- Due to misuse of rebase command, main was transiently
in an inconsistent state.
- This repairs the damage, and adds a few post-release
patches that ensure stable conda installs on Mac and Windows.
- user can select which weight files to download using huggingface cache
- user must log in to huggingface, generate an access token, and accept
license terms the very first time this is run. After that, everything
works automatically.
- added placeholder for docs for installing models
- also got rid of unused config files. hopefully they weren't needed
for textual inversion, but I don't think so.
This was a difficult merge because both PR #1108 and #1243 made
changes to obscure parts of the diffusion code.
- prompt weighting, merging and cross-attention working
- cross-attention does not work with runwayML inpainting
model, but weighting and merging are tested and working
- CLI command parsing code rewritten in order to get embedded
quotes right
- --hires now works with runwayML inpainting
- --embiggen does not work with runwayML and will give an error
- Added an --invert option to invert masks applied to inpainting
- Updated documentation
Now you can activate the Hugging Face `diffusers` library safety check
for NSFW and other potentially disturbing imagery.
To turn on the safety check, pass --safety_checker at the command
line. For developers, the flag is `safety_checker=True` passed to
ldm.generate.Generate(). Once the safety checker is turned on, it
cannot be turned off unless you reinitialize a new Generate object.
When the safety checker is active, suspect images will be blurred and
a warning icon is added. There is also a warning message printed in
the CLI, but it can be a little hard to see because of its positioning
in the output stream.
There is a slight but noticeable delay when the safety checker runs.
Note that invisible watermarking is *not* currently implemented. The
watermark code distributed by the CompViz distribution uses a library
that does not seem to be able to retrieve the watermarks it creates,
and it does not appear that Hugging Face `diffusers` or other SD
distributions are doing any watermarking.
Ironically, the black and white mask file generated by the
`invoke> !mask` command could not be passed as the mask to
`img2img`. This is now fixed and the documentation updated.
- The !mask command takes an image path, a text prompt, and
(optionally) a masking threshold. It creates a mask over the region
indicated by the prompt, and outputs several files that show which
regions will be masked by the chosen prompt and threshold.
- The mask images should not be passed directly to img2img because
they are designed for visualization only. Instead, use the
--text_mask option to pass the selected prompt and threshold.
- See docs/features/INPAINTING.md for details.