OpenAI-Clip
OpenAI-Clip: Optimized for Mobile Deployment
Multi-modal foundational model for vision and language tasks like image/text similarity and for zero-shot image classification
Contrastive Language-Image Pre-Training (CLIP) uses a ViT like transformer to get visual features and a causal language model to get the text features. Both the text and visual features can then be used for a variety of zero-shot learning tasks.
This model is an implementation of OpenAI-Clip found here.
This repository provides scripts to run OpenAI-Clip on Qualcomm® devices.
More details on model performance across various devices, can be found
here.
Model Details
- Model Type: Image classification
-
Model Stats:
- Model checkpoint: ViT-B/16
- Image input resolution: 224×224
- Text context length: 77
- Number of parameters (CLIPTextEncoder): 76.0M
- Model size (CLIPTextEncoder): 290 MB
- Number of parameters (CLIPImageEncoder): 115M
- Model size (CLIPImageEncoder): 437 MB
| Device | Chipset | Target Runtime | Inference Time (ms) | Peak Memory Range (MB) | Precision | Primary Compute Unit | Target Model |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Samsung Galaxy S23 Ultra (Android 13) | Snapdragon® 8 Gen 2 | TFLite | 15.528 ms | 0 – 3 MB | FP16 | NPU | CLIPTextEncoder.tflite |
| Samsung Galaxy S23 Ultra (Android 13) | Snapdragon® 8 Gen 2 | TFLite | 127.729 ms | 0 – 4 MB | FP16 | NPU | CLIPImageEncoder.tflite |
| Samsung Galaxy S23 Ultra (Android 13) | Snapdragon® 8 Gen 2 | QNN Model Library | 8.149 ms | 0 – 23 MB | FP16 | NPU | CLIPTextEncoder.so |
| Samsung Galaxy S23 Ultra (Android 13) | Snapdragon® 8 Gen 2 | QNN Model Library | 50.903 ms | 0 – 57 MB | FP16 | NPU | CLIPImageEncoder.so |
Installation
This model can be installed as a Python package via pip.
pip install "qai-hub-models[openai_clip]"
Configure Qualcomm® AI Hub to run this model on a cloud-hosted device
Sign-in to Qualcomm® AI Hub with your
Qualcomm® ID. Once signed in navigate to Account -> Settings -> API Token.
With this API token, you can configure your client to run models on the cloud
hosted devices.
qai-hub configure --api_token API_TOKEN
Navigate to docs for more information.
Demo off target
The package contains a simple end-to-end demo that downloads pre-trained
weights and runs this model on a sample input.
python -m qai_hub_models.models.openai_clip.demo
The above demo runs a reference implementation of pre-processing, model
inference, and post processing.
NOTE: If you want running in a Jupyter Notebook or Google Colab like
environment, please add the following to your cell (instead of the above).
%run -m qai_hub_models.models.openai_clip.demo
Run model on a cloud-hosted device
In addition to the demo, you can also run the model on a cloud-hosted Qualcomm®
device. This script does the following:
- Performance check on-device on a cloud-hosted device
- Downloads compiled assets that can be deployed on-device for Android.
- Accuracy check between PyTorch and on-device outputs.
python -m qai_hub_models.models.openai_clip.export
Profile Job summary of CLIPTextEncoder
--------------------------------------------------
Device: Samsung Galaxy S23 Ultra (13)
Estimated Inference Time: 15.53 ms
Estimated Peak Memory Range: 0.04-2.96 MB
Compute Units: NPU (574),CPU (2) | Total (576)
Profile Job summary of CLIPImageEncoder
--------------------------------------------------
Device: Samsung Galaxy S23 Ultra (13)
Estimated Inference Time: 127.73 ms
Estimated Peak Memory Range: 0.15-3.69 MB
Compute Units: NPU (575) | Total (575)
Profile Job summary of CLIPTextEncoder
--------------------------------------------------
Device: Samsung Galaxy S23 Ultra (13)
Estimated Inference Time: 8.15 ms
Estimated Peak Memory Range: 0.04-22.63 MB
Compute Units: NPU (377) | Total (377)
Profile Job summary of CLIPImageEncoder
--------------------------------------------------
Device: Samsung Galaxy S23 Ultra (13)
Estimated Inference Time: 50.90 ms
Estimated Peak Memory Range: 0.08-56.97 MB
Compute Units: NPU (370) | Total (370)
How does this work?
This export script
leverages Qualcomm® AI Hub to optimize, validate, and deploy this model
on-device. Lets go through each step below in detail:
Step 1: Compile model for on-device deployment
To compile a PyTorch model for on-device deployment, we first trace the model
in memory using the jit.trace and then call the submit_compile_job API.
import torch
import qai_hub as hub
from qai_hub_models.models.openai_clip import Model
# Load the model
torch_model = Model.from_pretrained()
torch_model.eval()
# Device
device = hub.Device("Samsung Galaxy S23")
# Trace model
input_shape = torch_model.get_input_spec()
sample_inputs = torch_model.sample_inputs()
pt_model = torch.jit.trace(torch_model, [torch.tensor(data[0]) for _, data in sample_inputs.items()])
# Compile model on a specific device
compile_job = hub.submit_compile_job(
model=pt_model,
device=device,
input_specs=torch_model.get_input_spec(),
)
# Get target model to run on-device
target_model = compile_job.get_target_model()
Step 2: Performance profiling on cloud-hosted device
After compiling models from step 1. Models can be profiled model on-device using the
target_model. Note that this scripts runs the model on a device automatically
provisioned in the cloud. Once the job is submitted, you can navigate to a
provided job URL to view a variety of on-device performance metrics.
profile_job = hub.submit_profile_job(
model=target_model,
device=device,
)
Step 3: Verify on-device accuracy
To verify the accuracy of the model on-device, you can run on-device inference
on sample input data on the same cloud hosted device.
input_data = torch_model.sample_inputs()
inference_job = hub.submit_inference_job(
model=target_model,
device=device,
inputs=input_data,
)
on_device_output = inference_job.download_output_data()
With the output of the model, you can compute like PSNR, relative errors or
spot check the output with expected output.
Note: This on-device profiling and inference requires access to Qualcomm®
AI Hub. Sign up for access.
Deploying compiled model to Android
The models can be deployed using multiple runtimes:
-
TensorFlow Lite (
.tfliteexport): This
tutorial provides a
guide to deploy the .tflite model in an Android application. -
QNN (
.soexport ): This sample
app
provides instructions on how to use the.soshared library in an Android application.
View on Qualcomm® AI Hub
Get more details on OpenAI-Clip’s performance across various devices here.
Explore all available models on Qualcomm® AI Hub
License
- The license for the original implementation of OpenAI-Clip can be found
here. - The license for the compiled assets for on-device deployment can be found here.
References
Community
- Join our AI Hub Slack community to collaborate, post questions and learn more about on-device AI.
- For questions or feedback please reach out to us.
