This issue is caused by a race condition. When a large image is served to the client, it is done using a streaming `FileResponse`. This concurrently serves the image straight from disk. The file is kept open by FastAPI until the image is fully served.
When a user deletes an image before the file is done serving, the delete fails because the file is still held by FastAPI.
To reproduce the issue:
- Create a very large image (8k reliably creates the issue).
- Create a smaller image, so that the first image in the gallery is not the large image.
- Refresh the app. The small image should be selected.
- Select the large image and immediately delete it. You have to be fast, to delete it before it finishes loading.
- In the terminal, we expect to see an error saying `Failed to delete image file`, and the image does not disappear from the UI.
- After a short wait, once the image has fully loaded, try deleting it again. We expect this to work.
The workaround is to instead serve the image from memory.
Loading the image to memory is very fast, so there is only a tiny window in which we could create the race condition, but it technically could still occur, because FastAPI is asynchronous and handles requests concurrently.
Once we load the image into memory, deletions of that image will work. Then we return a normal `Response` object with the image bytes. This is essentially what `FileResponse` does - except it uses `anyio.open_file`, which is async.
The tradeoff is that the server thread is blocked while opening the file. I think this is a fair tradeoff.
A future enhancement could be to implement soft deletion of images (db is already set up for this), and then clean up deleted image files on startup/shutdown. We could move back to using the async `FileResponse` for best responsiveness in the server without any risk of race conditions.
* 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>
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
- Remove ABCs, they do not work well with pydantic
- Remove the event type classvar - unused
- Remove clever logic to require an event name - we already get validation for this during schema registration.
- Rename event bases to all end in "Base"
Our events handling and implementation has a couple pain points:
- Adding or removing data from event payloads requires changes wherever the events are dispatched from.
- We have no type safety for events and need to rely on string matching and dict access when interacting with events.
- Frontend types for socket events must be manually typed. This has caused several bugs.
`fastapi-events` has a neat feature where you can create a pydantic model as an event payload, give it an `__event_name__` attr, and then dispatch the model directly.
This allows us to eliminate a layer of indirection and some unpleasant complexity:
- Event handler callbacks get type hints for their event payloads, and can use `isinstance` on them if needed.
- Event payload construction is now the responsibility of the event itself (a pydantic model), not the service. Every event model has a `build` class method, encapsulating this logic. The build methods are provided as few args as possible. For example, `InvocationStartedEvent.build()` gets the invocation instance and queue item, and can choose the data it wants to include in the event payload.
- Frontend event types may be autogenerated from the OpenAPI schema. We use the payload registry feature of `fastapi-events` to collect all payload models into one place, making it trivial to keep our schema and frontend types in sync.
This commit moves the backend over to this improved event handling setup.
- Use protocol to define callbacks, this allows them to have kwargs
- Shuffle the profiler around a bit
- Move `thread_limit` and `polling_interval` to `__init__`; `start` is called programmatically and will never get these args in practice
- Add `OnNodeError` and `OnNonFatalProcessorError` callbacks
- Move all session/node callbacks to `SessionRunner` - this ensures we dump perf stats before resetting them and generally makes sense to me
- Remove `complete` event from `SessionRunner`, it's essentially the same as `OnAfterRunSession`
- Remove extraneous `next_invocation` block, which would treat a processor error as a node error
- Simplify loops
- Add some callbacks for testing, to be removed before merge
The session is never updated in the queue after it is first enqueued. As a result, the queue detail view in the frontend never never updates and the session itself doesn't show outputs, execution graph, etc.
We need a new method on the queue service to update a queue item's session, then call it before updating the queue item's status.
Queue item status may be updated via a session-type event _or_ queue-type event. Adding the updated session to all these events is a hairy - simpler to just update the session before we do anything that could trigger a queue item status change event:
- Before calling `emit_session_complete` in the processor (handles session error, completed and cancel events and the corresponding queue events)
- Before calling `cancel_queue_item` in the processor (handles another way queue items can be canceled, outside the session execution loop)
When serializing the session, both in the new service method and the `get_queue_item` endpoint, we need to use `exclude_none=True` to prevent unexpected validation errors.
Canvas images are saved by uploading a blob generated from the HTML canvas element. This means the existing metadata handling, inside the graph execution engine, is not available.
To save metadata to canvas images, we need to provide it when uploading that blob.
The upload route now has a `metadata` body param. If this is provided, we use it over any metadata embedded in the image.
Graph, metadata and workflow all take stringified JSON only. This makes the API consistent and means we don't need to do a round-trip of pydantic parsing when handling this data.
It also prevents a failure mode where an uploaded image's metadata, workflow or graph are old and don't match the current schema.
As before, the frontend does strict validation and parsing when loading these values.
The previous super-minimal implementation had a major issue - the saved workflow didn't take into account batched field values. When generating with multiple iterations or dynamic prompts, the same workflow with the first prompt, seed, etc was stored in each image.
As a result, when the batch results in multiple queue items, only one of the images has the correct workflow - the others are mismatched.
To work around this, we can store the _graph_ in the image metadata (alongside the workflow, if generated via workflow editor). When loading a workflow from an image, we can choose to load the workflow or the graph, preferring the workflow.
Internally, we need to update images router image-saving services. The changes are minimal.
To avoid pydantic errors deserializing the graph, when we extract it from the image, we will leave it as stringified JSON and let the frontend's more sophisticated and flexible parsing handle it. The worklow is also changed to just return stringified JSON, so the API is consistent.