CMU 11492/11692 Spring 2023: ESPnet Tutorial2 (New task)
CMU 11492/11692 Spring 2023: ESPnet Tutorial2 (New task)
ESPnet is a widely-used end-to-end speech processing toolkit. It has supported various speech processing tasks. ESPnet uses PyTorch as a main deep learning engine, and also follows Kaldi style data processing, feature extraction/format, and recipes to provide a complete setup for speech recognition and other speech processing experiments.
Main references:
- ESPnet repository
- ESPnet documentation
- ESPnet tutorial in Speech Recognition and Understanding (Fall 2021)
- ESPnet tutorial in Speech Recognition and Understanding (Fall 2022)
- Recitation in Multilingual NLP (Spring 2022)
- ESPnet tutorial1 in Speech Recognition and Understanding (Fall 2022)
Author: Jiatong Shi (jiatongs@andrew.cmu.edu)
We would like to thank You (Neil) Zhang for kindly helping the hands-on tutorial and sharing his knowledge on the task.
❗Important Notes❗
- We are using Colab to show the demo. However, Colab has some constraints on the total GPU runtime. If you use too much GPU time, you may not be able to use GPU for some time.
- There are multiple in-class checkpoints ✅ throughout this tutorial. Your participation points are based on these tasks. Please try your best to follow all the steps! If you encounter issues, please notify the TAs as soon as possible so that we can make an adjustment for you.
- Please submit PDF files of your completed notebooks to Gradescope. You can print the notebook using
File -> Print
in the menu bar. - This tutorial covers some advanced usage of ESPnet, which is the extension of the first tutorial.
Useful links
- Installation https://espnet.github.io/espnet/installation.html
- Usage https://espnet.github.io/espnet/espnet2_tutorial.html
- Reference of task class in ESPnet https://espnet.github.io/espnet/espnet2_task.html
Objectives
After this tutorial, you are expected to know:
- How to add new task in ESPnet2
- How to add new models in ESPnet2
- How to create a new recipe (and template) of a new task from scratch
Function to print date and time
We first define a function to print the current date and time, which will be used in multiple places below.
def print_date_and_time():
from datetime import datetime
import pytz
now = datetime.now(pytz.timezone("America/New_York"))
print("=" * 60)
print(f' Current date and time: {now.strftime("%m/%d/%Y %H:%M:%S")}')
print("=" * 60)
# example output
print_date_and_time()
Install ESPnet (Almost same procedure as your first tutorial)
Download ESPnet
We use git clone
to download the source code of ESPnet and then go to a specific commit.
Important: In other versions of ESPnet, you may encounter errors related to imcompatible package versions (numba
). Please use the same commit to avoid such issues.
Note that we are using another branch espnet_tutorial_asvspoof
instead of "master". You can also use your own fork to proceed the following sections if you want to use Github to save your code.
# It takes a few seconds
!git clone --depth 5 https://github.com/espnet/espnet
%cd /content/espnet
Setup Python environment based on anaconda + Install ESPnet
# It takes 30 seconds
%cd /content/espnet/tools
!./setup_anaconda.sh anaconda espnet 3.9
# It may take 12 minutes
%cd /content/espnet/tools
!make TH_VERSION=1.12.1 CUDA_VERSION=11.6
What we provide you and what you need to proceed
We have provide you most of the files needed for ASVSpoof recipe. So you do not need to add any additional files. However, noted that some of the files are not complete and need your completion to proceed. For a quick overview of the whole layout of the new task, please refer to https://github.com/espnet/espnet/compare/master...2022fall_new_task_tutorial
As elaborated in the warming-up, we have shown that there are two core components for a new task in ESPnet: a task library and correponding recipe setups. For the following of the section, we will briefly show the overall layout of adding the ASVSpoof task in ESPnet. The listed files are almost the minimum requirements to add a new task in ESPnet.
Task library for ASVSpoof
Followings are a list of files adding to ESPnet for ASVSpoof (files in "" are ones that need modifications)
- espnet2
- bin
- asvspoof_train.py # Major entry point for asvspoof
- "asvspoof_inference.py" (Checkpoint 4) # Inference scripts for asvspoof
- asvspoof
- decoder
- __init__.py
- abs_decoder.py # abstract class for decoder in ASVSpoof
- "linear_decoder.py" (Checkpoint 3) # simple linear decoder for ASVSpoof
- loss
- __init__.py
- abs_loss.py # abstract class for loss in ASVSpoof
- binary_loss.py # naive binary class loss for ASVSpoof
- am_softmax.py
- "oc_softmax.py"
- __init__.py
- "espnet_model.py"
- tasks
- "asvspoof.py" (Checkpoint 2)
To help you understand more, we would recommend you to check the layout of other tasks (e.g., ASR, TTS, ST, etc.) to understand how the codebase is functioning.
Recipe for ASVSpoof
Followings are a list of files adding to ESPnet for ASVSpoof (files in boldface are ones that need modifications)
- egs2
- TEMPLATE
- asvspoof1
- "asvspoof.sh" (Checkpoint 1)
- others
- espnet_tutorial
- asvspoof11
- conf
- "asvspoof.sh” (Checkpoint 1)
- local
- "data_prep.py"
- "data.sh"
- "run.sh" (Checkpoint 5)
- scripts
- pyscripts
- utils
- steps
- path.sh
- db.sh
- cmd.sh
Noted that because of the symlink, the asvspoof.sh
is essentially the same for checkpoint 1.
ASVSpoof data preparation
As discussed in the warm-up session, ASVSpoof aims to conduct a binary classfication. As the task layout is a bit different from the ASR task we touched on the first tutorial, so we need to use a different format to formulate the data. For here, to keep the simplicity, we stil use the exact same file as the first tutorial:
wav.scp text utt2spk spk2utt
But on the other hand, we change the format of text into
utt_id1 0
utt_id2 1
utt_id3 0
where 0 represents real speech and 1 stands for fake speech.
Download dataset
We first download the data from google drive. Noted that the data is a subset of the ASVSpoof2019 Challenge.
# a few seconds
%cd /content/espnet/egs2/espnet_tutorial/asvspoof1/
!pip install --upgrade --no-cache-dir gdown
!gdown 1HRdjjmGXBTXOqOq9iijuXPCA4y_46OzP
!unzip espnet_tutorial_asvspoof.zip
Prepare data (Stage1 & Stage2)
This time, we make the task template to be as simple as possible. The data preparation will be only two stages, including basic data preparation and wave format.
# It may take around 6 minutes
!./asvspoof.sh --stage 1 --stop_stage 2 --train_set train --valid_set dev --test_sets "eval"
ASVSpoof collect stats (✅ Checkpoint 1 (0.5 point))
Similar to the previous tutorial, we collect the statisitcs for the data.
In the process, the data will be passed into a iterable loader. However, remember that the text
file is no longer the format as the ASR recipe. Therefore, we will need to use another data loader to load the corresponding information.
Fortunately, we have a wide range of data loaders for choices, which is listing in here. Please choose the correct file format and replace the [REPLACE_ME]
token (in stage 3 and stage 4) in /content/espnet/egs2/espnet_tutorial/asvspoof1/asvspoof.sh
After the replacement, you should be able to run the following blocks
# It takes less than 2 minutes
!./asvspoof.sh --stage 3 --stop_stage 3 --train_set train --valid_set dev --test_sets "dev eval" --asvspoof_config conf/checkpoint1_dummy.yaml
# NOTE: Checkpoint 1
print_date_and_time()
ASVSpoof Model
In this section, we will define the ASVSpoof model and use the model to conduct the training of ASVSpoof task. For easier understanding, we first use an encoder
to convert speech features into hidden representations and then use a decoder
to conduct the classification.
Encoder (✅ Checkpoint 2 (0.5 point))
First, we are going to focus on the encoder part. There has been a long history over the discussion of the speech encoder in our community. Given the sequential perspective, people firstly investigated recurrent neural networks. More recently, we are focusing on conformer block, which is an extension to the transformer block. In the previous settings, we used a transformer block to collect stats. However, we would want to switch to conformer.
Code-reusibility is one of the major benefits of using ESPnet as a toolkit for speech tasks. As ESPnet already support conformer block in ASR, it is easy to import into this new task.
In ESPnet, adding modules that we already have can be as simple as two-line codes. Please add lines into /content/espnet/espnet2/tasks/asvspoof.py
. We have marked TODO
in the scripts for your convenience.
# It takes less than 2 minutes
!./asvspoof.sh --stage 3 --stop_stage 3 --train_set train --valid_set dev --test_sets "dev eval" --asvspoof_config conf/checkpoint2.yaml
# NOTE: Checkpoint 2
print_date_and_time()
Decoder (✅ Checkpoint 3 (0.5 point))
In this stage, we will finally start the training. As the previous tutorial, we can use the Tensorboard to monitor the process.
# Load the TensorBoard notebook extension
%reload_ext tensorboard
# Launch tensorboard before training
%tensorboard --logdir /content/espnet/egs2/espnet_tutorial/asvspoof1/exp
After we finished the encoder, we also need to create a decoder to conduct the prediciton. As the encoder will generate hidden representations, we want to have a simple decoder to conduct mean-pooling to all the hidden representation at the time-axis. There should be another linear layer to conclude the models into binary classification. Please fill the missing part in /content/espnet/espnet2/asvspoof/decoder/linear_decoder.py
to finally start the training. For people who are not familiar with Pytorch, please refer the related resources for details.
Related resources that could be helpful for this checkpoint:
- https://pytorch.org/docs/stable/generated/torch.mean.html
- https://pytorch.org/docs/stable/generated/torch.nn.Linear.html
- https://pytorch.org/tutorials/beginner/basics/buildmodel_tutorial.html
!nvidia-smi
# Training takes around 2 minutes
!./asvspoof.sh --stage 4 --stop_stage 4 --train_set train --valid_set dev --test_sets "dev eval" --asvspoof_config conf/checkpoint2.yaml --inference_config conf/decode_asvspoof.yaml
# NOTE: Checkpoint 3
print_date_and_time()
Model Inference
(✅ Checkpoint 4 (0.5 point))
As the training is finished, we expect to conduct ASVSpoof on the test set. To approach that, we first have to finish the inference codebase. For our task specifically, we need the log-probability of the prediction to compute equal error rate (EER). Therefore the output should be a float number for each utterance.
Please fill the missing parts with TODO
s in /content/espnet/espnet2/bin/asvspoof_inference.py
!./asvspoof.sh --stage 5 --stop_stage 5 --train_set train --valid_set dev --test_sets "eval" --asvspoof_config conf/checkpoint2.yaml --inference_nj 1 --gpu_inference true
# NOTE: Checkpoint 4
print_date_and_time()
Scoring
(✅ Checkpoint 5 (0.5 point))
We have prepred the scoring script for you. We can get the EER by the following code-block
!./asvspoof.sh --stage 6 --stop_stage 6 --train_set train --valid_set dev --test_sets "eval" --asvspoof_config conf/checkpoint2.yaml
!chmod +x scripts/utils/show_asvspoof_result.sh
# NOTE: Checkpoint 5
print_date_and_time()