Description of image

Workflow Spec Reference Beta

Workflows automate machine learning tasks, combining GPU instances with an expressive syntax to generate production-ready machine learning pipelines with a few lines of code.


Key Concepts

  • defaults: At the top of the YAML Workflow file, you can specify default parameters to be used throughout the entire Workflow. This includes environment variables and default machine instance configuration. Instances can also be specified per-job.

  • inputs: The inputs block allows you to specify named inputs (for example, a versioned dataset to be referenced and consumed by your jobs). You can also collect inputs in a separate YAML and reference this file as an inputPath when creating a Workflow run. Workflow and job-level inputs can be of type: dataset (a persistent, versioned collection of data), string (for example, a generated value or ID that may be output from another job) or volume (a temporary workspace mounted onto a job’s container). Datasets must be defined in advance of being referenced in a workflow. See Create Datasets for the Workflow for more information.

  • jobs: Jobs are also sometimes referred to as “steps” within the Gradient Workflow. A job is an individual task that executes code (such as a training a machine learning model) and can consume inputs and produce outputs.

Example Workflow Spec

To run this Workflow, define datasets named test-one, test-two, and test-three as described in the Create Datasets for the Workflow documentation. Also, to make use of the secret named hello in the inputs section, define a secret.

defaults:
  # clusterId defaults to the NY2 public cluster, setting this parameter this is equaivalent to using the `--clusterId` flag on the command line.
  # This parameter often used for github triggered workflows running on private clusters.
  clusterId: clusterId
  # Default environment variables for all jobs. Can use any supported
  # substitution syntax (named secrets, ephemeral secrets, etc.).
  env:
    # This environment variable uses a Gradient secret called "hello".
    HELLO: secret:hello
  # Default instance type for all jobs
  resources:
    instance-type: P4000
    container-registries: # optional
      - my-registry

# Workflow takes two inputs, neither of which have defaults. This means that
# when the Workflow is run the corresponding input for these values are
# required, for example:
#
# {"inputs": {"data": {"id": "test-one"}, "echo": {"value": "hello world"}}}
#
inputs:
  data:
    type: dataset
    with:
      ref: test-one
  echo:
    type: string
    with:
      value: "hello world"
jobs:
  job-1:
    # These are inputs for the "job-1" job; they are "aliases" to the
    # Workflow inputs.
    #
    # All inputs are placed in the "/inputs/<name>" path of the run
    # containers. So for this job you would have the paths "/inputs/data"
    # and "/inputs/echo".
    inputs:
      # The "/inputs/data" directory would contain the contents for the dataset
      # version. ID here refers to the name of the dataset, not its dataset ID.
      data: workflow.inputs.data
      # The "/inputs/echo" file would contain the string of the Workflow input
      # "echo".
      echo: workflow.inputs.echo
    # These are outputs for the "job-1" job.
    #
    # All outputs are read from the "/outputs/<name>" path.
    outputs:
      # A directory will automatically be created for output datasets and
      # any content written to that directory will be committed to a newly
      # created dataset version when the jobs completes.
      data2:
        type: dataset
        with:
          id: test-two
      # The container is responsible creating the file "/outputs/<name>" with the
      # content being a small-ish utf-8 encoded string.
      echo2:
        type: string
    # Set job-specific environment variables
    env:
      TSTVAR: test
    # Set action
    uses: container@v1
    # Set action arguments
    with:
      args:
        - bash
        - -c
        - find /inputs/data > /outputs/data2/list.txt; echo ENV $HELLO $TSTVAR > /outputs/echo2; cat /inputs/echo; echo; cat /outputs/data2/list.txt /outputs/echo2
      image: bash:5
  job-2:
    inputs:
      # These inputs use job-1 outputs instead of Workflow inputs. You must
      # specify job-1 in the needs section to reference them here.
      data2: job-1.outputs.data2
      echo2: job-1.outputs.echo2
    outputs:
      data3:
        type: dataset
        with:
          ref: test-three
    # List of job IDs that must complete before this job runs
    needs:
      - job-1
    uses: container@v1
    with:
      args:
        - bash
        - -c
        - wc -l /inputs/data2/list.txt > /outputs/data3/summary.txt; cat /outputs/data3/summary.txt /inputs/echo2
      image: bash:5

Below is an example of a valid workflow.yaml spec. It clones the repository from https://github.com/NVlabs/stylegan2, generates images from the repo script run_generator.py, and outputs the results to the Gradient-managed dataset demo-dataset.

jobs:
  CloneRepo:
    resources:
      instance-type: C5
    outputs:
      repo:
        type: volume
    uses: git-checkout@v1
    with:
      url: https://github.com/NVlabs/stylegan2.git
  StyleGan2:
    resources:
      instance-type: P4000
    needs:
      - CloneRepo
    inputs:
      repo: CloneRepo.outputs.repo
    outputs:
      generatedFaces:
        type: dataset
        with:
          ref: demo-dataset
    uses: script@v1
    with:
      script: |-
        pip install scipy==1.3.3
        pip install requests==2.22.0
        pip install Pillow==6.2.1
        cp -R /inputs/repo /stylegan2
        cd /stylegan2
        python run_generator.py generate-images \
          --network=gdrive:networks/stylegan2-ffhq-config-f.pkl \
          --seeds=6600-6605 \
          --truncation-psi=0.5 \
          --result-dir=/outputs/generatedFaces        
      image: tensorflow/tensorflow:1.14.0-gpu-py3