license: apache-2.0
pipeline_tag: text-classification
tags:
- transformers
- sentence-transformers
language:
- multilingual
Reranker
More details please refer to our Github: FlagEmbedding.
Different from embedding model, reranker uses question and document as input and directly output similarity instead of embedding. You can get a relevance score by inputting query and passage to the reranker. And the score can be mapped to a float value in [0,1] by sigmoid function.
Model List
Model | Base model | Language | layerwise | feature |
---|---|---|---|---|
BAAI/bge-reranker-base | xlm-roberta-base | Chinese and English | - | Lightweight reranker model, easy to deploy, with fast inference. |
BAAI/bge-reranker-large | xlm-roberta-large | Chinese and English | - | Lightweight reranker model, easy to deploy, with fast inference. |
BAAI/bge-reranker-v2-m3 | bge-m3 | Multilingual | - | Lightweight reranker model, possesses strong multilingual capabilities, easy to deploy, with fast inference. |
BAAI/bge-reranker-v2-gemma | gemma-2b | Multilingual | - | Suitable for multilingual contexts, performs well in both English proficiency and multilingual capabilities. |
BAAI/bge-reranker-v2-minicpm-layerwise | MiniCPM-2B-dpo-bf16 | Multilingual | 8-40 | Suitable for multilingual contexts, performs well in both English and Chinese proficiency, allows freedom to select layers for output, facilitating accelerated inference. |
You can select the model according your senario and resource.
For multilingual, utilize BAAI/bge-reranker-v2-m3 and BAAI/bge-reranker-v2-gemma
For Chinese or English, utilize BAAI/bge-reranker-v2-m3 and BAAI/bge-reranker-v2-minicpm-layerwise.
For efficiency, utilize BAAI/bge-reranker-v2-m3 and the low layer of BAAI/bge-reranker-v2-minicpm-layerwise.
For better performance, recommand BAAI/bge-reranker-v2-minicpm-layerwise and BAAI/bge-reranker-v2-gemma
Usage
Using FlagEmbedding
pip install -U FlagEmbedding
For normal reranker (bge-reranker-base / bge-reranker-large / bge-reranker-v2-m3 )
Get relevance scores (higher scores indicate more relevance):
from FlagEmbedding import FlagReranker
reranker = FlagReranker('BAAI/bge-reranker-v2-m3', use_fp16=True) # Setting use_fp16 to True speeds up computation with a slight performance degradation
score = reranker.compute_score(['query', 'passage'])
print(score) # -5.65234375
# You can map the scores into 0-1 by set "normalize=True", which will apply sigmoid function to the score
score = reranker.compute_score(['query', 'passage'], normalize=True)
print(score) # 0.003497010252573502
scores = reranker.compute_score([['what is panda?', 'hi'], ['what is panda?', 'The giant panda (Ailuropoda melanoleuca), sometimes called a panda bear or simply panda, is a bear species endemic to China.']])
print(scores) # [-8.1875, 5.26171875]
# You can map the scores into 0-1 by set "normalize=True", which will apply sigmoid function to the score
scores = reranker.compute_score([['what is panda?', 'hi'], ['what is panda?', 'The giant panda (Ailuropoda melanoleuca), sometimes called a panda bear or simply panda, is a bear species endemic to China.']], normalize=True)
print(scores) # [0.00027803096387751553, 0.9948403768236574]
For LLM-based reranker
from FlagEmbedding import FlagLLMReranker
reranker = FlagLLMReranker('BAAI/bge-reranker-v2-gemma', use_bf16=True) # Setting use_bf16 to True speeds up computation with a slight performance degradation
score = reranker.compute_score(['query', 'passage'])
print(score)
scores = reranker.compute_score([['what is panda?', 'hi'], ['what is panda?', 'The giant panda (Ailuropoda melanoleuca), sometimes called a panda bear or simply panda, is a bear species endemic to China.']])
print(scores)
For LLM-based layerwise reranker
from FlagEmbedding import LayerWiseFlagLLMReranker
reranker = LayerWiseFlagLLMReranker('BAAI/bge-reranker-v2-minicpm-layerwise', use_bf16=True) # Setting use_bf16 to True speeds up computation with a slight performance degradation
score = reranker.compute_score(['query', 'passage'], cutoff_layers=[28]) # Adjusting 'cutoff_layers' to pick which layers are used for computing the score.
print(score)
scores = reranker.compute_score([['what is panda?', 'hi'], ['what is panda?', 'The giant panda (Ailuropoda melanoleuca), sometimes called a panda bear or simply panda, is a bear species endemic to China.']], cutoff_layers=[28])
print(scores)
Using Huggingface transformers
For normal reranker (bge-reranker-base / bge-reranker-large / bge-reranker-v2-m3 )
Get relevance scores (higher scores indicate more relevance):
import torch
from transformers import AutoModelForSequenceClassification, AutoTokenizer
tokenizer = AutoTokenizer.from_pretrained('BAAI/bge-reranker-v2-m3')
model = AutoModelForSequenceClassification.from_pretrained('BAAI/bge-reranker-v2-m3')
model.eval()
pairs = [['what is panda?', 'hi'], ['what is panda?', 'The giant panda (Ailuropoda melanoleuca), sometimes called a panda bear or simply panda, is a bear species endemic to China.']]
with torch.no_grad():
inputs = tokenizer(pairs, padding=True, truncation=True, return_tensors='pt', max_length=512)
scores = model(**inputs, return_dict=True).logits.view(-1, ).float()
print(scores)
For LLM-based reranker
import torch
from transformers import AutoModelForCausalLM, AutoTokenizer
def get_inputs(pairs, tokenizer, prompt=None, max_length=1024):
if prompt is None:
prompt = "Given a query A and a passage B, determine whether the passage contains an answer to the query by providing a prediction of either 'Yes' or 'No'."
sep = "\n"
prompt_inputs = tokenizer(prompt,
return_tensors=None,
add_special_tokens=False)['input_ids']
sep_inputs = tokenizer(sep,
return_tensors=None,
add_special_tokens=False)['input_ids']
inputs = []
for query, passage in pairs:
query_inputs = tokenizer(f'A: {query}',
return_tensors=None,
add_special_tokens=False,
max_length=max_length * 3 // 4,
truncation=True)
passage_inputs = tokenizer(f'B: {passage}',
return_tensors=None,
add_special_tokens=False,
max_length=max_length,
truncation=True)
item = tokenizer.prepare_for_model(
[tokenizer.bos_token_id] + query_inputs['input_ids'],
sep_inputs + passage_inputs['input_ids'],
truncation='only_second',
max_length=max_length,
padding=False,
return_attention_mask=False,
return_token_type_ids=False,
add_special_tokens=False
)
item['input_ids'] = item['input_ids'] + sep_inputs + prompt_inputs
item['attention_mask'] = [1] * len(item['input_ids'])
inputs.append(item)
return tokenizer.pad(
inputs,
padding=True,
max_length=max_length + len(sep_inputs) + len(prompt_inputs),
pad_to_multiple_of=8,
return_tensors='pt',
)
tokenizer = AutoTokenizer.from_pretrained('BAAI/bge-reranker-v2-gemma')
model = AutoModelForCausalLM.from_pretrained('BAAI/bge-reranker-v2-gemma')
yes_loc = tokenizer('Yes', add_special_tokens=False)['input_ids'][0]
model.eval()
pairs = [['what is panda?', 'hi'], ['what is panda?', 'The giant panda (Ailuropoda melanoleuca), sometimes called a panda bear or simply panda, is a bear species endemic to China.']]
with torch.no_grad():
inputs = get_inputs(pairs, tokenizer)
scores = model(**inputs, return_dict=True).logits[:, -1, yes_loc].view(-1, ).float()
print(scores)
For LLM-based layerwise reranker
import torch
from transformers import AutoModelForCausalLM, AutoTokenizer
def get_inputs(pairs, tokenizer, prompt=None, max_length=1024):
if prompt is None:
prompt = "Given a query A and a passage B, determine whether the passage contains an answer to the query by providing a prediction of either 'Yes' or 'No'."
sep = "\n"
prompt_inputs = tokenizer(prompt,
return_tensors=None,
add_special_tokens=False)['input_ids']
sep_inputs = tokenizer(sep,
return_tensors=None,
add_special_tokens=False)['input_ids']
inputs = []
for query, passage in pairs:
query_inputs = tokenizer(f'A: {query}',
return_tensors=None,
add_special_tokens=False,
max_length=max_length * 3 // 4,
truncation=True)
passage_inputs = tokenizer(f'B: {passage}',
return_tensors=None,
add_special_tokens=False,
max_length=max_length,
truncation=True)
item = tokenizer.prepare_for_model(
[tokenizer.bos_token_id] + query_inputs['input_ids'],
sep_inputs + passage_inputs['input_ids'],
truncation='only_second',
max_length=max_length,
padding=False,
return_attention_mask=False,
return_token_type_ids=False,
add_special_tokens=False
)
item['input_ids'] = item['input_ids'] + sep_inputs + prompt_inputs
item['attention_mask'] = [1] * len(item['input_ids'])
inputs.append(item)
return tokenizer.pad(
inputs,
padding=True,
max_length=max_length + len(sep_inputs) + len(prompt_inputs),
pad_to_multiple_of=8,
return_tensors='pt',
)
tokenizer = AutoTokenizer.from_pretrained('BAAI/bge-reranker-v2-minicpm-layerwise', trust_remote_code=True, torch_dtype=torch.bfloat16)
model = AutoModelForCausalLM.from_pretrained('BAAI/bge-reranker-v2-minicpm-layerwise', trust_remote_code=True, torch_dtype=torch.bfloat16)
model = model.to('cuda')
model.eval()
pairs = [['what is panda?', 'hi'], ['what is panda?', 'The giant panda (Ailuropoda melanoleuca), sometimes called a panda bear or simply panda, is a bear species endemic to China.']]
with torch.no_grad():
inputs = get_inputs(pairs, tokenizer).to(model.device)
all_scores = model(**inputs, return_dict=True, cutoff_layers=[28])
all_scores = [scores[:, -1].view(-1, ).float() for scores in all_scores[0]]
print(all_scores)
Fine-tune
Data Format
Train data should be a json file, where each line is a dict like this:
{"query": str, "pos": List[str], "neg":List[str], "prompt": str}
query
is the query, and pos
is a list of positive texts, neg
is a list of negative texts, prompt
indicates the relationship between query and texts. If you have no negative texts for a query, you can random sample some from the entire corpus as the negatives.
See toy_finetune_data.jsonl for a toy data file.
Train
You can fine-tune the reranker with the following code:
For llm-based reranker
torchrun --nproc_per_node {number of gpus} \
-m FlagEmbedding.llm_reranker.finetune_for_instruction.run \
--output_dir {path to save model} \
--model_name_or_path google/gemma-2b \
--train_data ./toy_finetune_data.jsonl \
--learning_rate 2e-4 \
--num_train_epochs 1 \
--per_device_train_batch_size 1 \
--gradient_accumulation_steps 16 \
--dataloader_drop_last True \
--query_max_len 512 \
--passage_max_len 512 \
--train_group_size 16 \
--logging_steps 1 \
--save_steps 2000 \
--save_total_limit 50 \
--ddp_find_unused_parameters False \
--gradient_checkpointing \
--deepspeed stage1.json \
--warmup_ratio 0.1 \
--bf16 \
--use_lora True \
--lora_rank 32 \
--lora_alpha 64 \
--use_flash_attn True \
--target_modules q_proj k_proj v_proj o_proj
For llm-based layerwise reranker
torchrun --nproc_per_node {number of gpus} \
-m FlagEmbedding.llm_reranker.finetune_for_layerwise.run \
--output_dir {path to save model} \
--model_name_or_path openbmb/MiniCPM-2B-dpo-bf16 \
--train_data ./toy_finetune_data.jsonl \
--learning_rate 2e-4 \
--num_train_epochs 1 \
--per_device_train_batch_size 1 \
--gradient_accumulation_steps 16 \
--dataloader_drop_last True \
--query_max_len 512 \
--passage_max_len 512 \
--train_group_size 16 \
--logging_steps 1 \
--save_steps 2000 \
--save_total_limit 50 \
--ddp_find_unused_parameters False \
--gradient_checkpointing \
--deepspeed stage1.json \
--warmup_ratio 0.1 \
--bf16 \
--use_lora True \
--lora_rank 32 \
--lora_alpha 64 \
--use_flash_attn True \
--target_modules q_proj k_proj v_proj o_proj \
--start_layer 8 \
--head_multi True \
--head_type simple
Our rerankers are initialized from google/gemma-2b (for llm-based reranker) and openbmb/MiniCPM-2B-dpo-bf16 (for llm-based layerwise reranker), and we train it on a mixture of multilingual datasets:
Evaluation
- llama-index.
- BEIR.
rereank the top 100 results from bge-en-v1.5 large.
rereank the top 100 results from e5 mistral 7b instruct.
- CMTEB-retrieval.
It rereank the top 100 results from bge-zh-v1.5 large.
- miracl (multi-language).
It rereank the top 100 results from bge-m3.
Citation
If you find this repository useful, please consider giving a star and citation
@misc{li2023making,
title={Making Large Language Models A Better Foundation For Dense Retrieval},
author={Chaofan Li and Zheng Liu and Shitao Xiao and Yingxia Shao},
year={2023},
eprint={2312.15503},
archivePrefix={arXiv},
primaryClass={cs.CL}
}
@misc{chen2024bge,
title={BGE M3-Embedding: Multi-Lingual, Multi-Functionality, Multi-Granularity Text Embeddings Through Self-Knowledge Distillation},
author={Jianlv Chen and Shitao Xiao and Peitian Zhang and Kun Luo and Defu Lian and Zheng Liu},
year={2024},
eprint={2402.03216},
archivePrefix={arXiv},
primaryClass={cs.CL}
}