@flwrlabs/quickstart-tensorflow
Federated Learning with Tensorflow/Keras and Flower (Quickstart Example)
Quickstart
flwr new @flwrlabs/quickstart-tensorflowReadme
Federated Learning with Tensorflow/Keras and Flower (Quickstart Example)
This introductory example to Flower uses Tensorflow/Keras but deep knowledge of this frameworks is required to run the example. However, it will help you understand how to adapt Flower to your use case. Running this example in itself is quite easy. This example uses Flower Datasets to download, partition and preprocess the CIFAR-10 dataset.
Set up the project
Fetch the app
Install Flower:
pip install flwrFetch the app:
flwr new @flwrlabs/quickstart-tensorflowThis will create a new directory called quickstart-tensorflow with the following structure:
quickstart-tensorflow
├── tfexample
│ ├── __init__.py
│ ├── client_app.py # Defines your ClientApp
│ ├── server_app.py # Defines your ServerApp
│ └── task.py # Defines your model, training and data loading
├── pyproject.toml # Project metadata like dependencies and configs
└── README.mdInstall dependencies and project
Install the dependencies defined in pyproject.toml as well as the tfhexample package.
pip install -e .Run the project
You can run your Flower project in both simulation and deployment mode without making changes to the code. If you are starting with Flower, we recommend you using the simulation mode as it requires fewer components to be launched manually. By default, flwr run will make use of the Simulation Engine.
Run with the Simulation Engine
NOTE
Check the Simulation Engine documentation to learn more about Flower simulations and how to optimize them.
flwr run .You can also override some of the settings for your ClientApp and ServerApp defined in pyproject.toml. For example:
flwr run . --run-config "num-server-rounds=5 learning-rate=0.05"TIP
For a more detailed walk-through check our quickstart TensorFlow tutorial
Run with the Deployment Engine
Follow this how-to guide to run the same app in this example but with Flower's Deployment Engine. After that, you might be intersted in setting up secure TLS-enabled communications and SuperNode authentication in your federation.
If you are already familiar with how the Deployment Engine works, you may want to learn how to run it using Docker. Check out the Flower with Docker documentation.