula:
mel(f) = 2595 * log10(1 + f/700)
In the returned matrix, all the triangles (filterbanks) have a peak value of 1.0.
The returned MelWeightMatrix can be used to right-multiply a spectrogram S of shape [frames, num_spectrogram_bins] of linear scale spectrum values (e.g. STFT magnitudes) to generate a "mel spectrogram" M of shape [frames, num_mel_bins].
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 17 of the default ONNX operator set.
Attributes
- output_datatype : int (default is 1)
- The data type of the output tensor. Strictly must be one of the values from DataType enum in TensorProto whose values correspond to T3. The default value is 1 = FLOAT.
Inputs
- num_mel_bins (non-differentiable) : T1
- The number of bands in the mel spectrum.
- dft_length (non-differentiable) : T1
- The size of the original DFT. The size of the original DFT is used to infer the size of the onesided DFT, which is understood to be floor(dft_length/2) + 1, i.e. the spectrogram only contains the nonredundant DFT bins.
- sample_rate (non-differentiable) : T1
- Samples per second of the input signal used to create the spectrogram. Used to figure out the frequencies corresponding to each spectrogram bin, which dictates how they are mapped into the mel scale.
- lower_edge_hertz (non-differentiable) : T2
- Lower bound on the frequencies to be included in the mel spectrum. This corresponds to the lower edge of the lowest triangular band.
- upper_edge_hertz (non-differentiable) : T2
- The desired top edge of the highest frequency band.
Outputs
- output (non-differentiable) : T3
- The Mel Weight Matrix. The output has the shape: [floor(dft_length/2) + 1][num_mel_bins].
Type Constraints
- T1 : tensor(int32), tensor(int64)
- Constrain to integer tensors.
- T2 : tensor(float), tensor(float16), tensor(double), tensor(bfloat16)
- Constrain to float tensors
- T3 : tensor(uint8), tensor(uint16), tensor(uint32), tensor(uint64), tensor(int8), tensor(int16), tensor(int32), tensor(int64), tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(bfloat16)
- Constrain to any numerical types.
Examples
melweightmatrixMin
Element-wise min of each of the input tensors (with Numpy-style broadcasting support). All inputs and outputs must have the same data type. This operator supports multidirectional (i.e., Numpy-style) broadcasting; for more details please check the doc.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 13 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 1, 6, 8, 12
Inputs (1 - ∞)
- data_0 (variadic, differentiable) : T
- List of tensors for min.
Outputs
- min (differentiable) : T
- Output tensor.
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(uint8), tensor(uint16), tensor(uint32), tensor(uint64), tensor(int8), tensor(int16), tensor(int32), tensor(int64), tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(bfloat16)
- Constrain input and output types to numeric tensors.
Examples
minmin_all_numeric_typesMish
Mish: A Self Regularized Non-Monotonic Neural Activation Function.
Perform the linear unit element-wise on the input tensor X using formula:
mish(x) = x * tanh(softplus(x)) = x * tanh(ln(1 + e^{x}))
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 18 of the default ONNX operator set.
Inputs
- X (differentiable) : T
- Input tensor
Outputs
- Y (differentiable) : T
- Output tensor
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double)
- Constrain input X and output types to float tensors.
Examples
mishMod
Performs element-wise binary modulus (with Numpy-style broadcasting support). The sign of the remainder is the same as that of the Divisor.
Mod operator can also behave like C fmod() or numpy.fmod. In this case, the sign of the remainder however, will be the same as the Dividend
(in contrast to integer mod). To force a behavior like numpy.fmod() an 'fmod' Attribute is provided.
This attribute is set to 0 by default causing the behavior to be like integer mod.
Setting this attribute to 1 causes the remainder to be calculated similar to that of numpy.fmod().
If the input type is floating point, then `fmod` attribute must be set to 1.
In case of dividend being zero, the results will be platform dependent.
This operator supports **multidirectional (i.e., Numpy-style) broadcasting**; for more details please check [the doc](Broadcasting.md).
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 13 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 10
Attributes
- fmod : int (default is 0)
- Whether the operator should behave like fmod (default=0 meaning it will do integer mods); Set this to 1 to force fmod treatment
Inputs
- A (differentiable) : T
- Dividend tensor
- B (non-differentiable) : T
- Divisor tensor
Outputs
- C (differentiable) : T
- Remainder tensor
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(uint8), tensor(uint16), tensor(uint32), tensor(uint64), tensor(int8), tensor(int16), tensor(int32), tensor(int64), tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(bfloat16)
- Constrain input and output types to high-precision numeric tensors.
Examples
mod_broadcastmod_int64_fmodmod_mixed_sign_float16mod_mixed_sign_float32mod_mixed_sign_float64mod_mixed_sign_int16mod_mixed_sign_int32mod_mixed_sign_int64mod_mixed_sign_int8mod_uint16mod_uint32mod_uint64mod_uint8Mul
Performs element-wise binary multiplication (with Numpy-style broadcasting support).
This operator supports multidirectional (i.e., Numpy-style) broadcasting; for more details please check the doc.
(Opset 14 change): Extend supported types to include uint8, int8, uint16, and int16.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 14 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 1, 6, 7, 13
Inputs
- A (differentiable) : T
- First operand.
- B (differentiable) : T
- Second operand.
Outputs
- C (differentiable) : T
- Result, has same element type as two inputs
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(uint8), tensor(uint16), tensor(uint32), tensor(uint64), tensor(int8), tensor(int16), tensor(int32), tensor(int64), tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(bfloat16)
- Constrain input and output types to all numeric tensors.
Examples
mulmul_broadcastMultinomial
Generate a tensor of samples from a multinomial distribution according to the probabilities of each of the possible outcomes.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 7 of the default ONNX operator set.
Attributes
- dtype : int (default is 6)
- (Optional) The data type for the elements of the output tensor, if not specified, we will use int32.
- sample_size : int (default is 1)
- Number of times to sample.
- seed : float
- (Optional) Seed to the random generator, if not specified we will auto generate one.
Inputs
- input : T1
- Input tensor with shape [batch_size, class_size], where class_size is the number of all possible outcomes. Each value along the axis zero represents the unnormalized log-probability of each corresponding outcome in a batch.
Outputs
- output : T2
- Output tensor with shape [batch_size, sample_size], where sample_size is the number of times to sample. Each value along the axis zero represents the outcome of the corresponding sample in a batch.
Type Constraints
- T1 : tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double)
- Constrain input types to float tensors.
- T2 : tensor(int32), tensor(int64)
- Constrain output types to integral tensors.
Neg
Neg takes one input data (Tensor) and produces one output data (Tensor) where each element flipped sign, y = -x, is applied to the tensor elementwise.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 13 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 1, 6
Inputs
- X (differentiable) : T
- Input tensor
Outputs
- Y (differentiable) : T
- Output tensor
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(float), tensor(int32), tensor(int8), tensor(int16), tensor(int64), tensor(float16), tensor(double), tensor(bfloat16)
- Constrain input and output types to signed numeric tensors.
Examples
negNegativeLogLikelihoodLoss
A NegativeLogLikelihoodLoss operator computes (weighted) negative log likelihood loss. Its "input" tensor has the shape of (N, C, d1, d2, ..., dk) where k >= 0. The "input" tensor contains log-probabilities for input[n, :, d_1, d_2,..., d_k] being in a class of [0, C). The operator's "target" input tensor has the shape of (N, d1, d2, ..., dk). It encodes class labels (one of C classes) or it may contain a special value (indicated by an attribute ignore_index) for N x d1 x d2 x ... x dk samples. The loss value for input[n, :, d_1, d_2,...d_k] being classified as class c = target[n][d_1][d_2]...[d_k] is computed as:
loss[n][d_1][d_2]...[d_k] = -input[n][c][d_1][d_2]...[d_k].
When an optional "weight" is provided, the sample loss is calculated as:
loss[n][d_1][d_2]...[d_k] = -input[n][c][d_1][d_2]...[d_k] * weight[c].
loss is zero for the case when target-value equals ignore_index.
loss[n][d_1][d_2]...[d_k] = 0, when target[n][d_1][d_2]...[d_k] = ignore_index
If "reduction" attribute is set to "none", the operator's output will be the above loss with shape (N, d1, d2, ..., dk). If "reduction" attribute is set to "mean" (the default attribute value), the output loss is (weight) averaged:
mean(loss), if "weight" is not provided,
or if weight is provided,
sum(loss) / sum(weight[target[n][d_1][d_2]...[d_k]]]), for all samples.
If "reduction" attribute is set to "sum", the output is a scalar: sum(loss)
.
See also https://pytorch.org/docs/stable/nn.html#torch.nn.NLLLoss.
Example 1:
// negative log likelihood loss, "none" reduction
N, C, d1 = 2, 3, 2
input = [[[1.0, 2.0], [2.0, 2.0], [3.0, 2.0]],
[[0.0, 1.0], [2.0, 2.0], [1.0, 2]]]
target = [[2, 1], [0, 2]]
loss = np.zeros((N, d1))
for n in range(N):
for d_1 in range(d1):
c = target[n][d_1]
loss[n][d_1] = -input[n][c][d_1]
// print(loss)
// [[-3. -2.]
// [-0. -2.]]
Example 2:
// weighted negative log likelihood loss, sum reduction
N, C, d1 = 2, 3, 2
input = [[[1.0, 2.0], [2.0, 2.0], [3.0, 2.0]],
[[0.0, 1.0], [2.0, 2.0], [1.0, 2]]]
target = [[2, 1], [0, 2]]
weight = [0.2, 0.3, 0.1]
loss = np.zeros((N, d1))
for n in range(N):
for d_1 in range(d1):
c = target[n][d_1]
loss[n][d_1] = -input[n][c][d_1] * weight[c]
loss = np.sum(loss)
// print(loss)
// -1.1
Example 3:
// weighted negative log likelihood loss, mean reduction
N, C, d1 = 2, 3, 2
input = [[[1.0, 2.0], [2.0, 2.0], [3.0, 2.0]],
[[0.0, 1.0], [2.0, 2.0], [1.0, 2]]]
target = [[2, 1], [0, 2]]
weight = [0.2, 0.3, 0.1]
loss = np.zeros((N, d1))
weight_total = 0
for n in range(N):
for d_1 in range(d1):
c = target[n][d_1]
loss[n][d_1] = -input[n][c][d_1] * weight[c]
weight_total = weight_total + weight[c]
loss = np.sum(loss) / weight_total
// print(loss)
// -1.57
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 13 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 12
Attributes
- ignore_index : int
- Specifies a target value that is ignored and does not contribute to the input gradient. It's an optional value.
- reduction : string (default is mean)
- Type of reduction to apply to loss: none, sum, mean (default). 'none': the output is the loss for each sample. 'sum': the output will be summed. 'mean': the sum of the output will be divided by the sum of applied weights.
Inputs (2 - 3)
- input (differentiable) : T
- Input tensor of shape (N, C) or (N, C, d1, d2, ..., dk).
- target (non-differentiable) : Tind
- Target tensor of shape (N) or (N, d1, d2, ..., dk). Target element value shall be in range of [0, C). If ignore_index is specified, it may have a value outside [0, C) and the target values should either be in the range [0, C) or have the value ignore_index.
- weight (optional, non-differentiable) : T
- Optional rescaling weight tensor. If given, it has to be a tensor of size C. Otherwise, it is treated as if having all ones.
Outputs
- loss (differentiable) : T
- The negative log likelihood loss
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double)
- Constrain input, weight, and output types to floating-point tensors.
- Tind : tensor(int32), tensor(int64)
- Constrain target to integer types
Examples
input_shape_is_NCinput_shape_is_NCd1input_shape_is_NCd1_iiinput_shape_is_NCd1_mean_weight_negative_iiinput_shape_is_NCd1_weightinput_shape_is_NCd1_weight_iiinput_shape_is_NCd1d2input_shape_is_NCd1d2_no_weight_reduction_mean_iiinput_shape_is_NCd1d2_reduction_meaninput_shape_is_NCd1d2_reduction_suminput_shape_is_NCd1d2_with_weightinput_shape_is_NCd1d2_with_weight_reduction_meaninput_shape_is_NCd1d2_with_weight_reduction_suminput_shape_is_NCd1d2_with_weight_reduction_sum_iiinput_shape_is_NCd1d2d3_none_no_weight_negative_iiinput_shape_is_NCd1d2d3_sum_weight_high_iiinput_shape_is_NCd1d2d3d4d5_mean_weightinput_shape_is_NCd1d2d3d4d5_none_no_weightNonMaxSuppression
Filter out boxes that have high intersection-over-union (IOU) overlap with previously selected boxes. Bounding boxes with score less than score_threshold are removed. Bounding box format is indicated by attribute center_point_box. Note that this algorithm is agnostic to where the origin is in the coordinate system and more generally is invariant to orthogonal transformations and translations of the coordinate system; thus translating or reflections of the coordinate system result in the same boxes being selected by the algorithm. The selected_indices output is a set of integers indexing into the input collection of bounding boxes representing the selected boxes. The bounding box coordinates corresponding to the selected indices can then be obtained using the Gather or GatherND operation.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 11 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 10
Attributes
- center_point_box : int (default is 0)
- Integer indicate the format of the box data. The default is 0. 0 - the box data is supplied as [y1, x1, y2, x2] where (y1, x1) and (y2, x2) are the coordinates of any diagonal pair of box corners and the coordinates can be provided as normalized (i.e., lying in the interval [0, 1]) or absolute. Mostly used for TF models. 1 - the box data is supplied as [x_center, y_center, width, height]. Mostly used for Pytorch models.
Inputs (2 - 5)
- boxes : tensor(float)
- An input tensor with shape [num_batches, spatial_dimension, 4]. The single box data format is indicated by center_point_box.
- scores : tensor(float)
- An input tensor with shape [num_batches, num_classes, spatial_dimension]
- max_output_boxes_per_class (optional) : tensor(int64)
- Integer representing the maximum number of boxes to be selected per batch per class. It is a scalar. Default to 0, which means no output.
- iou_threshold (optional) : tensor(float)
- Float representing the threshold for deciding whether boxes overlap too much with respect to IOU. It is scalar. Value range [0, 1]. Default to 0.
- score_threshold (optional) : tensor(float)
- Float representing the threshold for deciding when to remove boxes based on score. It is a scalar.
Outputs
- selected_indices : tensor(int64)
- selected indices from the boxes tensor. [num_selected_indices, 3], the selected index format is [batch_index, class_index, box_index].
Type Constraints
Examples
nonmaxsuppression_center_point_box_formatnonmaxsuppression_flipped_coordinatesnonmaxsuppression_identical_boxesnonmaxsuppression_limit_output_sizenonmaxsuppression_single_boxnonmaxsuppression_suppress_by_IOUnonmaxsuppression_suppress_by_IOU_and_scoresnonmaxsuppression_two_batchesnonmaxsuppression_two_classesNonZero
Returns the indices of the elements that are non-zero (in row-major order - by dimension). NonZero behaves similar to numpy.nonzero: https://docs.scipy.org/doc/numpy/reference/generated/numpy.nonzero.html, but for scalar input, NonZero produces output shape (0, N) instead of (1, N), which is different from Numpy's behavior.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 13 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 9
Inputs
- X (non-differentiable) : T
- input
Outputs
- Y (non-differentiable) : tensor(int64)
- output
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(uint8), tensor(uint16), tensor(uint32), tensor(uint64), tensor(int8), tensor(int16), tensor(int32), tensor(int64), tensor(bfloat16), tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(string), tensor(bool), tensor(complex64), tensor(complex128)
- Constrain to all tensor types.
Examples
nonzeroNot
Returns the negation of the input tensor element-wise.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 1 of the default ONNX operator set.
Inputs
- X (non-differentiable) : T
- Input tensor
Outputs
- Y (non-differentiable) : T
- Output tensor
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(bool)
- Constrain input/output to boolean tensors.
Examples
notOneHot
Produces a one-hot tensor based on inputs. The locations represented by the index values in the 'indices' input tensor will have 'on_value' and the other locations will have 'off_value' in the output tensor, where 'on_value' and 'off_value' are specified as part of required input argument 'values', which is a two-element tensor of format [off_value, on_value]. The rank of the output tensor will be one greater than the rank of the input tensor. The additional dimension is for one-hot representation. The additional dimension will be inserted at the position specified by 'axis'. If 'axis' is not specified then then additional dimension will be inserted as the innermost dimension, i.e. axis=-1. The size of the additional dimension is specified by required scalar input 'depth'. The type of the output tensor is the same as the type of the 'values' input. Any entries in the 'indices' input tensor with values outside the range [-depth, depth-1] will result in one-hot representation with all 'off_value' values in the output tensor.
when axis = 0:
output[input[i, j, k], i, j, k] = 1 for all i, j, k and 0 otherwise.
when axis = -1:
output[i, j, k, input[i, j, k]] = 1 for all i, j, k and 0 otherwise.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 11 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 9
Attributes
- axis : int (default is -1)
- (Optional) Axis along which one-hot representation in added. Default: axis=-1. axis=-1 means that the additional dimension will be inserted as the innermost/last dimension in the output tensor. Negative value means counting dimensions from the back. Accepted range is [-r-1, r] where r = rank(indices).
Inputs
- indices (non-differentiable) : T1
- Input tensor containing indices. Any entries in the 'indices' input tensor with values outside the range [-depth, depth-1] will result in one-hot representation with all 'off_value' values in the output tensor.In case 'indices' is of non-integer type, the values will be casted to int64 before use.
- depth (non-differentiable) : T2
- Scalar or Rank 1 tensor containing exactly one element, specifying the number of classes in one-hot tensor. This is also the size of the one-hot dimension (specified by 'axis' attribute) added on in the output tensor. The values in the 'indices' input tensor are expected to be in the range [-depth, depth-1]. In case 'depth' is of non-integer type, it will be casted to int64 before use.
- values (non-differentiable) : T3
- Rank 1 tensor containing exactly two elements, in the format [off_value, on_value], where 'on_value' is the value used for filling locations specified in 'indices' input tensor, and 'off_value' is the value used for filling locations other than those specified in 'indices' input tensor.
Outputs
- output (non-differentiable) : T3
- Tensor of rank one greater than input tensor 'indices', i.e. rank(output) = rank(indices) + 1. The data type for the elements of the output tensor is the same as the type of input 'values' is used.
Type Constraints
- T1 : tensor(uint8), tensor(uint16), tensor(uint32), tensor(uint64), tensor(int8), tensor(int16), tensor(int32), tensor(int64), tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double)
- Constrain input to only numeric types.
- T2 : tensor(uint8), tensor(uint16), tensor(uint32), tensor(uint64), tensor(int8), tensor(int16), tensor(int32), tensor(int64), tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double)
- Constrain input to only numeric types.
- T3 : tensor(uint8), tensor(uint16), tensor(uint32), tensor(uint64), tensor(int8), tensor(int16), tensor(int32), tensor(int64), tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(string), tensor(bool), tensor(complex64), tensor(complex128)
- Constrain to any tensor type.
Examples
with_axiswith_negative_axiswith_negative_indiceswithout_axisOptional
Constructs an optional-type value containing either an empty optional of a certain type specified by the attribute, or a non-empty value containing the input element.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 15 of the default ONNX operator set.
Attributes
- type : type_proto
- Type of the element in the optional output
Inputs (0 - 1)
- input (optional) : V
- The input element.
Outputs
- output : O
- The optional output enclosing the input element.
Type Constraints
- V : tensor(uint8), tensor(uint16), tensor(uint32), tensor(uint64), tensor(int8), tensor(int16), tensor(int32), tensor(int64), tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(string), tensor(bool), tensor(complex64), tensor(complex128), seq(tensor(uint8)), seq(tensor(uint16)), seq(tensor(uint32)), seq(tensor(uint64)), seq(tensor(int8)), seq(tensor(int16)), seq(tensor(int32)), seq(tensor(int64)), seq(tensor(float16)), seq(tensor(float)), seq(tensor(double)), seq(tensor(string)), seq(tensor(bool)), seq(tensor(complex64)), seq(tensor(complex128))
- Constrain input type to all tensor and sequence types.
- O : optional(seq(tensor(uint8))), optional(seq(tensor(uint16))), optional(seq(tensor(uint32))), optional(seq(tensor(uint64))), optional(seq(tensor(int8))), optional(seq(tensor(int16))), optional(seq(tensor(int32))), optional(seq(tensor(int64))), optional(seq(tensor(float16))), optional(seq(tensor(float))), optional(seq(tensor(double))), optional(seq(tensor(string))), optional(seq(tensor(bool))), optional(seq(tensor(complex64))), optional(seq(tensor(complex128))), optional(tensor(uint8)), optional(tensor(uint16)), optional(tensor(uint32)), optional(tensor(uint64)), optional(tensor(int8)), optional(tensor(int16)), optional(tensor(int32)), optional(tensor(int64)), optional(tensor(float16)), optional(tensor(float)), optional(tensor(double)), optional(tensor(string)), optional(tensor(bool)), optional(tensor(complex64)), optional(tensor(complex128))
- Constrain output type to all optional tensor or optional sequence types.
OptionalGetElement
If the input is a tensor or sequence type, it returns the input. If the input is an optional type, it outputs the element in the input. It is an error if the input is an empty optional-type (i.e. does not have an element) and the behavior is undefined in this case.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 18 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 15
Inputs
- input : O
- The optional input.
Outputs
- output : V
- Output element in the optional input.
Type Constraints
- O : optional(seq(tensor(uint8))), optional(seq(tensor(uint16))), optional(seq(tensor(uint32))), optional(seq(tensor(uint64))), optional(seq(tensor(int8))), optional(seq(tensor(int16))), optional(seq(tensor(int32))), optional(seq(tensor(int64))), optional(seq(tensor(float16))), optional(seq(tensor(float))), optional(seq(tensor(double))), optional(seq(tensor(string))), optional(seq(tensor(bool))), optional(seq(tensor(complex64))), optional(seq(tensor(complex128))), optional(tensor(uint8)), optional(tensor(uint16)), optional(tensor(uint32)), optional(tensor(uint64)), optional(tensor(int8)), optional(tensor(int16)), optional(tensor(int32)), optional(tensor(int64)), optional(tensor(float16)), optional(tensor(float)), optional(tensor(double)), optional(tensor(string)), optional(tensor(bool)), optional(tensor(complex64)), optional(tensor(complex128)), tensor(uint8), tensor(uint16), tensor(uint32), tensor(uint64), tensor(int8), tensor(int16), tensor(int32), tensor(int64), tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(string), tensor(bool), tensor(complex64), tensor(complex128), seq(tensor(uint8)), seq(tensor(uint16)), seq(tensor(uint32)), seq(tensor(uint64)), seq(tensor(int8)), seq(tensor(int16)), seq(tensor(int32)), seq(tensor(int64)), seq(tensor(float16)), seq(tensor(float)), seq(tensor(double)), seq(tensor(string)), seq(tensor(bool)), seq(tensor(complex64)), seq(tensor(complex128))
- Constrain input type to optional tensor and optional sequence types.
- V : tensor(uint8), tensor(uint16), tensor(uint32), tensor(uint64), tensor(int8), tensor(int16), tensor(int32), tensor(int64), tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(string), tensor(bool), tensor(complex64), tensor(complex128), seq(tensor(uint8)), seq(tensor(uint16)), seq(tensor(uint32)), seq(tensor(uint64)), seq(tensor(int8)), seq(tensor(int16)), seq(tensor(int32)), seq(tensor(int64)), seq(tensor(float16)), seq(tensor(float)), seq(tensor(double)), seq(tensor(string)), seq(tensor(bool)), seq(tensor(complex64)), seq(tensor(complex128))
- Constrain output type to all tensor or sequence types.
OptionalHasElement
Returns true if (1) the input is an optional-type and contains an element, or, (2) the input is a tensor or sequence type. If the input is not provided or is an empty optional-type, this op returns false.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 18 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 15
Inputs (0 - 1)
- input (optional) : O
- The optional input.
Outputs
- output : B
- A scalar boolean tensor. If true, it indicates that optional-type input contains an element. Otherwise, it is empty.
Type Constraints
- O : optional(seq(tensor(uint8))), optional(seq(tensor(uint16))), optional(seq(tensor(uint32))), optional(seq(tensor(uint64))), optional(seq(tensor(int8))), optional(seq(tensor(int16))), optional(seq(tensor(int32))), optional(seq(tensor(int64))), optional(seq(tensor(float16))), optional(seq(tensor(float))), optional(seq(tensor(double))), optional(seq(tensor(string))), optional(seq(tensor(bool))), optional(seq(tensor(complex64))), optional(seq(tensor(complex128))), optional(tensor(uint8)), optional(tensor(uint16)), optional(tensor(uint32)), optional(tensor(uint64)), optional(tensor(int8)), optional(tensor(int16)), optional(tensor(int32)), optional(tensor(int64)), optional(tensor(float16)), optional(tensor(float)), optional(tensor(double)), optional(tensor(string)), optional(tensor(bool)), optional(tensor(complex64)), optional(tensor(complex128)), tensor(uint8), tensor(uint16), tensor(uint32), tensor(uint64), tensor(int8), tensor(int16), tensor(int32), tensor(int64), tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(string), tensor(bool), tensor(complex64), tensor(complex128), seq(tensor(uint8)), seq(tensor(uint16)), seq(tensor(uint32)), seq(tensor(uint64)), seq(tensor(int8)), seq(tensor(int16)), seq(tensor(int32)), seq(tensor(int64)), seq(tensor(float16)), seq(tensor(float)), seq(tensor(double)), seq(tensor(string)), seq(tensor(bool)), seq(tensor(complex64)), seq(tensor(complex128))
- Constrain input type to optional tensor and optional sequence types.
- B : tensor(bool)
- Constrain output to a boolean tensor.
Examples
emptyget_element_sequenceget_element_tensoroptionalhaselementOr
Returns the tensor resulted from performing the or
logical operation elementwise on the input tensors A
and B
(with Numpy-style broadcasting support).
This operator supports multidirectional (i.e., Numpy-style) broadcasting; for more details please check the doc.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 7 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 1
Inputs
- A (non-differentiable) : T
- First input operand for the logical operator.
- B (non-differentiable) : T
- Second input operand for the logical operator.
Outputs
- C (non-differentiable) : T1
- Result tensor.
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(bool)
- Constrain input to boolean tensor.
- T1 : tensor(bool)
- Constrain output to boolean tensor.
Examples
oror_broadcastPRelu
PRelu takes input data (Tensor) and slope tensor as input, and produces one output data (Tensor) where the function f(x) = slope * x for x < 0
, f(x) = x for x >= 0
., is applied to the data tensor elementwise. This operator supports unidirectional broadcasting (tensor slope should be unidirectional broadcastable to input tensor X); for more details please check the doc.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 16 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 1, 6, 7, 9
Inputs
- X (differentiable) : T
- Input tensor
- slope (differentiable) : T
- Slope tensor. The shape of slope can be smaller then first input X; if so, its shape must be unidirectional broadcastable to X
Outputs
- Y (differentiable) : T
- Output tensor (same size as X)
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(bfloat16), tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(uint32), tensor(uint64), tensor(int32), tensor(int64)
- Constrain input and output types to float/int tensors.
Examples
preluprelu_broadcastPad
Given a tensor containing the data to be padded (data
), a tensor containing the number of start and end pad values for axis (pads
), (optionally) a mode
, and (optionally) constant_value
, a padded tensor (output
) is generated.
The three supported modes
are (similar to corresponding modes supported by numpy.pad
):
-
constant
(default) - pads with a given constant value as specified byconstant_value
(which defaults to 0, empty string, or False) -
reflect
- pads with the reflection of the vector mirrored on the first and last values of the vector along each axis -
edge
- pads with the edge values of array -
wrap
- wrap-around padding as if the data tensor forms a torus
Example 1 (constant
mode):
Insert 0 pads to the beginning of the second dimension.
data = [
[1.0, 1.2],
[2.3, 3.4],
[4.5, 5.7],
]
pads = [0, 2, 0, 0]
mode = 'constant'
constant_value = 0.0
output = [
[0.0, 0.0, 1.0, 1.2],
[0.0, 0.0, 2.3, 3.4],
[0.0, 0.0, 4.5, 5.7],
]
Example 2 (reflect
mode):
data = [
[1.0, 1.2],
[2.3, 3.4],
[4.5, 5.7],
]
pads = [0, 2, 0, 0]
mode = 'reflect'
output = [
[1.0, 1.2, 1.0, 1.2],
[2.3, 3.4, 2.3, 3.4],
[4.5, 5.7, 4.5, 5.7],
]
Example 3 (edge
mode):
data = [
[1.0, 1.2],
[2.3, 3.4],
[4.5, 5.7],
]
pads = [0, 2, 0, 0]
mode = 'edge'
output = [
[1.0, 1.0, 1.0, 1.2],
[2.3, 2.3, 2.3, 3.4],
[4.5, 4.5, 4.5, 5.7],
]
Example 4 (wrap
mode):
data = [
[1.0, 1.2],
[2.3, 3.4],
[4.5, 5.7],
]
pads = [2, 1, 1, 1]
mode = 'wrap'
output = [
[3.4, 2.3, 3.4, 2.3],
[5.7, 4.5, 5.7, 4.5],
[1.2, 1.0, 1.2, 1.0],
[3.4, 2.3, 3.4, 2.3],
[5.7, 4.5, 5.7, 4.5],
[1.2, 1.0, 1.2, 1.0],
]
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 19 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 1, 2, 11, 13, 18
Attributes
- mode : string (default is constant)
- Supported modes: `constant`(default), `reflect`, `edge`, `wrap`
Inputs (2 - 4)
- data (differentiable) : T
- Input tensor.
- pads (non-differentiable) : tensor(int64)
- Tensor of integers indicating the number of padding elements to add or remove (if negative) at the beginning and end of each axis. For 2D input tensor, it is the number of pixels. `pads` should be a 1D tensor of shape [2 * num_axes] where `num_axes` refers to the number of elements in the `axes` input or the input rank if `axes` are not provided explicitly. `pads` format should be: [x1_begin, x2_begin, ..., x1_end, x2_end,...], where xi_begin is the number of pad values added at the beginning of axis `axes[i]` and xi_end, the number of pad values added at the end of axis `axes[i]`.
- constant_value (optional, non-differentiable) : T
- (Optional) A scalar value to be used if the mode chosen is `constant` (by default it is 0, empty string or False).
- axes (optional, non-differentiable) : Tind
- 1-D tensor of axes that `pads` apply to. Negative value means counting dimensions from the back. Accepted range is [-r, r-1] where r = rank(data). Behavior is undefined if an axis is repeated. If not provided, all axes are assumed (`[0, 1, ..., input_rank-1]`).
Outputs
- output (differentiable) : T
- Tensor after padding.
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(uint8), tensor(uint16), tensor(uint32), tensor(uint64), tensor(int8), tensor(int16), tensor(int32), tensor(int64), tensor(bfloat16), tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(string), tensor(bool), tensor(complex64), tensor(complex128)
- Constrain input and output types to all tensor types.
- Tind : tensor(int32), tensor(int64)
- Constrain indices to integer types
Examples
constant_padconstant_pad_axesconstant_pad_negative_axesreflection_edge_and_wrap_padPow
Pow takes input data (Tensor) and exponent Tensor, and produces one output data (Tensor) where the function f(x) = x^exponent
, is applied to the data tensor elementwise. This operator supports multidirectional (i.e., Numpy-style) broadcasting; for more details please check the doc.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 15 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 1, 7, 12, 13
Inputs
- X (differentiable) : T
- First operand, base of the exponent.
- Y (differentiable) : T1
- Second operand, power of the exponent.
Outputs
- Z (differentiable) : T
- Output tensor
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(int32), tensor(int64), tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(bfloat16)
- Constrain input X and output types to float/int tensors.
- T1 : tensor(uint8), tensor(uint16), tensor(uint32), tensor(uint64), tensor(int8), tensor(int16), tensor(int32), tensor(int64), tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(bfloat16)
- Constrain input Y types to float/int tensors.
Examples
powpow_broadcasttypesQLinearConv
The convolution operator consumes a quantized input tensor, its scale and zero point, a quantized filter, its scale and zero point, and output's scale and zero point, and computes the quantized output. Each scale and zero-point pair must have same shape. It means they must be either scalars (per tensor) or 1-D tensors (per output channel). Each input or output and its related zero point must have same type. When bias is present it must be quantized using scale = input scale * weight scale and zero point as 0.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 10 of the default ONNX operator set.
Attributes
- auto_pad : string (default is NOTSET)
- auto_pad must be either NOTSET, SAME_UPPER, SAME_LOWER or VALID. Where default value is NOTSET, which means explicit padding is used. SAME_UPPER or SAME_LOWER mean pad the input so that `output_shape[i] = ceil(input_shape[i] / strides[i])` for each axis `i`. The padding is split between the two sides equally or almost equally (depending on whether it is even or odd). In case the padding is an odd number, the extra padding is added at the end for SAME_UPPER and at the beginning for SAME_LOWER.
- dilations : list of ints
- dilation value along each spatial axis of the filter. If not present, the dilation defaults to 1 along each spatial axis.
- group : int (default is 1)
- number of groups input channels and output channels are divided into. default is 1.
- kernel_shape : list of ints
- The shape of the convolution kernel. If not present, should be inferred from input 'w'.
- pads : list of ints
- Padding for the beginning and ending along each spatial axis, it can take any value greater than or equal to 0.The value represent the number of pixels added to the beginning and end part of the corresponding axis.`pads` format should be as follow [x1_begin, x2_begin...x1_end, x2_end,...], where xi_begin the number ofpixels added at the beginning of axis `i` and xi_end, the number of pixels added at the end of axis `i`.This attribute cannot be used simultaneously with auto_pad attribute. If not present, the padding defaultsto 0 along start and end of each spatial axis.
- strides : list of ints
- Stride along each spatial axis. If not present, the stride defaults to 1 along each spatial axis.
Inputs (8 - 9)
- x : T1
- Input data tensor from previous layer; has size (N x C x H x W), where N is the batch size, C is the number of channels, and H and W are the height and width. Note that this is for the 2D image. Otherwise the size is (N x C x D1 x D2 ... x Dn). Optionally, if dimension denotation is in effect, the operation expects input data tensor to arrive with the dimension denotation of [DATA_BATCH, DATA_CHANNEL, DATA_FEATURE, DATA_FEATURE ...].
- x_scale : tensor(float)
- Scale tensor for input 'x'. It's a scalar, which means a per-tensor/layer quantization.
- x_zero_point : T1
- Zero point tensor for input 'x'. It's a scalar, which means a per-tensor/layer quantization.
- w : T2
- The weight tensor that will be used in the convolutions; has size (M x C/group x kH x kW), where C is the number of channels, and kH and kW are the height and width of the kernel, and M is the number of feature maps. For more than 2 dimensions, the kernel shape will be (M x C/group x k1 x k2 x ... x kn), where (k1 x k2 x ... kn) is the dimension of the kernel. Optionally, if dimension denotation is in effect, the operation expects the weight tensor to arrive with the dimension denotation of [FILTER_OUT_CHANNEL, FILTER_IN_CHANNEL, FILTER_SPATIAL, FILTER_SPATIAL ...]. X.shape[1] == (W.shape[1] * group) == C (assuming zero based indices for the shape array). Or in other words FILTER_IN_CHANNEL should be equal to DATA_CHANNEL.
- w_scale : tensor(float)
- Scale tensor for input 'w'. It could be a scalar or a 1-D tensor, which means a per-tensor/layer or per output channel quantization. If it's a 1-D tensor, its number of elements should be equal to the number of output channels (M).
- w_zero_point : T2
- Zero point tensor for input 'w'. It could be a scalar or a 1-D tensor, which means a per-tensor/layer or per output channel quantization. If it's a 1-D tensor, its number of elements should be equal to the number of output channels (M).
- y_scale : tensor(float)
- Scale tensor for output 'y'. It's a scalar, which means a per-tensor/layer quantization.
- y_zero_point : T3
- Zero point tensor for output 'y'. It's a scalar, which means a per-tensor/layer quantization.
- B (optional) : T4
- Optional 1D bias to be added to the convolution, has size of M. Bias must be quantized using scale = x_scale * w_scale and zero_point = 0
Outputs
- y : T3
- Output data tensor that contains the result of the convolution. The output dimensions are functions of the kernel size, stride size, and pad lengths.
Type Constraints
- T1 : tensor(int8), tensor(uint8)
- Constrain input type to 8-bit integer tensor.
- T2 : tensor(int8), tensor(uint8)
- Constrain filter type to 8-bit integer tensor.
- T3 : tensor(int8), tensor(uint8)
- Constrain output type to 8-bit integer tensor.
- T4 : tensor(int32)
- Constrain bias type to 32-bit integer tensor.
Examples
qlinearconvQLinearMatMul
Matrix product that behaves like numpy.matmul: https://docs.scipy.org/doc/numpy-1.13.0/reference/generated/numpy.matmul.html. It consumes two quantized input tensors, their scales and zero points, scale and zero point of output, and computes the quantized output. The quantization formula is y = saturate((x / y_scale) + y_zero_point). For (x / y_scale), it is rounding to nearest ties to even. Refer to https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rounding for details. Scale and zero point must have same shape. They must be either scalar (per tensor) or N-D tensor (per row for 'a' and per column for 'b'). Scalar refers to per tensor quantization whereas N-D refers to per row or per column quantization. If the input is 2D of shape [M, K] then zero point and scale tensor may be an M element vector [v_1, v_2, ..., v_M] for per row quantization and K element vector of shape [v_1, v_2, ..., v_K] for per column quantization. If the input is N-D tensor with shape [D1, D2, M, K] then zero point and scale tensor may have shape [D1, D2, M, 1] for per row quantization and shape [D1, D2, 1, K] for per column quantization. Production must never overflow, and accumulation may overflow if and only if in 32 bits.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 10 of the default ONNX operator set.
Inputs
- a (non-differentiable) : T1
- N-dimensional quantized matrix a
- a_scale (non-differentiable) : tensor(float)
- scale of quantized input a
- a_zero_point (non-differentiable) : T1
- zero point of quantized input a
- b (non-differentiable) : T2
- N-dimensional quantized matrix b
- b_scale (non-differentiable) : tensor(float)
- scale of quantized input b
- b_zero_point (non-differentiable) : T2
- zero point of quantized input b
- y_scale (non-differentiable) : tensor(float)
- scale of quantized output y
- y_zero_point (non-differentiable) : T3
- zero point of quantized output y
Outputs
- y (non-differentiable) : T3
- Quantized matrix multiply results from a * b
Type Constraints
- T1 : tensor(int8), tensor(uint8)
- Constrain input a and its zero point data type to 8-bit integer tensor.
- T2 : tensor(int8), tensor(uint8)
- Constrain input b and its zero point data type to 8-bit integer tensor.
- T3 : tensor(int8), tensor(uint8)
- Constrain output y and its zero point data type to 8-bit integer tensor.
Examples
qlinearmatmulQuantizeLinear
The linear quantization operator. It consumes a high precision tensor, a scale, and a zero point to compute the low precision / quantized tensor. The scale factor and zero point must have same shape, and can be either a scalar for per-tensor / per layer quantization, or a 1-D tensor for per-axis quantization. The quantization formula is y = saturate ((x / y_scale) + y_zero_point)
. For saturation, it saturates to [0, 255] if it's uint8, or [-128, 127] if it's int8. For (x / y_scale), it's rounding to the nearest even. Refer to https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rounding for details. 'y_zero_point' and 'y' must have same type. 'y_zero_point' is usually not used for quantization to float8e4m3fn, float8e4m3fnuz, float8e5m2, float8e5m2fnuz, but the quantization formula remains the same for consistency and the type of the attribute 'y_zero_point' still determines the quantization type.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 19 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 10, 13
Attributes
- axis : int (default is 1)
- (Optional) The axis of the quantization dimension of the input tensor. Ignored for per-tensor quantization. Negative value means counting dimensions from the back. Accepted range is [-r, r-1] where r = rank(input).
- saturate : int (default is 1)
- The parameter defines how the conversion behaves if an input value is out of range of the destination type. It only applies for float 8 quantization (float8e4m3fn, float8e4m3fnuz, float8e5m2, float8e5m2fnuz). It is true by default. All cases are fully described in two tables inserted in the operator description.
Inputs (2 - 3)
- x : T1
- N-D full precision Input tensor to be quantized.
- y_scale : T1
- Scale for doing quantization to get 'y'. It can be a scalar, which means per-tensor/layer quantization, or a 1-D Tensor for per-axis quantization.
- y_zero_point (optional) : T2
- Zero point for doing quantization to get 'y'. Shape must match y_scale. Default is uint8 with zero point of 0 if it's not specified.
Outputs
- y : T2
- N-D quantized output tensor. It has same shape as input 'x'.
Type Constraints
- T1 : tensor(float), tensor(float16), tensor(bfloat16), tensor(int32)
- Constrain 'x' to float, float16, bfloat16 or int32 tensor.
- T2 : tensor(int8), tensor(uint8), tensor(float8e4m3fn), tensor(float8e4m3fnuz), tensor(float8e5m2), tensor(float8e5m2fnuz)
- Constrain 'y_zero_point' and 'y' to 8-bit integer/float tensor.
Examples
axise4m3fne5m2quantizelinearRNN
Computes an one-layer simple RNN. This operator is usually supported via some custom implementation such as CuDNN.
Notations:
X
- input tensori
- input gatet
- time step (t-1 means previous time step)Wi
- W parameter weight matrix for input gateRi
- R recurrence weight matrix for input gateWbi
- W parameter bias vector for input gateRbi
- R parameter bias vector for input gateWBi
- W parameter weight matrix for backward input gateRBi
- R recurrence weight matrix for backward input gateWBbi
- WR bias vectors for backward input gateRBbi
- RR bias vectors for backward input gateH
- Hidden statenum_directions
- 2 if direction == bidirectional else 1
Activation functions:
- Relu(x) - max(0, x)
- Tanh(x) - (1 - e^{-2x})/(1 + e^{-2x})
- Sigmoid(x) - 1/(1 + e^{-x})
NOTE: Below are optional
- Affine(x) - alpha*x + beta
- LeakyRelu(x) - x if x >= 0 else alpha * x
- ThresholdedRelu(x) - x if x >= alpha else 0
- ScaledTanh(x) - alphaTanh(betax)
- HardSigmoid(x) - min(max(alpha*x + beta, 0), 1)
- Elu(x) - x if x >= 0 else alpha*(e^x - 1)
- Softsign(x) - x/(1 + |x|)
- Softplus(x) - log(1 + e^x)
Equations (Default: f=Tanh):
- Ht = f(Xt*(Wi^T) + Ht-1*(Ri^T) + Wbi + Rbi) This operator has optional inputs/outputs. See the doc for more details about the representation of optional arguments. An empty string may be used in the place of an actual argument's name to indicate a missing argument. Trailing optional arguments (those not followed by an argument that is present) may also be simply omitted.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 14 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 1, 7
Attributes
- activation_alpha : list of floats
- Optional scaling values used by some activation functions. The values are consumed in the order of activation functions, for example (f, g, h) in LSTM. Default values are the same as of corresponding ONNX operators.For example with LeakyRelu, the default alpha is 0.01.
- activation_beta : list of floats
- Optional scaling values used by some activation functions. The values are consumed in the order of activation functions, for example (f, g, h) in LSTM. Default values are the same as of corresponding ONNX operators.
- activations : list of strings (default is ['Tanh', 'Tanh'])
- One (or two if bidirectional) activation function for input gate. The activation function must be one of the activation functions specified above. Optional: Default `Tanh` if not specified.
- clip : float
- Cell clip threshold. Clipping bounds the elements of a tensor in the range of [-threshold, +threshold] and is applied to the input of activations. No clip if not specified.
- direction : string (default is forward)
- Specify if the RNN is forward, reverse, or bidirectional. Must be one of forward (default), reverse, or bidirectional.
- hidden_size : int
- Number of neurons in the hidden layer
- layout : int (default is 0)
- The shape format of inputs X, initial_h and outputs Y, Y_h. If 0, the following shapes are expected: X.shape = [seq_length, batch_size, input_size], Y.shape = [seq_length, num_directions, batch_size, hidden_size], initial_h.shape = Y_h.shape = [num_directions, batch_size, hidden_size]. If 1, the following shapes are expected: X.shape = [batch_size, seq_length, input_size], Y.shape = [batch_size, seq_length, num_directions, hidden_size], initial_h.shape = Y_h.shape = [batch_size, num_directions, hidden_size].
Inputs (3 - 6)
- X (differentiable) : T
- The input sequences packed (and potentially padded) into one 3-D tensor with the shape of `[seq_length, batch_size, input_size]`.
- W (differentiable) : T
- The weight tensor for input gate. Concatenation of `Wi` and `WBi` (if bidirectional). The tensor has shape `[num_directions, hidden_size, input_size]`.
- R (differentiable) : T
- The recurrence weight tensor. Concatenation of `Ri` and `RBi` (if bidirectional). The tensor has shape `[num_directions, hidden_size, hidden_size]`.
- B (optional, differentiable) : T
- The bias tensor for input gate. Concatenation of `[Wbi, Rbi]` and `[WBbi, RBbi]` (if bidirectional). The tensor has shape `[num_directions, 2*hidden_size]`. Optional: If not specified - assumed to be 0.
- sequence_lens (optional, non-differentiable) : T1
- Optional tensor specifying lengths of the sequences in a batch. If not specified - assumed all sequences in the batch to have length `seq_length`. It has shape `[batch_size]`.
- initial_h (optional, non-differentiable) : T
- Optional initial value of the hidden. If not specified - assumed to be 0. It has shape `[num_directions, batch_size, hidden_size]`.
Outputs (0 - 2)
- Y (optional, differentiable) : T
- A tensor that concats all the intermediate output values of the hidden. It has shape `[seq_length, num_directions, batch_size, hidden_size]`.
- Y_h (optional, differentiable) : T
- The last output value of the hidden. It has shape `[num_directions, batch_size, hidden_size]`.
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double)
- Constrain input and output types to float tensors.
- T1 : tensor(int32)
- Constrain seq_lens to integer tensor.
Examples
batchwisedefaultsinitial_biasseq_lengthRandomNormal
Generate a tensor with random values drawn from a normal distribution. The shape of the tensor is specified by the shape
argument and the parameter of the normal distribution specified by mean
and scale
.
The data type is specified by the 'dtype' argument. The 'dtype' argument must be one of the data types specified in the 'DataType' enum field in the TensorProto message.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 1 of the default ONNX operator set.
Attributes
- dtype : int (default is 1)
- The data type for the elements of the output tensor. Default is TensorProto::FLOAT.
- mean : float (default is 0.0)
- The mean of the normal distribution.
- scale : float (default is 1.0)
- The standard deviation of the normal distribution.
- seed : float
- (Optional) Seed to the random generator, if not specified we will auto generate one.
- shape : list of ints (required)
- The shape of the output tensor.
Inputs
Outputs
- output : T
- Output tensor of random values drawn from normal distribution
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double)
- Constrain output types to float tensors.
RandomNormalLike
Generate a tensor with random values drawn from a normal distribution. The shape of the output tensor is copied from the shape of the input tensor, and the parameters of the normal distribution are specified by mean
and scale
.
The data type is specified by the 'dtype' argument, or copied from the input tensor if not provided. The 'dtype' argument must be one of the data types specified in the 'DataType' enum field in the TensorProto message, and be valid as an output type.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 1 of the default ONNX operator set.
Attributes
- dtype : int
- (Optional) The data type for the elements of the output tensor, if not specified, we will use the data type of the input tensor.
- mean : float (default is 0.0)
- The mean of the normal distribution.
- scale : float (default is 1.0)
- The standard deviation of the normal distribution.
- seed : float
- (Optional) Seed to the random generator, if not specified we will auto generate one.
Inputs
- input : T1
- Input tensor to copy shape and optionally type information from.
Outputs
- output : T2
- Output tensor of random values drawn from normal distribution
Type Constraints
- T1 : tensor(uint8), tensor(uint16), tensor(uint32), tensor(uint64), tensor(int8), tensor(int16), tensor(int32), tensor(int64), tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(string), tensor(bool), tensor(complex64), tensor(complex128)
- Constrain to any tensor type. If the dtype attribute is not provided this must be a valid output type.
- T2 : tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double)
- Constrain output types to float tensors.
RandomUniform
Generate a tensor with random values drawn from a uniform distribution. The shape of the tensor is specified by the shape
argument and the range by low
and high
.
The data type is specified by the 'dtype' argument. The 'dtype' argument must be one of the data types specified in the 'DataType' enum field in the TensorProto message.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 1 of the default ONNX operator set.
Attributes
- dtype : int (default is 1)
- The data type for the elements of the output tensor. If not specified, default is TensorProto::FLOAT.
- high : float (default is 1.0)
- Upper boundary of the output values.
- low : float (default is 0.0)
- Lower boundary of the output values.
- seed : float
- (Optional) Seed to the random generator, if not specified we will auto generate one.
- shape : list of ints (required)
- The shape of the output tensor.
Inputs
Outputs
- output : T
- Output tensor of random values drawn from uniform distribution
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double)
- Constrain output types to float tensors.
RandomUniformLike
Generate a tensor with random values drawn from a uniform distribution. The shape of the output tensor is copied from the shape of the input tensor, and the parameters of the uniform distribution are specified by low
and high
.
The data type is specified by the 'dtype' argument, or copied from the input tensor if not provided. The 'dtype' argument must be one of the data types specified in the 'DataType' enum field in the TensorProto message and be valid as an output type.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 1 of the default ONNX operator set.
Attributes
- dtype : int
- (Optional) The data type for the elements of the output tensor, if not specified, we will use the data type of the input tensor.
- high : float (default is 1.0)
- Upper boundary of the output values.
- low : float (default is 0.0)
- Lower boundary of the output values.
- seed : float
- (Optional) Seed to the random generator, if not specified we will auto generate one.
Inputs
- input : T1
- Input tensor to copy shape and optionally type information from.
Outputs
- output : T2
- Output tensor of random values drawn from uniform distribution
Type Constraints
- T1 : tensor(uint8), tensor(uint16), tensor(uint32), tensor(uint64), tensor(int8), tensor(int16), tensor(int32), tensor(int64), tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(string), tensor(bool), tensor(complex64), tensor(complex128)
- Constrain to any tensor type. If the dtype attribute is not provided this must be a valid output type.
- T2 : tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double)
- Constrain output types to float tensors.
Range
Generate a tensor containing a sequence of numbers that begin at start
and extends by increments of delta
up to limit
(exclusive).
The number of elements in the output of range is computed as below:
number_of_elements = max( ceil( (limit - start) / delta ) , 0 )
The pseudocode determining the contents of the output is shown below:
for(int i=0; i<number_of_elements; ++i) {
output[i] = start + (i * delta);
}
Example 1
Inputs: start = 3, limit = 9, delta = 3
Output: [3, 6]
Example 2
Inputs: start = 10, limit = 4, delta = -2
Output: [10, 8, 6]
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 11 of the default ONNX operator set.
Inputs
- start : T
- Scalar. First entry for the range of output values.
- limit : T
- Scalar. Exclusive upper limit for the range of output values.
- delta : T
- Scalar. Value to step by.
Outputs
- output : T
- A 1-D tensor with same type as the inputs containing generated range of values.
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(int16), tensor(int32), tensor(int64)
- Constrain input types to common numeric type tensors.
Examples
range_float_type_positive_deltarange_int32_type_negative_deltaReciprocal
Reciprocal takes one input data (Tensor) and produces one output data (Tensor) where the reciprocal is, y = 1/x, is applied to the tensor elementwise.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 13 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 1, 6
Inputs
- X (differentiable) : T
- Input tensor
Outputs
- Y (differentiable) : T
- Output tensor
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(bfloat16)
- Constrain input and output types to float tensors.
Examples
reciprocalReduceL1
Computes the L1 norm of the input tensor's elements along the provided axes. The resulting tensor has the same rank as the input if keepdims equals 1. If keepdims equals 0, then the resulting tensor has the reduced dimension pruned. Input tensors of rank zero are valid.
The above behavior is similar to numpy, with the exception that numpy defaults keepdims to False instead of True.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 18 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 1, 11, 13
Attributes
- keepdims : int (default is 1)
- Keep the reduced dimension or not, default 1 means keep reduced dimension.
- noop_with_empty_axes : int (default is 0)
- Defines behavior if 'axes' is empty. Default behavior with 'false' is to reduce all axes. When axes is empty and this attribute is set to true, input tensor will not be reduced,and the output tensor would be equivalent to input tensor.
Inputs (1 - 2)
- data (differentiable) : T
- An input tensor.
- axes (optional, non-differentiable) : tensor(int64)
- Optional input list of integers, along which to reduce. The default is to reduce over all the dimensions of the input tensor if 'noop_with_empty_axes' is false, else act as an Identity op when 'noop_with_empty_axes' is true. Accepted range is [-r, r-1] where r = rank(data).
Outputs
- reduced (differentiable) : T
- Reduced output tensor.
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(uint32), tensor(uint64), tensor(int32), tensor(int64), tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(bfloat16)
- Constrain input and output types to high-precision numeric tensors.
Examples
default_axes_keepdimsdo_not_keepdimskeepdimsnegative_axes_keepdimsReduceL2
Computes the L2 norm of the input tensor's elements along the provided axes. The resulting tensor has the same rank as the input if keepdims equals 1. If keepdims equals 0, then the resulting tensor has the reduced dimension pruned. Input tensors of rank zero are valid.
The above behavior is similar to numpy, with the exception that numpy defaults keepdims to False instead of True.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 18 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 1, 11, 13
Attributes
- keepdims : int (default is 1)
- Keep the reduced dimension or not, default 1 means keep reduced dimension.
- noop_with_empty_axes : int (default is 0)
- Defines behavior if 'axes' is empty. Default behavior with 'false' is to reduce all axes. When axes is empty and this attribute is set to true, input tensor will not be reduced,and the output tensor would be equivalent to input tensor.
Inputs (1 - 2)
- data (differentiable) : T
- An input tensor.
- axes (optional, non-differentiable) : tensor(int64)
- Optional input list of integers, along which to reduce. The default is to reduce over all the dimensions of the input tensor if 'noop_with_empty_axes' is false, else act as an Identity op when 'noop_with_empty_axes' is true. Accepted range is [-r, r-1] where r = rank(data).
Outputs
- reduced (differentiable) : T
- Reduced output tensor.
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(uint32), tensor(uint64), tensor(int32), tensor(int64), tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(bfloat16)
- Constrain input and output types to high-precision numeric tensors.
Examples
default_axes_keepdimsdo_not_keepdimskeepdimsnegative_axes_keepdimsReduceLogSum
Computes the log sum of the input tensor's elements along the provided axes. The resulting tensor has the same rank as the input if keepdims equals 1. If keepdims equals 0, then the resulting tensor has the reduced dimension pruned. Input tensors of rank zero are valid.
The above behavior is similar to numpy, with the exception that numpy defaults keepdims to False instead of True.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 18 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 1, 11, 13
Attributes
- keepdims : int (default is 1)
- Keep the reduced dimension or not, default 1 means keep reduced dimension.
- noop_with_empty_axes : int (default is 0)
- Defines behavior if 'axes' is empty. Default behavior with 'false' is to reduce all axes. When axes is empty and this attribute is set to true, input tensor will not be reduced,and the output tensor would be equivalent to input tensor.
Inputs (1 - 2)
- data (differentiable) : T
- An input tensor.
- axes (optional, non-differentiable) : tensor(int64)
- Optional input list of integers, along which to reduce. The default is to reduce over all the dimensions of the input tensor if 'noop_with_empty_axes' is false, else act as an Identity op when 'noop_with_empty_axes' is true. Accepted range is [-r, r-1] where r = rank(data).
Outputs
- reduced (differentiable) : T
- Reduced output tensor.
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(uint32), tensor(uint64), tensor(int32), tensor(int64), tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(bfloat16)
- Constrain input and output types to high-precision numeric tensors.
Examples
keepdimsnegative_axes_keepdimsnokeepdimsReduceLogSumExp
Computes the log sum exponent of the input tensor's elements along the provided axes. The resulting tensor has the same rank as the input if keepdims equals 1. If keepdims equals 0, then the resulting tensor has the reduced dimension pruned. Input tensors of rank zero are valid.
The above behavior is similar to numpy, with the exception that numpy defaults keepdims to False instead of True.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 18 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 1, 11, 13
Attributes
- keepdims : int (default is 1)
- Keep the reduced dimension or not, default 1 means keep reduced dimension.
- noop_with_empty_axes : int (default is 0)
- Defines behavior if 'axes' is empty. Default behavior with 'false' is to reduce all axes. When axes is empty and this attribute is set to true, input tensor will not be reduced,and the output tensor would be equivalent to input tensor.
Inputs (1 - 2)
- data (differentiable) : T
- An input tensor.
- axes (optional, non-differentiable) : tensor(int64)
- Optional input list of integers, along which to reduce. The default is to reduce over all the dimensions of the input tensor if 'noop_with_empty_axes' is false, else act as an Identity op when 'noop_with_empty_axes' is true. Accepted range is [-r, r-1] where r = rank(data).
Outputs
- reduced (differentiable) : T
- Reduced output tensor.
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(uint32), tensor(uint64), tensor(int32), tensor(int64), tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(bfloat16)
- Constrain input and output types to high-precision numeric tensors.
Examples
default_axes_keepdimsdo_not_keepdimskeepdimsnegative_axes_keepdimsReduceMax
Computes the max of the input tensor's elements along the provided axes. The resulting tensor has the same rank as the input if keepdims equals 1. If keepdims equals 0, then the resulting tensor has the reduced dimension pruned. Input tensors of rank zero are valid.
The above behavior is similar to numpy, with the exception that numpy defaults keepdims to False instead of True.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 18 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 1, 11, 12, 13
Attributes
- keepdims : int (default is 1)
- Keep the reduced dimension or not, default 1 means keep reduced dimension.
- noop_with_empty_axes : int (default is 0)
- Defines behavior if 'axes' is empty. Default behavior with 'false' is to reduce all axes. When axes is empty and this attribute is set to true, input tensor will not be reduced,and the output tensor would be equivalent to input tensor.
Inputs (1 - 2)
- data (differentiable) : T
- An input tensor.
- axes (optional, non-differentiable) : tensor(int64)
- Optional input list of integers, along which to reduce. The default is to reduce over all the dimensions of the input tensor if 'noop_with_empty_axes' is false, else act as an Identity op when 'noop_with_empty_axes' is true. Accepted range is [-r, r-1] where r = rank(data).
Outputs
- reduced (differentiable) : T
- Reduced output tensor.
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(uint32), tensor(uint64), tensor(int32), tensor(int64), tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(bfloat16), tensor(uint8), tensor(int8)
- Constrain input and output types to high-precision and 8 bit numeric tensors.
Examples
default_axes_keepdimsdo_not_keepdimskeepdimsnegative_axes_keepdimsReduceMean
Computes the mean of the input tensor's elements along the provided axes. The resulting tensor has the same rank as the input if keepdims equals 1. If keepdims equals 0, then the resulting tensor has the reduced dimension pruned. Input tensors of rank zero are valid.
The above behavior is similar to numpy, with the exception that numpy defaults keepdims to False instead of True.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 18 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 1, 11, 13
Attributes
- keepdims : int (default is 1)
- Keep the reduced dimension or not, default 1 means keep reduced dimension.
- noop_with_empty_axes : int (default is 0)
- Defines behavior if 'axes' is empty. Default behavior with 'false' is to reduce all axes. When axes is empty and this attribute is set to true, input tensor will not be reduced,and the output tensor would be equivalent to input tensor.
Inputs (1 - 2)
- data (differentiable) : T
- An input tensor.
- axes (optional, non-differentiable) : tensor(int64)
- Optional input list of integers, along which to reduce. The default is to reduce over all the dimensions of the input tensor if 'noop_with_empty_axes' is false, else act as an Identity op when 'noop_with_empty_axes' is true. Accepted range is [-r, r-1] where r = rank(data).
Outputs
- reduced (differentiable) : T
- Reduced output tensor.
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(uint32), tensor(uint64), tensor(int32), tensor(int64), tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(bfloat16)
- Constrain input and output types to high-precision numeric tensors.
Examples
default_axes_keepdimsdo_not_keepdimskeepdimsnegative_axes_keepdimsReduceMin
Computes the min of the input tensor's elements along the provided axes. The resulting tensor has the same rank as the input if keepdims equals 1. If keepdims equals 0, then the resulting tensor has the reduced dimension pruned. Input tensors of rank zero are valid.
The above behavior is similar to numpy, with the exception that numpy defaults keepdims to False instead of True.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 18 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 1, 11, 12, 13
Attributes
- keepdims : int (default is 1)
- Keep the reduced dimension or not, default 1 means keep reduced dimension.
- noop_with_empty_axes : int (default is 0)
- Defines behavior if 'axes' is empty. Default behavior with 'false' is to reduce all axes. When axes is empty and this attribute is set to true, input tensor will not be reduced,and the output tensor would be equivalent to input tensor.
Inputs (1 - 2)
- data (differentiable) : T
- An input tensor.
- axes (optional, non-differentiable) : tensor(int64)
- Optional input list of integers, along which to reduce. The default is to reduce over all the dimensions of the input tensor if 'noop_with_empty_axes' is false, else act as an Identity op when 'noop_with_empty_axes' is true. Accepted range is [-r, r-1] where r = rank(data).
Outputs
- reduced (differentiable) : T
- Reduced output tensor.
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(uint32), tensor(uint64), tensor(int32), tensor(int64), tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(bfloat16), tensor(uint8), tensor(int8)
- Constrain input and output types to high-precision and 8 bit numeric tensors.
Examples
default_axes_keepdimsdo_not_keepdimskeepdimsnegative_axes_keepdimsReduceProd
Computes the product of the input tensor's elements along the provided axes. The resulting tensor has the same rank as the input if keepdims equals 1. If keepdims equals 0, then the resulting tensor has the reduced dimension pruned. Input tensors of rank zero are valid.
The above behavior is similar to numpy, with the exception that numpy defaults keepdims to False instead of True.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 18 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 1, 11, 13
Attributes
- keepdims : int (default is 1)
- Keep the reduced dimension or not, default 1 means keep reduced dimension.
- noop_with_empty_axes : int (default is 0)
- Defines behavior if 'axes' is empty. Default behavior with 'false' is to reduce all axes. When axes is empty and this attribute is set to true, input tensor will not be reduced,and the output tensor would be equivalent to input tensor.
Inputs (1 - 2)
- data (differentiable) : T
- An input tensor.
- axes (optional, non-differentiable) : tensor(int64)
- Optional input list of integers, along which to reduce. The default is to reduce over all the dimensions of the input tensor if 'noop_with_empty_axes' is false, else act as an Identity op when 'noop_with_empty_axes' is true. Accepted range is [-r, r-1] where r = rank(data).
Outputs
- reduced (differentiable) : T
- Reduced output tensor.
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(uint32), tensor(uint64), tensor(int32), tensor(int64), tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(bfloat16)
- Constrain input and output types to high-precision numeric tensors.
Examples
default_axes_keepdimsdo_not_keepdimskeepdimsnegative_axes_keepdimsReduceSum
Computes the sum of the input tensor's elements along the provided axes. The resulting tensor has the same rank as the input if keepdims equals 1. If keepdims equals 0, then the resulting tensor has the reduced dimension pruned. Input tensors of rank zero are valid.
The above behavior is similar to numpy, with the exception that numpy defaults keepdims to False instead of True.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 13 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 1, 11
Attributes
- keepdims : int (default is 1)
- Keep the reduced dimension or not, default 1 means keep reduced dimension.
- noop_with_empty_axes : int (default is 0)
- Defines behavior if 'axes' is empty. Default behavior with 'false' is to reduce all axes. When axes is empty and this attribute is set to true, input tensor will not be reduced,and the output tensor would be equivalent to input tensor.
Inputs (1 - 2)
- data (differentiable) : T
- An input tensor.
- axes (optional, non-differentiable) : tensor(int64)
- Optional input list of integers, along which to reduce. The default is to reduce over all the dimensions of the input tensor if 'noop_with_empty_axes' is false, else act as an Identity op when 'noop_with_empty_axes' is true. Accepted range is [-r, r-1] where r = rank(data).
Outputs
- reduced (differentiable) : T
- Reduced output tensor.
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(uint32), tensor(uint64), tensor(int32), tensor(int64), tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(bfloat16)
- Constrain input and output types to high-precision numeric tensors.
Examples
default_axes_keepdimsdo_not_keepdimsempty_axes_input_noopkeepdimsnegative_axes_keepdimsReduceSumSquare
Computes the sum square of the input tensor's elements along the provided axes. The resulting tensor has the same rank as the input if keepdims equals 1. If keepdims equals 0, then the resulting tensor has the reduced dimension pruned. Input tensors of rank zero are valid.
The above behavior is similar to numpy, with the exception that numpy defaults keepdims to False instead of True.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 18 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 1, 11, 13
Attributes
- keepdims : int (default is 1)
- Keep the reduced dimension or not, default 1 means keep reduced dimension.
- noop_with_empty_axes : int (default is 0)
- Defines behavior if 'axes' is empty. Default behavior with 'false' is to reduce all axes. When axes is empty and this attribute is set to true, input tensor will not be reduced,and the output tensor would be equivalent to input tensor.
Inputs (1 - 2)
- data (differentiable) : T
- An input tensor.
- axes (optional, non-differentiable) : tensor(int64)
- Optional input list of integers, along which to reduce. The default is to reduce over all the dimensions of the input tensor if 'noop_with_empty_axes' is false, else act as an Identity op when 'noop_with_empty_axes' is true. Accepted range is [-r, r-1] where r = rank(data).
Outputs
- reduced (differentiable) : T
- Reduced output tensor.
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(uint32), tensor(uint64), tensor(int32), tensor(int64), tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(bfloat16)
- Constrain input and output types to high-precision numeric tensors.
Examples
default_axes_keepdimsdo_not_keepdimskeepdimsnegative_axes_keepdimsRelu
Relu takes one input data (Tensor) and produces one output data (Tensor) where the rectified linear function, y = max(0, x), is applied to the tensor elementwise.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 14 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 1, 6, 13
Inputs
- X (differentiable) : T
- Input tensor
Outputs
- Y (differentiable) : T
- Output tensor
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(float), tensor(int32), tensor(int8), tensor(int16), tensor(int64), tensor(float16), tensor(double), tensor(bfloat16)
- Constrain input and output types to signed numeric tensors.
Examples
reluReshape
Reshape the input tensor similar to numpy.reshape. First input is the data tensor, second input is a shape tensor which specifies the output shape. It outputs the reshaped tensor. At most one dimension of the new shape can be -1. In this case, the value is inferred from the size of the tensor and the remaining dimensions. A dimension could also be 0, in which case the actual dimension value is unchanged (i.e. taken from the input tensor). If 'allowzero' is set, and the new shape includes 0, the dimension will be set explicitly to zero (i.e. not taken from input tensor). Shape (second input) could be an empty shape, which means converting to a scalar. The input tensor's shape and the output tensor's shape are required to have the same number of elements.
If the attribute 'allowzero' is set, it is invalid for the specified shape to contain both a zero value and -1, as the value of the dimension corresponding to -1 cannot be determined uniquely.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 19 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 1, 5, 13, 14
Attributes
- allowzero : int (default is 0)
- (Optional) By default, when any value in the 'shape' input is equal to zero the corresponding dimension value is copied from the input tensor dynamically. allowzero=1 indicates that if any value in the 'shape' input is set to zero, the zero value is honored, similar to NumPy.
Inputs
- data (differentiable) : T
- An input tensor.
- shape (non-differentiable) : tensor(int64)
- Specified shape for output.
Outputs
- reshaped (differentiable) : T
- Reshaped data.
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(uint8), tensor(uint16), tensor(uint32), tensor(uint64), tensor(int8), tensor(int16), tensor(int32), tensor(int64), tensor(bfloat16), tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(string), tensor(bool), tensor(complex64), tensor(complex128), tensor(float8e4m3fn), tensor(float8e4m3fnuz), tensor(float8e5m2), tensor(float8e5m2fnuz)
- Constrain input and output types to all tensor types.
Examples
allowzeroreshapeResize
Resize the input tensor. In general, it calculates every value in the output tensor as a weighted average of neighborhood (a.k.a. sampling locations) in the input tensor. Each dimension value of the output tensor is:
output_dimension = floor(input_dimension * (roi_end - roi_start) * scale)
if input "sizes" is not specified.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 19 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 10, 11, 13, 18
Attributes
- antialias : int (default is 0)
- If set to 1, "linear" and "cubic" interpolation modes will use an antialiasing filter when downscaling. Antialiasing is achieved by stretching the resampling filter by a factor max(1, 1 / scale), which means that when downsampling, more input pixels contribute to an output pixel.
- axes : list of ints
- If provided, it specifies a subset of axes that 'roi', 'scales' and 'sizes' refer to. If not provided, all axes are assumed [0, 1, ..., r-1], where r = rank(data). Non-specified dimensions are interpreted as non-resizable. Negative value means counting dimensions from the back. Accepted range is [-r, r-1], where r = rank(data). Behavior is undefined if an axis is repeated.
- coordinate_transformation_mode : string (default is half_pixel)
- This attribute describes how to transform the coordinate in the resized tensor to the coordinate in the original tensor.
The coordinate of each dimension is transformed individually. Let's describe a case using axis x as an example. Denote
x_resized
as the coordinate of axis x in the resized tensor,x_original
as the coordinate of axis x in the original tensor,length_original
as the length of the original tensor in axis x,length_resized
as the length of the resized tensor in axis x,scale = length_resized / length_original
,output_width
the target length on the axis x which can be a fractional number when it is calculated out of a scale factor, andoutput_width_int
the effective output width as an integer.if coordinate_transformation_mode is
"half_pixel"
,x_original = (x_resized + 0.5) / scale - 0.5
if coordinate_transformation_mode is
"half_pixel_symmetric"
,adjustment = output_width_int / output_width center = input_width / 2 offset = center * (1 - adjustment) x_ori = offset + (x + 0.5) / scale - 0.5
if coordinate_transformation_mode is
"pytorch_half_pixel"
,x_original = length_resized > 1 ? (x_resized + 0.5) / scale - 0.5 : 0
if coordinate_transformation_mode is
"align_corners"
,x_original = x_resized * (length_original - 1) / (length_resized - 1)
if coordinate_transformation_mode is
"asymmetric"
,x_original = x_resized / scale
if coordinate_transformation_mode is
"tf_crop_and_resize"
,x_original = length_resized > 1 ? start_x * (length_original - 1) + x_resized * (end_x - start_x) * (length_original - 1) / (length_resized - 1) : 0.5 * (start_x + end_x) * (length_original - 1)
.
- cubic_coeff_a : float (default is -0.75)
- The coefficient 'a' used in cubic interpolation. Two common choice are -0.5 (in some cases of TensorFlow) and -0.75 (in PyTorch). Check out Equation (4) in https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/1163711 for the details. This attribute is valid only if mode is "cubic".
- exclude_outside : int (default is 0)
- If set to 1, the weight of sampling locations outside the tensor will be set to 0 and the weight will be renormalized so that their sum is 1.0. The default value is 0.
- extrapolation_value : float (default is 0.0)
- When coordinate_transformation_mode is "tf_crop_and_resize" and x_original is outside the range [0, length_original - 1], this value is used as the corresponding output value. Default is 0.0f.
- keep_aspect_ratio_policy : string (default is stretch)
- This attribute describes how to interpret the `sizes` input with regard to keeping the original aspect ratio of the input, and it is not applicable when the `scales` input is used.
Given a set of
sizes
, associated with a subset ofaxes
(explicitly provided or default), and assumingd = axes[i]
, withi
being the index of the providedsizes
.If
keep_aspect_ratio_policy
is"stretch"
, the original aspect ratio is disregarded, and the input is resized to the specified size:out_size[d] = sizes[i]
If
keep_aspect_ratio_policy
is"not_larger"
, the sizes are adjusted so that no extent of the output is larger than the specified size, while keeping the original aspect ratio:scale = Min(sizes[i] / in_size[d]) out_size[d] = round_int(scale * in_size[i])
If
keep_aspect_ratio_policy
is"not_smaller"
, the sizes are adjusted so that no extent of the output is smaller than the specified size, while keeping the original aspect ratio:scale = Max(sizes[i] / in_size[d]) out_size[d] = round_int(scale * in_size[i])
For non-resizable axes (those not specified in
axes
), the output size will be equal to the input size.Note:
round_int
stands for computing the nearest integer value, rounding halfway cases up.
- mode : string (default is nearest)
- Three interpolation modes: "nearest" (default), "linear" and "cubic". The "linear" mode includes linear interpolation for 1D tensor and N-linear interpolation for N-D tensor (for example, bilinear interpolation for 2D tensor). The "cubic" mode includes cubic interpolation for 1D tensor and N-cubic interpolation for N-D tensor (for example, bicubic interpolation for 2D tensor).
- nearest_mode : string (default is round_prefer_floor)
- Four modes: "round_prefer_floor" (default, as known as round half down), "round_prefer_ceil" (as known as round half up), "floor", "ceil". Only used by nearest interpolation. It indicates how to get "nearest" pixel in input tensor from x_original, so this attribute is valid only if "mode" is "nearest".
Inputs (1 - 4)
- X (differentiable) : T1
- N-D tensor
- roi (optional, non-differentiable) : T2
- 1-D tensor given as [start1, ..., startN, end1, ..., endN], where N is the rank of X or the length of axes, if provided. The RoIs' coordinates are normalized in the coordinate system of the input image. It only takes effect when coordinate_transformation_mode is "tf_crop_and_resize"
- scales (optional, non-differentiable) : tensor(float)
- The scale array along each dimension. It takes value greater than 0. If it's less than 1, it's sampling down, otherwise, it's upsampling. The number of elements of 'scales' should be the same as the rank of input 'X' or the length of 'axes', if provided. One of 'scales' and 'sizes' MUST be specified and it is an error if both are specified. If 'sizes' is needed, the user can use an empty string as the name of 'scales' in this operator's input list.
- sizes (optional, non-differentiable) : tensor(int64)
- Target size of the output tensor. Its interpretation depends on the 'keep_aspect_ratio_policy' value.The number of elements of 'sizes' should be the same as the rank of input 'X', or the length of 'axes', if provided. Only one of 'scales' and 'sizes' can be specified.
Outputs
- Y (differentiable) : T1
- N-D tensor after resizing
Type Constraints
- T1 : tensor(uint8), tensor(uint16), tensor(uint32), tensor(uint64), tensor(int8), tensor(int16), tensor(int32), tensor(int64), tensor(bfloat16), tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(string), tensor(bool), tensor(complex64), tensor(complex128)
- Constrain input 'X' and output 'Y' to all tensor types.
- T2 : tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double)
- Constrain roi type to float or double.
Examples
resize_downsample_scales_cubicresize_downsample_scales_cubic_A_n0p5_exclude_outsideresize_downsample_scales_cubic_align_cornersresize_downsample_scales_cubic_antialiasresize_downsample_scales_linearresize_downsample_scales_linear_align_cornersresize_downsample_scales_linear_antialiasresize_downsample_scales_linear_half_pixel_symmetricresize_downsample_scales_nearestresize_downsample_sizes_cubicresize_downsample_sizes_cubic_antialiasresize_downsample_sizes_linear_antialiasresize_downsample_sizes_linear_pytorch_half_pixelresize_downsample_sizes_nearestresize_downsample_sizes_nearest_not_largerresize_downsample_sizes_nearest_not_smallerresize_tf_crop_and_resizeresize_tf_crop_and_resize_axes_2_3resize_tf_crop_and_resize_axes_3_2resize_tf_crop_and_resize_extrapolation_valueresize_upsample_scales_cubicresize_upsample_scales_cubic_A_n0p5_exclude_outsideresize_upsample_scales_cubic_align_cornersresize_upsample_scales_cubic_asymmetricresize_upsample_scales_linearresize_upsample_scales_linear_align_cornersresize_upsample_scales_linear_half_pixel_symmetricresize_upsample_scales_nearestresize_upsample_scales_nearest_axes_2_3resize_upsample_scales_nearest_axes_3_2resize_upsample_sizes_cubicresize_upsample_sizes_nearestresize_upsample_sizes_nearest_axes_2_3resize_upsample_sizes_nearest_axes_3_2resize_upsample_sizes_nearest_ceil_half_pixelresize_upsample_sizes_nearest_floor_align_cornersresize_upsample_sizes_nearest_not_largerresize_upsample_sizes_nearest_not_smallerresize_upsample_sizes_nearest_round_prefer_ceil_asymmetricReverseSequence
Reverse batch of sequences having different lengths specified by sequence_lens
.
For each slice i iterating on batch axis, the operator reverses the first sequence_lens[i] elements on time axis, and copies elements whose index's beyond sequence_lens[i] to the output. So the output slice i contains reversed sequences on the first sequence_lens[i] elements, then have original values copied for the other elements.
Example 1: input = [[0.0, 4.0, 8.0, 12.0], [1.0, 5.0, 9.0, 13.0], [2.0, 6.0, 10.0, 14.0], [3.0, 7.0, 11.0, 15.0]] sequence_lens = [4, 3, 2, 1] time_axis = 0 batch_axis = 1
output = [[3.0, 6.0, 9.0, 12.0],
[2.0, 5.0, 8.0, 13.0],
[1.0, 4.0, 10.0, 14.0],
[0.0, 7.0, 11.0, 15.0]]
Example 2: input = [[0.0, 1.0, 2.0, 3.0 ], [4.0, 5.0, 6.0, 7.0 ], [8.0, 9.0, 10.0, 11.0], [12.0, 13.0, 14.0, 15.0]] sequence_lens = [1, 2, 3, 4] time_axis = 1 batch_axis = 0
output = [[0.0, 1.0, 2.0, 3.0 ],
[5.0, 4.0, 6.0, 7.0 ],
[10.0, 9.0, 8.0, 11.0],
[15.0, 14.0, 13.0, 12.0]]
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 10 of the default ONNX operator set.
Attributes
- batch_axis : int (default is 1)
- (Optional) Specify which axis is batch axis. Must be one of 1 (default), or 0.
- time_axis : int (default is 0)
- (Optional) Specify which axis is time axis. Must be one of 0 (default), or 1.
Inputs
- input : T
- Tensor of rank r >= 2.
- sequence_lens : tensor(int64)
- Tensor specifying lengths of the sequences in a batch. It has shape `[batch_size]`.
Outputs
- Y : T
- Tensor with same shape of input.
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(uint8), tensor(uint16), tensor(uint32), tensor(uint64), tensor(int8), tensor(int16), tensor(int32), tensor(int64), tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(string), tensor(bool), tensor(complex64), tensor(complex128)
- Input and output types can be of any tensor type.
Examples
reversesequence_batchreversesequence_timeRoiAlign
Region of Interest (RoI) align operation described in the Mask R-CNN paper. RoiAlign consumes an input tensor X and region of interests (rois) to apply pooling across each RoI; it produces a 4-D tensor of shape (num_rois, C, output_height, output_width).
RoiAlign is proposed to avoid the misalignment by removing quantizations while converting from original image into feature map and from feature map into RoI feature; in each ROI bin, the value of the sampled locations are computed directly through bilinear interpolation.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 16 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 10
Attributes
- coordinate_transformation_mode : string (default is half_pixel)
- Allowed values are 'half_pixel' and 'output_half_pixel'. Use the value 'half_pixel' to pixel shift the input coordinates by -0.5 (the recommended behavior). Use the value 'output_half_pixel' to omit the pixel shift for the input (use this for a backward-compatible behavior).
- mode : string (default is avg)
- The pooling method. Two modes are supported: 'avg' and 'max'. Default is 'avg'.
- output_height : int (default is 1)
- default 1; Pooled output Y's height.
- output_width : int (default is 1)
- default 1; Pooled output Y's width.
- sampling_ratio : int (default is 0)
- Number of sampling points in the interpolation grid used to compute the output value of each pooled output bin. If > 0, then exactly sampling_ratio x sampling_ratio grid points are used. If == 0, then an adaptive number of grid points are used (computed as ceil(roi_width / output_width), and likewise for height). Default is 0.
- spatial_scale : float (default is 1.0)
- Multiplicative spatial scale factor to translate ROI coordinates from their input spatial scale to the scale used when pooling, i.e., spatial scale of the input feature map X relative to the input image. E.g.; default is 1.0f.
Inputs
- X : T1
- Input data tensor from the previous operator; 4-D feature map of shape (N, C, H, W), where N is the batch size, C is the number of channels, and H and W are the height and the width of the data.
- rois : T1
- RoIs (Regions of Interest) to pool over; rois is 2-D input of shape (num_rois, 4) given as [[x1, y1, x2, y2], ...]. The RoIs' coordinates are in the coordinate system of the input image. Each coordinate set has a 1:1 correspondence with the 'batch_indices' input.
- batch_indices : T2
- 1-D tensor of shape (num_rois,) with each element denoting the index of the corresponding image in the batch.
Outputs
- Y : T1
- RoI pooled output, 4-D tensor of shape (num_rois, C, output_height, output_width). The r-th batch element Y[r-1] is a pooled feature map corresponding to the r-th RoI X[r-1].
Type Constraints
- T1 : tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double)
- Constrain types to float tensors.
- T2 : tensor(int64)
- Constrain types to int tensors.
Examples
roialign_aligned_falseroialign_aligned_trueroialign_mode_maxRound
Round takes one input Tensor and rounds the values, element-wise, meaning it finds the nearest integer for each value. In case of halfs, the rule is to round them to the nearest even integer. If input x is integral, +0, -0, NaN, or infinite, x itself is returned. The output tensor has the same shape and type as the input.
Examples:
round([0.9]) = [1.0]
round([2.5]) = [2.0]
round([2.3]) = [2.0]
round([1.5]) = [2.0]
round([-4.5]) = [-4.0]
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 11 of the default ONNX operator set.
Inputs
- X (non-differentiable) : T
- Input tensor
Outputs
- Y (non-differentiable) : T
- Output tensor
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double)
- Constrain input and output types to float tensors.
Examples
roundSTFT
Computes the Short-time Fourier Transform of the signal.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 17 of the default ONNX operator set.
Attributes
- onesided : int (default is 1)
- If onesided is 1, only values for w in [0, 1, 2, ..., floor(n_fft/2) + 1] are returned because the real-to-complex Fourier transform satisfies the conjugate symmetry, i.e., X[m, w] = X[m,w]=X[m,n_fft-w]*. Note if the input or window tensors are complex, then onesided output is not possible. Enabling onesided with real inputs performs a Real-valued fast Fourier transform (RFFT).When invoked with real or complex valued input, the default value is 1. Values can be 0 or 1.
Inputs (2 - 4)
- signal (non-differentiable) : T1
- Input tensor representing a real or complex valued signal. For real input, the following shape is expected: [batch_size][signal_length][1]. For complex input, the following shape is expected: [batch_size][signal_length][2], where [batch_size][signal_length][0] represents the real component and [batch_size][signal_length][1] represents the imaginary component of the signal.
- frame_step (non-differentiable) : T2
- The number of samples to step between successive DFTs.
- window (optional, non-differentiable) : T1
- A tensor representing the window that will be slid over the signal.The window must have rank 1 with shape: [window_shape]. It's an optional value.
- frame_length (optional, non-differentiable) : T2
- A scalar representing the size of the DFT. It's an optional value.
Outputs
- output (non-differentiable) : T1
- The Short-time Fourier Transform of the signals.If onesided is 1, the output has the shape: [batch_size][frames][dft_unique_bins][2], where dft_unique_bins is frame_length // 2 + 1 (the unique components of the DFT) If onesided is 0, the output has the shape: [batch_size][frames][frame_length][2], where frame_length is the length of the DFT.
Type Constraints
- T1 : tensor(float), tensor(float16), tensor(double), tensor(bfloat16)
- Constrain signal and output to float tensors.
- T2 : tensor(int32), tensor(int64)
- Constrain scalar length types to int64_t.
Examples
stftScan
Scan can be used to iterate over one or more scan_input tensors, constructing zero or more scan_output tensors. It combines ideas from general recurrences, functional programming constructs such as scan, fold, map, and zip, and is intended to enable generalizations of RNN-like constructs for sequence-to-sequence processing. Other tensors (referred to as state_variables here) can be used to carry a state when iterating from one element to another (similar to hidden-state in RNNs, also referred to as loop-carried dependences in the context of loops). Many common usages involve a single scan_input tensor (where functionality similar to scan, fold and map can be obtained). When more than one scan_input is used, a behavior similar to zip is obtained.
The attribute body must be a graph, specifying the computation to be performed in every iteration. It takes as input the current values of the state_variables and the current iterated element of the scan_inputs. It must return the (updated) values of the state_variables and zero or more scan_output_element tensors. The values of the scan_output_element tensors are concatenated over all the iterations to produce the scan_output values of the scan construct (similar to the concatenated intermediate hidden-state values of RNN-like constructs). All the output tensors (state_variables as well as scan_output_element tensors) are required to have the same shape in each iteration of the loop (a restriction imposed to enable efficient memory allocation).
Note that the iterated element passed to the body subgraph does not have a sequence axis. It will have a rank one less than the rank of the corresponding scan_input.
The scan operation returns the final values of the state_variables as well as the scan_outputs.
The optional attribute scan_input_directions specifies the direction (forward or backward) for each scan input. If this attribute is omitted, all sequences are scanned in the forward direction. A bidirectional scan may be performed by specifying the same tensor input twice in the scan_inputs, once with a forward direction, and once with a backward direction.
The scan_output of the operation is produced by concatenating the scan_output_element values produced by the body in each iteration. The optional attribute scan_output_directions specifies the direction in which scan_output is constructed (by appending or prepending the scan_output_element to scan_output in each iteration) for each scan_output. If this attribute is omitted, the scan_output_element is appended to the scan_output in each iteration.
The optional attribute scan_input_axes specifies the axis to be scanned for each scan_input. If omitted, every scan_input will be scanned in axis 0. For example, if axis 0 is the batch axis and axis 1 is the time axis (to be scanned), specify an axis value of 1. Note that scanning a non-zero axis may be less efficient than scanning axis zero.
The optional attribute scan_output_axes specifies the axis along which the scan_outputs are accumulated for each scan_output. For example, if axis 1 is the time axis (to be scanned) for both inputs and outputs, specify a scan_input axis and scan_output axis value of 1.
Note that because of the ONNX restriction that only the last parameter of an operator can be variadic, the initial-states and scan-inputs are listed together as one input parameter. Similarly, the final-states and scan-outputs are listed together as one output parameter. The attribute num_scan_inputs indicates the number M of scan-inputs.
The behavior of
Scan <
num_scan_inputs = m,
body = loop-body,
scan_input_axes = [axis_1, ..., axis_m]
> (init_1, ..., init_n, scan_1, ..., scan_m)
is equivalent to the following pseudo-code:
// scan_i.shape[axis_i] denotes the (max) sequence-length of scan_i
// scan_i.shape[axis_i] is required to be equal to scan_j.shape[axis_j] for all i,j.
sequence_length = scan_1.shape[axis_1];
// initialize state-variables
st_1 = init_1; ... st_n = init_n;
// initialize scan-output variables: [] denotes an empty tensor
scan_out_1 = []; ...; scan_out_k = [];
// identify number of iterations:
// execute loop
for (int t = 0; t < sequence_length; ++t) {
// generate the scan-input elements: the notation T<axis=k>[t] indicates the sub-tensor
// of rank one less than T obtained by indexing T at position t along axis k.
si_1 = scan_1<axis=axis_1>[t];
... ;
si_m = scan_m<axis=axis_m>[t];
// execute loop-body
st_1, ..., st_n, so_1, ..., so_k = loop-body(st_1, ..., st_n, si_1, ..., si_m)
// accumulate the scan-output elements
scan_out_1 = Concat<axis=0>(scan_out_1, so_1); ... ; scan_out_k = Concat<axis=0>(scan_out_k, so_k);
}
return st_1, ..., st_n, scan_out_1, ..., scan_out_k;
Sample usage: Encoding RNN using a Scan
The following example shows how a simple RNN over an input tensor %X, with weight tensor %Wi, recurrence weight tensor %Ri, bias tensors %Wbi and %Rbi, and initial hidden-state %H_0 can be encoded as a ScanLoop. Note that the loop-body is a nested graph, and it directly computes %Wi, %Ri, %Wbi, and %Rbi (typically constants or initializers in the body graph). If these values are computed in the outer graph, they need to be passed in as extra state_variables.
graph rnn-encoding {
%H_0 = ...
%X = ...
%Y_h, %Y = Scan[body = <graph rnn-cell-1>, num_scan_inputs=1](%H_0, %X)
return %Y, %Y_h
}
graph rnn-cell-1 (
%H_tminus1[FLOAT, tensor]
%X_t[FLOAT, tensor]
) {
%Wi = ...
%Ri = ...
%Wbi = ...
%Rbi = ...
%t1 = X_t * (Wi^T)
%t2 = H_tminus1*(Ri^T)
%t3 = Add(%t1, %t2)
%t4 = Add(%t3, %Wbi)
%t5 = Add(%t4, %Rbi)
%Ht = Tanh(%t5)
%Accumulate = Identity(%Ht)
return %Ht, %Accumulate
}
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 19 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 8, 9, 11, 16
Attributes
- body : graph (required)
- The graph run each iteration. It has N+M inputs: (loop state variables..., scan_input_elts...). It has N+K outputs: (loop state variables..., scan_output_elts...). Each scan_output is created by concatenating the value of the specified scan_output_elt value at the end of each iteration of the loop. It is an error if the dimensions of these values change across loop iterations.
- num_scan_inputs : int (required)
- An attribute specifying the number of scan_inputs M.
- scan_input_axes : list of ints
- An optional list of M flags. The i-th element of the list specifies the axis to be scanned (the sequence axis) for the i-th scan_input. If omitted, 0 will be used as the scan axis for every scan_input. Negative value for an axis means counting dimensions from the back. Accepted range is [-r, r-1] where r = rank(input).
- scan_input_directions : list of ints
- An optional list of M flags. The i-th element of the list specifies the direction to be scanned for the i-th scan_input tensor: 0 indicates forward direction and 1 indicates reverse direction. If omitted, all scan_input tensors will be scanned in the forward direction.
- scan_output_axes : list of ints
- An optional list of K flags. The i-th element of the list specifies the axis for the i-th scan_output. The scan outputs are accumulated along the specified axis. If omitted, 0 will be used as the scan axis for every scan_output. Negative value for an axis means counting dimensions from the back. Accepted range is [-r, r-1].
- scan_output_directions : list of ints
- An optional list of K flags, one for each scan_output. The i-th element of the list specifies whether the i-th scan_output should be constructed by appending or prepending a new value in each iteration: 0 indicates appending and 1 indicates prepending. If omitted, all scan_output tensors will be produced by appending a value in each iteration.
Inputs (1 - ∞)
- initial_state_and_scan_inputs (variadic, heterogeneous) : V
- Initial values of the loop's N state variables followed by M scan_inputs
Outputs (1 - ∞)
- final_state_and_scan_outputs (variadic, heterogeneous) : V
- Final values of the loop's N state variables followed by K scan_outputs
Type Constraints
- V : tensor(uint8), tensor(uint16), tensor(uint32), tensor(uint64), tensor(int8), tensor(int16), tensor(int32), tensor(int64), tensor(bfloat16), tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(string), tensor(bool), tensor(complex64), tensor(complex128), tensor(float8e4m3fn), tensor(float8e4m3fnuz), tensor(float8e5m2), tensor(float8e5m2fnuz)
- All Tensor types up to IRv9.
Examples
scan_8scan_9Scatter (deprecated)
This operator is deprecated. Please use ScatterElements, which provides the same functionality.
Scatter takes three inputs data
, updates
, and indices
of the same rank r >= 1 and an optional attribute axis that identifies an axis of data
(by default, the outer-most axis, that is axis 0). The output of the operation is produced by creating a copy of the input data
, and then updating its value to values specified by updates
at specific index positions specified by indices
. Its output shape is the same as the shape of data
.
For each entry in updates
, the target index in data
is obtained by combining the corresponding entry in indices
with the index of the entry itself: the index-value for dimension = axis is obtained from the value of the corresponding entry in indices
and the index-value for dimension != axis is obtained from the index of the entry itself.
For instance, in a 2-D tensor case, the update corresponding to the [i][j] entry is performed as below:
output[indices[i][j]][j] = updates[i][j] if axis = 0,
output[i][indices[i][j]] = updates[i][j] if axis = 1,
This operator is the inverse of GatherElements. It is similar to Torch's Scatter operation.
Example 1:
data = [
[0.0, 0.0, 0.0],
[0.0, 0.0, 0.0],
[0.0, 0.0, 0.0],
]
indices = [
[1, 0, 2],
[0, 2, 1],
]
updates = [
[1.0, 1.1, 1.2],
[2.0, 2.1, 2.2],
]
output = [
[2.0, 1.1, 0.0]
[1.0, 0.0, 2.2]
[0.0, 2.1, 1.2]
]
Example 2:
data = [[1.0, 2.0, 3.0, 4.0, 5.0]]
indices = [[1, 3]]
updates = [[1.1, 2.1]]
axis = 1
output = [[1.0, 1.1, 3.0, 2.1, 5.0]]
Version
This version of the operator has been deprecated since version 11 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 9
Examples
scatter_with_axisscatter_without_axisScatterElements
ScatterElements takes three inputs data
, updates
, and indices
of the same rank r >= 1 and an optional attribute axis that identifies an axis of data
(by default, the outer-most axis, that is axis 0). The output of the operation is produced by creating a copy of the input data
, and then updating its value to values specified by updates
at specific index positions specified by indices
. Its output shape is the same as the shape of data
.
For each entry in updates
, the target index in data
is obtained by combining the corresponding entry in indices
with the index of the entry itself: the index-value for dimension = axis is obtained from the value of the corresponding entry in indices
and the index-value for dimension != axis is obtained from the index of the entry itself.
reduction
allows specification of an optional reduction operation, which is applied to all values in updates
tensor into output
at the specified indices
. In cases where reduction
is set to "none", indices should not have duplicate entries: that is, if idx1 != idx2, then indices[idx1] != indices[idx2]. For instance, in a 2-D tensor case, the update corresponding to the [i][j] entry is performed as below:
output[indices[i][j]][j] = updates[i][j] if axis = 0,
output[i][indices[i][j]] = updates[i][j] if axis = 1,
When reduction
is set to some reduction function f
, the update corresponding to the [i][j] entry is performed as below:
output[indices[i][j]][j] += f(output[indices[i][j]][j], updates[i][j]) if axis = 0,
output[i][indices[i][j]] += f(output[i][indices[i][j]], updates[i][j]) if axis = 1,
where the f
is +
, *
, max
or min
as specified.
This operator is the inverse of GatherElements. It is similar to Torch's Scatter operation.
(Opset 18 change): Adds max/min to the set of allowed reduction ops.
Example 1:
data = [
[0.0, 0.0, 0.0],
[0.0, 0.0, 0.0],
[0.0, 0.0, 0.0],
]
indices = [
[1, 0, 2],
[0, 2, 1],
]
updates = [
[1.0, 1.1, 1.2],
[2.0, 2.1, 2.2],
]
output = [
[2.0, 1.1, 0.0]
[1.0, 0.0, 2.2]
[0.0, 2.1, 1.2]
]
Example 2:
data = [[1.0, 2.0, 3.0, 4.0, 5.0]]
indices = [[1, 3]]
updates = [[1.1, 2.1]]
axis = 1
output = [[1.0, 1.1, 3.0, 2.1, 5.0]]
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 18 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 11, 13, 16
Attributes
- axis : int (default is 0)
- Which axis to scatter on. Negative value means counting dimensions from the back. Accepted range is [-r, r-1] where r = rank(data).
- reduction : string (default is none)
- Type of reduction to apply: none (default), add, mul, max, min. 'none': no reduction applied. 'add': reduction using the addition operation. 'mul': reduction using the multiplication operation.'max': reduction using the maximum operation.'min': reduction using the minimum operation.
Inputs
- data (differentiable) : T
- Tensor of rank r >= 1.
- indices (non-differentiable) : Tind
- Tensor of int32/int64 indices, of r >= 1 (same rank as input). All index values are expected to be within bounds [-s, s-1] along axis of size s. It is an error if any of the index values are out of bounds.
- updates (differentiable) : T
- Tensor of rank r >=1 (same rank and shape as indices)
Outputs
- output (differentiable) : T
- Tensor of rank r >= 1 (same rank as input).
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(uint8), tensor(uint16), tensor(uint32), tensor(uint64), tensor(int8), tensor(int16), tensor(int32), tensor(int64), tensor(bfloat16), tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(string), tensor(bool), tensor(complex64), tensor(complex128)
- Input and output types can be of any tensor type.
- Tind : tensor(int32), tensor(int64)
- Constrain indices to integer types
Examples
scatter_elements_with_axisscatter_elements_with_duplicate_indicesscatter_elements_with_negative_indicesscatter_elements_with_reduction_maxscatter_elements_with_reduction_minscatter_elements_without_axisScatterND
ScatterND takes three inputs data
tensor of rank r >= 1, indices
tensor of rank q >= 1, and updates
tensor of rank q + r - indices.shape[-1] - 1. The output of the operation is produced by creating a copy of the input data
, and then updating its value to values specified by updates
at specific index positions specified by indices
. Its output shape is the same as the shape of data
.
indices
is an integer tensor. Let k denote indices.shape[-1], the last dimension in the shape of indices
. indices
is treated as a (q-1)-dimensional tensor of k-tuples, where each k-tuple is a partial-index into data
. Hence, k can be a value at most the rank of data
. When k equals rank(data), each update entry specifies an update to a single element of the tensor. When k is less than rank(data) each update entry specifies an update to a slice of the tensor. Index values are allowed to be negative, as per the usual convention for counting backwards from the end, but are expected in the valid range.
updates
is treated as a (q-1)-dimensional tensor of replacement-slice-values. Thus, the first (q-1) dimensions of updates.shape must match the first (q-1) dimensions of indices.shape. The remaining dimensions of updates
correspond to the dimensions of the replacement-slice-values. Each replacement-slice-value is a (r-k) dimensional tensor, corresponding to the trailing (r-k) dimensions of data
. Thus, the shape of updates
must equal indices.shape[0:q-1] ++ data.shape[k:r-1], where ++ denotes the concatenation of shapes.
The output
is calculated via the following equation:
output = np.copy(data)
update_indices = indices.shape[:-1]
for idx in np.ndindex(update_indices):
output[indices[idx]] = updates[idx]
The order of iteration in the above loop is not specified. In particular, indices should not have duplicate entries: that is, if idx1 != idx2, then indices[idx1] != indices[idx2]. This ensures that the output value does not depend on the iteration order.
reduction
allows specification of an optional reduction operation, which is applied to all values in updates
tensor into output
at the specified indices
. In cases where reduction
is set to "none", indices should not have duplicate entries: that is, if idx1 != idx2, then indices[idx1] != indices[idx2]. This ensures that the output value does not depend on the iteration order. When reduction
is set to some reduction function f
, output
is calculated as follows:
output = np.copy(data)
update_indices = indices.shape[:-1]
for idx in np.ndindex(update_indices):
output[indices[idx]] = f(output[indices[idx]], updates[idx])
where the f
is +
, *
, max
or min
as specified.
This operator is the inverse of GatherND.
(Opset 18 change): Adds max/min to the set of allowed reduction ops.
Example 1:
data = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8]
indices = [[4], [3], [1], [7]]
updates = [9, 10, 11, 12]
output = [1, 11, 3, 10, 9, 6, 7, 12]
Example 2:
data = [[[1, 2, 3, 4], [5, 6, 7, 8], [8, 7, 6, 5], [4, 3, 2, 1]],
[[1, 2, 3, 4], [5, 6, 7, 8], [8, 7, 6, 5], [4, 3, 2, 1]],
[[8, 7, 6, 5], [4, 3, 2, 1], [1, 2, 3, 4], [5, 6, 7, 8]],
[[8, 7, 6, 5], [4, 3, 2, 1], [1, 2, 3, 4], [5, 6, 7, 8]]]
indices = [[0], [2]]
updates = [[[5, 5, 5, 5], [6, 6, 6, 6], [7, 7, 7, 7], [8, 8, 8, 8]],
[[1, 1, 1, 1], [2, 2, 2, 2], [3, 3, 3, 3], [4, 4, 4, 4]]]
output = [[[5, 5, 5, 5], [6, 6, 6, 6], [7, 7, 7, 7], [8, 8, 8, 8]],
[[1, 2, 3, 4], [5, 6, 7, 8], [8, 7, 6, 5], [4, 3, 2, 1]],
[[1, 1, 1, 1], [2, 2, 2, 2], [3, 3, 3, 3], [4, 4, 4, 4]],
[[8, 7, 6, 5], [4, 3, 2, 1], [1, 2, 3, 4], [5, 6, 7, 8]]]
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 18 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 11, 13, 16
Attributes
- reduction : string (default is none)
- Type of reduction to apply: none (default), add, mul, max, min. 'none': no reduction applied. 'add': reduction using the addition operation. 'mul': reduction using the addition operation. 'max': reduction using the maximum operation.'min': reduction using the minimum operation.
Inputs
- data (differentiable) : T
- Tensor of rank r >= 1.
- indices (non-differentiable) : tensor(int64)
- Tensor of rank q >= 1.
- updates (differentiable) : T
- Tensor of rank q + r - indices_shape[-1] - 1.
Outputs
- output (differentiable) : T
- Tensor of rank r >= 1.
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(uint8), tensor(uint16), tensor(uint32), tensor(uint64), tensor(int8), tensor(int16), tensor(int32), tensor(int64), tensor(bfloat16), tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(string), tensor(bool), tensor(complex64), tensor(complex128)
- Constrain input and output types to any tensor type.
Examples
scatterndscatternd_addscatternd_maxscatternd_minscatternd_multiplySelu
Selu takes one input data (Tensor) and produces one output data (Tensor) where the scaled exponential linear unit function, y = gamma * (alpha * e^x - alpha) for x <= 0
, y = gamma * x for x > 0
, is applied to the tensor elementwise.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 6 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 1
Attributes
- alpha : float (default is 1.67326)
- Coefficient of SELU default to 1.67326319217681884765625 (i.e., float32 approximation of 1.6732632423543772848170429916717).
- gamma : float (default is 1.0507)
- Coefficient of SELU default to 1.05070102214813232421875 (i.e., float32 approximation of 1.0507009873554804934193349852946).
Inputs
- X (differentiable) : T
- Input tensor
Outputs
- Y (differentiable) : T
- Output tensor
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double)
- Constrain input and output types to float tensors.
Examples
seluselu_defaultSequenceAt
Outputs a tensor copy from the tensor at 'position' in 'input_sequence'. Accepted range for 'position' is in [-n, n - 1]
, where n
is the number of tensors in 'input_sequence'. Negative value means counting positions from the back.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 11 of the default ONNX operator set.
Inputs
- input_sequence : S
- Input sequence.
- position : I
- Position of the tensor in the sequence. Negative value means counting positions from the back. Accepted range in `[-n, n - 1]`, where `n` is the number of tensors in 'input_sequence'. It is an error if any of the index values are out of bounds. It must be a scalar(tensor of empty shape).
Outputs
- tensor : T
- Output tensor at the specified position in the input sequence.
Type Constraints
- S : seq(tensor(uint8)), seq(tensor(uint16)), seq(tensor(uint32)), seq(tensor(uint64)), seq(tensor(int8)), seq(tensor(int16)), seq(tensor(int32)), seq(tensor(int64)), seq(tensor(float16)), seq(tensor(float)), seq(tensor(double)), seq(tensor(string)), seq(tensor(bool)), seq(tensor(complex64)), seq(tensor(complex128))
- Constrain to any tensor type.
- T : tensor(uint8), tensor(uint16), tensor(uint32), tensor(uint64), tensor(int8), tensor(int16), tensor(int32), tensor(int64), tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(string), tensor(bool), tensor(complex64), tensor(complex128)
- Constrain to any tensor type.
- I : tensor(int32), tensor(int64)
- Constrain position to integral tensor. It must be a scalar(tensor of empty shape).
SequenceConstruct
Construct a tensor sequence containing 'inputs' tensors. All tensors in 'inputs' must have the same data type.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 11 of the default ONNX operator set.
Inputs (1 - ∞)
- inputs (variadic) : T
- Tensors.
Outputs
- output_sequence : S
- Sequence enclosing the input tensors.
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(uint8), tensor(uint16), tensor(uint32), tensor(uint64), tensor(int8), tensor(int16), tensor(int32), tensor(int64), tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(string), tensor(bool), tensor(complex64), tensor(complex128)
- Constrain input types to any tensor type.
- S : seq(tensor(uint8)), seq(tensor(uint16)), seq(tensor(uint32)), seq(tensor(uint64)), seq(tensor(int8)), seq(tensor(int16)), seq(tensor(int32)), seq(tensor(int64)), seq(tensor(float16)), seq(tensor(float)), seq(tensor(double)), seq(tensor(string)), seq(tensor(bool)), seq(tensor(complex64)), seq(tensor(complex128))
- Constrain output types to any tensor type.
SequenceEmpty
Construct an empty tensor sequence, with given data type.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 11 of the default ONNX operator set.
Attributes
- dtype : int
- (Optional) The data type of the tensors in the output sequence. The default type is 'float'.
Inputs
Outputs
- output : S
- Empty sequence.
Type Constraints
- S : seq(tensor(uint8)), seq(tensor(uint16)), seq(tensor(uint32)), seq(tensor(uint64)), seq(tensor(int8)), seq(tensor(int16)), seq(tensor(int32)), seq(tensor(int64)), seq(tensor(float16)), seq(tensor(float)), seq(tensor(double)), seq(tensor(string)), seq(tensor(bool)), seq(tensor(complex64)), seq(tensor(complex128))
- Constrain output types to any tensor type.
SequenceErase
Outputs a tensor sequence that removes the tensor at 'position' from 'input_sequence'. Accepted range for 'position' is in [-n, n - 1]
, where n
is the number of tensors in 'input_sequence'. Negative value means counting positions from the back. 'position' is optional, by default it erases the last tensor from 'input_sequence'.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 11 of the default ONNX operator set.
Inputs (1 - 2)
- input_sequence : S
- Input sequence.
- position (optional) : I
- Position of the tensor in the sequence. Negative value means counting positions from the back. Accepted range in `[-n, n - 1]`, where `n` is the number of tensors in 'input_sequence'. It is an error if any of the index values are out of bounds. It must be a scalar(tensor of empty shape).
Outputs
- output_sequence : S
- Output sequence that has the tensor at the specified position removed.
Type Constraints
- S : seq(tensor(uint8)), seq(tensor(uint16)), seq(tensor(uint32)), seq(tensor(uint64)), seq(tensor(int8)), seq(tensor(int16)), seq(tensor(int32)), seq(tensor(int64)), seq(tensor(float16)), seq(tensor(float)), seq(tensor(double)), seq(tensor(string)), seq(tensor(bool)), seq(tensor(complex64)), seq(tensor(complex128))
- Constrain to any tensor type.
- I : tensor(int32), tensor(int64)
- Constrain position to integral tensor. It must be a scalar(tensor of empty shape).
SequenceInsert
Outputs a tensor sequence that inserts 'tensor' into 'input_sequence' at 'position'. 'tensor' must have the same data type as 'input_sequence'. Accepted range for 'position' is in [-n, n]
, where n
is the number of tensors in 'input_sequence'. Negative value means counting positions from the back. 'position' is optional, by default it inserts 'tensor' to the back of 'input_sequence'.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 11 of the default ONNX operator set.
Inputs (2 - 3)
- input_sequence : S
- Input sequence.
- tensor : T
- Input tensor to be inserted into the input sequence.
- position (optional) : I
- Position in the sequence where the new tensor is inserted. It is optional and default is to insert to the back of the sequence. Negative value means counting positions from the back. Accepted range in `[-n, n]`, where `n` is the number of tensors in 'input_sequence'. It is an error if any of the index values are out of bounds. It must be a scalar(tensor of empty shape).
Outputs
- output_sequence : S
- Output sequence that contains the inserted tensor at given position.
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(uint8), tensor(uint16), tensor(uint32), tensor(uint64), tensor(int8), tensor(int16), tensor(int32), tensor(int64), tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(string), tensor(bool), tensor(complex64), tensor(complex128)
- Constrain to any tensor type.
- S : seq(tensor(uint8)), seq(tensor(uint16)), seq(tensor(uint32)), seq(tensor(uint64)), seq(tensor(int8)), seq(tensor(int16)), seq(tensor(int32)), seq(tensor(int64)), seq(tensor(float16)), seq(tensor(float)), seq(tensor(double)), seq(tensor(string)), seq(tensor(bool)), seq(tensor(complex64)), seq(tensor(complex128))
- Constrain to any tensor type.
- I : tensor(int32), tensor(int64)
- Constrain position to integral tensor. It must be a scalar(tensor of empty shape).
Examples
sequenceinsertSequenceLength
Produces a scalar(tensor of empty shape) containing the number of tensors in 'input_sequence'.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 11 of the default ONNX operator set.
Inputs
- input_sequence : S
- Input sequence.
Outputs
- length : I
- Length of input sequence. It must be a scalar(tensor of empty shape).
Type Constraints
- S : seq(tensor(uint8)), seq(tensor(uint16)), seq(tensor(uint32)), seq(tensor(uint64)), seq(tensor(int8)), seq(tensor(int16)), seq(tensor(int32)), seq(tensor(int64)), seq(tensor(float16)), seq(tensor(float)), seq(tensor(double)), seq(tensor(string)), seq(tensor(bool)), seq(tensor(complex64)), seq(tensor(complex128))
- Constrain to any tensor type.
- I : tensor(int64)
- Constrain output to integral tensor. It must be a scalar(tensor of empty shape).
SequenceMap
Applies a sub-graph to each sample in the input sequence(s).
Inputs can be either tensors or sequences, with the exception of the first input which must be a sequence. The length of the first input sequence will determine the number of samples in the outputs. Any other sequence inputs should have the same number of samples. The number of inputs and outputs, should match the one of the subgraph.
For each i-th element in the output, a sample will be extracted from the input sequence(s) at the i-th position and the sub-graph will be applied to it. The outputs will contain the outputs of the sub-graph for each sample, in the same order as in the input.
This operator assumes that processing each sample is independent and could executed in parallel or in any order. Users cannot expect any specific ordering in which each subgraph is computed.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 17 of the default ONNX operator set.
Attributes
- body : graph (required)
- The graph to be run for each sample in the sequence(s). It should have as many inputs and outputs as inputs and outputs to the SequenceMap function.
Inputs (1 - ∞)
- input_sequence : S
- Input sequence.
- additional_inputs (variadic, heterogeneous) : V
- Additional inputs to the graph
Outputs (1 - ∞)
- out_sequence (variadic, heterogeneous) : S
- Output sequence(s)
Type Constraints
- S : seq(tensor(uint8)), seq(tensor(uint16)), seq(tensor(uint32)), seq(tensor(uint64)), seq(tensor(int8)), seq(tensor(int16)), seq(tensor(int32)), seq(tensor(int64)), seq(tensor(float16)), seq(tensor(float)), seq(tensor(double)), seq(tensor(string)), seq(tensor(bool)), seq(tensor(complex64)), seq(tensor(complex128))
- Constrain input types to any sequence type.
- V : tensor(uint8), tensor(uint16), tensor(uint32), tensor(uint64), tensor(int8), tensor(int16), tensor(int32), tensor(int64), tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(string), tensor(bool), tensor(complex64), tensor(complex128), seq(tensor(uint8)), seq(tensor(uint16)), seq(tensor(uint32)), seq(tensor(uint64)), seq(tensor(int8)), seq(tensor(int16)), seq(tensor(int32)), seq(tensor(int64)), seq(tensor(float16)), seq(tensor(float)), seq(tensor(double)), seq(tensor(string)), seq(tensor(bool)), seq(tensor(complex64)), seq(tensor(complex128))
- Constrain to any tensor or sequence type.
Examples
sequence_map_add_1_sequence_1_tensorsequence_map_add_2_sequencessequence_map_extract_shapessequence_map_identity_1_sequencesequence_map_identity_1_sequence_1_tensorsequence_map_identity_2_sequencesShape
Takes a tensor as input and outputs an 1D int64 tensor containing the shape of the input tensor. Optional attributes start and end can be used to compute a slice of the input tensor's shape. If start axis is omitted, the slice starts from axis 0. The end axis, if specified, is exclusive (and the returned value will not include the size of that axis). If the end axis is omitted, the axes upto the last one will be included. Negative axes indicate counting back from the last axis. Note that axes will be clamped to the range [0, r-1], where r is the rank of the input tensor if they are out-of-range (after adding r in the case of negative axis). Thus, specifying any end value > r is equivalent to specifying an end value of r, and specifying any start value < -r is equivalent to specifying a start value of 0.
Examples:
Input tensor with shape: [2, 3, 4]
No attributes specified.
Output: [2, 3, 4]
Input tensor with shape: [2, 3, 4]
start: -1
Output: [4]
Input tensor with shape: [2, 3, 4]
end: -1
Output: [2, 3]
Input tensor with shape: [2, 3, 4]
start: 1
end: 2
Output: [3]
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 19 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 1, 13, 15
Attributes
- end : int
- (Optional) Ending axis for slicing the shape. Negative value means counting dimensions from the back. If omitted, sizes of all axes upto (including) the last one will be included.
- start : int (default is 0)
- (Optional) Starting axis for slicing the shape. Default value is 0.Negative value means counting dimensions from the back.
Inputs
- data (non-differentiable) : T
- An input tensor.
Outputs
- shape (non-differentiable) : T1
- Shape of the input tensor
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(uint8), tensor(uint16), tensor(uint32), tensor(uint64), tensor(int8), tensor(int16), tensor(int32), tensor(int64), tensor(bfloat16), tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(string), tensor(bool), tensor(complex64), tensor(complex128), tensor(float8e4m3fn), tensor(float8e4m3fnuz), tensor(float8e5m2), tensor(float8e5m2fnuz)
- Input tensor can be of arbitrary type.
- T1 : tensor(int64)
- Constrain output to int64 tensor.
Examples
shapeShrink
Shrink takes one input data (Tensor) and produces one Tensor output, having same datatype and shape with input. It has two attributes, lambd and bias. The formula of this operator is: If x < -lambd, y = x + bias; If x > lambd, y = x - bias; Otherwise, y = 0.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 9 of the default ONNX operator set.
Attributes
- bias : float (default is 0.0)
- The bias value added to output. Default is 0.
- lambd : float (default is 0.5)
- The lambd value for the Shrink formulation. Default is 0.5.
Inputs
- input (differentiable) : T
- The input data as Tensor.
Outputs
- output (differentiable) : T
- The output.
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(uint8), tensor(uint16), tensor(uint32), tensor(uint64), tensor(int8), tensor(int16), tensor(int32), tensor(int64), tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double)
- Constrain input to only numeric types.
Examples
hard_shrinksoft_shrinkSigmoid
Sigmoid takes one input data (Tensor) and produces one output data (Tensor) where the sigmoid function, y = 1 / (1 + exp(-x)), is applied to the tensor elementwise.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 13 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 1, 6
Inputs
- X (differentiable) : T
- Input tensor
Outputs
- Y (differentiable) : T
- Output tensor
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(bfloat16)
- Constrain input and output types to float tensors.
Examples
sigmoidSign
Calculate the sign of the given input tensor element-wise. If input > 0, output 1. if input < 0, output -1. if input == 0, output 0.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 13 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 9
Inputs
- input (non-differentiable) : T
- Input tensor
Outputs
- output (non-differentiable) : T
- The sign of the input tensor computed element-wise. It has the same shape and type of the input.
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(uint8), tensor(uint16), tensor(uint32), tensor(uint64), tensor(int8), tensor(int16), tensor(int32), tensor(int64), tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(bfloat16)
- Constrain input and output types to all numeric tensors.
Examples
signSin
Calculates the sine of the given input tensor, element-wise.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 7 of the default ONNX operator set.
Inputs
- input (differentiable) : T
- Input tensor
Outputs
- output (differentiable) : T
- The sine of the input tensor computed element-wise
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double)
- Constrain input and output types to float tensors.
Examples
sinSinh
Calculates the hyperbolic sine of the given input tensor element-wise.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 9 of the default ONNX operator set.
Inputs
- input (differentiable) : T
- Input tensor
Outputs
- output (differentiable) : T
- The hyperbolic sine values of the input tensor computed element-wise
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double)
- Constrain input and output types to float tensors.
Examples
sinhSize
Takes a tensor as input and outputs a int64 scalar that equals to the total number of elements of the input tensor.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 19 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 1, 13
Inputs
- data (non-differentiable) : T
- An input tensor.
Outputs
- size (non-differentiable) : T1
- Total number of elements of the input tensor
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(uint8), tensor(uint16), tensor(uint32), tensor(uint64), tensor(int8), tensor(int16), tensor(int32), tensor(int64), tensor(bfloat16), tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(string), tensor(bool), tensor(complex64), tensor(complex128), tensor(float8e4m3fn), tensor(float8e4m3fnuz), tensor(float8e5m2), tensor(float8e5m2fnuz)
- Input tensor can be of arbitrary type.
- T1 : tensor(int64)
- Constrain output to int64 tensor, which should be a scalar though.
Examples
sizeSlice
Produces a slice of the input tensor along multiple axes. Similar to numpy: https://numpy.org/doc/stable/user/basics.indexing.html?highlight=slice#slicing-and-striding
Slice uses the starts
, ends
, axes
and steps
inputs to select a sub-tensor of its input data
tensor.
An effective start[i]
, end[i]
, and step[i]
must be computed for each i
in [0, ... r-1]
where r = rank(input)
as follows:
If axes
are omitted, they are set to [0, ..., r-1]
. If steps
are omitted, they are set to [1, ..., 1]
of length len(starts)
The effective values are initialized as start[i] = 0
, end[i] = dims[i]
where dims
are the dimensions of input
and step[i] =
1.
All negative elements of axes
are made non-negatve by adding r
to them, where r =rank(input)
.
All negative values in starts[i]
and ends[i]
have dims[axes[i]]
added to them, where dims
are the dimensions of input
. Then start[axes[i]]
is the adjusted starts[i]
is clamped into the range [0, dims[axes[i]]]
for positive stepping and [0, dims[axes[i]]-1]
for negative stepping.
The clamping for the adjusted ends[i]
depends on the sign of steps[i]
and must accommodate copying 0 through dims[axes[i]]
elements, so for positive stepping end[axes[i]]
is clamped to [0, dims[axes[i]]]
, while for negative stepping it is clamped to [-1, dims[axes[i]]-1]
.
Finally, step[axes[i]] = steps[i]
.
For slicing to the end of a dimension with unknown size, it is recommended to pass in INT_MAX
when slicing forward and 'INT_MIN' when slicing backward.
Example 1:
data = [
[1, 2, 3, 4],
[5, 6, 7, 8],
]
axes = [0, 1]
starts = [1, 0]
ends = [2, 3]
steps = [1, 2]
result = [
[5, 7],
]
Example 2:
data = [
[1, 2, 3, 4],
[5, 6, 7, 8],
]
starts = [0, 1]
ends = [-1, 1000]
result = [
[2, 3, 4],
]
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 13 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 1, 10, 11
Inputs (3 - 5)
- data (differentiable) : T
- Tensor of data to extract slices from.
- starts (non-differentiable) : Tind
- 1-D tensor of starting indices of corresponding axis in `axes`
- ends (non-differentiable) : Tind
- 1-D tensor of ending indices (exclusive) of corresponding axis in `axes`
- axes (optional, non-differentiable) : Tind
- 1-D tensor of axes that `starts` and `ends` apply to. Negative value means counting dimensions from the back. Accepted range is [-r, r-1] where r = rank(data). Behavior is undefined if an axis is repeated.
- steps (optional, non-differentiable) : Tind
- 1-D tensor of slice step of corresponding axis in `axes`. Negative value means slicing backward. 'steps' cannot be 0. Defaults to 1s.
Outputs
- output (differentiable) : T
- Sliced data tensor.
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(uint8), tensor(uint16), tensor(uint32), tensor(uint64), tensor(int8), tensor(int16), tensor(int32), tensor(int64), tensor(bfloat16), tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(string), tensor(bool), tensor(complex64), tensor(complex128)
- Constrain input and output types to all tensor types.
- Tind : tensor(int32), tensor(int64)
- Constrain indices to integer types
Examples
sliceslice_default_axesslice_default_stepsslice_end_out_of_boundsslice_negslice_neg_stepsslice_negative_axesslice_start_out_of_boundsSoftmax
The operator computes the normalized exponential values for the given input:
Softmax(input, axis) = Exp(input) / ReduceSum(Exp(input), axis=axis, keepdims=1)
The "axis" attribute indicates the dimension along which Softmax will be performed. The output tensor has the same shape and contains the Softmax values of the corresponding input.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 13 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 1, 11
Attributes
- axis : int (default is -1)
- Describes the dimension Softmax will be performed on. Negative value means counting dimensions from the back. Accepted range is [-r, r-1] where r = rank(input).
Inputs
- input (differentiable) : T
- The input tensor of rank >= axis.
Outputs
- output (differentiable) : T
- The output values with the same shape as the input tensor.
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(bfloat16)
- Constrain input and output types to float tensors.
Examples
softmaxsoftmax_axisSoftmaxCrossEntropyLoss
Loss function that measures the softmax cross entropy between 'scores' and 'labels'. This operator first computes a loss tensor whose shape is identical to the labels input. If the input is 2-D with shape (N, C), the loss tensor may be a N-element vector L = (l_1, l_2, ..., l_N). If the input is N-D tensor with shape (N, C, D1, D2, ..., Dk), the loss tensor L may have (N, D1, D2, ..., Dk) as its shape and L[i,][j_1][j_2]...[j_k] denotes a scalar element in L. After L is available, this operator can optionally do a reduction operator.
- shape(scores): (N, C) where C is the number of classes, or (N, C, D1, D2,..., Dk), with K >= 1 in case of K-dimensional loss.
- shape(labels): (N) where each value is 0 <= labels[i] <= C-1, or (N, D1, D2,..., Dk), with K >= 1 in case of K-dimensional loss.
The loss for one sample, l_i, can caculated as follows:
l[i][d1][d2]...[dk] = -y[i][c][d1][d2]..[dk], where i is the index of classes.
or
l[i][d1][d2]...[dk] = -y[i][c][d1][d2]..[dk] * weights[c], if 'weights' is provided.
loss is zero for the case when label-value equals ignore_index.
l[i][d1][d2]...[dk] = 0, when labels[n][d1][d2]...[dk] = ignore_index
where:
p = Softmax(scores)
y = Log(p)
c = labels[i][d1][d2]...[dk]
Finally, L is optionally reduced:
- If reduction = 'none', the output is L with shape (N, D1, D2, ..., Dk).
- If reduction = 'sum', the output is scalar: Sum(L).
- If reduction = 'mean', the output is scalar: ReduceMean(L), or if weight is provided:
ReduceSum(L) / ReduceSum(W)
, where tensor W is of shape(N, D1, D2, ..., Dk)
andW[n][d1][d2]...[dk] = weights[labels[i][d1][d2]...[dk]]
.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 13 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 12
Attributes
- ignore_index : int
- Specifies a target value that is ignored and does not contribute to the input gradient. It's an optional value.
- reduction : string (default is mean)
- Type of reduction to apply to loss: none, sum, mean(default). 'none': no reduction will be applied, 'sum': the output will be summed. 'mean': the sum of the output will be divided by the number of elements in the output.
Inputs (2 - 3)
- scores (differentiable) : T
- The predicted outputs with shape [batch_size, class_size], or [batch_size, class_size, D1, D2 , ..., Dk], where K is the number of dimensions.
- labels (non-differentiable) : Tind
- The ground truth output tensor, with shape [batch_size], or [batch_size, D1, D2, ..., Dk], where K is the number of dimensions. Labels element value shall be in range of [0, C). If ignore_index is specified, it may have a value outside [0, C) and the label values should either be in the range [0, C) or have the value ignore_index.
- weights (optional, non-differentiable) : T
- A manual rescaling weight given to each class. If given, it has to be a 1D Tensor assigning weight to each of the classes. Otherwise, it is treated as if having all ones.
Outputs (1 - 2)
- output (differentiable) : T
- Weighted loss float Tensor. If reduction is 'none', this has the shape of [batch_size], or [batch_size, D1, D2, ..., Dk] in case of K-dimensional loss. Otherwise, it is a scalar.
- log_prob (optional, differentiable) : T
- Log probability tensor. If the output of softmax is prob, its value is log(prob).
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(bfloat16)
- Constrain input and output types to float tensors.
- Tind : tensor(int32), tensor(int64)
- Constrain target to integer types
Examples
input_shape_is_NCd1_mean_weight_negative_iiinput_shape_is_NCd1_mean_weight_negative_ii_log_probinput_shape_is_NCd1d2d3_none_no_weight_negative_iiinput_shape_is_NCd1d2d3_none_no_weight_negative_ii_log_probinput_shape_is_NCd1d2d3_sum_weight_high_iiinput_shape_is_NCd1d2d3_sum_weight_high_ii_log_probinput_shape_is_NCd1d2d3d4d5_mean_weightinput_shape_is_NCd1d2d3d4d5_mean_weight_log_probinput_shape_is_NCd1d2d3d4d5_none_no_weightinput_shape_is_NCd1d2d3d4d5_none_no_weight_log_probsoftmaxcrossentropy_meansoftmaxcrossentropy_mean_3dsoftmaxcrossentropy_mean_3d_log_probsoftmaxcrossentropy_mean_log_probsoftmaxcrossentropy_mean_no_weights_iisoftmaxcrossentropy_mean_no_weights_ii_3dsoftmaxcrossentropy_mean_no_weights_ii_3d_log_probsoftmaxcrossentropy_mean_no_weights_ii_4dsoftmaxcrossentropy_mean_no_weights_ii_4d_log_probsoftmaxcrossentropy_mean_no_weights_ii_log_probsoftmaxcrossentropy_mean_weightssoftmaxcrossentropy_mean_weights_iisoftmaxcrossentropy_mean_weights_ii_3dsoftmaxcrossentropy_mean_weights_ii_3d_log_probsoftmaxcrossentropy_mean_weights_ii_4dsoftmaxcrossentropy_mean_weights_ii_4d_log_probsoftmaxcrossentropy_mean_weights_ii_log_probsoftmaxcrossentropy_mean_weights_log_probsoftmaxcrossentropy_nonesoftmaxcrossentropy_none_log_probsoftmaxcrossentropy_none_weightssoftmaxcrossentropy_none_weights_log_probsoftmaxcrossentropy_sumsoftmaxcrossentropy_sum_log_probSoftplus
Softplus takes one input data (Tensor) and produces one output data (Tensor) where the softplus function, y = ln(exp(x) + 1), is applied to the tensor elementwise.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 1 of the default ONNX operator set.
Inputs
- X (differentiable) : T
- 1D input tensor
Outputs
- Y (differentiable) : T
- 1D input tensor
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double)
- Constrain input and output types to float tensors.
Examples
softplusSoftsign
Calculates the softsign (x/(1+|x|)) of the given input tensor element-wise.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 1 of the default ONNX operator set.
Inputs
- input (differentiable) : T
- Input tensor
Outputs
- output (differentiable) : T
- The softsign (x/(1+|x|)) values of the input tensor computed element-wise
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double)
- Constrain input and output types to float tensors.
Examples
softsignSpaceToDepth
SpaceToDepth rearranges blocks of spatial data into depth. More specifically, this op outputs a copy of the input tensor where values from the height and width dimensions are moved to the depth dimension.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 13 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 1
Attributes
- blocksize : int (required)
- Blocks of [blocksize, blocksize] are moved.
Inputs
- input (differentiable) : T
- Input tensor of [N,C,H,W], where N is the batch axis, C is the channel or depth, H is the height and W is the width.
Outputs
- output (differentiable) : T
- Output tensor of [N, C * blocksize * blocksize, H/blocksize, W/blocksize].
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(uint8), tensor(uint16), tensor(uint32), tensor(uint64), tensor(int8), tensor(int16), tensor(int32), tensor(int64), tensor(bfloat16), tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(string), tensor(bool), tensor(complex64), tensor(complex128)
- Constrain input and output types to all tensor types.
Examples
examplespacetodepthSplit
Split a tensor into a list of tensors, along the specified 'axis'. Either input 'split' or the attribute 'num_outputs' should be specified, but not both. If the attribute 'num_outputs' is specified, then the tensor is split into equal sized parts. If the tensor is not evenly splittable into num_outputs
, the last chunk will be smaller. If the input 'split' is specified, it indicates the sizes of each output in the split.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 18 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 1, 2, 11, 13
Attributes
- axis : int (default is 0)
- Which axis to split on. A negative value means counting dimensions from the back. Accepted range is [-rank, rank-1] where r = rank(input).
- num_outputs : int
- Number of outputs to split parts of the tensor into. If the tensor is not evenly splittable the last chunk will be smaller.
Inputs (1 - 2)
- input (differentiable) : T
- The tensor to split
- split (optional, non-differentiable) : tensor(int64)
- Optional length of each output. Values should be >= 0.Sum of the values must be equal to the dim value at 'axis' specified.
Outputs (1 - ∞)
- outputs (variadic, differentiable) : T
- One or more outputs forming list of tensors after splitting
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(uint8), tensor(uint16), tensor(uint32), tensor(uint64), tensor(int8), tensor(int16), tensor(int32), tensor(int64), tensor(bfloat16), tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(string), tensor(bool), tensor(complex64), tensor(complex128)
- Constrain input and output types to all tensor types.
Examples
1d_opset131d_opset181d_uneven_split_opset182d_opset132d_opset182d_uneven_split_opset18default_values_opset13default_values_opset18zero_size_splits_opset13zero_size_splits_opset18SplitToSequence
Split a tensor into a sequence of tensors, along the specified 'axis'. Lengths of the parts can be specified using the optional argument 'split'. If the argument split' is not specified, a default scalar value of 1 is used as the value of
split'. 'split' must contain only positive numbers. 'split' is either a scalar (tensor of empty shape), or a 1-D tensor. If 'split' is a scalar, then 'input' will be split into chunks all of size 'split' if possible. The last chunk alone may be smaller than 'split' if the 'input' size along the given axis 'axis' is not divisible by 'split'. If 'split' is a 1-dimensional tensor, the input tensor is split into 'size(split)' chunks, with lengths of the parts on 'axis' specified in 'split'. In this scenario, the sum of entries in 'split' must be equal to the dimension size of input tensor on 'axis'.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 11 of the default ONNX operator set.
Attributes
- axis : int (default is 0)
- Which axis to split on. A negative value means counting dimensions from the back. Accepted range is [-rank, rank-1].
- keepdims : int (default is 1)
- Keep the split dimension or not. Default 1, which means we keep split dimension. If input 'split' is specified, this attribute is ignored.
Inputs (1 - 2)
- input : T
- The tensor to split
- split (optional) : I
- Length of each output. It can be either a scalar(tensor of empty shape), or a 1-D tensor. All values must be >= 0.
Outputs
- output_sequence : S
- One or more outputs forming a sequence of tensors after splitting
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(uint8), tensor(uint16), tensor(uint32), tensor(uint64), tensor(int8), tensor(int16), tensor(int32), tensor(int64), tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(string), tensor(bool), tensor(complex64), tensor(complex128)
- Constrain input types to all tensor types.
- I : tensor(int32), tensor(int64)
- Constrain split size to integral tensor.
- S : seq(tensor(uint8)), seq(tensor(uint16)), seq(tensor(uint32)), seq(tensor(uint64)), seq(tensor(int8)), seq(tensor(int16)), seq(tensor(int32)), seq(tensor(int64)), seq(tensor(float16)), seq(tensor(float)), seq(tensor(double)), seq(tensor(string)), seq(tensor(bool)), seq(tensor(complex64)), seq(tensor(complex128))
- Constrain output types to all tensor types.
Examples
nokeepdimswith_split_1with_split_2Sqrt
Square root takes one input data (Tensor) and produces one output data (Tensor) where the square root is, y = x^0.5, is applied to the tensor elementwise. If x is negative, then it will return NaN.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 13 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 1, 6
Inputs
- X (differentiable) : T
- Input tensor
Outputs
- Y (differentiable) : T
- Output tensor
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(bfloat16)
- Constrain input and output types to float tensors.
Examples
sqrtSqueeze
Remove single-dimensional entries from the shape of a tensor. Takes an input axes
with a list of axes to squeeze. If axes
is not provided, all the single dimensions will be removed from the shape. If an axis is selected with shape entry not equal to one, an error is raised.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 13 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 1, 11
Inputs (1 - 2)
- data (differentiable) : T
- Tensors with at least max(dims) dimensions.
- axes (optional, non-differentiable) : tensor(int64)
- List of integers indicating the dimensions to squeeze. Negative value means counting dimensions from the back. Accepted range is [-r, r-1] where r = rank(data).
Outputs
- squeezed (differentiable) : T
- Reshaped tensor with same data as input.
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(uint8), tensor(uint16), tensor(uint32), tensor(uint64), tensor(int8), tensor(int16), tensor(int32), tensor(int64), tensor(bfloat16), tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(string), tensor(bool), tensor(complex64), tensor(complex128)
- Constrain input and output types to all tensor types.
Examples
squeezesqueeze_negative_axesStringNormalizer
StringNormalization performs string operations for basic cleaning. This operator has only one input (denoted by X) and only one output (denoted by Y). This operator first examines the elements in the X, and removes elements specified in "stopwords" attribute. After removing stop words, the intermediate result can be further lowercased, uppercased, or just returned depending the "case_change_action" attribute. This operator only accepts [C]- and [1, C]-tensor. If all elements in X are dropped, the output will be the empty value of string tensor with shape [1] if input shape is [C] and shape [1, 1] if input shape is [1, C].
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 10 of the default ONNX operator set.
Attributes
- case_change_action : string (default is NONE)
- string enum that cases output to be lowercased/uppercases/unchanged. Valid values are "LOWER", "UPPER", "NONE". Default is "NONE"
- is_case_sensitive : int (default is 0)
- Boolean. Whether the identification of stop words in X is case-sensitive. Default is false
- locale : string
- Environment dependent string that denotes the locale according to which output strings needs to be upper/lowercased.Default en_US or platform specific equivalent as decided by the implementation.
- stopwords : list of strings
- List of stop words. If not set, no word would be removed from X.
Inputs
- X : tensor(string)
- UTF-8 strings to normalize
Outputs
- Y : tensor(string)
- UTF-8 Normalized strings
Type Constraints
Examples
monday_casesensintive_lowermonday_casesensintive_nochangecasemonday_casesensintive_uppermonday_empty_outputmonday_insensintive_upper_twodimnostopwords_nochangecaseSub
Performs element-wise binary subtraction (with Numpy-style broadcasting support).
This operator supports multidirectional (i.e., Numpy-style) broadcasting; for more details please check the doc.
(Opset 14 change): Extend supported types to include uint8, int8, uint16, and int16.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 14 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 1, 6, 7, 13
Inputs
- A (differentiable) : T
- First operand.
- B (differentiable) : T
- Second operand.
Outputs
- C (differentiable) : T
- Result, has same element type as two inputs
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(uint8), tensor(uint16), tensor(uint32), tensor(uint64), tensor(int8), tensor(int16), tensor(int32), tensor(int64), tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(bfloat16)
- Constrain input and output types to all numeric tensors.
Examples
subsub_broadcastSum
Element-wise sum of each of the input tensors (with Numpy-style broadcasting support). All inputs and outputs must have the same data type. This operator supports multidirectional (i.e., Numpy-style) broadcasting; for more details please check the doc.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 13 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 1, 6, 8
Inputs (1 - ∞)
- data_0 (variadic, differentiable) : T
- List of tensors for sum.
Outputs
- sum (differentiable) : T
- Output tensor.
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(bfloat16)
- Constrain input and output types to float tensors.
Examples
sumTan
Calculates the tangent of the given input tensor, element-wise.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 7 of the default ONNX operator set.
Inputs
- input (differentiable) : T
- Input tensor
Outputs
- output (differentiable) : T
- The tangent of the input tensor computed element-wise
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double)
- Constrain input and output types to float tensors.
Examples
tanTanh
Calculates the hyperbolic tangent of the given input tensor element-wise.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 13 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 1, 6
Inputs
- input (differentiable) : T
- Input tensor
Outputs
- output (differentiable) : T
- The hyperbolic tangent values of the input tensor computed element-wise
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(bfloat16)
- Constrain input and output types to float tensors.
Examples
tanhTfIdfVectorizer
This transform extracts n-grams from the input sequence and save them as a vector. Input can be either a 1-D or 2-D tensor. For 1-D input, output is the n-gram representation of that input. For 2-D input, the output is also a 2-D tensor whose i-th row is the n-gram representation of the i-th input row. More specifically, if input shape is [C], the corresponding output shape would be [max(ngram_indexes) + 1]. If input shape is [N, C], this operator produces a [N, max(ngram_indexes) + 1]-tensor.
In contrast to standard n-gram extraction, here, the indexes of extracting an n-gram from the original sequence are not necessarily consecutive numbers. The discontinuity between indexes are controlled by the number of skips. If the number of skips is 2, we should skip two tokens when scanning through the original sequence. Let's consider an example. Assume that input sequence is [94, 17, 36, 12, 28] and the number of skips is 2. The associated 2-grams are [94, 12] and [17, 28] respectively indexed by [0, 3] and [1, 4]. If the number of skips becomes 0, the 2-grams generated are [94, 17], [17, 36], [36, 12], [12, 28] indexed by [0, 1], [1, 2], [2, 3], [3, 4], respectively.
The output vector (denoted by Y) stores the count of each n-gram; Y[ngram_indexes[i]] indicates the times that the i-th n-gram is found. The attribute ngram_indexes is used to determine the mapping between index i and the corresponding n-gram's output coordinate. If pool_int64s is [94, 17, 17, 36], ngram_indexes is [1, 0], ngram_counts=[0, 0], then the Y[0] (first element in Y) and Y[1] (second element in Y) are the counts of [17, 36] and [94, 17], respectively. An n-gram which cannot be found in pool_strings/pool_int64s should be ignored and has no effect on the output. Note that we may consider all skips up to S when generating the n-grams.
The examples used above are true if mode is "TF". If mode is "IDF", all the counts larger than 1 would be truncated to 1 and the i-th element in weights would be used to scale (by multiplication) the count of the i-th n-gram in pool. If mode is "TFIDF", this operator first computes the counts of all n-grams and then scale them by the associated values in the weights attribute.
Only one of pool_strings and pool_int64s can be set. If pool_int64s is set, the input should be an integer tensor. If pool_strings is set, the input must be a string tensor.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 9 of the default ONNX operator set.
Attributes
- max_gram_length : int (required)
- Maximum n-gram length. If this value is 3, 3-grams will be used to generate the output.
- max_skip_count : int (required)
- Maximum number of items (integers/strings) to be skipped when constructing an n-gram from X. If max_skip_count=1, min_gram_length=2, max_gram_length=3, this operator may generate 2-grams with skip_count=0 and skip_count=1, and 3-grams with skip_count=0 and skip_count=1
- min_gram_length : int (required)
- Minimum n-gram length. If this value is 2 and max_gram_length is 3, output may contain counts of 2-grams and 3-grams.
- mode : string (required)
- The weighting criteria. It can be one of "TF" (term frequency), "IDF" (inverse document frequency), and "TFIDF" (the combination of TF and IDF)
- ngram_counts : list of ints (required)
- The starting indexes of 1-grams, 2-grams, and so on in pool. It is useful when determining the boundary between two consecutive collections of n-grams. For example, if ngram_counts is [0, 17, 36], the first index (zero-based) of 1-gram/2-gram/3-gram in pool are 0/17/36. This format is essentially identical to CSR (or CSC) sparse matrix format, and we choose to use this due to its popularity.
- ngram_indexes : list of ints (required)
- list of int64s (type: AttributeProto::INTS). This list is parallel to the specified 'pool_*' attribute. The i-th element in ngram_indexes indicate the coordinate of the i-th n-gram in the output tensor.
- pool_int64s : list of ints
- List of int64 n-grams learned from the training set. Either this or pool_strings attributes must be present but not both. It's an 1-D tensor starting with the collections of all 1-grams and ending with the collections of n-grams. The i-th element in pool stores the n-gram that should be mapped to coordinate ngram_indexes[i] in the output vector.
- pool_strings : list of strings
- List of strings n-grams learned from the training set. Either this or pool_int64s attributes must be present but not both. It's an 1-D tensor starting with the collections of all 1-grams and ending with the collections of n-grams. The i-th element in pool stores the n-gram that should be mapped to coordinate ngram_indexes[i] in the output vector.
- weights : list of floats
- list of floats. This attribute stores the weight of each n-gram in pool. The i-th element in weights is the weight of the i-th n-gram in pool. Its length equals to the size of ngram_indexes. By default, weights is an all-one tensor.This attribute is used when mode is "IDF" or "TFIDF" to scale the associated word counts.
Inputs
- X (non-differentiable) : T
- Input for n-gram extraction
Outputs
- Y (non-differentiable) : T1
- Ngram results
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(string), tensor(int32), tensor(int64)
- Input is ether string UTF-8 or int32/int64
- T1 : tensor(float)
- 1-D tensor of floats
Examples
tf_batch_onlybigrams_skip0tf_batch_onlybigrams_skip5tf_batch_uniandbigrams_skip5tf_only_bigrams_skip0tf_onlybigrams_levelemptytf_onlybigrams_skip5tf_uniandbigrams_skip5ThresholdedRelu
ThresholdedRelu takes one input data (Tensor) and produces one output data (Tensor) where the rectified linear function, y = x for x > alpha, y = 0 otherwise, is applied to the tensor elementwise.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 10 of the default ONNX operator set.
Attributes
- alpha : float (default is 1.0)
- Threshold value
Inputs
- X (differentiable) : T
- Input tensor
Outputs
- Y (differentiable) : T
- Output tensor
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double)
- Constrain input and output types to float tensors.
Examples
defaultthresholdedreluTile
Constructs a tensor by tiling a given tensor. This is the same as function tile
in Numpy, but no broadcast. For example A = [[1, 2], [3, 4]], B = [1, 2], tile(A, B) = [[1, 2, 1, 2], [3, 4, 3, 4]]
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 13 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 1, 6
Inputs
- input (differentiable) : T
- Input tensor of any shape.
- repeats (non-differentiable) : T1
- 1D int64 tensor of the same length as input's dimension number, includes numbers of repeated copies along input's dimensions.
Outputs
- output (differentiable) : T
- Output tensor of the same dimensions and type as tensor input. output_dim[i] = input_dim[i] * repeats[i]
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(uint8), tensor(uint16), tensor(uint32), tensor(uint64), tensor(int8), tensor(int16), tensor(int32), tensor(int64), tensor(bfloat16), tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(string), tensor(bool), tensor(complex64), tensor(complex128)
- Constrain input and output types to all tensor types.
- T1 : tensor(int64)
- Constrain repeat's type to int64 tensors.
Examples
tiletile_precomputedTopK
Retrieve the top-K largest or smallest elements along a specified axis. Given an input tensor of shape [a_1, a_2, ..., a_n, r] and integer argument k, return two outputs:
-
Value tensor of shape [a_1, a_2, ..., a_{axis-1}, k, a_{axis+1}, ... a_n] which contains the values of the top k elements along the specified axis
-
Index tensor of shape [a_1, a_2, ..., a_{axis-1}, k, a_{axis+1}, ... a_n] which contains the indices of the top k elements (original indices from the input tensor).
-
If "largest" is 1 (the default value) then the k largest elements are returned.
-
If "sorted" is 1 (the default value) then the resulting k elements will be sorted.
-
If "sorted" is 0, order of returned 'Values' and 'Indices' are undefined.
Given two equivalent values, this operator uses the indices along the axis as a tiebreaker. That is, the element with the lower index will appear first.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 11 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 1, 10
Attributes
- axis : int (default is -1)
- Dimension on which to do the sort. Negative value means counting dimensions from the back. Accepted range is [-r, r-1] where r = rank(input).
- largest : int (default is 1)
- Whether to return the top-K largest or smallest elements.
- sorted : int (default is 1)
- Whether to return the elements in sorted order.
Inputs
- X (differentiable) : T
- Tensor of shape [a_1, a_2, ..., a_n, r]
- K (non-differentiable) : tensor(int64)
- A 1-D tensor containing a single positive value corresponding to the number of top elements to retrieve
Outputs
- Values (differentiable) : T
- Tensor of shape [a_1, a_2, ..., a_{axis-1}, k, a_{axis+1}, ... a_n] containing top K values from the input tensor
- Indices (non-differentiable) : I
- Tensor of shape [a_1, a_2, ..., a_{axis-1}, k, a_{axis+1}, ... a_n] containing the corresponding input tensor indices for the top K values.
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(uint8), tensor(uint16), tensor(uint32), tensor(uint64), tensor(int8), tensor(int16), tensor(int32), tensor(int64), tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double)
- Constrain input and output types to numeric tensors.
- I : tensor(int64)
- Constrain index tensor to int64
Examples
top_ktop_k_negative_axistop_k_smallestTranspose
Transpose the input tensor similar to numpy.transpose. For example, when perm=(1, 0, 2), given an input tensor of shape (1, 2, 3), the output shape will be (2, 1, 3).
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 13 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 1
Attributes
- perm : list of ints
- A list of integers. By default, reverse the dimensions, otherwise permute the axes according to the values given.
Inputs
- data (differentiable) : T
- An input tensor.
Outputs
- transposed (differentiable) : T
- Transposed output.
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(uint8), tensor(uint16), tensor(uint32), tensor(uint64), tensor(int8), tensor(int16), tensor(int32), tensor(int64), tensor(bfloat16), tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(string), tensor(bool), tensor(complex64), tensor(complex128)
- Constrain input and output types to all tensor types.
Examples
all_permutationsdefaultTrilu
Given a 2-D matrix or batches of 2-D matrices, returns the upper or lower triangular part of the tensor(s). The attribute "upper" determines whether the upper or lower part is retained. If set to true, the upper triangular matrix is retained. Lower triangular matrix is retained otherwise. Default value for the "upper" attribute is true. Trilu takes one input tensor of shape [*, N, M], where * is zero or more batch dimensions. The upper triangular part consists of the elements on and above the given diagonal (k). The lower triangular part consists of elements on and below the diagonal. All other elements in the matrix are set to zero. If k = 0, the triangular part on and above/below the main diagonal is retained. If upper is set to true, a positive k retains the upper triangular matrix excluding the main diagonal and (k-1) diagonals above it. A negative k value retains the main diagonal and |k| diagonals below it. If upper is set to false, a positive k retains the lower triangular matrix including the main diagonal and k diagonals above it. A negative k value excludes the main diagonal and (|k|-1) diagonals below it.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 14 of the default ONNX operator set.
Attributes
- upper : int (default is 1)
- Boolean. Indicates whether upper or lower part of matrix is retained. Default is true.
Inputs (1 - 2)
- input (differentiable) : T
- Input tensor of rank 2 or higher.
- k (optional, non-differentiable) : tensor(int64)
- A 0-D tensor containing a single value corresponding to the number diagonals above or below the main diagonal to exclude or include. Default value is 0 if it's not specified.
Outputs
- output (differentiable) : T
- Output tensor of the same type and shape as the input tensor.
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(uint8), tensor(uint16), tensor(uint32), tensor(uint64), tensor(int8), tensor(int16), tensor(int32), tensor(int64), tensor(bfloat16), tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(string), tensor(bool), tensor(complex64), tensor(complex128)
- Constrain input and output types to all tensor types.
Examples
triltril_negtril_one_rowtril_out_negtril_out_postril_postril_squaretril_square_negtril_zerotriutriu_negtriu_one_rowtriu_out_neg_outtriu_out_postriu_postriu_squaretriu_square_negtriu_zeroUnique
Find the unique elements of a tensor. When an optional attribute 'axis' is provided, unique subtensors sliced along the 'axis' are returned. Otherwise the input tensor is flattened and unique values of the flattened tensor are returned.
This operator returns the unique values or sliced unique subtensors of the input tensor and three optional outputs. The first output tensor 'Y' contains all unique values or subtensors of the input. The second optional output tensor 'indices' contains indices of 'Y' elements' first occurance in 'X'.. The third optional output tensor 'inverse_indices' contains, for elements of 'X', its corresponding indices in 'Y'. ". The fourth optional output tensor 'counts' contains the count of each element of 'Y' in the input.
Outputs are either sorted in ascending order or optionally in the order of the first occurrence of the values in the input.
https://docs.scipy.org/doc/numpy/reference/generated/numpy.unique.html
Example 1:
input_X = [2, 1, 1, 3, 4, 3]
attribute_sorted = 0
attribute_axis = None
output_Y = [2, 1, 3, 4]
output_indices = [0, 1, 3, 4]
output_inverse_indices = [0, 1, 1, 2, 3, 2]
output_counts = [1, 2, 2, 1]
Example 2:
input_X = [[1, 3], [2, 3]]
attribute_sorted = 1
attribute_axis = None
output_Y = [1, 2, 3]
output_indices = [0, 2, 1]
output_inverse_indices = [0, 2, 1, 2]
output_counts = [1, 1, 2]
Example 3:
input_X = [[1, 0, 0], [1, 0, 0], [2, 3, 4]]
attribute_sorted = 1
attribute_axis = 0
output_Y = [[1, 0, 0], [2, 3, 4]]
output_indices = [0, 2]
output_inverse_indices = [0, 0, 1]
output_counts = [2, 1]
Example 4:
input_x = [[[1., 1.], [0., 1.], [2., 1.], [0., 1.]],
[[1., 1.], [0., 1.], [2., 1.], [0., 1.]]]
attribute_sorted = 1
attribute_axis = 1
intermediate data are presented below for better understanding: there are 4 subtensors sliced along axis 1 of input_x (shape = (2, 4, 2)):
A: [[1, 1], [1, 1]],
[[0, 1], [0, 1]],
[[2, 1], [2, 1]],
[[0, 1], [0, 1]].
there are 3 unique subtensors:
[[1, 1], [1, 1]],
[[0, 1], [0, 1]],
[[2, 1], [2, 1]].
sorted unique subtensors:
B: [[0, 1], [0, 1]],
[[1, 1], [1, 1]],
[[2, 1], [2, 1]].
output_Y is constructed from B:
[[[0. 1.], [1. 1.], [2. 1.]],
[[0. 1.], [1. 1.], [2. 1.]]]
output_indices is to map from B to A:
[1, 0, 2]
output_inverse_indices is to map from A to B:
[1, 0, 2, 0]
output_counts:
[2, 1, 1]
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 11 of the default ONNX operator set.
Attributes
- axis : int
- (Optional) The dimension to apply unique. If not specified, the unique elements of the flattened input are returned. Negative value means counting dimensions from the back. Accepted range is [-r, r-1] where r = rank(input).
- sorted : int (default is 1)
- (Optional) Whether to sort the unique elements in ascending order before returning as output. Must be one of 0, or 1 (default).
Inputs
- X (non-differentiable) : T
- A N-D input tensor that is to be processed.
Outputs (1 - 4)
- Y (non-differentiable) : T
- A tensor of the same type as 'X' containing all the unique values or subtensors sliced along a provided 'axis' in 'X', either sorted or maintained in the same order they occur in input 'X'
- indices (optional, non-differentiable) : tensor(int64)
- A 1-D INT64 tensor containing indices of 'Y' elements' first occurance in 'X'. When 'axis' is provided, it contains indices to subtensors in input 'X' on the 'axis'. When 'axis' is not provided, it contains indices to values in the flattened input tensor.
- inverse_indices (optional, non-differentiable) : tensor(int64)
- A 1-D INT64 tensor containing, for elements of 'X', its corresponding indices in 'Y'. When 'axis' is provided, it contains indices to subtensors in output 'Y' on the 'axis'. When 'axis' is not provided, it contains indices to values in output 'Y'.
- counts (optional, non-differentiable) : tensor(int64)
- A 1-D INT64 tensor containing the count of each element of 'Y' in input 'X'
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(uint8), tensor(uint16), tensor(uint32), tensor(uint64), tensor(int8), tensor(int16), tensor(int32), tensor(int64), tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(string), tensor(bool), tensor(complex64), tensor(complex128)
- Input can be of any tensor type.
Examples
not_sorted_without_axissorted_with_axissorted_with_axis_3dsorted_with_negative_axissorted_without_axisUnsqueeze
Insert single-dimensional entries to the shape of an input tensor (data
). Takes one required input axes
- which contains a list of dimension indices and this operator will insert a dimension of value 1
into the corresponding index of the output tensor (expanded
).
For example, given an input tensor (data
) of shape [3, 4, 5], then Unsqueeze(data, axes=[0, 4]) outputs a tensor (expanded
) containing same data as data
but with shape [1, 3, 4, 5, 1].
The input axes
should not contain any duplicate entries. It is an error if it contains duplicates. The rank of the output tensor (output_rank
) is the rank of the input tensor (data
) plus the number of values in axes
. Each value in axes
should be within the (inclusive) range [-output_rank , output_rank - 1]. The order of values in axes
does not matter and can come in any order.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 13 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 1, 11
Inputs
- data (differentiable) : T
- Original tensor
- axes (non-differentiable) : tensor(int64)
- List of integers indicating the dimensions to be inserted. Negative value means counting dimensions from the back. Accepted range is [-r, r-1] where r = rank(expanded).
Outputs
- expanded (differentiable) : T
- Reshaped tensor with same data as input.
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(uint8), tensor(uint16), tensor(uint32), tensor(uint64), tensor(int8), tensor(int16), tensor(int32), tensor(int64), tensor(bfloat16), tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(string), tensor(bool), tensor(complex64), tensor(complex128)
- Constrain input and output types to all tensor types.
Examples
unsqueeze_negative_axesunsqueeze_one_axisunsqueeze_three_axesunsqueeze_two_axesunsqueeze_unsorted_axesUpsample (deprecated)
Upsample the input tensor. Each dimension value of the output tensor is: output_dimension = floor(input_dimension * scale).
Version
This version of the operator has been deprecated since version 10 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 7, 9
Examples
nearestWhere
Return elements, either from X or Y, depending on condition. Where behaves like numpy.where with three parameters.
This operator supports multidirectional (i.e., Numpy-style) broadcasting; for more details please check the doc.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 16 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 9
Inputs
- condition (non-differentiable) : B
- When True (nonzero), yield X, otherwise yield Y
- X (differentiable) : T
- values selected at indices where condition is True
- Y (differentiable) : T
- values selected at indices where condition is False
Outputs
- output (differentiable) : T
- Tensor of shape equal to the broadcasted shape of condition, X, and Y.
Type Constraints
- B : tensor(bool)
- Constrain to boolean tensors.
- T : tensor(uint8), tensor(uint16), tensor(uint32), tensor(uint64), tensor(int8), tensor(int16), tensor(int32), tensor(int64), tensor(bfloat16), tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(string), tensor(bool), tensor(complex64), tensor(complex128)
- Constrain input and output types to all tensor types (including bfloat).
Examples
longwhereXor
Returns the tensor resulted from performing the xor
logical operation elementwise on the input tensors A
and B
(with Numpy-style broadcasting support).
This operator supports multidirectional (i.e., Numpy-style) broadcasting; for more details please check the doc.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 7 of the default ONNX operator set.
Other versions of this operator: 1
Inputs
- A (non-differentiable) : T
- First input operand for the logical operator.
- B (non-differentiable) : T
- Second input operand for the logical operator.
Outputs
- C (non-differentiable) : T1
- Result tensor.
Type Constraints
- T : tensor(bool)
- Constrain input to boolean tensor.
- T1 : tensor(bool)
- Constrain output to boolean tensor.
Examples
xorxor_broadcastai.onnx.preview.training
ai.onnx.preview.training.Adagrad
Compute one iteration of ADAGRAD, a stochastic gradient based optimization algorithm. This operator can conduct the optimization of multiple tensor variables.
Let's define the behavior of this operator. As you can imagine, ADAGRAD requires
some parameters:
- The initial learning-rate "R".
- The update count "T". That is, the number of training iterations conducted.
- A L2-norm regularization coefficient "norm_coefficient".
- A learning-rate decay factor "decay_factor".
- A small constant "epsilon" to avoid dividing-by-zero.
At each ADAGRAD iteration, the optimized tensors are moved along a direction
computed based on their estimated gradient and accumulated squared gradient. Assume
that only a single tensor "X" is updated by this operator. We need the value of "X",
its gradient "G", and its accumulated squared gradient "H". Therefore, variables in
this operator's input list are sequentially "R", "T", "X", "G", and "H". Other
parameters are given as attributes because they are usually constants. Also, the
corresponding output tensors are the new value of "X" (called "X_new"), and then
the new accumulated squared gradient (called "H_new"). Those outputs are computed
from the given inputs following the pseudo code below.
Let "+", "-", "*", and "/" are all element-wise arithmetic operations with
numpy-style broadcasting support. The pseudo code to compute those outputs is:
// Compute a scalar learning-rate factor. At the first update of X, T is generally
// 0 (0-based update index) or 1 (1-based update index).
r = R / (1 + T * decay_factor);
// Add gradient of 0.5 * norm_coefficient * ||X||_2^2, where ||X||_2 is the 2-norm.
G_regularized = norm_coefficient * X + G;
// Compute new accumulated squared gradient.
H_new = H + G_regularized * G_regularized;
// Compute the adaptive part of per-coordinate learning rate. Note that Sqrt(...)
// computes element-wise square-root.
H_adaptive = Sqrt(H_new) + epsilon
// Compute the new value of "X".
X_new = X - r * G_regularized / H_adaptive;
If one assign this operators to optimize multiple inputs, for example, "X_1" and "X_2", the same
pseudo code may be extended to handle all tensors jointly. More specifically, we can view "X" as a
concatenation of "X_1" and "X_2" (of course, their gradient and accumulate gradient should
be concatenated too) and then just reuse the entire pseudo code.
Note that ADAGRAD was first proposed in http://jmlr.org/papers/volume12/duchi11a/duchi11a.pdf.
In that reference paper, this operator is a special case of the Figure 1's composite mirror
descent update.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 1 of the 'ai.onnx.preview.training' operator set.
Attributes
- decay_factor : float (default is 0.0)
- The decay factor of learning rate after one update.The effective learning rate is computed by r = R / (1 + T * decay_factor). Default to 0 so that increasing update counts doesn't reduce the learning rate.
- epsilon : float (default is 0.0)
- Small scalar to avoid dividing by zero.
- norm_coefficient : float (default is 0.0)
- Regularization coefficient in 0.5 * norm_coefficient * ||X||_2^2. Default to 0, which means no regularization.
Inputs (3 - ∞)
- R : T1
- The initial learning rate.
- T : T2
- The update count of "X". It should be a scalar.
- inputs (variadic, heterogeneous) : T3
- The current values of optimized tensors, followed by their respective gradients, followed by their respective accumulated squared gradients.For example, if two tensor "X_1" and "X_2" are optimized, The input list would be ["X_1", "X_2", gradient of "X_1", gradient of "X_2", accumulated squared gradient of "X_1", accumulated squared gradient of "X_2"].
Outputs (1 - ∞)
- outputs (variadic, heterogeneous) : T3
- Updated values of optimized tensors, followed by their updated values of accumulated squared gradients. For example, if two tensor "X_1" and "X_2" are optimized, the output list would be [new value of "X_1," new value of "X_2" new accumulated squared gradient of "X_1", new accumulated squared gradient of "X_2"].
Type Constraints
- T1 : tensor(float), tensor(double)
- Constrain input types to float scalars.
- T2 : tensor(int64)
- Constrain input types to 64-bit integer scalars.
- T3 : tensor(float), tensor(double)
- Constrain input and output types to float tensors.
Examples
adagradadagrad_multipleai.onnx.preview.training.Adam
Compute one iteration of Adam, a stochastic gradient based optimization algorithm. This operator can conduct the optimization of multiple tensor variables.
Let's define the behavior of this operator. First of all, Adam requires
some parameters:
- The learning-rate "R".
- The update count "T". That is, the number of training iterations conducted.
- A L2-norm regularization coefficient "norm_coefficient".
- A small constant "epsilon" to avoid dividing-by-zero.
- Two coefficients, "alpha" and "beta".
At each Adam iteration, the optimized tensors are moved along a direction
computed based on their exponentially-averaged historical gradient and
exponentially-averaged historical squared gradient. Assume that only a tensor
"X" is being optimized. The rest of required information is
- the value of "X",
- "X"'s gradient (denoted by "G"),
- "X"'s exponentially-averaged historical gradient (denoted by "V"), and
- "X"'s exponentially-averaged historical squared gradient (denoted by "H").
Some of those parameters are passed into this operator as input tensors and others
are stored as this operator's attributes. Specifically, this operator's input tensor
list is ["R", "T", "X", "G", "V", "H"]. That is, "R" is the first input, "T" is
the second input, and so on. Other parameters are given as attributes because they
are constants. Moreover, the corresponding output tensors are
- the new value of "X" (called "X_new"),
- the new exponentially-averaged historical gradient (denoted by "V_new"), and
- the new exponentially-averaged historical squared gradient (denoted by "H_new").
Those outputs are computed following the pseudo code below.
Let "+", "-", "*", and "/" are all element-wise arithmetic operations with
numpy-style broadcasting support. The pseudo code to compute those outputs is:
// Add gradient of 0.5 * norm_coefficient * ||X||_2^2, where ||X||_2 is the 2-norm.
G_regularized = norm_coefficient * X + G
// Update exponentially-averaged historical gradient.
V_new = alpha * V + (1 - alpha) * G_regularized
// Update exponentially-averaged historical squared gradient.
H_new = beta * H + (1 - beta) * G_regularized * G_regularized
// Compute the element-wise square-root of H_new. V_new will be element-wisely
// divided by H_sqrt for a better update direction.
H_sqrt = Sqrt(H_new) + epsilon
// Compute learning-rate. Note that "alpha**T"/"beta**T" is alpha's/beta's T-th power.
R_adjusted = T > 0 ? R * Sqrt(1 - beta**T) / (1 - alpha**T) : R
// Compute new value of "X".
X_new = X - R_adjusted * V_new / H_sqrt
// Post-update regularization.
X_final = (1 - norm_coefficient_post) * X_new
If there are multiple inputs to be optimized, the pseudo code will be applied
independently to each of them.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 1 of the 'ai.onnx.preview.training' operator set.
Attributes
- alpha : float (default is 0.9)
- Coefficient of previously accumulated gradient in running average. Default to 0.9.
- beta : float (default is 0.999)
- Coefficient of previously accumulated squared-gradient in running average. Default to 0.999.
- epsilon : float (default is 0.0)
- Small scalar to avoid dividing by zero.
- norm_coefficient : float (default is 0.0)
- Regularization coefficient of 0.5 * norm_coefficient * ||X||_2^2. Default to 0, which means no regularization.
- norm_coefficient_post : float (default is 0.0)
- Regularization coefficient of 0.5 * norm_coefficient * ||X||_2^2. Default to 0, which means no regularization.
Inputs (3 - ∞)
- R : T1
- The initial learning rate.
- T : T2
- The update count of "X". It should be a scalar.
- inputs (variadic, heterogeneous) : T3
- The tensors to be optimized, followed by their respective gradients, followed by their respective accumulated gradients (aka momentum), followed by their respective accumulated squared gradients. For example, to optimize tensors "X_1" and "X_2,", the input list would be ["X_1", "X_2", gradient of "X_1", gradient of "X_2", accumulated gradient of "X_1", accumulated gradient of "X_2", accumulated squared gradient of "X_1", accumulated squared gradient of "X_2"].
Outputs (1 - ∞)
- outputs (variadic, heterogeneous) : T3
- New values of optimized tensors, followed by their respective new accumulated gradients, followed by their respective new accumulated squared gradients. For example, if two tensors "X_1" and "X_2" are optimized, the outputs list would be [new value of "X_1", new value of "X_2", new accumulated gradient of "X_1", new accumulated gradient of "X_2", new accumulated squared gradient of "X_1", new accumulated squared gradient of "X_2"].
Type Constraints
- T1 : tensor(float), tensor(double)
- Constrain input types to float scalars.
- T2 : tensor(int64)
- Constrain input types to 64-bit integer scalars.
- T3 : tensor(float), tensor(double)
- Constrain input and output types to float tensors.
Examples
adamadam_multipleai.onnx.preview.training.Gradient
Gradient operator computes the partial derivatives of a specific tensor w.r.t. some other tensors. This operator is widely used in gradient-based training algorithms. To illustrate its use, let's consider a computation graph,
X -----.
|
v
W --> Conv --> H --> Gemm --> Y
^
|
Z
, where W and Z are trainable tensors. Note that operators' attributes are omitted for the sake of simplicity. Let dY/dW (dY/dZ) be the gradient of Y with respect to W (Z). The user can compute gradient by inserting Gradient operator to form another graph shown below.
W --> Conv --> H --> Gemm --> Y
| ^ ^
| | |
| X Z
| | |
| | .----------'
| | | (W/Z/X is the 1st/2nd/3rd input of Gradient as shown in
| | | "xs" followed by "zs")
| v v
'---> Gradient(xs=["W", "Z"], zs=["X"], y="Y")
| |
| '-----------------------------------> dY/dW (1st output of Gradient)
|
'---------------------------------------> dY/dZ (2nd output of Gradient)
By definition, the tensor "y" is a function of independent variables in "xs" and "zs". Since we only compute the gradient of "y" w.r.t. the differentiable variables in "xs", this Gradient only outputs dY/dW and dY/dZ. Note that "H" cannot appear in "xs" and "zs". The reason is that "H" can be determined by tensors "W" and "X" and therefore "H" is not an independent variable.
All outputs are optional. If needed, for example, user can assign an empty string to the 1st output name of that Gradient to skip the generation of dY/dW. Note that the concept of optional outputs can also be found in ONNX's RNN, GRU, and LSTM.
Gradient operator can compute derivative against intermediate tensors. For example, the gradient of Y with respect to H can be done via
W --> Conv --> H --> Gemm --> Y
^ | ^
| | |
X | Z
.-------' |
| .----------'
| | (H/Z is the 1st/2nd input of Gradient as shown in "xs")
v v
Gradient(xs=["H", "Z"], y="Y")
| |
| '-----------------------------------> dY/dH (1st output of Gradient)
|
'---------------------------------------> dY/dZ (2nd output of Gradient)
It is possible to represent high-order differentiation using Gradient operators. For example, given the following linear model:
W --> Gemm --> Y --> Loss --> O
^ ^
| |
X L
To compute the 2nd order derivative of O with respect to W (denoted by d^2O/dW^2), one can do
W --> Gemm --> Y --> Loss --> O
| ^ ^
| | |
| X .------------L
| | | |
| | | v
+------+-+> Gradient(xs=["X", "W"], zs=["L"], y="O") ---> dO/dX (1st output of Gradient)
| | | |
| | | '---> dO/dW (2nd output of Gradient)
| v v
'---> Gradient(xs=["X", "W"], zs=["L"], y="dO/dW") ---> d(dO/dW)dX (1st output of
| Gradient)
|
|
'---> d^2O/dW^2 (2nd output of Gradient)
The tensors named in attributes "xs", "zs", and "y" define the differentiated computation graph, and the inputs to Gradient node define the values at which the gradient is computed. We can feed different tensors to the identified graph. For example, one can compute the gradient of Y with respect to H at a specific value of H, H_1, by providing that value as an input to the Gradient node.
W --> Conv --> H --> Gemm --> Y
^ ^
| |
X Z
Z_1 (2nd input of Gradient)
|
v
H_1 --> Gradient(xs=["H", "Z"], y="Y") ---> dY/dH when H = H_1 and Y = Y_1.
|
'------------------------------> dY/dZ (2nd output of Gradient)
When the inputs of Gradient are the tensors named in "xs" and "zs", the computation can be optimized. More specifically, intermediate variables in forward pass can be reused if the gradient is computed via reverse-mode auto-differentiation.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 1 of the 'ai.onnx.preview.training' operator set.
Attributes
- xs : list of strings (required)
- Input tensor names of the differentiated sub-graph. It contains only the necessary differentiated inputs of a (sub-)graph. Variables (usually called intermediate variables) that can be generated from inputs cannot be included in this attribute.
- y : string (required)
- The targeted tensor. It can be viewed as the output of the differentiated function. The attribute "xs" and attribute "zs" are the minimal independent variable set that determines the value of "y".
- zs : list of strings
- Input tensor names of the differentiated sub-graph. It contains only the necessary non-differentiated inputs of a (sub-)graph. Variables (usually called intermediate variables) that can be generated from inputs cannot be included in this attribute.
Inputs (1 - ∞)
- Inputs (variadic, heterogeneous) : T1
- The values fed into graph identified by the attributes. The i-th input is the value of the i-th tensor specified in the concatenated list of the attribute "xs" and the attribute "zs". For example, if xs=["A", "B"] and zs=["C"], the first input is used as the value of symbol "A" and the 3rd input is substituted for all the occurrences of "C".
Outputs (1 - ∞)
- Outputs (variadic, heterogeneous) : T2
- The gradient of the tensor specified by the attribute "y" with respect to each of tensors specified in the attribute "xs". The i-th output is the gradient of "y" with respect to the i-th tensor specified in the attribute "xs".
Type Constraints
- T1 : tensor(uint8), tensor(uint16), tensor(uint32), tensor(uint64), tensor(int8), tensor(int16), tensor(int32), tensor(int64), tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double), tensor(string), tensor(bool), tensor(complex64), tensor(complex128)
- Allow outputs to be any kind of tensor.
- T2 : tensor(float16), tensor(float), tensor(double)
- Allow inputs to be any kind of floating-point tensor.
Examples
gradient_scalar_addgradient_scalar_add_and_mulai.onnx.preview.training.Momentum
Compute one iteration of stochastic gradient update with momentum. This operator can conduct the optimization of multiple tensor variables.
Let's define the behavior of this operator. As you can imagine, SG with momentum requires
several parameters:
- The learning-rate "R".
- The update count "T". That is, the number of conducted training iterations. It should
be zero in the first training iteration.
- A L2-norm regularization coefficient "norm_coefficient".
- A decay coefficient of previous accumulated gradient (i.e., momentum) "alpha".
- The scaling coefficient of current gradient "beta".
- An attribute to choose either standard momentum or Nesterov's momentum "mode" should
be used.
For the sake of simplicity, assume that there is only one tensor (called "X") to be optimized.
Other necessary inputs are "X"'s gradient (called "G") and "X"'s momentum (called "V"). This
Momentum operator maps all these inputs to the new value of "X" (called "X_new") and its new
momentum (called "V_new").
This operator supports two different momentum algorithms. Set the attribute "mode" to
"nesterov" if Nesterov's momentum is desired. Otherwise, set the attribute "model" to
"standard" to use standard momentum. Computation details are described subsequently.
Let "+", "-", "*", and "/" are all element-wise operations with numpy-style broadcasting.
Pseudo code for SG with standard momentum:
// Add gradient of 0.5 * norm_coefficient * ||X||^2, where ||X|| is the sum of squared
// values of all elements in X.
G_regularized = norm_coefficient * X + G
// In the first training iteration, beta should always be 1.
beta_adjusted = T > 0 ? beta : 1
// Compute the current momentum based on previous momentum and the current gradient.
V_new = alpha * V + beta_adjusted * G_regularized
// Update X.
X_new = X - R * V_new
Pseudo code for SG with Nesterov's momentum:
// Add gradient of 0.5 * norm_coefficient * ||X||^2, where ||X|| is the sum of squared
// values of all elements in X.
G_regularized = norm_coefficient * X + G;
// In the first training iteration, beta should always be 1.
beta_adjusted = T > 0 ? beta : 1
// Compute the current momentum based on previous momentum and the current gradient.
V_new = alpha * V + beta_adjusted * G_regularized;
// Compute final update direction and then update X.
X_new = X - R * (G_regularized + alpha * V_new)
If one assign this operators to optimize multiple inputs, for example, "X_1" and "X_2". The same
pseudo code would be extended to handle all tensors jointly. More specifically, we can view "X" as a
concatenation of "X_1" and "X_2" (of course, their gradient and accumulate gradient should
be concatenated too) and then our pseudo code becomes applicable.
Version
This version of the operator has been available since version 1 of the 'ai.onnx.preview.training' operator set.
Attributes
- alpha : float (required)
- The decay factor of momentum. It should be a scalar.
- beta : float (required)
- The coefficient of gradient in computing new momentum. It should be a scalar.
- mode : string (required)
- Its value should be either "nesterov" or "standard". The value "nesterov" leads to the use of Nesterov's momentum while "standard" invokes stochastic gradient method using standard momentum
- norm_coefficient : float (required)
- Coefficient of 0.5 * norm_coefficient * ||X||^2.
Inputs (3 - ∞)
- R : T1
- The learning rate.
- T : T2
- Update count of "X". It should be a scalar.
- inputs (variadic, heterogeneous) : T3
- It sequentially contains the current values of optimized tensors, then their gradient tensors, and finally their momentum tensors. For example, if two tensors "X_1" and "X_2" are optimized, The expected input list would be ["X_1", "X_2", gradient of "X_1", gradient of "X_2", momentum of "X_1", momentum of "X_2"].
Outputs (1 - ∞)
- outputs (variadic, heterogeneous) : T3
- It sequentially contains the new values of optimized tensors and then the new values of their momentum tensors. For example, if two tensors "X_1" and "X_2" are optimized, the output list would be [new value of "X_1," new value of "X_2" new momentum of "X_1", new momentum of "X_2"].
Type Constraints
- T1 : tensor(float), tensor(double)
- Constrain input types to float scalars.
- T2 : tensor(int64)
- Constrain input types to 64-bit integer scalars.
- T3 : tensor(float), tensor(double)
- Constrain input types to float tensors.
Examples
momentummomentum_multiplenesterov_momentum# Define operator attributes.
norm_coefficient = 0.01
alpha = 0.95
beta = 1.0
# Create operator.
node = onnx.helper.make_node(
"Momentum",
inputs=["R", "T", "X", "G", "V"],
outputs=["X_new", "V_new"],
norm_coefficient=norm_coefficient,
alpha=alpha,
beta=beta,
mode="nesterov",
domain=AI_ONNX_PREVIEW_TRAINING_DOMAIN,
)
# Define operator inputs.
r = np.array(0.1, dtype=np.float32) # scalar
t = np.array(0, dtype=np.int64) # scalar
x = np.array([1.2, 2.8], dtype=np.float32)
g = np.array([-0.94, -2.5], dtype=np.float32)
v = np.array([1.7, 3.6], dtype=np.float32)
# Compute expected outputs of Momentum.
x_new, v_new = apply_nesterov(r, t, x, g, v, norm_coefficient, alpha, beta)
# Check results.
expect(
node,
inputs=[r, t, x, g, v],
outputs=[x_new, v_new],
name="test_nesterov_momentum",
opset_imports=[
onnx.helper.make_opsetid(AI_ONNX_PREVIEW_TRAINING_DOMAIN, 1)
],
)