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Training/test Tips

Training/test options

Please see options/train_options.py and options/base_options.py for the training flags; see options/test_options.py and options/base_options.py for the test flags. There are some model-specific flags as well, which are added in the model files, such as --lambda_A option in model/cycle_gan_model.py. The default values of these options are also adjusted in the model files.

CPU/GPU (default --gpu_ids 0)

Please set--gpu_ids -1 to use CPU mode; set --gpu_ids 0,1,2 for multi-GPU mode. You need a large batch size (e.g. --batch_size 32) to benefit from multiple GPUs.

Visualization

During training, the current results can be viewed using two methods. First, if you set --display_id > 0, the results and loss plot will appear on a local graphics web server launched by visdom. To do this, you should have visdom installed and a server running by the command python -m visdom.server. The default server URL is http://localhost:8097. display_id corresponds to the window ID that is displayed on the visdom server. The visdom display functionality is turned on by default. To avoid the extra overhead of communicating with visdom set --display_id -1. Second, the intermediate results are saved to [opt.checkpoints_dir]/[opt.name]/web/ as an HTML file. To avoid this, set --no_html.

Preprocessing

Images can be resized and cropped in different ways using --resize_or_crop option. The default option 'resize_and_crop' resizes the image to be of size (opt.loadSize, opt.loadSize) and does a random crop of size (opt.fineSize, opt.fineSize). 'crop' skips the resizing step and only performs random cropping. 'scale_width' resizes the image to have width opt.fineSize while keeping the aspect ratio. 'scale_width_and_crop' first resizes the image to have width opt.loadSize and then does random cropping of size (opt.fineSize, opt.fineSize). 'none' tries to skip all these preprocessing steps. However, if the image size is not a multiple of some number depending on the number of downsamplings of the generator, you will get an error because the size of the output image may be different from the size of the input image. Therefore, 'none' option still tries to adjust the image size to be a multiple of 4. You might need a bigger adjustment if you change the generator architecture. Please see data/base_datset.py do see how all these were implemented.

Fine-tuning/resume training

To fine-tune a pre-trained model, or resume the previous training, use the --continue_train flag. The program will then load the model based on epoch. By default, the program will initialize the epoch count as 1. Set --epoch_count <int> to specify a different starting epoch count.

About image size

Since the generator architecture in CycleGAN involves a series of downsampling / upsampling operations, the size of the input and output image may not match if the input image size is not a multiple of 4. As a result, you may get a runtime error because the L1 identity loss cannot be enforced with images of different size. Therefore, we slightly resize the image to become multiples of 4 even with --resize_or_crop none option. For the same reason, --fineSize needs to be a multiple of 4.

Training/Testing with high res images

CycleGAN is quite memory-intensive as four networks (two generators and two discriminators) need to be loaded on one GPU, so a large image cannot be entirely loaded. In this case, we recommend training with cropped images. For example, to generate 1024px results, you can train with --resize_or_crop scale_width_and_crop --loadSize 1024 --fineSize 360, and test with --resize_or_crop scale_width --fineSize 1024. This way makes sure the training and test will be at the same scale. At test time, you can afford higher resolution because you don’t need to load all networks.

About loss curve

Unfortunately, the loss curve does not reveal much information in training GANs, and CycleGAN is no exception. To check whether the training has converged or not, we recommend periodically generating a few samples and looking at them.

About batch size

For all experiments in the paper, we set the batch size to be 1. If there is room for memory, you can use higher batch size with batch norm or instance norm. (Note that the default batchnorm does not work well with multi-GPU training. You may consider using synchronized batchnorm instead). But please be aware that it can impact the training. In particular, even with Instance Normalization, different batch sizes can lead to different results. Moreover, increasing --fineSize may be a good alternative to increasing the batch size.