InvokeAI/docker/README.md

Ignoring revisions in .git-blame-ignore-revs. Click here to bypass and see the normal blame view.

123 lines
4.8 KiB
Markdown
Raw Permalink Normal View History

# Invoke in Docker
- Ensure that Docker can use the GPU on your system
- This documentation assumes Linux, but should work similarly under Windows with WSL2
- We don't recommend running Invoke in Docker on macOS at this time. It works, but very slowly.
## Quickstart :lightning:
No `docker compose`, no persistence, just a simple one-liner using the official images:
**CUDA:**
```bash
docker run --runtime=nvidia --gpus=all --publish 9090:9090 ghcr.io/invoke-ai/invokeai
```
**ROCm:**
```bash
docker run --device /dev/kfd --device /dev/dri --publish 9090:9090 ghcr.io/invoke-ai/invokeai:main-rocm
```
Open `http://localhost:9090` in your browser once the container finishes booting, install some models, and generate away!
> [!TIP]
> To persist your data (including downloaded models) outside of the container, add a `--volume/-v` flag to the above command, e.g.: `docker run --volume /some/local/path:/invokeai <...the rest of the command>`
## Customize the container
We ship the `run.sh` script, which is a convenient wrapper around `docker compose` for cases where custom image build args are needed. Alternatively, the familiar `docker compose` commands work just as well.
```bash
cd docker
cp .env.sample .env
# edit .env to your liking if you need to; it is well commented.
./run.sh
```
It will take a few minutes to build the image the first time. Once the application starts up, open `http://localhost:9090` in your browser to invoke!
## Docker setup in detail
#### Linux
1. Ensure builkit is enabled in the Docker daemon settings (`/etc/docker/daemon.json`)
2. Install the `docker compose` plugin using your package manager, or follow a [tutorial](https://docs.docker.com/compose/install/linux/#install-using-the-repository).
- The deprecated `docker-compose` (hyphenated) CLI probably won't work. Update to a recent version.
3. Ensure docker daemon is able to access the GPU.
- [NVIDIA docs](https://docs.nvidia.com/datacenter/cloud-native/container-toolkit/latest/install-guide.html)
- [AMD docs](https://rocm.docs.amd.com/projects/install-on-linux/en/latest/how-to/docker.html)
#### macOS
> [!TIP]
> You'll be better off installing Invoke directly on your system, because Docker can not use the GPU on macOS.
If you are still reading:
1. Ensure Docker has at least 16GB RAM
2. Enable VirtioFS for file sharing
3. Enable `docker compose` V2 support
This is done via Docker Desktop preferences.
### Configure the Invoke Environment
1. Make a copy of `.env.sample` and name it `.env` (`cp .env.sample .env` (Mac/Linux) or `copy example.env .env` (Windows)). Make changes as necessary. Set `INVOKEAI_ROOT` to an absolute path to the desired location of the InvokeAI runtime directory. It may be an existing directory from a previous installation (post 4.0.0).
2023-10-30 20:53:02 +00:00
1. Execute `run.sh`
The image will be built automatically if needed.
The runtime directory (holding models and outputs) will be created in the location specified by `INVOKEAI_ROOT`. The default location is `~/invokeai`. Navigate to the Model Manager tab and install some models before generating.
### Use a GPU
- Linux is *recommended* for GPU support in Docker.
- WSL2 is *required* for Windows.
- only `x86_64` architecture is supported.
The Docker daemon on the system must be already set up to use the GPU. In case of Linux, this involves installing `nvidia-docker-runtime` and configuring the `nvidia` runtime as default. Steps will be different for AMD. Please see Docker/NVIDIA/AMD documentation for the most up-to-date instructions for using your GPU with Docker.
To use an AMD GPU, set `GPU_DRIVER=rocm` in your `.env` file before running `./run.sh`.
## Customize
2023-10-30 20:53:02 +00:00
Check the `.env.sample` file. It contains some environment variables for running in Docker. Copy it, name it `.env`, and fill it in with your own values. Next time you run `run.sh`, your custom values will be used.
You can also set these values in `docker-compose.yml` directly, but `.env` will help avoid conflicts when code is updated.
Values are optional, but setting `INVOKEAI_ROOT` is highly recommended. The default is `~/invokeai`. Example:
```bash
INVOKEAI_ROOT=/Volumes/WorkDrive/invokeai
HUGGINGFACE_TOKEN=the_actual_token
CONTAINER_UID=1000
GPU_DRIVER=cuda
```
Any environment variables supported by InvokeAI can be set here. See the [Configuration docs](https://invoke-ai.github.io/InvokeAI/features/CONFIGURATION/) for further detail.
2024-05-24 15:26:05 +00:00
## Even More Customizing!
See the `docker-compose.yml` file. The `command` instruction can be uncommented and used to run arbitrary startup commands. Some examples below.
### Reconfigure the runtime directory
Can be used to download additional models from the supported model list
In conjunction with `INVOKEAI_ROOT` can be also used to initialize a runtime directory
```yaml
command:
- invokeai-configure
- --yes
```
Or install models:
```yaml
command:
- invokeai-model-install
```