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utils.py
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utils.py
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"""
Mask R-CNN
Common utility functions and classes.
Copyright (c) 2017 Matterport, Inc.
Licensed under the MIT License (see LICENSE for details)
Written by Waleed Abdulla
"""
import sys
import os
import math
import random
import numpy as np
import tensorflow as tf
import scipy.misc
import skimage.color
############################################################
# Bounding Boxes
############################################################
def extract_bboxes(mask):
"""Compute bounding boxes from masks.
mask: [height, width, num_instances]. Mask pixels are either 1 or 0.
Returns: bbox array [num_instances, (y1, x1, y2, x2)].
"""
boxes = np.zeros([mask.shape[-1], 4], dtype=np.int32)
for i in range(mask.shape[-1]):
m = mask[:, :, i]
# Bounding box.
horizontal_indicies = np.where(np.any(m, axis=0))[0]
vertical_indicies = np.where(np.any(m, axis=1))[0]
if horizontal_indicies.shape[0]:
x1, x2 = horizontal_indicies[[0, -1]]
y1, y2 = vertical_indicies[[0, -1]]
# x2 and y2 should not be part of the box. Increment by 1.
x2 += 1
y2 += 1
else:
# No mask for this instance. Might happen due to
# resizing or cropping. Set bbox to zeros
x1, x2, y1, y2 = 0, 0, 0, 0
boxes[i] = np.array([y1, x1, y2, x2])
return boxes.astype(np.int32)
def compute_iou(box, boxes, box_area, boxes_area):
"""Calculates IoU of the given box with the array of the given boxes.
box: 1D vector [y1, x1, y2, x2]
boxes: [boxes_count, (y1, x1, y2, x2)]
box_area: float. the area of 'box'
boxes_area: array of length boxes_count.
Note: the areas are passed in rather than calculated here for
efficency. Calculate once in the caller to avoid duplicate work.
"""
# Calculate intersection areas
y1 = np.maximum(box[0], boxes[:, 0])
y2 = np.minimum(box[2], boxes[:, 2])
x1 = np.maximum(box[1], boxes[:, 1])
x2 = np.minimum(box[3], boxes[:, 3])
intersection = np.maximum(x2 - x1, 0) * np.maximum(y2 - y1, 0)
union = box_area + boxes_area[:] - intersection[:]
iou = intersection / union
return iou
def compute_overlaps(boxes1, boxes2):
"""Computes IoU overlaps between two sets of boxes.
boxes1, boxes2: [N, (y1, x1, y2, x2)].
For better performance, pass the largest set first and the smaller second.
"""
# Areas of anchors and GT boxes
area1 = (boxes1[:, 2] - boxes1[:, 0]) * (boxes1[:, 3] - boxes1[:, 1])
area2 = (boxes2[:, 2] - boxes2[:, 0]) * (boxes2[:, 3] - boxes2[:, 1])
# Compute overlaps to generate matrix [boxes1 count, boxes2 count]
# Each cell contains the IoU value.
overlaps = np.zeros((boxes1.shape[0], boxes2.shape[0]))
for i in range(overlaps.shape[1]):
box2 = boxes2[i]
overlaps[:, i] = compute_iou(box2, boxes1, area2[i], area1)
return overlaps
def non_max_suppression(boxes, scores, threshold):
"""Performs non-maximum supression and returns indicies of kept boxes.
boxes: [N, (y1, x1, y2, x2)]. Notice that (y2, x2) lays outside the box.
scores: 1-D array of box scores.
threshold: Float. IoU threshold to use for filtering.
"""
assert boxes.shape[0] > 0
if boxes.dtype.kind != "f":
boxes = boxes.astype(np.float32)
# Compute box areas
y1 = boxes[:, 0]
x1 = boxes[:, 1]
y2 = boxes[:, 2]
x2 = boxes[:, 3]
area = (y2 - y1) * (x2 - x1)
# Get indicies of boxes sorted by scores (highest first)
ixs = scores.argsort()[::-1]
pick = []
while len(ixs) > 0:
# Pick top box and add its index to the list
i = ixs[0]
pick.append(i)
# Compute IoU of the picked box with the rest
iou = compute_iou(boxes[i], boxes[ixs[1:]], area[i], area[ixs[1:]])
# Identify boxes with IoU over the threshold. This
# returns indicies into ixs[1:], so add 1 to get
# indicies into ixs.
remove_ixs = np.where(iou > threshold)[0] + 1
# Remove indicies of the picked and overlapped boxes.
ixs = np.delete(ixs, remove_ixs)
ixs = np.delete(ixs, 0)
return np.array(pick, dtype=np.int32)
def apply_box_deltas(boxes, deltas):
"""Applies the given deltas to the given boxes.
boxes: [N, (y1, x1, y2, x2)]. Note that (y2, x2) is outside the box.
deltas: [N, (dy, dx, log(dh), log(dw))]
"""
boxes = boxes.astype(np.float32)
# Convert to y, x, h, w
height = boxes[:, 2] - boxes[:, 0]
width = boxes[:, 3] - boxes[:, 1]
center_y = boxes[:, 0] + 0.5 * height
center_x = boxes[:, 1] + 0.5 * width
# Apply deltas
center_y += deltas[:, 0] * height
center_x += deltas[:, 1] * width
height *= np.exp(deltas[:, 2])
width *= np.exp(deltas[:, 3])
# Convert back to y1, x1, y2, x2
y1 = center_y - 0.5 * height
x1 = center_x - 0.5 * width
y2 = y1 + height
x2 = x1 + width
return np.stack([y1, x1, y2, x2], axis=1)
def box_refinement_graph(box, gt_box):
"""Compute refinement needed to transform box to gt_box.
box and gt_box are [N, (y1, x1, y2, x2)]
"""
box = tf.cast(box, tf.float32)
gt_box = tf.cast(gt_box, tf.float32)
height = box[:, 2] - box[:, 0]
width = box[:, 3] - box[:, 1]
center_y = box[:, 0] + 0.5 * height
center_x = box[:, 1] + 0.5 * width
gt_height = gt_box[:, 2] - gt_box[:, 0]
gt_width = gt_box[:, 3] - gt_box[:, 1]
gt_center_y = gt_box[:, 0] + 0.5 * gt_height
gt_center_x = gt_box[:, 1] + 0.5 * gt_width
dy = (gt_center_y - center_y) / height
dx = (gt_center_x - center_x) / width
dh = tf.log(gt_height / height)
dw = tf.log(gt_width / width)
result = tf.stack([dy, dx, dh, dw], axis=1)
return result
def box_refinement(box, gt_box):
"""Compute refinement needed to transform box to gt_box.
box and gt_box are [N, (y1, x1, y2, x2)]. (y2, x2) is
assumed to be outside the box.
"""
box = box.astype(np.float32)
gt_box = gt_box.astype(np.float32)
height = box[:, 2] - box[:, 0]
width = box[:, 3] - box[:, 1]
center_y = box[:, 0] + 0.5 * height
center_x = box[:, 1] + 0.5 * width
gt_height = gt_box[:, 2] - gt_box[:, 0]
gt_width = gt_box[:, 3] - gt_box[:, 1]
gt_center_y = gt_box[:, 0] + 0.5 * gt_height
gt_center_x = gt_box[:, 1] + 0.5 * gt_width
dy = (gt_center_y - center_y) / height
dx = (gt_center_x - center_x) / width
dh = np.log(gt_height / height)
dw = np.log(gt_width / width)
return np.stack([dy, dx, dh, dw], axis=1)
############################################################
# Dataset
############################################################
class Dataset(object):
"""The base class for dataset classes.
To use it, create a new class that adds functions specific to the dataset
you want to use. For example:
class CatsAndDogsDataset(Dataset):
def load_cats_and_dogs(self):
...
def load_mask(self, image_id):
...
def image_reference(self, image_id):
...
See COCODataset and ShapesDataset as examples.
"""
def __init__(self, class_map=None):
self._image_ids = []
self.image_info = []
# Background is always the first class
self.class_info = [{"source": "", "id": 0, "name": "BG"}]
self.source_class_ids = {}
def add_class(self, source, class_id, class_name):
assert "." not in source, "Source name cannot contain a dot"
# Does the class exist already?
for info in self.class_info:
if info['source'] == source and info["id"] == class_id:
# source.class_id combination already available, skip
return
# Add the class
self.class_info.append({
"source": source,
"id": class_id,
"name": class_name,
})
def add_image(self, source, image_id, path, **kwargs):
image_info = {
"id": image_id,
"source": source,
"path": path,
}
image_info.update(kwargs)
self.image_info.append(image_info)
def image_reference(self, image_id):
"""Return a link to the image in its source Website or details about
the image that help looking it up or debugging it.
Override for your dataset, but pass to this function
if you encounter images not in your dataset.
"""
return ""
def prepare(self, class_map=None):
"""Prepares the Dataset class for use.
TODO: class map is not supported yet. When done, it should handle mapping
classes from different datasets to the same class ID.
"""
def clean_name(name):
"""Returns a shorter version of object names for cleaner display."""
return ",".join(name.split(",")[:1])
# Build (or rebuild) everything else from the info dicts.
self.num_classes = len(self.class_info)
self.class_ids = np.arange(self.num_classes)
self.class_names = [clean_name(c["name"]) for c in self.class_info]
self.num_images = len(self.image_info)
self._image_ids = np.arange(self.num_images)
self.class_from_source_map = {"{}.{}".format(info['source'], info['id']): id
for info, id in zip(self.class_info, self.class_ids)}
# Map sources to class_ids they support
self.sources = list(set([i['source'] for i in self.class_info]))
self.source_class_ids = {}
# Loop over datasets
for source in self.sources:
self.source_class_ids[source] = []
# Find classes that belong to this dataset
for i, info in enumerate(self.class_info):
# Include BG class in all datasets
if i == 0 or source == info['source']:
self.source_class_ids[source].append(i)
def map_source_class_id(self, source_class_id):
"""Takes a source class ID and returns the int class ID assigned to it.
For example:
dataset.map_source_class_id("coco.12") -> 23
"""
return self.class_from_source_map[source_class_id]
def get_source_class_id(self, class_id, source):
"""Map an internal class ID to the corresponding class ID in the source dataset."""
info = self.class_info[class_id]
assert info['source'] == source
return info['id']
def append_data(self, class_info, image_info):
self.external_to_class_id = {}
for i, c in enumerate(self.class_info):
for ds, id in c["map"]:
self.external_to_class_id[ds + str(id)] = i
# Map external image IDs to internal ones.
self.external_to_image_id = {}
for i, info in enumerate(self.image_info):
self.external_to_image_id[info["ds"] + str(info["id"])] = i
@property
def image_ids(self):
return self._image_ids
def source_image_link(self, image_id):
"""Returns the path or URL to the image.
Override this to return a URL to the image if it's availble online for easy
debugging.
"""
return self.image_info[image_id]["path"]
def load_image(self, image_id):
"""Load the specified image and return a [H,W,3] Numpy array.
"""
# Load image
image = scipy.misc.imread(self.image_info[image_id]['path'])
# If grayscale. Convert to RGB for consistency.
if image.ndim != 3:
image = skimage.color.gray2rgb(image)
return image
def load_mask(self, image_id):
"""Load instance masks for the given image.
Different datasets use different ways to store masks. Override this
method to load instance masks and return them in the form of am
array of binary masks of shape [height, width, instances].
Returns:
masks: A bool array of shape [height, width, instance count] with
a binary mask per instance.
class_ids: a 1D array of class IDs of the instance masks.
"""
# Override this function to load a mask from your dataset.
# Otherwise, it returns an empty mask.
mask = np.empty([0, 0, 0])
class_ids = np.empty([0], np.int32)
return mask, class_ids
def resize_image(image, min_dim=None, max_dim=None, padding=False):
"""
Resizes an image keeping the aspect ratio.
min_dim: if provided, resizes the image such that it's smaller
dimension == min_dim
max_dim: if provided, ensures that the image longest side doesn't
exceed this value.
padding: If true, pads image with zeros so it's size is max_dim x max_dim
Returns:
image: the resized image
window: (y1, x1, y2, x2). If max_dim is provided, padding might
be inserted in the returned image. If so, this window is the
coordinates of the image part of the full image (excluding
the padding). The x2, y2 pixels are not included.
scale: The scale factor used to resize the image
padding: Padding added to the image [(top, bottom), (left, right), (0, 0)]
"""
# Default window (y1, x1, y2, x2) and default scale == 1.
h, w = image.shape[:2]
window = (0, 0, h, w)
scale = 1
# Scale?
if min_dim:
# Scale up but not down
scale = max(1, min_dim / min(h, w))
# Does it exceed max dim?
if max_dim:
image_max = max(h, w)
if round(image_max * scale) > max_dim:
scale = max_dim / image_max
# Resize image and mask
if scale != 1:
image = scipy.misc.imresize(
image, (round(h * scale), round(w * scale)))
# Need padding?
if padding:
# Get new height and width
h, w = image.shape[:2]
top_pad = (max_dim - h) // 2
bottom_pad = max_dim - h - top_pad
left_pad = (max_dim - w) // 2
right_pad = max_dim - w - left_pad
padding = [(top_pad, bottom_pad), (left_pad, right_pad), (0, 0)]
image = np.pad(image, padding, mode='constant', constant_values=0)
window = (top_pad, left_pad, h + top_pad, w + left_pad)
return image, window, scale, padding
def resize_mask(mask, scale, padding):
"""Resizes a mask using the given scale and padding.
Typically, you get the scale and padding from resize_image() to
ensure both, the image and the mask, are resized consistently.
scale: mask scaling factor
padding: Padding to add to the mask in the form
[(top, bottom), (left, right), (0, 0)]
"""
h, w = mask.shape[:2]
mask = scipy.ndimage.zoom(mask, zoom=[scale, scale, 1], order=0)
mask = np.pad(mask, padding, mode='constant', constant_values=0)
return mask
def minimize_mask(bbox, mask, mini_shape):
"""Resize masks to a smaller version to cut memory load.
Mini-masks can then resized back to image scale using expand_masks()
See inspect_data.ipynb notebook for more details.
"""
mini_mask = np.zeros(mini_shape + (mask.shape[-1],), dtype=bool)
for i in range(mask.shape[-1]):
m = mask[:, :, i]
y1, x1, y2, x2 = bbox[i][:4]
m = m[y1:y2, x1:x2]
m = scipy.misc.imresize(m.astype(float), mini_shape, interp='bilinear')
mini_mask[:, :, i] = np.where(m >= 128, 1, 0)
return mini_mask
def expand_mask(bbox, mini_mask, image_shape):
"""Resizes mini masks back to image size. Reverses the change
of minimize_mask().
See inspect_data.ipynb notebook for more details.
"""
mask = np.zeros(image_shape[:2] + (mini_mask.shape[-1],), dtype=bool)
for i in range(mask.shape[-1]):
m = mini_mask[:, :, i]
y1, x1, y2, x2 = bbox[i][:4]
h = y2 - y1
w = x2 - x1
m = scipy.misc.imresize(m.astype(float), (h, w), interp='bilinear')
mask[y1:y2, x1:x2, i] = np.where(m >= 128, 1, 0)
return mask
# TODO: Build and use this function to reduce code duplication
def mold_mask(mask, config):
pass
def unmold_mask(mask, bbox, image_shape):
"""Converts a mask generated by the neural network into a format similar
to it's original shape.
mask: [height, width] of type float. A small, typically 28x28 mask.
bbox: [y1, x1, y2, x2]. The box to fit the mask in.
Returns a binary mask with the same size as the original image.
"""
threshold = 0.5
y1, x1, y2, x2 = bbox
mask = scipy.misc.imresize(
mask, (y2 - y1, x2 - x1), interp='bilinear').astype(np.float32) / 255.0
mask = np.where(mask >= threshold, 1, 0).astype(np.uint8)
# Put the mask in the right location.
full_mask = np.zeros(image_shape[:2], dtype=np.uint8)
full_mask[y1:y2, x1:x2] = mask
return full_mask
############################################################
# Anchors
############################################################
def generate_anchors(scales, ratios, shape, feature_stride, anchor_stride):
"""
scales: 1D array of anchor sizes in pixels. Example: [32, 64, 128]
ratios: 1D array of anchor ratios of width/height. Example: [0.5, 1, 2]
shape: [height, width] spatial shape of the feature map over which
to generate anchors.
feature_stride: Stride of the feature map relative to the image in pixels.
anchor_stride: Stride of anchors on the feature map. For example, if the
value is 2 then generate anchors for every other feature map pixel.
"""
# Get all combinations of scales and ratios
scales, ratios = np.meshgrid(np.array(scales), np.array(ratios))
scales = scales.flatten()
ratios = ratios.flatten()
# Enumerate heights and widths from scales and ratios
heights = scales / np.sqrt(ratios)
widths = scales * np.sqrt(ratios)
# Enumerate shifts in feature space
shifts_y = np.arange(0, shape[0], anchor_stride) * feature_stride
shifts_x = np.arange(0, shape[1], anchor_stride) * feature_stride
shifts_x, shifts_y = np.meshgrid(shifts_x, shifts_y)
# Enumerate combinations of shifts, widths, and heights
box_widths, box_centers_x = np.meshgrid(widths, shifts_x)
box_heights, box_centers_y = np.meshgrid(heights, shifts_y)
# Reshape to get a list of (y, x) and a list of (h, w)
box_centers = np.stack(
[box_centers_y, box_centers_x], axis=2).reshape([-1, 2])
box_sizes = np.stack([box_heights, box_widths], axis=2).reshape([-1, 2])
# Convert to corner coordinates (y1, x1, y2, x2)
boxes = np.concatenate([box_centers - 0.5 * box_sizes,
box_centers + 0.5 * box_sizes], axis=1)
return boxes
def generate_pyramid_anchors(scales, ratios, feature_shapes, feature_strides,
anchor_stride):
"""Generate anchors at different levels of a feature pyramid. Each scale
is associated with a level of the pyramid, but each ratio is used in
all levels of the pyramid.
Returns:
anchors: [N, (y1, x1, y2, x2)]. All generated anchors in one array. Sorted
with the same order of the given scales. So, anchors of scale[0] come
first, then anchors of scale[1], and so on.
"""
# Anchors
# [anchor_count, (y1, x1, y2, x2)]
anchors = []
for i in range(len(scales)):
anchors.append(generate_anchors(scales[i], ratios, feature_shapes[i],
feature_strides[i], anchor_stride))
return np.concatenate(anchors, axis=0)
############################################################
# Miscellaneous
############################################################
def trim_zeros(x):
"""It's common to have tensors larger than the available data and
pad with zeros. This function removes rows that are all zeros.
x: [rows, columns].
"""
assert len(x.shape) == 2
return x[~np.all(x == 0, axis=1)]
def compute_ap(gt_boxes, gt_class_ids,
pred_boxes, pred_class_ids, pred_scores,
iou_threshold=0.5):
"""Compute Average Precision at a set IoU threshold (default 0.5).
Returns:
mAP: Mean Average Precision
precisions: List of precisions at different class score thresholds.
recalls: List of recall values at different class score thresholds.
overlaps: [pred_boxes, gt_boxes] IoU overlaps.
"""
# Trim zero padding and sort predictions by score from high to low
# TODO: cleaner to do zero unpadding upstream
gt_boxes = trim_zeros(gt_boxes)
pred_boxes = trim_zeros(pred_boxes)
pred_scores = pred_scores[:pred_boxes.shape[0]]
indices = np.argsort(pred_scores)[::-1]
pred_boxes = pred_boxes[indices]
pred_class_ids = pred_class_ids[indices]
pred_scores = pred_scores[indices]
# Compute IoU overlaps [pred_boxes, gt_boxes]
overlaps = compute_overlaps(pred_boxes, gt_boxes)
# Loop through ground truth boxes and find matching predictions
match_count = 0
pred_match = np.zeros([pred_boxes.shape[0]])
gt_match = np.zeros([gt_boxes.shape[0]])
for i in range(len(pred_boxes)):
# Find best matching ground truth box
sorted_ixs = np.argsort(overlaps[i])[::-1]
for j in sorted_ixs:
# If ground truth box is already matched, go to next one
if gt_match[j] == 1:
continue
# If we reach IoU smaller than the threshold, end the loop
iou = overlaps[i, j]
if iou < iou_threshold:
break
# Do we have a match?
if pred_class_ids[i] == gt_class_ids[j]:
match_count += 1
gt_match[j] = 1
pred_match[i] = 1
break
# Compute precision and recall at each prediction box step
precisions = np.cumsum(pred_match) / (np.arange(len(pred_match))+1)
recalls = np.cumsum(pred_match).astype(np.float32) / len(gt_match)
# Pad with start and end values to simplify the math
precisions = np.concatenate([[0], precisions, [0]])
recalls = np.concatenate([[0], recalls, [1]])
# Ensure precision values decrease but don't increase. This way, the
# precision value at each recall threshold is the maximum it can be
# for all following recall thresholds, as specified by the VOC paper.
for i in range(len(precisions)-2, -1, -1):
precisions[i] = np.maximum(precisions[i], precisions[i+1])
# Compute mean AP over recall range
indices = np.where(recalls[:-1] != recalls[1:])[0] + 1
mAP = np.sum((recalls[indices] - recalls[indices - 1]) * precisions[indices])
return mAP, precisions, recalls, overlaps
def compute_recall(pred_boxes, gt_boxes, iou):
"""Compute the recall at the given IoU threshold. It's an indication
of how many GT boxes were found by the given prediction boxes.
pred_boxes: [N, (y1, x1, y2, x2)] in image coordinates
gt_boxes: [N, (y1, x1, y2, x2)] in image coordinates
"""
# Measure overlaps
overlaps = compute_overlaps(pred_boxes, gt_boxes)
iou_max = np.max(overlaps, axis=1)
iou_argmax = np.argmax(overlaps, axis=1)
positive_ids = np.where(iou_max >= iou)[0]
matched_gt_boxes = iou_argmax[positive_ids]
recall = len(set(matched_gt_boxes)) / gt_boxes.shape[0]
return recall, positive_ids
# ## Batch Slicing
# Some custom layers support a batch size of 1 only, and require a lot of work
# to support batches greater than 1. This function slices an input tensor
# across the batch dimension and feeds batches of size 1. Effectively,
# an easy way to support batches > 1 quickly with little code modification.
# In the long run, it's more efficient to modify the code to support large
# batches and getting rid of this function. Consider this a temporary solution
def batch_slice(inputs, graph_fn, batch_size, names=None):
"""Splits inputs into slices and feeds each slice to a copy of the given
computation graph and then combines the results. It allows you to run a
graph on a batch of inputs even if the graph is written to support one
instance only.
inputs: list of tensors. All must have the same first dimension length
graph_fn: A function that returns a TF tensor that's part of a graph.
batch_size: number of slices to divide the data into.
names: If provided, assigns names to the resulting tensors.
"""
if not isinstance(inputs, list):
inputs = [inputs]
outputs = []
for i in range(batch_size):
inputs_slice = [x[i] for x in inputs]
output_slice = graph_fn(*inputs_slice)
if not isinstance(output_slice, (tuple, list)):
output_slice = [output_slice]
outputs.append(output_slice)
# Change outputs from a list of slices where each is
# a list of outputs to a list of outputs and each has
# a list of slices
outputs = list(zip(*outputs))
if names is None:
names = [None] * len(outputs)
result = [tf.stack(o, axis=0, name=n)
for o, n in zip(outputs, names)]
if len(result) == 1:
result = result[0]
return result