Before this change, if you attempt to create an image that with a nonexistent board, we'd get an unhandled error when adding the image to a board. The record would be created, but file not, due to the structure of the code.
With this change, we now log a warning if we have a problem adding the image to the board, but the record and file are still created.
A future improvement would be to create a transaction for this part of the code, preventing some other situation that could result in only the record or only the file beings saved.
* use model_class.load_singlefile() instead of converting; works, but performance is poor
* adjust the convert api - not right just yet
* working, needs sql migrator update
* rename migration_11 before conflict merge with main
* Update invokeai/backend/model_manager/load/model_loaders/stable_diffusion.py
Co-authored-by: Ryan Dick <ryanjdick3@gmail.com>
* Update invokeai/backend/model_manager/load/model_loaders/stable_diffusion.py
Co-authored-by: Ryan Dick <ryanjdick3@gmail.com>
* implement lightweight version-by-version config migration
* simplified config schema migration code
* associate sdxl config with sdxl VAEs
* remove use of original_config_file in load_single_file()
---------
Co-authored-by: Lincoln Stein <lstein@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Ryan Dick <ryanjdick3@gmail.com>
Previously, we used `model_install_download_progress` for both download starting and progressing. When handling this event, we don't know which actual thing it represents.
Add `model_install_download_started` event to explicitly represent a model download started event.
* allow model patcher to optimize away the unpatching step when feasible
* remove lazy_offloading functionality
* allow model patcher to optimize away the unpatching step when feasible
* remove lazy_offloading functionality
* do not save original weights if there is a CPU copy of state dict
* Update invokeai/backend/model_manager/load/load_base.py
Co-authored-by: Ryan Dick <ryanjdick3@gmail.com>
* documentation fixes added during penultimate review
---------
Co-authored-by: Lincoln Stein <lstein@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Kent Keirsey <31807370+hipsterusername@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Ryan Dick <ryanjdick3@gmail.com>
- Pass the seed from `latents_a` to the output latents. Fixed an issue where using `BlendLatentsInvocation` could result in different outputs during denoising even when the alpha or slerp weight was 0.
## Explanation
`LatentsField` has an optional `seed` field. During denoising, if this `seed` field is not present, we **fall back to 0 for the seed**. The seed is used during denoising in a few ways:
1. Initializing the scheduler.
The seed is used in two places in `invokeai/app/invocations/latent.py`.
The `get_scheduler()` utility function has special handling for `DPMSolverSDEScheduler`, which appears to need a seed for deterministic outputs.
`DenoiseLatentsInvocation.init_scheduler()` has special handling for schedulers that accept a generator - the generator needs to be seeded in a particular way. At the time of this commit, these are the Invoke-supported schedulers that need this seed:
- DDIMScheduler
- DDPMScheduler
- DPMSolverMultistepScheduler
- EulerAncestralDiscreteScheduler
- EulerDiscreteScheduler
- KDPM2AncestralDiscreteScheduler
- LCMScheduler
- TCDScheduler
2. Adding noise during inpainting.
If a mask is used for denoising, and we are not using an inpainting model, we add noise to the unmasked area. If, for some reason, we have a mask but no noise, the seed is used to add noise.
I wonder if we should instead assert that if a mask is provided, we also have noise.
This is done in `invokeai/backend/stable_diffusion/diffusers_pipeline.py` in `StableDiffusionGeneratorPipeline.latents_from_embeddings()`.
When we create noise to be used in denoising, we are expected to set `LatentsField.seed` to the seed used to create the noise. This introduces some awkwardness when we manipulate any "latents" that will be used for denoising. We have to pass the seed along for every operation.
If the wrong seed or no seed is passed along, we can get unexpected outputs during denoising. One notable case relates to blending latents (slerping tensors).
If we slerp two noise tensors (`LatentsField`s) _without_ passing along the seed from the source latents, when we denoise with a seed-dependent scheduler*, the schedulers use the fallback seed of 0 and we get the wrong output. This is most obvious when slerping with a weight of 0, in which case we expect the exact same output after denoising.
*It looks like only the DPMSolver* schedulers are affected, but I haven't tested all of them.
Passing the seed along in the output fixes this issue.
- Any mypy issues are a misconfiguration of mypy
- Use simple conditionals instead of ternaries
- Consistent & standards-compliant docstring formatting
- Use `dict` instead of `typing.Dict`
Some tech debt related to dynamic pydantic schemas for invocations became problematic. Including the invocations and results in the event schemas was breaking pydantic's handling of ref schemas. I don't really understand why - I think it's a pydantic bug in a remote edge case that we are hitting.
After many failed attempts I landed on this implementation, which is actually much tidier than what was in there before.
- Create pydantic-enabled types for `AnyInvocation` and `AnyInvocationOutput` and use these in place of the janky dynamic unions. Actually, they are kinda the same, but better encapsulated. Use these in `Graph`, `GraphExecutionState`, `InvocationEventBase` and `InvocationCompleteEvent`.
- Revise the custom openapi function to work with the new models.
- Split out the custom openapi function to a separate file. Add a `post_transform` callback so consumers can customize the output schema.
- Update makefile scripts.
This is required to get these event fields to deserialize correctly. If omitted, pydantic uses `BaseInvocation`/`BaseInvocationOutput`, which is not correct.
This is similar to the workaround in the `Graph` and `GraphExecutionState` classes where we need to fanagle pydantic with manual validation handling.
There's no longer any need for session-scoped events now that we have the session queue. Session started/completed/canceled map 1-to-1 to queue item status events, but queue item status events also have an event for failed state.
We can simplify queue and processor handling substantially by removing session events and instead using queue item events.
- Remove the session-scoped events entirely.
- Remove all event handling from session queue. The processor still needs to respond to some events from the queue: `QueueClearedEvent`, `BatchEnqueuedEvent` and `QueueItemStatusChangedEvent`.
- Pass an `is_canceled` callback to the invocation context instead of the cancel event
- Update processor logic to ensure the local instance of the current queue item is synced with the instance in the database. This prevents race conditions and ensures lifecycle callback do not get stale callbacks.
- Update docstrings and comments
- Add `complete_queue_item` method to session queue service as an explicit way to mark a queue item as successfully completed. Previously, the queue listened for session complete events to do this.
Closes#6442