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The Surprising Computational Power of Nondeterministic Stack RNNs

This repository contains the code for the paper "The Surprising Computational Power of Nondeterministic Stack RNNs" (DuSell and Chiang, 2023). It includes all of the code necessary to reproduce the experiments and figures used in the paper, as well as a Docker image definition that can be used to replicate the software environment it was developed in.

If you are looking for the code for our earlier paper "Learning Hierarchical Structures with Differentiable Nondeterministic Stacks" (DuSell and Chiang, 2022), please see this release.

If you are looking for the code for our earlier paper "Learning Context-free Languages with Nondeterministic Stack RNNs" (DuSell and Chiang, 2020), please see this release.

This repository includes PyTorch implementations of the following models:

Directory Structure

  • data/: Contains datasets used for experiments, namely the PTB language modeling dataset.
  • experiments/: Contains scripts for reproducing all of the experiments and figures presented in the paper.
    • capacity/: Scripts for the capacity experiments in Section 5.
    • non-cfls/: Scripts for the non-CFL experiments in Section 4.
    • ptb/: Scripts for the PTB language modeling experiments in Section 6.
  • scripts/: Contains helper scripts for setting up the software environment, building container images, running containers, installing Python packages, preprocessing data, etc. Instructions for using these scripts are below.
  • src/: Contains source code for all models, training routines, plotting scripts, etc.
  • tests/: Contains unit tests for the code under src/.

Installation and Setup

In order to foster reproducibility, the code for this paper was developed and run inside of a Docker container defined in the file Dockerfile-dev. To run this code, you can build the Docker image yourself and run it using Docker. Or, if you don't feel like installing Docker, you can simply use Dockerfile-dev as a reference for setting up the software environment on your own system. You can also build an equivalent Singularity image which can be used on an HPC cluster, where it is likely that Docker is not available but Singularity is.

In any case, it is highly recommended to run most experiments on a machine with access to an NVIDIA GPU so that they finish within a reasonable amount of time. The exception to this is the experiments for the baseline models (LSTM, superposition stack LSTM, and stratification stack LSTM) on the formal language modeling tasks, as they finish more quickly on CPU rather than GPU and should be run in CPU mode.

Using Docker

In order to use the Docker image, you must first install Docker. If you intend to run any experiments on a GPU, you must also ensure that your NVIDIA driver is set up properly and install the NVIDIA Container Toolkit.

In order to automatically pull the public Docker image, start the container, and open up a bash shell inside of it, run

$ bash scripts/docker-shell.bash --pull

If you prefer to build the image from scratch yourself, you can run

$ bash scripts/docker-shell.bash --build

After you have built the image once, there is no need to do so again, so afterwards you can simply run

$ bash scripts/docker-shell.bash

By default, this script starts the container in GPU mode, which will fail if you are not running on a machine with a GPU. If you only want to run things in CPU mode, you can run

$ bash scripts/docker-shell.bash --cpu

You can combine this with the --pull or --build options.

Using Singularity

If you use a shared HPC cluster at your institution, it might not support Docker, but there's a chance it does support Singularity, which is an alternative container runtime that is more suitable for shared computing environments.

In order to run the code in a Singularity container, you must first obtain the Docker image and then convert it to a .sif (Singularity image) file on a machine where you have root access (e.g. your personal computer or workstation). This requires installing both Docker and Singularity on that machine. Assuming you have already built the Docker image according to the instructions above, you can use the following to create the .sif file:

$ bash scripts/build-singularity-image.bash

This will create the file nondeterministic-stack-rnn-2023.sif. It is normal for this to take several minutes. Afterwards, you can upload the .sif file to your HPC cluster and use it there.

You can open a shell in the Singularity container using

$ bash scripts/singularity-shell.bash

This will work on machines that do and do not have an NVIDIA GPU, although it will output a warning if there is no GPU.

You can find a more general tutorial on Singularity here.

Additional Setup

Whatever method you use to run the code (whether in a Docker container, Singularity container, or no container), there are some additional setup and preprocessing steps you need to run. The following script will take care of these for you (if you are using a container, you must run this inside the container shell):

$ bash scripts/setup.bash

More specifically, this script:

  • Installs the Python packages required by our code, which will be stored in the local directory rather than system-wide. We use the package manager Poetry to manage Python packages.
  • Downloads and preprocesses the Penn Treebank language modeling dataset.

Running Code

All files under src/ should be run using poetry so they have access to the Python packages provided by the Poetry package manager. This means you should either prefix all of your commands with poetry run or run poetry shell beforehand to enter a shell with Poetry's virtualenv enabled all the time. You should run both Python and Bash scripts with Poetry, because the Bash scripts might call out to Python scripts. All Bash scripts under src/ should be run with src/ as the current working directory.

All scripts under scripts/ should be run with the top-level directory as the current working directory.

Running Experiments

The experiments/ directory contains scripts for reproducing all of the experiments and plots presented in the paper. Some of these scripts are intended to be used to submit jobs to a computing cluster. They should be run outside of the container. You will need to edit the file experiments/submit-job.bash to tailor it to your specific computing cluster. Other scripts are for plotting or printing tables and should be run inside the container.