Advanced Mini-Batching

The creation of mini-batching is crucial for letting the training of a deep learning model scale to huge amounts of data. Instead of processing examples one-by-one, a mini-batch groups a set of examples into a unified representation where it can efficiently be processed in parallel. In the image or language domain, this procedure is typically achieved by rescaling or padding each example into a set to equally-sized shapes, and examples are then grouped in an additional dimension. The length of this dimension is then equal to the number of examples grouped in a mini-batch and is typically referred to as the batch_size.

Since graphs are one of the most general data structures that can hold any number of nodes or edges, the two approaches described above are either not feasible or may result in a lot of unnecessary memory consumption. In PyG, we opt for another approach to achieve parallelization across a number of examples. Here, adjacency matrices are stacked in a diagonal fashion (creating a giant graph that holds multiple isolated subgraphs), and node and target features are simply concatenated in the node dimension, i.e.

\[\begin{split}\mathbf{A} = \begin{bmatrix} \mathbf{A}_1 & & \\ & \ddots & \\ & & \mathbf{A}_n \end{bmatrix}, \qquad \mathbf{X} = \begin{bmatrix} \mathbf{X}_1 \\ \vdots \\ \mathbf{X}_n \end{bmatrix}, \qquad \mathbf{Y} = \begin{bmatrix} \mathbf{Y}_1 \\ \vdots \\ \mathbf{Y}_n \end{bmatrix}.\end{split}\]

This procedure has some crucial advantages over other batching procedures:

  1. GNN operators that rely on a message passing scheme do not need to be modified since messages still cannot be exchanged between two nodes that belong to different graphs.

  2. There is no computational or memory overhead. For example, this batching procedure works completely without any padding of node or edge features. Note that there is no additional memory overhead for adjacency matrices since they are saved in a sparse fashion holding only non-zero entries, i.e., the edges.

PyG automatically takes care of batching multiple graphs into a single giant graph with the help of the torch_geometric.loader.DataLoader class. Internally, DataLoader is just a regular PyTorch torch.utils.data.DataLoader that overwrites its collate() functionality, i.e., the definition of how a list of examples should be grouped together. Therefore, all arguments that can be passed to a PyTorch DataLoader can also be passed to a PyG DataLoader, e.g., the number of workers num_workers.

In its most general form, the PyG DataLoader will automatically increment the edge_index tensor by the cumulated number of nodes of all graphs that got collated before the currently processed graph, and will concatenate edge_index tensors (that are of shape [2, num_edges]) in the second dimension. The same is true for face tensors, i.e., face indices in meshes. All other tensors will just get concatenated in the first dimension without any further increasement of their values.

However, there are a few special use-cases (as outlined below) where the user actively wants to modify this behaviour to its own needs. PyG allows modification to the underlying batching procedure by overwriting the torch_geometric.data.Data.__inc__() and torch_geometric.data.Data.__cat_dim__() functionalities. Without any modifications, these are defined as follows in the Data class:

def __inc__(self, key, value, *args, **kwargs):
    if 'index' in key or 'face' in key:
        return self.num_nodes
    else:
        return 0

def __cat_dim__(self, key, value, *args, **kwargs):
    if 'index' in key or 'face' in key:
        return 1
    else:
        return 0

We can see that __inc__() defines the incremental count between two consecutive graph attributes, where as __cat_dim__() defines in which dimension graph tensors of the same attribute should be concatenated together. Both functions are called for each attribute stored in the Data class, and get passed their specific key and value item as arguments.

In what follows, we present a few use-cases where the modification of __inc__() and __cat_dim__() might be absolutely necessary.

Pairs of Graphs

In case you want to store multiple graphs in a single Data object, e.g., for applications such as graph matching, you need to ensure correct batching behaviour across all those graphs. For example, consider storing two graphs, a source graph \(\mathcal{G}_s\) and a target graph \(\mathcal{G}_t\) in a Data, e.g.:

from torch_geometric.data import Data

class PairData(Data):
    def __init__(self, edge_index_s=None, x_s=None, edge_index_t=None, x_t=None):
        super().__init__()
        self.edge_index_s = edge_index_s
        self.x_s = x_s
        self.edge_index_t = edge_index_t
        self.x_t = x_t

In this case, edge_index_s should be increased by the number of nodes in the source graph \(\mathcal{G}_s\), e.g., x_s.size(0), and edge_index_t should be increased by the number of nodes in the target graph \(\mathcal{G}_t\), e.g., x_t.size(0):

def __inc__(self, key, value, *args, **kwargs):
    if key == 'edge_index_s':
        return self.x_s.size(0)
    if key == 'edge_index_t':
        return self.x_t.size(0)
    else:
        return super().__inc__(key, value, *args, **kwargs)

We can test our PairData batching behaviour by setting up a simple test script:

from torch_geometric.loader import DataLoader

 edge_index_s = torch.tensor([
     [0, 0, 0, 0],
     [1, 2, 3, 4],
 ])
 x_s = torch.randn(5, 16)  # 5 nodes.
 edge_index_t = torch.tensor([
     [0, 0, 0],
     [1, 2, 3],
 ])
 x_t = torch.randn(4, 16)  # 4 nodes.

 data = PairData(edge_index_s, x_s, edge_index_t, x_t)
 data_list = [data, data]
 loader = DataLoader(data_list, batch_size=2)
 batch = next(iter(loader))

 print(batch)
 >>> PairDataBatch(edge_index_s=[2, 8], x_s=[10, 16],
                   edge_index_t=[2, 6], x_t=[8, 16])

 print(batch.edge_index_s)
 >>> tensor([[0, 0, 0, 0, 5, 5, 5, 5],
             [1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 7, 8, 9]])

 print(batch.edge_index_t)
 >>> tensor([[0, 0, 0, 4, 4, 4],
             [1, 2, 3, 5, 6, 7]])

Everything looks good so far! edge_index_s and edge_index_t get correctly batched together, even when using different numbers of nodes for \(\mathcal{G}_s\) and \(\mathcal{G}_t\). However, the batch attribute (that maps each node to its respective graph) is missing since PyG fails to identify the actual graph in the PairData object. That’s where the follow_batch argument of the DataLoader comes into play. Here, we can specify for which attributes we want to maintain the batch information:

loader = DataLoader(data_list, batch_size=2, follow_batch=['x_s', 'x_t'])
batch = next(iter(loader))

print(batch)
>>> PairDataBatch(edge_index_s=[2, 8], x_s=[10, 16], x_s_batch=[10],
                  edge_index_t=[2, 6], x_t=[8, 16], x_t_batch=[8])
print(batch.x_s_batch)
>>> tensor([0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1])

print(batch.x_t_batch)
>>> tensor([0, 0, 0, 0, 1, 1, 1, 1])

As one can see, follow_batch=['x_s', 'x_t'] now successfully creates assignment vectors called x_s_batch and x_t_batch for the node features x_s and x_t, respectively. That information can now be used to perform reduce operations, e.g., global pooling, on multiple graphs in a single Batch object.

Bipartite Graphs

The adjacency matrix of a bipartite graph defines the relationship between nodes of two different node types. In general, the number of nodes for each node type do not need to match, resulting in a non-quadratic adjacency matrix of shape \(\mathbf{A} \in \{ 0, 1 \}^{N \times M}\) with \(N \neq M\) potentially. In a mini-batching procedure of bipartite graphs, the source nodes of edges in edge_index should get increased differently than the target nodes of edges in edge_index. To achieve this, consider a bipartite graph between two node types with corresponding node features x_s and x_t, respectively:

from torch_geometric.data import Data

class BipartiteData(Data):
    def __init__(self, edge_index=None, x_s=None, x_t=None):
        super().__init__()
        self.edge_index = edge_index
        self.x_s = x_s
        self.x_t = x_t

For a correct mini-batching procedure in bipartite graphs, we need to tell PyG that it should increment source and target nodes of edges in edge_index independently on each other:

def __inc__(self, key, value, *args, **kwargs):
    if key == 'edge_index':
        return torch.tensor([[self.x_s.size(0)], [self.x_t.size(0)]])
    else:
        return super().__inc__(key, value, *args, **kwargs)

Here, edge_index[0] (the source nodes of edges) get incremented by x_s.size(0) while edge_index[1] (the target nodes of edges) get incremented by x_t.size(0). We can again test our implementation by running a simple test script:

from torch_geometric.loader import DataLoader

 edge_index = torch.tensor([
     [0, 0, 1, 1],
     [0, 1, 1, 2],
 ])
 x_s = torch.randn(2, 16)  # 2 nodes.
 x_t = torch.randn(3, 16)  # 3 nodes.

 data = BipartiteData(edge_index, x_s, x_t)
 data_list = [data, data]
 loader = DataLoader(data_list, batch_size=2)
 batch = next(iter(loader))

 print(batch)
 >>> BipartiteDataBatch(edge_index=[2, 8], x_s=[4, 16], x_t=[6, 16])

 print(batch.edge_index)
 >>> tensor([[0, 0, 1, 1, 2, 2, 3, 3],
             [0, 1, 1, 2, 3, 4, 4, 5]])

Again, this is exactly the behaviour we aimed for!

Batching Along New Dimensions

Sometimes, attributes of data objects should be batched by gaining a new batch dimension (as in classical mini-batching), e.g., for graph-level properties or targets. Specifically, a list of attributes of shape [num_features] should be returned as [num_examples, num_features] rather than [num_examples * num_features]. PyG achieves this by returning a concatenation dimension of None in __cat_dim__():

from torch_geometric.data import Data
from torch_geometric.loader import DataLoader

 class MyData(Data):
     def __cat_dim__(self, key, value, *args, **kwargs):
         if key == 'foo':
             return None
         else:
             return super().__cat_dim__(key, value, *args, **kwargs)

edge_index = torch.tensor([
   [0, 1, 1, 2],
   [1, 0, 2, 1],
])
foo = torch.randn(16)

data = MyData(edge_index=edge_index, foo=foo)
data_list = [data, data]
loader = DataLoader(data_list, batch_size=2)
batch = next(iter(loader))

print(batch)
>>> MyDataBatch(edge_index=[2, 8], foo=[2, 16])

As desired, batch.foo is now described by two dimensions: The batch dimension and the feature dimension.