1

I have deployed a the universal_sentence_encoder_large_3 to an aws sagemaker. When I am attempting to predict with the deployed model I get Failed precondition: Table not initialized. as an error. I have included the part where I save my model below:

import tensorflow as tf
import tensorflow_hub as hub
import numpy as np
def tfhub_to_savedmodel(model_name, export_path):

    model_path = '{}/{}/00000001'.format(export_path, model_name)
    tfhub_uri = 'http://tfhub.dev/google/universal-sentence-encoder-large/3'

    with tf.Session() as sess:
        module = hub.Module(tfhub_uri)
        sess.run([tf.global_variables_initializer(), tf.tables_initializer()])
        input_params = module.get_input_info_dict()
        dtype = input_params['text'].dtype
        shape = input_params['text'].get_shape()

        # define the model inputs
        inputs = {'text': tf.placeholder(dtype, shape, 'text')}
        output = module(inputs['text'])
        outputs = {
            'vector': output,
        }

        # export the model
        tf.saved_model.simple_save(
            sess,
            model_path,
            inputs=inputs,
            outputs=outputs)  

    return model_path

I have seen other people ask this problem but no solution has been ever posted. It seems to be a common problem with tensorflow_hub sentence encoders

1 Answer 1

0

I was running into this exact issue earlier this week while trying to modify this example Sagemaker notebook. Particularly the part where serving the model. That is, running predictor.predict() on the Sagemaker Tensorflow Estimator.

The solution outlined in the issue worked perfectly for me- https://github.com/awslabs/amazon-sagemaker-examples/issues/773#issuecomment-509433290

I think it's just because tf.tables_initializer() only runs for training but it needs to be specified through the legacy_init_op if you want to run it during prediction.

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.