# Copyright (c) Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved. # Licensed under the MIT License. """ Draw a pipeline =============== There is no other way to look into one model stored in ONNX format than looking into its node with *onnx*. This example demonstrates how to draw a model and to retrieve it in *json* format. Retrieve a model in JSON format +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ That's the most simple way. """ from onnxruntime.datasets import get_example example1 = get_example("mul_1.onnx") import onnx # noqa: E402 model = onnx.load(example1) # model is a ModelProto protobuf message print(model) ################################# # Draw a model with ONNX # ++++++++++++++++++++++ # We use `net_drawer.py `_ # included in *onnx* package. # We use *onnx* to load the model # in a different way than before. from onnx import ModelProto # noqa: E402 model = ModelProto() with open(example1, "rb") as fid: content = fid.read() model.ParseFromString(content) ################################### # We convert it into a graph. from onnx.tools.net_drawer import GetOpNodeProducer, GetPydotGraph # noqa: E402 pydot_graph = GetPydotGraph( model.graph, name=model.graph.name, rankdir="LR", node_producer=GetOpNodeProducer("docstring") ) pydot_graph.write_dot("graph.dot") ####################################### # Then into an image import os # noqa: E402 os.system("dot -O -Tpng graph.dot") ################################ # Which we display... import matplotlib.pyplot as plt # noqa: E402 image = plt.imread("graph.dot.png") plt.imshow(image)