When a control adapter processor config is changed, if we were already processing an image, that batch is immediately canceled. This prevents the processed image from getting stuck in a weird state if you change or reset the processor at the right (err, wrong?) moment.
- Update internal state for control adapters to track processor batches, instead of just having a flag indicating if the image is processing. Add a slice migration to not break the user's existing app state.
- Update preprocessor listener with more sophisticated logic to handle canceling the batch and resetting the processed image when the config changes or is reset.
- Fixed error handling that erroneously showed "failed to queue graph" errors when an active listener instance is canceled, need to check the abort signal.
This is largely an internal change, and it should have been this way from the start - less tip-toeing around layer types. The user-facing change is when you click an IP Adapter layer, it is highlighted. That's it.
Turns out, it's more efficient to just use the bbox logic for empty mask calculations. We already track if if the bbox needs updating, so this calculation does minimal work.
The dedicated calculation wasn't able to use the bbox tracking so it ran far more often than the bbox calculation.
Removed the "fast" bbox calculation logic, bc the new logic means we are continually updating the bbox in the background - not only when the user switches to the move tool and/or selects a layer.
The bbox calculation logic is split out from the bbox rendering logic to support this.
Result - better perf overall, with the empty mask handling retained.
Mask vector data includes additive (brush, rect) shapes and subtractive (eraser) shapes. A different composite operation is used to draw a shape, depending on whether it is additive or subtractive.
This means that a mask may have vector objects, but once rendered, is _visually_ empty (fully transparent). The only way determine if a mask is visually empty is to render it and check every pixel.
When we generate and save layer metadata, these fully erased masks are still used. Generating with an empty mask is a no-op in the backend, so we want to avoid this and not pollute graphs/metadata.
Previously, we did that pixel-based when calculating the bbox, which we only did when using the move tool, and only for the selected layer.
This change introduces a simpler function to check if a mask is transparent, and if so, deletes all its objects to reset it. This allows us skip these no-op layers entirely.
This check is debounced to 300 ms, trailing edge only.
- Viewer only exists on Generation tab
- Viewer defaults to open
- When clicking the Control Layers tab on the left panel, close the viewer (i.e. open the CL editor)
- Do not switch to editor when adding layers (this is handled by clicking the Control Layers tab)
- Do not open viewer when single-clicking images in gallery
- _Do_ open viewer when _double_-clicking images in gallery
- Do not change viewer state when switching between app tabs (this no longer makes sense; the viewer only exists on generation tab)
- Change the button to a drop down menu that states what you are currently doing, e.g. Viewing vs Editing
When recalling metadata and/or using control image dimensions, it was possible to set a width or height that was not a multiple of 8, resulting in generation failures.
Added a `clamp` option to the w/h actions to fix this. The option is used for all untrusted sources - everything except for the w/h number inputs, which clamp the values themselves.
Firefox v125.0.3 and below has a bug where `mouseenter` events are fired continually during mouse moves. The issue isn't present on FF v126.0b6 Developer Edition. It's not clear if the issue is present on FF nightly, and we're not sure if it will actually be fixed in the stable v126 release.
The control layers drawing logic relied on on `mouseenter` events to create new lines, and `mousemove` to extend existing lines. On the affected version of FF, all line extensions are turned into new lines, resulting in very poor performance, noncontiguous lines, and way-too-big internal state.
To resolve this, the drawing handling was updated to not use `mouseenter` at all. As a bonus, resolving this issue has resulted in simpler logic for drawing on the canvas.
- Revise control adapter config types
- Recreate all control adapter mutations in control layers slice
- Bit of renaming along the way - typing 'RegionalGuidanceLayer' over and over again was getting tedious