tf2onnx converts TensorFlow (tf-1.x or tf-2.x), tf.keras and tflite models to ONNX via command line or python api.
Note: after tf2onnx-1.8.3 we made a change that impacts the output names for the ONNX model. Instead of taking the output names from the tensorflow graph (ie. for keras models this is frequently Identity:0) we decided that it is better to use the structured output names of the model so the output names are now identical to the names in the keras or saved model.
TensorFlow has many more ops than ONNX and occasionally mapping a model to ONNX creates issues.
You find a list of supported Tensorflow ops and their mapping to ONNX here.
The common issues we run into we try to document here Troubleshooting Guide.
tf2onnx will use the ONNX version installed on your system and installs the latest ONNX version if none is found.
We support ONNX opset-6 to opset-13. By default we use opset-9
for the resulting ONNX graph since most runtimes will support opset-9.
If you want the graph to be generated with a specific opset, use --opset
in the command line, for example --opset 13
.
We support tf-1.x graphs
and tf-2
. To keep our test matrix manageable we test tf2onnx running on top of tf-1.12 and up
.
When running under tf-2.x tf2onnx will use the tensorflow V2 controlflow.
You can install tf2onnx on top of tf-1.x or tf-2.x.
We support Python 3.6
, 3.7
and 3.8
.
If you don't have TensorFlow installed already, install the desired TensorFlow build, for example:
pip install tensorflow
If you want to run tests, install a runtime that can run ONNX models. For example:
ONNX Runtime (available for Linux, Windows, and Mac):
pip install onnxruntime
pip install -U tf2onnx
pip install git+https://github.com/onnx/tensorflow-onnx
git clone https://github.com/onnx/tensorflow-onnx
Once dependencies are installed, from the tensorflow-onnx folder call:
python setup.py install
or
python setup.py develop
tensorflow-onnx requires onnx-1.5 or better and will install/upgrade onnx if needed.
To create a wheel for distribution:
python setup.py bdist_wheel
To get started with tensorflow-onnx
, run the t2onnx.convert
command, providing:
- the path to your TensorFlow model (where the model is in
saved model
format) - a name for the ONNX output file:
python -m tf2onnx.convert --saved-model tensorflow-model-path --output model.onnx
The above command uses a default of 9
for the ONNX opset. If you need a newer opset, or want to limit your model to use an older opset then you can provide the --opset
argument to the command. If you are unsure about which opset to use, refer to the ONNX operator documentation.
python -m tf2onnx.convert --saved-model tensorflow-model-path --opset 13 --output model.onnx
If your TensorFlow model is in a format other than saved model
, then you need to provide the inputs and outputs of the model graph.
For checkpoint
format:
python -m tf2onnx.convert --checkpoint tensorflow-model-meta-file-path --output model.onnx --inputs input0:0,input1:0 --outputs output0:0
For graphdef
format:
python -m tf2onnx.convert --graphdef tensorflow-model-graphdef-file --output model.onnx --inputs input0:0,input1:0 --outputs output0:0
If your model is in checkpoint
or graphdef
format and you do not know the input and output nodes of the model, you can use the summarize_graph TensorFlow utility. The summarize_graph
tool does need to be downloaded and built from source. If you have the option of going to your model provider and obtaining the model in saved model
format, then we recommend doing so.
You find an end-to-end tutorial for ssd-mobilenet here
We recently added support for tflite. You convert tflite
models via command line, for example:
python -m tf2onnx.convert --opset 13 --tflite tflite--file --output model.onnx
python -m tf2onnx.convert
--saved-model SOURCE_SAVED_MODEL_PATH |
--checkpoint SOURCE_CHECKPOINT_METAFILE_PATH |
--tflite SOURCE_TFLITE_PATH |
--input | --graphdef SOURCE_GRAPHDEF_PB
--output TARGET_ONNX_MODEL
[--inputs GRAPH_INPUTS]
[--outputs GRAPH_OUTPUS]
[--inputs-as-nchw inputs_provided_as_nchw]
[--opset OPSET]
[--dequantize]
[--tag TAG]
[--signature_def SIGNATURE_DEF]
[--concrete_function CONCRETE_FUNCTION]
[--target TARGET]
[--custom-ops list-of-custom-ops]
[--fold_const]
[--large_model]
[--continue_on_error]
[--verbose]
[--output_frozen_graph]
TensorFlow model as saved_model. We expect the path to the saved_model directory.
TensorFlow model as checkpoint. We expect the path to the .meta file.
Convert a tflite model by providing a path to the .tflite file. Inputs/outputs do not need to be specified.
TensorFlow model as graphdef file.
The target onnx file path.
TensorFlow model's input/output names, which can be found with summarize graph tool. Those names typically end with :0
, for example --inputs input0:0,input1:0
. Inputs and outputs are not needed for models in saved-model format. Some models specify placeholders with unknown ranks and dims which can not be mapped to onnx. In those cases one can add the shape after the input name inside []
, for example --inputs X:0[1,28,28,3]
. Use -1 to indicate unknown dimensions.
By default we preserve the image format of inputs (nchw
or nhwc
) as given in the TensorFlow model. If your hosts (for example windows) native format nchw and the model is written for nhwc, --inputs-as-nchw
tensorflow-onnx will transpose the input. Doing so is convenient for the application and the converter in many cases can optimize the transpose away. For example --inputs input0:0,input1:0 --inputs-as-nchw input0:0
assumes that images are passed into input0:0
as nchw while the TensorFlow model given uses nhwc.
ONNX requires default values for graph inputs to be constant, while Tensorflow's PlaceholderWithDefault op accepts computed defaults. To convert such models, pass a comma-separated list of node names to the ignore_default and/or use_default flags. PlaceholderWithDefault nodes with matching names will be replaced with Placeholder or Identity ops, respectively.
By default we use the opset 9 to generate the graph. By specifying --opset
the user can override the default to generate a graph with the desired opset. For example --opset 13
would create a onnx graph that uses only ops available in opset 13. Because older opsets have in most cases fewer ops, some models might not convert on a older opset.
(This is experimental, only supported for tflite)
Produces a float32 model from a quantized tflite model. Detects ReLU and ReLU6 ops from quantization bounds.
Only valid with parameter --saved_model
. Specifies the tag in the saved_model to be used. Typical value is 'serve'.
Only valid with parameter --saved_model
. Specifies which signature to use within the specified --tag value. Typical value is 'serving_default'.
(This is experimental, valid only for TF2.x models)
Only valid with parameter --saved_model
. If a model contains a list of concrete functions, under the function name __call__
(as can be viewed using the command saved_model_cli show --all
), this parameter is a 0-based integer specifying which function in that list should be converted. This parameter takes priority over --signature_def
, which will be ignored.
(Can be used only for TF2.x models)
Only valid with parameter --saved_model
. When set, creates a zip file containing the ONNX protobuf model and large tensor values stored externally. This allows for converting models that exceed the 2 GB protobuf limit.
Saves the frozen and optimize tensorflow graph to file.
If a model contains ops not recognized by onnx runtime, you can tag these ops with a custom op domain so that the
runtime can still open the model. The format is a comma-separated map of tf op names to domains in the format
OpName:domain. If only an op name is provided (no colon), the default domain of ai.onnx.converters.tensorflow
will be used.
Some models require special handling to run on some runtimes. In particular, the model may use unsupported data types. Workarounds are activated with --target TARGET
. Currently supported values are listed on this wiki. If your model will be run on Windows ML, you should specify the appropriate target value.
Deprecated.
To find the inputs and outputs for the TensorFlow graph the model developer will know or you can consult TensorFlow's summarize_graph tool, for example:
summarize_graph --in_graph=tests/models/fc-layers/frozen.pb
There are 2 types of tests.
python setup.py test
python tests/run_pretrained_models.py
usage: run_pretrained_models.py [-h] [--cache CACHE] [--tests TESTS] [--backend BACKEND] [--verbose] [--debug] [--config yaml-config]
optional arguments:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
--cache CACHE pre-trained models cache dir
--tests TESTS tests to run
--backend BACKEND backend to use
--config yaml config file
--verbose verbose output, option is additive
--opset OPSET target opset to use
--perf csv-file capture performance numbers for tensorflow and onnx runtime
--debug dump generated graph with shape info
--fold_const when set, TensorFlow fold_constants transformation will be applied before conversion. This will benefit features including Transpose optimization (e.g. Transpose operations introduced during tf-graph-to-onnx-graph conversion will be removed), and RNN unit conversion (for example LSTM).
run_pretrained_models.py
will run the TensorFlow model, captures the TensorFlow output and runs the same test against the specified ONNX backend after converting the model.
If the option --perf csv-file
is specified, we'll capture the timeing for inferece of tensorflow and onnx runtime and write the result into the given csv file.
You call it for example with:
python tests/run_pretrained_models.py --backend onnxruntime --config tests/run_pretrained_models.yaml --perf perf.csv
We provide an utility to save pre-trained model along with its config.
Put save_pretrained_model(sess, outputs, feed_inputs, save_dir, model_name)
in your last testing epoch and the pre-trained model and config will be saved under save_dir/to_onnx
.
Please refer to the example in tools/save_pretrained_model.py for more information.
Note the minimum required Tensorflow version is r1.6.
With tf2onnx-1.8.4 we updated our API. Our old API still works - you find the documentation here.
import tf2onnx
model_proto, external_tensor_storage = tf2onnx.convert.from_keras(model,
input_signature=None, opset=None, custom_ops=None,
custom_op_handlers=None, custom_rewriter=None,
inputs_as_nchw=None, extra_opset=None shape_override=None,
target=None, large_model=False, output_path=None)
Args:
model: the tf.keras model we want to convert
input_signature: a tf.TensorSpec or a numpy array defining the shape/dtype of the input
opset: the opset to be used for the ONNX model, default is the latest
target: list of workarounds applied to help certain platforms
custom_op_handlers: dictionary of custom ops handlers
custom_rewriter: list of custom graph rewriters
extra_opset: list of extra opset's, for example the opset's used by custom ops
shape_override: dict with inputs that override the shapes given by tensorflow
inputs_as_nchw: transpose inputs in list from nchw to nhwc
large_model: use the ONNX external tensor storage format
output_path: save model to output_path
Returns:
An ONNX model_proto and an external_tensor_storage dict.
See tutorials/keras-resnet50.ipynb for an end to end example.
import tf2onnx
model_proto, external_tensor_storage = tf2onnx.convert.from_function(function,
input_signature=None, opset=None, custom_ops=None,
custom_op_handlers=None, custom_rewriter=None,
inputs_as_nchw=None, extra_opset=None, shape_override=None,
target=None, large_model=False, output_path=None)
Args:
function: the tf.function we want to convert
input_signature: a tf.TensorSpec or a numpy array defining the shape/dtype of the input
opset: the opset to be used for the ONNX model, default is the latest
target: list of workarounds applied to help certain platforms
custom_op_handlers: dictionary of custom ops handlers
custom_rewriter: list of custom graph rewriters
extra_opset: list of extra opset's, for example the opset's used by custom ops
shape_override: dict with inputs that override the shapes given by tensorflow
inputs_as_nchw: transpose inputs in list from nchw to nhwc
large_model: use the ONNX external tensor storage format
output_path: save model to output_path
Returns:
An ONNX model_proto and an external_tensor_storage dict.
import tf2onnx
model_proto, external_tensor_storage = tf2onnx.convert.from_graph_def(graph_def,
name=None, input_names=None, output_names=None, opset=None,
custom_ops=None, custom_op_handlers=None, custom_rewriter=None,
inputs_as_nchw=None, extra_opset=None,
shape_override=None, target=None, large_model=False,
output_path=None)
Args:
graph_def: the graph_def we want to convert
input_names: list of input names
output_names: list of output names
name: A name for the graph
opset: the opset to be used for the ONNX model, default is the latest
target: list of workarounds applied to help certain platforms
custom_op_handlers: dictionary of custom ops handlers
custom_rewriter: list of custom graph rewriters
extra_opset: list of extra opset's, for example the opset's used by custom ops
shape_override: dict with inputs that override the shapes given by tensorflow
inputs_as_nchw: transpose inputs in list from nchw to nhwc
large_model: use the ONNX external tensor storage format
output_path: save model to output_path
Returns:
An ONNX model_proto and an external_tensor_storage dict.
For complex custom ops that require graph rewrites or input / attribute rewrites using the python interface to insert a custom op will be the easiest way to accomplish the task. A dictionary of name->custom_op_handler can be passed to tf2onnx.tfonnx.process_tf_graph. If the op name is found in the graph the handler will have access to all internal structures and can rewrite that is needed. For example examples/custom_op_via_python.py:
import tensorflow as tf
import tf2onnx
from onnx import helper
_TENSORFLOW_DOMAIN = "ai.onnx.converters.tensorflow"
def print_handler(ctx, node, name, args):
# replace tf.Print() with Identity
# T output = Print(T input, data, @list(type) U, @string message, @int first_n, @int summarize)
# becomes:
# T output = Identity(T Input)
node.domain = _TENSORFLOW_DOMAIN
del node.input[1:]
return node
with tf.Session() as sess:
x = tf.placeholder(tf.float32, [2, 3], name="input")
x_ = tf.add(x, x)
x_ = tf.Print(x, [x], "hello")
_ = tf.identity(x_, name="output")
onnx_graph = tf2onnx.tfonnx.process_tf_graph(sess.graph,
custom_op_handlers={"Print": (print_handler, ["Identity", "mode"])},
extra_opset=[helper.make_opsetid(_TENSORFLOW_DOMAIN, 1)],
input_names=["input:0"],
output_names=["output:0"])
model_proto = onnx_graph.make_model("test")
with open("/tmp/model.onnx", "wb") as f:
f.write(model_proto.SerializeToString())
The converter needs to take care of a few things:
- Convert the protobuf format. Since the format is similar this step is straight forward.
- TensorFlow types need to be mapped to their ONNX equivalent.
- For many ops TensorFlow passes parameters like shapes as inputs where ONNX wants to see them as attributes. Since we use a frozen graph, the converter will fetch the input as constant, converts it to an attribute and remove the original input.
- TensorFlow in many cases composes ops out of multiple simpler ops. The converter will need to identify the subgraph for such ops, slice the subgraph out and replace it with the ONNX equivalent. This can become fairly complex so we use a graph matching library for it. A good example of this is the tensorflow transpose op.
- TensorFlow's default data format is NHWC where ONNX requires NCHW. The converter will insert transpose ops to deal with this.
- There are some ops like relu6 that are not supported in ONNX but the converter can be composed out of other ONNX ops.
- ONNX backends are new and their implementations are not complete yet. For some ops the converter generate ops with deal with issues in existing backends.
tf2onnx starts with a frozen graph. This is because of item 3 above.
tf2onnx first does a simple conversion from the TensorFlow protobuf format to the ONNX protobuf format without looking at individual ops. We do this so we can use the ONNX graph as internal representation and write helper functions around it. The code that does the conversion is in tensorflow_to_onnx(). tensorflow_to_onnx() will return the ONNX graph and a dictionary with shape information from TensorFlow. The shape information is helpful in some cases when processing individual ops. The ONNX graph is wrapped in a Graph object and nodes in the graph are wrapped in a Node object to allow easier graph manipulations on the graph. All code that deals with nodes and graphs is in graph.py.
In the next step we apply graph matching code on the graph to re-write subgraphs for ops like transpose and lstm. For an example looks at rewrite_transpose().
In the fourth step we look at individual ops that need attention. The dictionary _OPS_MAPPING will map tensorflow op types to a method that is used to process the op. The simplest case is direct_op() where the op can be taken as is. Whenever possible we try to group ops into common processing, for example all ops that require dealing with broadcasting are mapped to broadcast_op(). For an op that composes the tensorflow op from multiple onnx ops, see relu6_op().
We than try to optimize the functional ONNX graph. For example we remove ops that are not needed, remove transposes as much as possible, de-dupe constants, fuse ops whenever possible, ...
Once all ops are converted and optimize, we need to do a topological sort since ONNX requires it. process_tf_graph() is the method that takes care of all above steps.
If you like to contribute and add new conversions to tf2onnx, the process is something like:
- See if the op fits into one of the existing mappings. If so adding it to _OPS_MAPPING is all that is needed.
- If the new op needs extra processing, start a new mapping function.
- If the tensorflow op is composed of multiple ops, consider using a graph re-write. While this might be a little harder initially, it works better for complex patterns.
- Add a unit test in tests/test_backend.py. The unit tests mostly create the tensorflow graph, run it and capture the output, than convert to onnx, run against a onnx backend and compare tensorflow and onnx results.
- If there are pre-trained models that use the new op, consider adding those to test/run_pretrained_models.py.