- Add and use more performant `deepClone` method for deep copying throughout the UI.
Benchmarks indicate the Really Fast Deep Clone library (`rfdc`) is the best all-around way to deep-clone large objects.
This is particularly relevant in canvas. When drawing or otherwise manipulating canvas objects, we need to do a lot of deep cloning of the canvas layer state objects.
Previously, we were using lodash's `cloneDeep`.
I did some fairly realistic benchmarks with a handful of deep-cloning algorithms/libraries (including the native `structuredClone`). I used a snapshot of the canvas state as the data to be copied:
On Chromium, `rfdc` is by far the fastest, over an order of magnitude faster than `cloneDeep`.
On FF, `fastest-json-copy` and `recursiveDeepCopy` are even faster, but are rather limited in data types. `rfdc`, while only half as fast as the former 2, is still nearly an order of magnitude faster than `cloneDeep`.
On Safari, `structuredClone` is the fastest, about 2x as fast as `cloneDeep`. `rfdc` is only 30% faster than `cloneDeep`.
`rfdc`'s peak memory usage is about 10% more than `cloneDeep` on Chrome. I couldn't get memory measurements from FF and Safari, but let's just assume the memory usage is similar relative to the other algos.
Overall, `rfdc` is the best choice for a single algo for all browsers. It's definitely the best for Chromium, by far the most popular desktop browser and thus our primary target.
A future enhancement might be to detect the browser and use that to determine which algorithm to use.
With the change to model identifiers from v3 to v4, if a user had persisted redux state with the old format, we could get unexpected runtime errors when rehydrating state if we try to access model attributes that no longer exist.
For example, the CLIP Skip component does this:
```ts
CLIP_SKIP_MAP[model.base].maxClip
```
In v3, models had a `base_type` attribute, but it is renamed to `base` in v4. This code therefore causes a runtime error:
- `model.base` is `undefined`
- `CLIP_SKIP_MAP[undefined]` is also undefined
- `undefined.maxClip` is a runtime error!
Resolved by adding a migration for the redux slices that have model identifiers. The migration simply resets the slice or the part of the slice that is affected, when it's simple to do a partial reset.
Closes#6000
Add concepts for metadata handlers. Handlers include parsers, recallers and validators for different metadata types:
- Parsers parse a raw metadata object of any shape to a structured object.
- Recallers load the parsed metadata into state. Recallers are optional, as some metadata types don't need to be loaded into state.
- Validators provide an additional layer of validation before recalling the metadata. This is needed because a metadata object may be valid, but not able to be recalled due to some other requirement, like base model compatibility. Validators are optional.
Sometimes metadata is not a single object but a list of items - like LoRAs. Metadata handlers may implement an optional set of "item" handlers which operate on individual items in the list.
Parsers and validators are async to allow fetching additional data, like a model config. Recallers are synchronous.
The these handlers are composed into a public API, exported as a `handlers` object. Besides the handlers functions, a metadata handler set includes:
- A function to get the label of the metadata type.
- An optional function to render the value of the metadata type.
- An optional function to render the _item_ value of the metadata type.
Refactor of metadata recall handling. This is in preparation for a backwards compatibility layer for models.
- Create helpers to fetch a model outside react (e.g. not in a hook)
- Created helpers to parse model metadata
- Renamed a lot of types that were confusing and/or had naming collisions
- Update most model identifiers to be `{key: string}` instead of name/base/type. Doesn't change the model select components yet.
- Update model _parameters_, stored in redux, to be `{key: string, base: BaseModel}` - we need to store the base model to be able to check model compatibility. May want to store the whole config? Not sure...
* feat(ui): get rid of convoluted socket vs appSocket redux actions
There's no need to have `socket...` and `appSocket...` actions.
I did this initially due to a misunderstanding about the sequence of handling from middleware to reducers.
* feat(ui): bump deps
Mainly bumping to get latest `redux-remember`.
A change to socket.io required a change to the types in `useSocketIO`.
* chore(ui): format
* feat(ui): add error handling to redux persistence layer
- Add an error handler to `redux-remember` config using our logger
- Add custom errors representing storage set and get failures
- Update storage driver to raise these accordingly
- wrap method to clear idbkeyval storage and tidy its logic up
* feat(ui): add debuggingLoggerMiddleware
This simply logs every action and a diff of the state change.
Due to the noise this creates, it's not added by default at all. Add it to the middlewares if you want to use it.
* feat(ui): add $socket to window if in dev mode
* fix(ui): do not enable cancel hotkeys on inputs
* fix(ui): use JSON.stringify for ROARR logger serializer
A recent change to ROARR introduced limits to the size of data that will logged. This ends up making our logs far less useful. Change the serializer back to what it was previously.
* feat(ui): change diff util, update debuggerLoggerMiddleware
The previous diff library would present deleted things as `undefined`. Unfortunately, a JSON.stringify cycle will strip those values out. The ROARR logger does this and so the diffs end up being a lot less useful, not showing removed keys.
The new diff library uses a different format for the delta that serializes nicely.
* feat(ui): add migrations to redux persistence layer
- All persisted slices must now have a slice config, consisting of their initial state and a migrate callback. The migrate callback is very simple for now, with no type safety. It adds missing properties to the state. A future enhancement might be to model the each slice's state with e.g. zod and have proper validation and types.
- Persisted slices now have a `_version` property
- The migrate callback is called inside `redux-remember`'s `unserialize` handler. I couldn't figure out a good way to put this into the reducer and do logging (reducers should have no side effects). Also I ran into a weird race condition that I couldn't figure out. And finally, the typings are tricky. This works for now.
- `generationSlice` and `canvasSlice` both need migrations for the new aspect ratio setup, this has been added
- Stuff related to persistence has been moved in to `store.ts` for simplicity
* feat(ui): clean up StorageError class
* fix(ui): scale method default is now 'auto'
* feat(ui): when changing controlnet model, enable autoconfig
* fix(ui): make embedding popover immediately accessible
Prevents hotkeys from being captured when embeddings are still loading.
Ensure workflow editor model selector component gets a value
This introduced some funky type issues related to ONNX models. ONNX doesn't work anyways (unmaintained). Instead of fixing the types to work with a non-working feature, ONNX is now removed entirely from the UI.
- Remove all refs to ONNX (and Olives)
- Fix some type issues
- Add ONNX nodes to the nodes denylist (so they are not visible in UI)
- Update VAE graph helper, which still had some ONNX logic. It's a very simple change and doesn't change any logic. Just removes some conditions that were for ONNX. I tested it and nothing broke.
- Regenerate types
- Fix prettier and eslint ignores for generated types
- Lint
There are a few breaking changes, which I've addressed.
The vast majority of changes are related to new handling of `reselect`'s `createSelector` options.
For better or worse, we memoize just about all our selectors using lodash `isEqual` for `resultEqualityCheck`. The upgrade requires we explicitly set the `memoize` option to `lruMemoize` to continue using lodash here.
Doing that required changing our `defaultSelectorOptions`.
Instead of changing that and finding dozens of instances where we weren't using that and instead were defining selector options manually, I've created a pre-configured selector: `createMemoizedSelector`.
This is now used everywhere instead of `createSelector`.
Node authors may now create their own arbitrary/custom field types. Any pydantic model is supported.
Two notes:
1. Your field type's class name must be unique.
Suggest prefixing fields with something related to the node pack as a kind of namespace.
2. Custom field types function as connection-only fields.
For example, if your custom field has string attributes, you will not get a text input for that attribute when you give a node a field with your custom type.
This is the same behaviour as other complex fields that don't have custom UIs in the workflow editor - like, say, a string collection.
feat(ui): fix tooltips for custom types
We need to hold onto the original type of the field so they don't all just show up as "Unknown".
fix(ui): fix ts error with custom fields
feat(ui): custom field types connection validation
In the initial commit, a custom field's original type was added to the *field templates* only as `originalType`. Custom fields' `type` property was `"Custom"`*. This allowed for type safety throughout the UI logic.
*Actually, it was `"Unknown"`, but I changed it to custom for clarity.
Connection validation logic, however, uses the *field instance* of the node/field. Like the templates, *field instances* with custom types have their `type` set to `"Custom"`, but they didn't have an `originalType` property. As a result, all custom fields could be connected to all other custom fields.
To resolve this, we need to add `originalType` to the *field instances*, then switch the validation logic to use this instead of `type`.
This ended up needing a bit of fanagling:
- If we make `originalType` a required property on field instances, existing workflows will break during connection validation, because they won't have this property. We'd need a new layer of logic to migrate the workflows, adding the new `originalType` property.
While this layer is probably needed anyways, typing `originalType` as optional is much simpler. Workflow migration logic can come layer.
(Technically, we could remove all references to field types from the workflow files, and let the templates hold all this information. This feels like a significant change and I'm reluctant to do it now.)
- Because `originalType` is optional, anywhere we care about the type of a field, we need to use it over `type`. So there are a number of `field.originalType ?? field.type` expressions. This is a bit of a gotcha, we'll need to remember this in the future.
- We use `Array.prototype.includes()` often in the workflow editor, e.g. `COLLECTION_TYPES.includes(type)`. In these cases, the const array is of type `FieldType[]`, and `type` is is `FieldType`.
Because we now support custom types, the arg `type` is now widened from `FieldType` to `string`.
This causes a TS error. This behaviour is somewhat controversial (see https://github.com/microsoft/TypeScript/issues/14520). These expressions are now rewritten as `COLLECTION_TYPES.some((t) => t === type)` to satisfy TS. It's logically equivalent.
fix(ui): typo
feat(ui): add CustomCollection and CustomPolymorphic field types
feat(ui): add validation for CustomCollection & CustomPolymorphic types
- Update connection validation for custom types
- Use simple string parsing to determine if a field is a collection or polymorphic type.
- No longer need to keep a list of collection and polymorphic types.
- Added runtime checks in `baseinvocation.py` to ensure no fields are named in such a way that it could mess up the new parsing
chore(ui): remove errant console.log
fix(ui): rename 'nodes.currentConnectionFieldType' -> 'nodes.connectionStartFieldType'
This was confusingly named and kept tripping me up. Renamed to be consistent with the `reactflow` `ConnectionStartParams` type.
fix(ui): fix ts error
feat(nodes): add runtime check for custom field names
"Custom", "CustomCollection" and "CustomPolymorphic" are reserved field names.
chore(ui): add TODO for revising field type names
wip refactor fieldtype structured
wip refactor field types
wip refactor types
wip refactor types
fix node layout
refactor field types
chore: mypy
organisation
organisation
organisation
fix(nodes): fix field orig_required, field_kind and input statuses
feat(nodes): remove broken implementation of default_factory on InputField
Use of this could break connection validation due to the difference in node schemas required fields and invoke() required args.
Removed entirely for now. It wasn't ever actually used by the system, because all graphs always had values provided for fields where default_factory was used.
Also, pydantic is smart enough to not reuse the same object when specifying a default value - it clones the object first. So, the common pattern of `default_factory=list` is extraneous. It can just be `default=[]`.
fix(nodes): fix InputField name validation
workflow validation
validation
chore: ruff
feat(nodes): fix up baseinvocation comments
fix(ui): improve typing & logic of buildFieldInputTemplate
improved error handling in parseFieldType
fix: back compat for deprecated default_factory and UIType
feat(nodes): do not show node packs loaded log if none loaded
chore(ui): typegen
* first string only to test
* more strings changed
* almost half strings added in json file
* more strings added
* more changes
* few strings and t function changed
* resolved
* errors resolved
* chore(ui): fmt en.json
---------
Co-authored-by: psychedelicious <4822129+psychedelicious@users.noreply.github.com>
This rule enforces no arrow functions in component props. In practice, it means all functions passed as component props must be wrapped in `useCallback()`.
This is a performance optimization to prevent unnecessary rerenders.
The rule is added and all violations have been fixed, whew!
- Change translations to use arrays of paragraphs instead of a single paragraph.
- Change component to accept a `feature` prop to identify the feature which the popover describes.
- Add optional `wrapperProps`: passed to the wrapper element, allowing more flexibility when using the popover
- Add optional `popoverProps`: passed to the `<Popover />` component, allowing for overriding individual instances of the popover's props
- Move definitions of features and popover settings to `invokeai/frontend/web/src/common/components/IAIInformationalPopover/constants.ts`
- Add some type safety to the `feature` prop
- Edit `POPOVER_DATA` to provide `image`, `href`, `buttonLabel`, and any popover props. The popover props are applied to all instances of the popover for the given feature. Note that the component prop `popoverProps` will override settings here.
- Remove the popover's arrow. Because the popover is wrapping groups of components, sometimes the error ends up pointing to nothing, which looks kinda janky. I've just removed the arrow entirely, but feel free to add it back if you think it looks better.
- Use a `link` variant button with external link icon to better communicate that clicking the button will open a new tab.
- Default the link button label to "Learn More" (if a label is provided, that will be used instead)
- Make default position `top`, but set manually set some to `right` - namely, anything with a dropdown. This prevents the popovers from obscuring or being obscured by the dropdowns.
- Do a bit more restructuring of the Popover component itself, and how it is integrated with other components
- More ref forwarding
- Make the open delay 1s
- Set the popovers to use lazy mounting (eg do not mount until the user opens the thing)
- Update the verbiage for many popover items and add missing dynamic prompts stuff