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a6efcca78c illustration of two generate alternatives 2023-02-26 12:22:32 -05:00
1589 changed files with 104278 additions and 128335 deletions

6
.coveragerc Normal file
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@ -0,0 +1,6 @@
[run]
omit='.env/*'
source='.'
[report]
show_missing = true

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@ -1,9 +1,25 @@
# use this file as a whitelist
*
!invokeai
!ldm
!pyproject.toml
!docker/docker-entrypoint.sh
!LICENSE
**/node_modules
**/__pycache__
**/*.egg-info
# Guard against pulling in any models that might exist in the directory tree
**/*.pt*
**/*.ckpt
# ignore frontend but whitelist dist
invokeai/frontend/
!invokeai/frontend/dist/
# ignore invokeai/assets but whitelist invokeai/assets/web
invokeai/assets/
!invokeai/assets/web/
# Byte-compiled / optimized / DLL files
**/__pycache__/
**/*.py[cod]
# Distribution / packaging
*.egg-info/
*.egg

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@ -1 +0,0 @@
b3dccfaeb636599c02effc377cdd8a87d658256c

63
.github/CODEOWNERS vendored
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@ -1,34 +1,51 @@
# continuous integration
/.github/workflows/ @lstein @blessedcoolant
/.github/workflows/ @mauwii @lstein @blessedcoolant
# documentation
/docs/ @lstein @blessedcoolant @hipsterusername
/mkdocs.yml @lstein @blessedcoolant
# nodes
/invokeai/app/ @Kyle0654 @blessedcoolant @psychedelicious @brandonrising
/docs/ @lstein @mauwii @tildebyte @blessedcoolant
mkdocs.yml @lstein @mauwii @blessedcoolant
# installation and configuration
/pyproject.toml @lstein @blessedcoolant
/docker/ @lstein @blessedcoolant
/scripts/ @ebr @lstein
/installer/ @lstein @ebr
/invokeai/assets @lstein @ebr
/invokeai/configs @lstein
/invokeai/version @lstein @blessedcoolant
/pyproject.toml @mauwii @lstein @ebr @blessedcoolant
/docker/ @mauwii @lstein @blessedcoolant
/scripts/ @ebr @lstein @blessedcoolant
/installer/ @ebr @lstein @tildebyte @blessedcoolant
ldm/invoke/config @lstein @ebr @blessedcoolant
invokeai/assets @lstein @ebr @blessedcoolant
invokeai/configs @lstein @ebr @blessedcoolant
/ldm/invoke/_version.py @lstein @blessedcoolant
# web ui
/invokeai/frontend @blessedcoolant @psychedelicious @lstein @maryhipp
/invokeai/backend @blessedcoolant @psychedelicious @lstein @maryhipp
/invokeai/frontend @blessedcoolant @psychedelicious @lstein
/invokeai/backend @blessedcoolant @psychedelicious @lstein
# generation, model management, postprocessing
/invokeai/backend @damian0815 @lstein @blessedcoolant @gregghelt2 @StAlKeR7779 @brandonrising
# generation and model management
/ldm/*.py @lstein @blessedcoolant
/ldm/generate.py @lstein @keturn @blessedcoolant
/ldm/invoke/args.py @lstein @blessedcoolant
/ldm/invoke/ckpt* @lstein @blessedcoolant
/ldm/invoke/ckpt_generator @lstein @blessedcoolant
/ldm/invoke/CLI.py @lstein @blessedcoolant
/ldm/invoke/config @lstein @ebr @mauwii @blessedcoolant
/ldm/invoke/generator @keturn @damian0815 @blessedcoolant
/ldm/invoke/globals.py @lstein @blessedcoolant
/ldm/invoke/merge_diffusers.py @lstein @blessedcoolant
/ldm/invoke/model_manager.py @lstein @blessedcoolant
/ldm/invoke/txt2mask.py @lstein @blessedcoolant
/ldm/invoke/patchmatch.py @Kyle0654 @blessedcoolant @lstein
/ldm/invoke/restoration @lstein @blessedcoolant
# front ends
/invokeai/frontend/CLI @lstein
/invokeai/frontend/install @lstein @ebr
/invokeai/frontend/merge @lstein @blessedcoolant
/invokeai/frontend/training @lstein @blessedcoolant
/invokeai/frontend/web @psychedelicious @blessedcoolant @maryhipp
# attention, textual inversion, model configuration
/ldm/models @damian0815 @keturn @lstein @blessedcoolant
/ldm/modules @damian0815 @keturn @lstein @blessedcoolant
# Nodes
apps/ @Kyle0654 @lstein @blessedcoolant
# legacy REST API
# is CapableWeb still engaged?
/ldm/invoke/pngwriter.py @CapableWeb @lstein @blessedcoolant
/ldm/invoke/server_legacy.py @CapableWeb @lstein @blessedcoolant
/scripts/legacy_api.py @CapableWeb @lstein @blessedcoolant
/tests/legacy_tests.sh @CapableWeb @lstein @blessedcoolant

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@ -65,16 +65,6 @@ body:
placeholder: 8GB
validations:
required: false
- type: input
id: version-number
attributes:
label: What version did you experience this issue on?
description: |
Please share the version of Invoke AI that you experienced the issue on. If this is not the latest version, please update first to confirm the issue still exists. If you are testing main, please include the commit hash instead.
placeholder: X.X.X
validations:
required: true
- type: textarea
id: what-happened

19
.github/stale.yaml vendored
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@ -1,19 +0,0 @@
# Number of days of inactivity before an issue becomes stale
daysUntilStale: 28
# Number of days of inactivity before a stale issue is closed
daysUntilClose: 14
# Issues with these labels will never be considered stale
exemptLabels:
- pinned
- security
# Label to use when marking an issue as stale
staleLabel: stale
# Comment to post when marking an issue as stale. Set to `false` to disable
markComment: >
This issue has been automatically marked as stale because it has not had
recent activity. It will be closed if no further activity occurs. Please
update the ticket if this is still a problem on the latest release.
# Comment to post when closing a stale issue. Set to `false` to disable
closeComment: >
Due to inactivity, this issue has been automatically closed. If this is
still a problem on the latest release, please recreate the issue.

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@ -3,20 +3,19 @@ on:
push:
branches:
- 'main'
- 'update/ci/docker/*'
- 'update/docker/*'
paths:
- 'pyproject.toml'
- '.dockerignore'
- 'invokeai/**'
- 'ldm/**'
- 'invokeai/backend/**'
- 'invokeai/configs/**'
- 'invokeai/frontend/dist/**'
- 'docker/Dockerfile'
- 'docker/docker-entrypoint.sh'
- 'workflows/build-container.yml'
tags:
- 'v*'
- 'v*.*.*'
workflow_dispatch:
permissions:
contents: write
packages: write
jobs:
docker:
@ -24,27 +23,23 @@ jobs:
strategy:
fail-fast: false
matrix:
gpu-driver:
- cuda
- cpu
- rocm
flavor:
- amd
- cuda
- cpu
include:
- flavor: amd
pip-extra-index-url: 'https://download.pytorch.org/whl/rocm5.2'
- flavor: cuda
pip-extra-index-url: ''
- flavor: cpu
pip-extra-index-url: 'https://download.pytorch.org/whl/cpu'
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
name: ${{ matrix.gpu-driver }}
name: ${{ matrix.flavor }}
env:
# torch/arm64 does not support GPU currently, so arm64 builds
# would not be GPU-accelerated.
# re-enable arm64 if there is sufficient demand.
# PLATFORMS: 'linux/amd64,linux/arm64'
PLATFORMS: 'linux/amd64'
PLATFORMS: 'linux/amd64,linux/arm64'
DOCKERFILE: 'docker/Dockerfile'
steps:
- name: Free up more disk space on the runner
# https://github.com/actions/runner-images/issues/2840#issuecomment-1284059930
run: |
sudo rm -rf /usr/share/dotnet
sudo rm -rf "$AGENT_TOOLSDIRECTORY"
sudo swapoff /mnt/swapfile
sudo rm -rf /mnt/swapfile
- name: Checkout
uses: actions/checkout@v3
@ -55,17 +50,17 @@ jobs:
github-token: ${{ secrets.GITHUB_TOKEN }}
images: |
ghcr.io/${{ github.repository }}
${{ env.DOCKERHUB_REPOSITORY }}
${{ vars.DOCKERHUB_REPOSITORY }}
tags: |
type=ref,event=branch
type=ref,event=tag
type=pep440,pattern={{version}}
type=pep440,pattern={{major}}.{{minor}}
type=pep440,pattern={{major}}
type=semver,pattern={{version}}
type=semver,pattern={{major}}.{{minor}}
type=semver,pattern={{major}}
type=sha,enable=true,prefix=sha-,format=short
flavor: |
latest=${{ matrix.gpu-driver == 'cuda' && github.ref == 'refs/heads/main' }}
suffix=-${{ matrix.gpu-driver }},onlatest=false
latest=${{ matrix.flavor == 'cuda' && github.ref == 'refs/heads/main' }}
suffix=-${{ matrix.flavor }},onlatest=false
- name: Set up QEMU
uses: docker/setup-qemu-action@v2
@ -83,33 +78,34 @@ jobs:
username: ${{ github.repository_owner }}
password: ${{ secrets.GITHUB_TOKEN }}
# - name: Login to Docker Hub
# if: github.event_name != 'pull_request' && vars.DOCKERHUB_REPOSITORY != ''
# uses: docker/login-action@v2
# with:
# username: ${{ secrets.DOCKERHUB_USERNAME }}
# password: ${{ secrets.DOCKERHUB_TOKEN }}
- name: Login to Docker Hub
if: github.event_name != 'pull_request' && vars.DOCKERHUB_REPOSITORY != ''
uses: docker/login-action@v2
with:
username: ${{ secrets.DOCKERHUB_USERNAME }}
password: ${{ secrets.DOCKERHUB_TOKEN }}
- name: Build container
id: docker_build
uses: docker/build-push-action@v4
with:
context: .
file: docker/Dockerfile
file: ${{ env.DOCKERFILE }}
platforms: ${{ env.PLATFORMS }}
push: ${{ github.ref == 'refs/heads/main' || github.ref_type == 'tag' }}
push: ${{ github.ref == 'refs/heads/main' || github.ref == 'refs/tags/*' }}
tags: ${{ steps.meta.outputs.tags }}
labels: ${{ steps.meta.outputs.labels }}
build-args: PIP_EXTRA_INDEX_URL=${{ matrix.pip-extra-index-url }}
cache-from: |
type=gha,scope=${{ github.ref_name }}-${{ matrix.gpu-driver }}
type=gha,scope=main-${{ matrix.gpu-driver }}
cache-to: type=gha,mode=max,scope=${{ github.ref_name }}-${{ matrix.gpu-driver }}
type=gha,scope=${{ github.ref_name }}-${{ matrix.flavor }}
type=gha,scope=main-${{ matrix.flavor }}
cache-to: type=gha,mode=max,scope=${{ github.ref_name }}-${{ matrix.flavor }}
# - name: Docker Hub Description
# if: github.ref == 'refs/heads/main' || github.ref == 'refs/tags/*' && vars.DOCKERHUB_REPOSITORY != ''
# uses: peter-evans/dockerhub-description@v3
# with:
# username: ${{ secrets.DOCKERHUB_USERNAME }}
# password: ${{ secrets.DOCKERHUB_TOKEN }}
# repository: ${{ vars.DOCKERHUB_REPOSITORY }}
# short-description: ${{ github.event.repository.description }}
- name: Docker Hub Description
if: github.ref == 'refs/heads/main' || github.ref == 'refs/tags/*' && vars.DOCKERHUB_REPOSITORY != ''
uses: peter-evans/dockerhub-description@v3
with:
username: ${{ secrets.DOCKERHUB_USERNAME }}
password: ${{ secrets.DOCKERHUB_TOKEN }}
repository: ${{ vars.DOCKERHUB_REPOSITORY }}
short-description: ${{ github.event.repository.description }}

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@ -1,27 +0,0 @@
name: Close inactive issues
on:
schedule:
- cron: "00 6 * * *"
env:
DAYS_BEFORE_ISSUE_STALE: 14
DAYS_BEFORE_ISSUE_CLOSE: 28
jobs:
close-issues:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
permissions:
issues: write
pull-requests: write
steps:
- uses: actions/stale@v5
with:
days-before-issue-stale: ${{ env.DAYS_BEFORE_ISSUE_STALE }}
days-before-issue-close: ${{ env.DAYS_BEFORE_ISSUE_CLOSE }}
stale-issue-label: "Inactive Issue"
stale-issue-message: "There has been no activity in this issue for ${{ env.DAYS_BEFORE_ISSUE_STALE }} days. If this issue is still being experienced, please reply with an updated confirmation that the issue is still being experienced with the latest release."
close-issue-message: "Due to inactivity, this issue was automatically closed. If you are still experiencing the issue, please recreate the issue."
days-before-pr-stale: -1
days-before-pr-close: -1
repo-token: ${{ secrets.GITHUB_TOKEN }}
operations-per-run: 500

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@ -3,22 +3,14 @@ name: Lint frontend
on:
pull_request:
paths:
- 'invokeai/frontend/web/**'
types:
- 'ready_for_review'
- 'opened'
- 'synchronize'
- 'invokeai/frontend/**'
push:
branches:
- 'main'
paths:
- 'invokeai/frontend/web/**'
merge_group:
workflow_dispatch:
- 'invokeai/frontend/**'
defaults:
run:
working-directory: invokeai/frontend/web
working-directory: invokeai/frontend
jobs:
lint-frontend:
@ -31,7 +23,7 @@ jobs:
node-version: '18'
- uses: actions/checkout@v3
- run: 'yarn install --frozen-lockfile'
- run: 'yarn run lint:tsc'
- run: 'yarn run lint:madge'
- run: 'yarn run lint:eslint'
- run: 'yarn run lint:prettier'
- run: 'yarn tsc'
- run: 'yarn run madge'
- run: 'yarn run lint --max-warnings=0'
- run: 'yarn run prettier --check'

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@ -2,19 +2,13 @@ name: mkdocs-material
on:
push:
branches:
- 'refs/heads/v2.3'
permissions:
contents: write
- 'main'
- 'development'
jobs:
mkdocs-material:
if: github.event.pull_request.draft == false
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
env:
REPO_URL: '${{ github.server_url }}/${{ github.repository }}'
REPO_NAME: '${{ github.repository }}'
SITE_URL: 'https://${{ github.repository_owner }}.github.io/InvokeAI'
steps:
- name: checkout sources
uses: actions/checkout@v3
@ -25,15 +19,11 @@ jobs:
uses: actions/setup-python@v4
with:
python-version: '3.10'
cache: pip
cache-dependency-path: pyproject.toml
- name: install requirements
env:
PIP_USE_PEP517: 1
run: |
python -m \
pip install ".[docs]"
pip install -r docs/requirements-mkdocs.txt
- name: confirm buildability
run: |

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@ -3,7 +3,7 @@ name: PyPI Release
on:
push:
paths:
- 'invokeai/version/invokeai_version.py'
- 'ldm/invoke/_version.py'
workflow_dispatch:
jobs:

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@ -1,17 +1,12 @@
name: Test invoke.py pip
# This is a dummy stand-in for the actual tests
# we don't need to run python tests on non-Python changes
# But PRs require passing tests to be mergeable
on:
pull_request:
paths:
- '**'
- '!pyproject.toml'
- '!invokeai/**'
- '!tests/**'
- 'invokeai/frontend/web/**'
paths-ignore:
- 'pyproject.toml'
- 'ldm/**'
- 'invokeai/backend/**'
- 'invokeai/configs/**'
- 'invokeai/frontend/dist/**'
merge_group:
workflow_dispatch:
@ -25,26 +20,48 @@ jobs:
strategy:
matrix:
python-version:
# - '3.9'
- '3.10'
pytorch:
# - linux-cuda-11_6
- linux-cuda-11_7
- linux-rocm-5_2
- linux-cpu
- macos-default
- windows-cpu
# - windows-cuda-11_6
# - windows-cuda-11_7
include:
# - pytorch: linux-cuda-11_6
# os: ubuntu-22.04
# extra-index-url: 'https://download.pytorch.org/whl/cu116'
# github-env: $GITHUB_ENV
- pytorch: linux-cuda-11_7
os: ubuntu-22.04
github-env: $GITHUB_ENV
- pytorch: linux-rocm-5_2
os: ubuntu-22.04
extra-index-url: 'https://download.pytorch.org/whl/rocm5.2'
github-env: $GITHUB_ENV
- pytorch: linux-cpu
os: ubuntu-22.04
extra-index-url: 'https://download.pytorch.org/whl/cpu'
github-env: $GITHUB_ENV
- pytorch: macos-default
os: macOS-12
github-env: $GITHUB_ENV
- pytorch: windows-cpu
os: windows-2022
github-env: $env:GITHUB_ENV
# - pytorch: windows-cuda-11_6
# os: windows-2022
# extra-index-url: 'https://download.pytorch.org/whl/cu116'
# github-env: $env:GITHUB_ENV
# - pytorch: windows-cuda-11_7
# os: windows-2022
# extra-index-url: 'https://download.pytorch.org/whl/cu117'
# github-env: $env:GITHUB_ENV
name: ${{ matrix.pytorch }} on ${{ matrix.python-version }}
runs-on: ${{ matrix.os }}
steps:
- name: skip
run: echo "no build required"
- run: 'echo "No build required"'

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@ -5,14 +5,17 @@ on:
- 'main'
paths:
- 'pyproject.toml'
- 'invokeai/**'
- '!invokeai/frontend/web/**'
- 'ldm/**'
- 'invokeai/backend/**'
- 'invokeai/configs/**'
- 'invokeai/frontend/dist/**'
pull_request:
paths:
- 'pyproject.toml'
- 'invokeai/**'
- 'tests/**'
- '!invokeai/frontend/web/**'
- 'ldm/**'
- 'invokeai/backend/**'
- 'invokeai/configs/**'
- 'invokeai/frontend/dist/**'
types:
- 'ready_for_review'
- 'opened'
@ -33,12 +36,19 @@ jobs:
# - '3.9'
- '3.10'
pytorch:
# - linux-cuda-11_6
- linux-cuda-11_7
- linux-rocm-5_2
- linux-cpu
- macos-default
- windows-cpu
# - windows-cuda-11_6
# - windows-cuda-11_7
include:
# - pytorch: linux-cuda-11_6
# os: ubuntu-22.04
# extra-index-url: 'https://download.pytorch.org/whl/cu116'
# github-env: $GITHUB_ENV
- pytorch: linux-cuda-11_7
os: ubuntu-22.04
github-env: $GITHUB_ENV
@ -56,6 +66,14 @@ jobs:
- pytorch: windows-cpu
os: windows-2022
github-env: $env:GITHUB_ENV
# - pytorch: windows-cuda-11_6
# os: windows-2022
# extra-index-url: 'https://download.pytorch.org/whl/cu116'
# github-env: $env:GITHUB_ENV
# - pytorch: windows-cuda-11_7
# os: windows-2022
# extra-index-url: 'https://download.pytorch.org/whl/cu117'
# github-env: $env:GITHUB_ENV
name: ${{ matrix.pytorch }} on ${{ matrix.python-version }}
runs-on: ${{ matrix.os }}
env:
@ -66,6 +84,11 @@ jobs:
uses: actions/checkout@v3
- name: set test prompt to main branch validation
if: ${{ github.ref == 'refs/heads/main' }}
run: echo "TEST_PROMPTS=tests/preflight_prompts.txt" >> ${{ matrix.github-env }}
- name: set test prompt to Pull Request validation
if: ${{ github.ref != 'refs/heads/main' }}
run: echo "TEST_PROMPTS=tests/validate_pr_prompt.txt" >> ${{ matrix.github-env }}
- name: setup python
@ -86,38 +109,40 @@ jobs:
id: run-pytest
run: pytest
# - name: run invokeai-configure
# env:
# HUGGING_FACE_HUB_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.HUGGINGFACE_TOKEN }}
# run: >
# invokeai-configure
# --yes
# --default_only
# --full-precision
# # can't use fp16 weights without a GPU
- name: set INVOKEAI_OUTDIR
run: >
python -c
"import os;from ldm.invoke.globals import Globals;OUTDIR=os.path.join(Globals.root,str('outputs'));print(f'INVOKEAI_OUTDIR={OUTDIR}')"
>> ${{ matrix.github-env }}
# - name: run invokeai
# id: run-invokeai
# env:
# # Set offline mode to make sure configure preloaded successfully.
# HF_HUB_OFFLINE: 1
# HF_DATASETS_OFFLINE: 1
# TRANSFORMERS_OFFLINE: 1
# INVOKEAI_OUTDIR: ${{ github.workspace }}/results
# run: >
# invokeai
# --no-patchmatch
# --no-nsfw_checker
# --precision=float32
# --always_use_cpu
# --use_memory_db
# --outdir ${{ env.INVOKEAI_OUTDIR }}/${{ matrix.python-version }}/${{ matrix.pytorch }}
# --from_file ${{ env.TEST_PROMPTS }}
- name: run invokeai-configure
id: run-preload-models
env:
HUGGING_FACE_HUB_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.HUGGINGFACE_TOKEN }}
run: >
invokeai-configure
--yes
--default_only
--full-precision
# can't use fp16 weights without a GPU
# - name: Archive results
# env:
# INVOKEAI_OUTDIR: ${{ github.workspace }}/results
# uses: actions/upload-artifact@v3
# with:
# name: results
# path: ${{ env.INVOKEAI_OUTDIR }}
- name: run invokeai
id: run-invokeai
env:
# Set offline mode to make sure configure preloaded successfully.
HF_HUB_OFFLINE: 1
HF_DATASETS_OFFLINE: 1
TRANSFORMERS_OFFLINE: 1
run: >
invokeai
--no-patchmatch
--no-nsfw_checker
--from_file ${{ env.TEST_PROMPTS }}
--outdir ${{ env.INVOKEAI_OUTDIR }}/${{ matrix.python-version }}/${{ matrix.pytorch }}
- name: Archive results
id: archive-results
uses: actions/upload-artifact@v3
with:
name: results
path: ${{ env.INVOKEAI_OUTDIR }}

20
.gitignore vendored
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@ -9,8 +9,6 @@ models/ldm/stable-diffusion-v1/model.ckpt
configs/models.user.yaml
config/models.user.yml
invokeai.init
.version
.last_model
# ignore the Anaconda/Miniconda installer used while building Docker image
anaconda.sh
@ -34,7 +32,7 @@ __pycache__/
.Python
build/
develop-eggs/
# dist/
dist/
downloads/
eggs/
.eggs/
@ -65,7 +63,6 @@ pip-delete-this-directory.txt
htmlcov/
.tox/
.nox/
.coveragerc
.coverage
.coverage.*
.cache
@ -76,10 +73,8 @@ cov.xml
*.py,cover
.hypothesis/
.pytest_cache/
.pytest.ini
cover/
junit/
notes/
# Translations
*.mo
@ -202,11 +197,8 @@ checkpoints
# If it's a Mac
.DS_Store
invokeai/frontend/yarn.lock
invokeai/frontend/node_modules
# Let the frontend manage its own gitignore
!invokeai/frontend/web/*
!invokeai/frontend/*
# Scratch folder
.scratch/
@ -221,6 +213,11 @@ gfpgan/
# config file (will be created by installer)
configs/models.yaml
# weights (will be created by installer)
models/ldm/stable-diffusion-v1/*.ckpt
models/clipseg
models/gfpgan
# ignore initfile
.invokeai
@ -235,3 +232,6 @@ installer/install.bat
installer/install.sh
installer/update.bat
installer/update.sh
# no longer stored in source directory
models

5
.pytest.ini Normal file
View File

@ -0,0 +1,5 @@
[pytest]
DJANGO_SETTINGS_MODULE = webtas.settings
; python_files = tests.py test_*.py *_tests.py
addopts = --cov=. --cov-config=.coveragerc --cov-report xml:cov.xml

189
LICENSE
View File

@ -1,176 +1,21 @@
Apache License
Version 2.0, January 2004
http://www.apache.org/licenses/
MIT License
TERMS AND CONDITIONS FOR USE, REPRODUCTION, AND DISTRIBUTION
Copyright (c) 2022 InvokeAI Team
1. Definitions.
Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy
of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal
in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights
to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell
copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is
furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
"License" shall mean the terms and conditions for use, reproduction,
and distribution as defined by Sections 1 through 9 of this document.
The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all
copies or substantial portions of the Software.
"Licensor" shall mean the copyright owner or entity authorized by
the copyright owner that is granting the License.
"Legal Entity" shall mean the union of the acting entity and all
other entities that control, are controlled by, or are under common
control with that entity. For the purposes of this definition,
"control" means (i) the power, direct or indirect, to cause the
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218
README.md
View File

@ -1,11 +1,8 @@
<div align="center">
![project hero](https://github.com/invoke-ai/InvokeAI/assets/31807370/1a917d94-e099-4fa1-a70f-7dd8d0691018)
# Invoke AI - Generative AI for Professional Creatives
## Professional Creative Tools for Stable Diffusion, Custom-Trained Models, and more.
To learn more about Invoke AI, get started instantly, or implement our Business solutions, visit [invoke.ai](https://invoke.ai)
![project logo](https://github.com/invoke-ai/InvokeAI/raw/main/docs/assets/invoke_ai_banner.png)
# InvokeAI: A Stable Diffusion Toolkit
[![discord badge]][discord link]
@ -36,32 +33,13 @@
</div>
_**Note: This is an alpha release. Bugs are expected and not all
features are fully implemented. Please use the GitHub [Issues
pages](https://github.com/invoke-ai/InvokeAI/issues?q=is%3Aissue+is%3Aopen)
to report unexpected problems. Also note that InvokeAI root directory
which contains models, outputs and configuration files, has changed
between the 2.x and 3.x release. If you wish to use your v2.3 root
directory with v3.0, please follow the directions in [Migrating a 2.3
root directory to 3.0](#migrating-to-3).**_
InvokeAI is a leading creative engine built to empower professionals and enthusiasts alike. Generate and create stunning visual media using the latest AI-driven technologies. InvokeAI offers an industry leading Web Interface, interactive Command Line Interface, and also serves as the foundation for multiple commercial products.
InvokeAI is a leading creative engine built to empower professionals
and enthusiasts alike. Generate and create stunning visual media using
the latest AI-driven technologies. InvokeAI offers an industry leading
Web Interface, interactive Command Line Interface, and also serves as
the foundation for multiple commercial products.
**Quick links**: [[How to Install](https://invoke-ai.github.io/InvokeAI/#installation)] [<a href="https://discord.gg/ZmtBAhwWhy">Discord Server</a>] [<a href="https://invoke-ai.github.io/InvokeAI/">Documentation and Tutorials</a>] [<a href="https://github.com/invoke-ai/InvokeAI/">Code and Downloads</a>] [<a href="https://github.com/invoke-ai/InvokeAI/issues">Bug Reports</a>] [<a href="https://github.com/invoke-ai/InvokeAI/discussions">Discussion, Ideas & Q&A</a>]
**Quick links**: [[How to
Install](https://invoke-ai.github.io/InvokeAI/#installation)] [<a
href="https://discord.gg/ZmtBAhwWhy">Discord Server</a>] [<a
href="https://invoke-ai.github.io/InvokeAI/">Documentation and
Tutorials</a>] [<a
href="https://github.com/invoke-ai/InvokeAI/">Code and
Downloads</a>] [<a
href="https://github.com/invoke-ai/InvokeAI/issues">Bug Reports</a>]
[<a
href="https://github.com/invoke-ai/InvokeAI/discussions">Discussion,
Ideas & Q&A</a>]
_Note: InvokeAI is rapidly evolving. Please use the
[Issues](https://github.com/invoke-ai/InvokeAI/issues) tab to report bugs and make feature
requests. Be sure to use the provided templates. They will help us diagnose issues faster._
<div align="center">
@ -71,30 +49,22 @@ the foundation for multiple commercial products.
## Table of Contents
Table of Contents 📝
1. [Quick Start](#getting-started-with-invokeai)
2. [Installation](#detailed-installation-instructions)
3. [Hardware Requirements](#hardware-requirements)
4. [Features](#features)
5. [Latest Changes](#latest-changes)
6. [Troubleshooting](#troubleshooting)
7. [Contributing](#contributing)
8. [Contributors](#contributors)
9. [Support](#support)
10. [Further Reading](#further-reading)
**Getting Started**
1. 🏁 [Quick Start](#quick-start)
3. 🖥️ [Hardware Requirements](#hardware-requirements)
**More About Invoke**
1. 🌟 [Features](#features)
2. 📣 [Latest Changes](#latest-changes)
3. 🛠️ [Troubleshooting](#troubleshooting)
**Supporting the Project**
1. 🤝 [Contributing](#contributing)
2. 👥 [Contributors](#contributors)
3. 💕 [Support](#support)
## Quick Start
## Getting Started with InvokeAI
For full installation and upgrade instructions, please see:
[InvokeAI Installation Overview](https://invoke-ai.github.io/InvokeAI/installation/)
If upgrading from version 2.3, please read [Migrating a 2.3 root
directory to 3.0](#migrating-to-3) first.
### Automatic Installer (suggested for 1st time users)
1. Go to the bottom of the [Latest Release Page](https://github.com/invoke-ai/InvokeAI/releases/latest)
@ -103,8 +73,9 @@ directory to 3.0](#migrating-to-3) first.
3. Unzip the file.
4. **Windows:** double-click on the `install.bat` script. **macOS:** Open a Terminal window, drag the file `install.sh` from Finder
into the Terminal, and press return. **Linux:** run `install.sh`.
4. If you are on Windows, double-click on the `install.bat` script. On
macOS, open a Terminal window, drag the file `install.sh` from Finder
into the Terminal, and press return. On Linux, run `install.sh`.
5. You'll be asked to confirm the location of the folder in which
to install InvokeAI and its image generation model files. Pick a
@ -113,7 +84,7 @@ installing lots of models.
6. Wait while the installer does its thing. After installing the software,
the installer will launch a script that lets you configure InvokeAI and
select a set of starting image generation models.
select a set of starting image generaiton models.
7. Find the folder that InvokeAI was installed into (it is not the
same as the unpacked zip file directory!) The default location of this
@ -130,12 +101,10 @@ and go to http://localhost:9090.
10. Type `banana sushi` in the box on the top left and click `Invoke`
### Command-Line Installation (for developers and users familiar with Terminals)
### Command-Line Installation (for users familiar with Terminals)
You must have Python 3.9 or 3.10 installed on your machine. Earlier or
later versions are not supported.
Node.js also needs to be installed along with yarn (can be installed with
the command `npm install -g yarn` if needed)
You must have Python 3.9 or 3.10 installed on your machine. Earlier or later versions are
not supported.
1. Open a command-line window on your machine. The PowerShell is recommended for Windows.
2. Create a directory to install InvokeAI into. You'll need at least 15 GB of free space:
@ -170,20 +139,15 @@ the command `npm install -g yarn` if needed)
_For Windows/Linux with an NVIDIA GPU:_
```terminal
pip install "InvokeAI[xformers]" --use-pep517 --extra-index-url https://download.pytorch.org/whl/cu117
pip install InvokeAI[xformers] --use-pep517 --extra-index-url https://download.pytorch.org/whl/cu117
```
_For Linux with an AMD GPU:_
```sh
pip install InvokeAI --use-pep517 --extra-index-url https://download.pytorch.org/whl/rocm5.4.2
pip install InvokeAI --use-pep517 --extra-index-url https://download.pytorch.org/whl/rocm5.2
```
_For non-GPU systems:_
```terminal
pip install InvokeAI --use-pep517 --extra-index-url https://download.pytorch.org/whl/cpu
```
_For Macintoshes, either Intel or M1/M2:_
```sh
@ -199,23 +163,16 @@ the command `npm install -g yarn` if needed)
7. Launch the web server (do it every time you run InvokeAI):
```terminal
invokeai-web
invokeai --web
```
8. Build Node.js assets
```terminal
cd invokeai/frontend/web/
yarn vite build
```
9. Point your browser to http://localhost:9090 to bring up the web interface.
10. Type `banana sushi` in the box on the top left and click `Invoke`.
8. Point your browser to http://localhost:9090 to bring up the web interface.
9. Type `banana sushi` in the box on the top left and click `Invoke`.
Be sure to activate the virtual environment each time before re-launching InvokeAI,
using `source .venv/bin/activate` or `.venv\Scripts\activate`.
## Detailed Installation Instructions
### Detailed Installation Instructions
This fork is supported across Linux, Windows and Macintosh. Linux
users can use either an Nvidia-based card (with CUDA support) or an
@ -223,87 +180,6 @@ AMD card (using the ROCm driver). For full installation and upgrade
instructions, please see:
[InvokeAI Installation Overview](https://invoke-ai.github.io/InvokeAI/installation/INSTALL_SOURCE/)
<a name="migrating-to-3"></a>
### Migrating a v2.3 InvokeAI root directory
The InvokeAI root directory is where the InvokeAI startup file,
installed models, and generated images are stored. It is ordinarily
named `invokeai` and located in your home directory. The contents and
layout of this directory has changed between versions 2.3 and 3.0 and
cannot be used directly.
We currently recommend that you use the installer to create a new root
directory named differently from the 2.3 one, e.g. `invokeai-3` and
then use a migration script to copy your 2.3 models into the new
location. However, if you choose, you can upgrade this directory in
place. This section gives both recipes.
#### Creating a new root directory and migrating old models
This is the safer recipe because it leaves your old root directory in
place to fall back on.
1. Follow the instructions above to create and install InvokeAI in a
directory that has a different name from the 2.3 invokeai directory.
In this example, we will use "invokeai-3"
2. When you are prompted to select models to install, select a minimal
set of models, such as stable-diffusion-v1.5 only.
3. After installation is complete launch `invokeai.sh` (Linux/Mac) or
`invokeai.bat` and select option 8 "Open the developers console". This
will take you to the command line.
4. Issue the command `invokeai-migrate3 --from /path/to/v2.3-root --to
/path/to/invokeai-3-root`. Provide the correct `--from` and `--to`
paths for your v2.3 and v3.0 root directories respectively.
This will copy and convert your old models from 2.3 format to 3.0
format and create a new `models` directory in the 3.0 directory. The
old models directory (which contains the models selected at install
time) will be renamed `models.orig` and can be deleted once you have
confirmed that the migration was successful.
#### Migrating in place
For the adventurous, you may do an in-place upgrade from 2.3 to 3.0
without touching the command line. The recipe is as follows>
1. Launch the InvokeAI launcher script in your current v2.3 root directory.
2. Select option [9] "Update InvokeAI" to bring up the updater dialog.
3a. During the alpha release phase, select option [3] and manually
enter the tag name `v3.0.0+a2`.
3b. Once 3.0 is released, select option [1] to upgrade to the latest release.
4. Once the upgrade is finished you will be returned to the launcher
menu. Select option [7] "Re-run the configure script to fix a broken
install or to complete a major upgrade".
This will run the configure script against the v2.3 directory and
update it to the 3.0 format. The following files will be replaced:
- The invokeai.init file, replaced by invokeai.yaml
- The models directory
- The configs/models.yaml model index
The original versions of these files will be saved with the suffix
".orig" appended to the end. Once you have confirmed that the upgrade
worked, you can safely remove these files. Alternatively you can
restore a working v2.3 directory by removing the new files and
restoring the ".orig" files' original names.
#### Migration Caveats
The migration script will migrate your invokeai settings and models,
including textual inversion models, LoRAs and merges that you may have
installed previously. However it does **not** migrate the generated
images stored in your 2.3-format outputs directory. The released
version of 3.0 is expected to have an interface for importing an
entire directory of image files as a batch.
## Hardware Requirements
InvokeAI is supported across Linux, Windows and macOS. Linux
@ -322,9 +198,13 @@ We do not recommend the GTX 1650 or 1660 series video cards. They are
unable to run in half-precision mode and do not have sufficient VRAM
to render 512x512 images.
**Memory** - At least 12 GB Main Memory RAM.
### Memory
**Disk** - At least 12 GB of free disk space for the machine learning model, Python, and all its dependencies.
- At least 12 GB Main Memory RAM.
### Disk
- At least 12 GB of free disk space for the machine learning model, Python, and all its dependencies.
## Features
@ -338,24 +218,28 @@ InvokeAI offers a locally hosted Web Server & React Frontend, with an industry l
The Unified Canvas is a fully integrated canvas implementation with support for all core generation capabilities, in/outpainting, brush tools, and more. This creative tool unlocks the capability for artists to create with AI as a creative collaborator, and can be used to augment AI-generated imagery, sketches, photography, renders, and more.
### *Node Architecture & Editor (Beta)*
### *Advanced Prompt Syntax*
Invoke AI's backend is built on a graph-based execution architecture. This allows for customizable generation pipelines to be developed by professional users looking to create specific workflows to support their production use-cases, and will be extended in the future with additional capabilities.
InvokeAI's advanced prompt syntax allows for token weighting, cross-attention control, and prompt blending, allowing for fine-tuned tweaking of your invocations and exploration of the latent space.
### *Board & Gallery Management*
### *Command Line Interface*
Invoke AI provides an organized gallery system for easily storing, accessing, and remixing your content in the Invoke workspace. Images can be dragged/dropped onto any Image-base UI element in the application, and rich metadata within the Image allows for easy recall of key prompts or settings used in your workflow.
For users utilizing a terminal-based environment, or who want to take advantage of CLI features, InvokeAI offers an extensive and actively supported command-line interface that provides the full suite of generation functionality available in the tool.
### Other features
- *Support for both ckpt and diffusers models*
- *SD 2.0, 2.1 support*
- *Upscaling Tools*
- *Noise Control & Tresholding*
- *Popular Sampler Support*
- *Upscaling & Face Restoration Tools*
- *Embedding Manager & Support*
- *Model Manager & Support*
- *Node-Based Architecture*
- *Node-Based Plug-&-Play UI (Beta)*
- *SDXL Support* (Coming soon)
### Coming Soon
- *Node-Based Architecture & UI*
- And more...
### Latest Changes
@ -363,7 +247,7 @@ For our latest changes, view our [Release
Notes](https://github.com/invoke-ai/InvokeAI/releases) and the
[CHANGELOG](docs/CHANGELOG.md).
### Troubleshooting
## Troubleshooting
Please check out our **[Q&A](https://invoke-ai.github.io/InvokeAI/help/TROUBLESHOOT/#faq)** to get solutions for common installation
problems and other issues.
@ -393,6 +277,8 @@ This fork is a combined effort of various people from across the world.
[Check out the list of all these amazing people](https://invoke-ai.github.io/InvokeAI/other/CONTRIBUTORS/). We thank them for
their time, hard work and effort.
Thanks to [Weblate](https://weblate.org/) for generously providing translation services to this project.
### Support
For support, please use this repository's GitHub Issues tracking service, or join the Discord.

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@ -0,0 +1,164 @@
@echo off
@rem This script will install git (if not found on the PATH variable)
@rem using micromamba (an 8mb static-linked single-file binary, conda replacement).
@rem For users who already have git, this step will be skipped.
@rem Next, it'll download the project's source code.
@rem Then it will download a self-contained, standalone Python and unpack it.
@rem Finally, it'll create the Python virtual environment and preload the models.
@rem This enables a user to install this project without manually installing git or Python
@rem change to the script's directory
PUSHD "%~dp0"
set "no_cache_dir=--no-cache-dir"
if "%1" == "use-cache" (
set "no_cache_dir="
)
echo ***** Installing InvokeAI.. *****
@rem Config
set INSTALL_ENV_DIR=%cd%\installer_files\env
@rem https://mamba.readthedocs.io/en/latest/installation.html
set MICROMAMBA_DOWNLOAD_URL=https://github.com/cmdr2/stable-diffusion-ui/releases/download/v1.1/micromamba.exe
set RELEASE_URL=https://github.com/invoke-ai/InvokeAI
set RELEASE_SOURCEBALL=/archive/refs/heads/main.tar.gz
set PYTHON_BUILD_STANDALONE_URL=https://github.com/indygreg/python-build-standalone/releases/download
set PYTHON_BUILD_STANDALONE=20221002/cpython-3.10.7+20221002-x86_64-pc-windows-msvc-shared-install_only.tar.gz
set PACKAGES_TO_INSTALL=
call git --version >.tmp1 2>.tmp2
if "%ERRORLEVEL%" NEQ "0" set PACKAGES_TO_INSTALL=%PACKAGES_TO_INSTALL% git
@rem Cleanup
del /q .tmp1 .tmp2
@rem (if necessary) install git into a contained environment
if "%PACKAGES_TO_INSTALL%" NEQ "" (
@rem download micromamba
echo ***** Downloading micromamba from %MICROMAMBA_DOWNLOAD_URL% to micromamba.exe *****
call curl -L "%MICROMAMBA_DOWNLOAD_URL%" > micromamba.exe
@rem test the mamba binary
echo ***** Micromamba version: *****
call micromamba.exe --version
@rem create the installer env
if not exist "%INSTALL_ENV_DIR%" (
call micromamba.exe create -y --prefix "%INSTALL_ENV_DIR%"
)
echo ***** Packages to install:%PACKAGES_TO_INSTALL% *****
call micromamba.exe install -y --prefix "%INSTALL_ENV_DIR%" -c conda-forge %PACKAGES_TO_INSTALL%
if not exist "%INSTALL_ENV_DIR%" (
echo ----- There was a problem while installing "%PACKAGES_TO_INSTALL%" using micromamba. Cannot continue. -----
pause
exit /b
)
)
del /q micromamba.exe
@rem For 'git' only
set PATH=%INSTALL_ENV_DIR%\Library\bin;%PATH%
@rem Download/unpack/clean up InvokeAI release sourceball
set err_msg=----- InvokeAI source download failed -----
echo Trying to download "%RELEASE_URL%%RELEASE_SOURCEBALL%"
curl -L %RELEASE_URL%%RELEASE_SOURCEBALL% --output InvokeAI.tgz
if %errorlevel% neq 0 goto err_exit
set err_msg=----- InvokeAI source unpack failed -----
tar -zxf InvokeAI.tgz
if %errorlevel% neq 0 goto err_exit
del /q InvokeAI.tgz
set err_msg=----- InvokeAI source copy failed -----
cd InvokeAI-*
xcopy . .. /e /h
if %errorlevel% neq 0 goto err_exit
cd ..
@rem cleanup
for /f %%i in ('dir /b InvokeAI-*') do rd /s /q %%i
rd /s /q .dev_scripts .github docker-build tests
del /q requirements.in requirements-mkdocs.txt shell.nix
echo ***** Unpacked InvokeAI source *****
@rem Download/unpack/clean up python-build-standalone
set err_msg=----- Python download failed -----
curl -L %PYTHON_BUILD_STANDALONE_URL%/%PYTHON_BUILD_STANDALONE% --output python.tgz
if %errorlevel% neq 0 goto err_exit
set err_msg=----- Python unpack failed -----
tar -zxf python.tgz
if %errorlevel% neq 0 goto err_exit
del /q python.tgz
echo ***** Unpacked python-build-standalone *****
@rem create venv
set err_msg=----- problem creating venv -----
.\python\python -E -s -m venv .venv
if %errorlevel% neq 0 goto err_exit
call .venv\Scripts\activate.bat
echo ***** Created Python virtual environment *****
@rem Print venv's Python version
set err_msg=----- problem calling venv's python -----
echo We're running under
.venv\Scripts\python --version
if %errorlevel% neq 0 goto err_exit
set err_msg=----- pip update failed -----
.venv\Scripts\python -m pip install %no_cache_dir% --no-warn-script-location --upgrade pip wheel
if %errorlevel% neq 0 goto err_exit
echo ***** Updated pip and wheel *****
set err_msg=----- requirements file copy failed -----
copy binary_installer\py3.10-windows-x86_64-cuda-reqs.txt requirements.txt
if %errorlevel% neq 0 goto err_exit
set err_msg=----- main pip install failed -----
.venv\Scripts\python -m pip install %no_cache_dir% --no-warn-script-location -r requirements.txt
if %errorlevel% neq 0 goto err_exit
echo ***** Installed Python dependencies *****
set err_msg=----- InvokeAI setup failed -----
.venv\Scripts\python -m pip install %no_cache_dir% --no-warn-script-location -e .
if %errorlevel% neq 0 goto err_exit
copy binary_installer\invoke.bat.in .\invoke.bat
echo ***** Installed invoke launcher script ******
@rem more cleanup
rd /s /q binary_installer installer_files
@rem preload the models
call .venv\Scripts\python ldm\invoke\config\invokeai_configure.py
set err_msg=----- model download clone failed -----
if %errorlevel% neq 0 goto err_exit
deactivate
echo ***** Finished downloading models *****
echo All done! Execute the file invoke.bat in this directory to start InvokeAI
pause
exit
:err_exit
echo %err_msg%
pause
exit

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@ -0,0 +1,235 @@
#!/usr/bin/env bash
# ensure we're in the correct folder in case user's CWD is somewhere else
scriptdir=$(dirname "$0")
cd "$scriptdir"
set -euo pipefail
IFS=$'\n\t'
function _err_exit {
if test "$1" -ne 0
then
echo -e "Error code $1; Error caught was '$2'"
read -p "Press any key to exit..."
exit
fi
}
# This script will install git (if not found on the PATH variable)
# using micromamba (an 8mb static-linked single-file binary, conda replacement).
# For users who already have git, this step will be skipped.
# Next, it'll download the project's source code.
# Then it will download a self-contained, standalone Python and unpack it.
# Finally, it'll create the Python virtual environment and preload the models.
# This enables a user to install this project without manually installing git or Python
echo -e "\n***** Installing InvokeAI into $(pwd)... *****\n"
export no_cache_dir="--no-cache-dir"
if [ $# -ge 1 ]; then
if [ "$1" = "use-cache" ]; then
export no_cache_dir=""
fi
fi
OS_NAME=$(uname -s)
case "${OS_NAME}" in
Linux*) OS_NAME="linux";;
Darwin*) OS_NAME="darwin";;
*) echo -e "\n----- Unknown OS: $OS_NAME! This script runs only on Linux or macOS -----\n" && exit
esac
OS_ARCH=$(uname -m)
case "${OS_ARCH}" in
x86_64*) ;;
arm64*) ;;
*) echo -e "\n----- Unknown system architecture: $OS_ARCH! This script runs only on x86_64 or arm64 -----\n" && exit
esac
# https://mamba.readthedocs.io/en/latest/installation.html
MAMBA_OS_NAME=$OS_NAME
MAMBA_ARCH=$OS_ARCH
if [ "$OS_NAME" == "darwin" ]; then
MAMBA_OS_NAME="osx"
fi
if [ "$OS_ARCH" == "linux" ]; then
MAMBA_ARCH="aarch64"
fi
if [ "$OS_ARCH" == "x86_64" ]; then
MAMBA_ARCH="64"
fi
PY_ARCH=$OS_ARCH
if [ "$OS_ARCH" == "arm64" ]; then
PY_ARCH="aarch64"
fi
# Compute device ('cd' segment of reqs files) detect goes here
# This needs a ton of work
# Suggestions:
# - lspci
# - check $PATH for nvidia-smi, gtt CUDA/GPU version from output
# - Surely there's a similar utility for AMD?
CD="cuda"
if [ "$OS_NAME" == "darwin" ] && [ "$OS_ARCH" == "arm64" ]; then
CD="mps"
fi
# config
INSTALL_ENV_DIR="$(pwd)/installer_files/env"
MICROMAMBA_DOWNLOAD_URL="https://micro.mamba.pm/api/micromamba/${MAMBA_OS_NAME}-${MAMBA_ARCH}/latest"
RELEASE_URL=https://github.com/invoke-ai/InvokeAI
RELEASE_SOURCEBALL=/archive/refs/heads/main.tar.gz
PYTHON_BUILD_STANDALONE_URL=https://github.com/indygreg/python-build-standalone/releases/download
if [ "$OS_NAME" == "darwin" ]; then
PYTHON_BUILD_STANDALONE=20221002/cpython-3.10.7+20221002-${PY_ARCH}-apple-darwin-install_only.tar.gz
elif [ "$OS_NAME" == "linux" ]; then
PYTHON_BUILD_STANDALONE=20221002/cpython-3.10.7+20221002-${PY_ARCH}-unknown-linux-gnu-install_only.tar.gz
fi
echo "INSTALLING $RELEASE_SOURCEBALL FROM $RELEASE_URL"
PACKAGES_TO_INSTALL=""
if ! hash "git" &>/dev/null; then PACKAGES_TO_INSTALL="$PACKAGES_TO_INSTALL git"; fi
# (if necessary) install git and conda into a contained environment
if [ "$PACKAGES_TO_INSTALL" != "" ]; then
# download micromamba
echo -e "\n***** Downloading micromamba from $MICROMAMBA_DOWNLOAD_URL to micromamba *****\n"
curl -L "$MICROMAMBA_DOWNLOAD_URL" | tar -xvjO bin/micromamba > micromamba
chmod u+x ./micromamba
# test the mamba binary
echo -e "\n***** Micromamba version: *****\n"
./micromamba --version
# create the installer env
if [ ! -e "$INSTALL_ENV_DIR" ]; then
./micromamba create -y --prefix "$INSTALL_ENV_DIR"
fi
echo -e "\n***** Packages to install:$PACKAGES_TO_INSTALL *****\n"
./micromamba install -y --prefix "$INSTALL_ENV_DIR" -c conda-forge "$PACKAGES_TO_INSTALL"
if [ ! -e "$INSTALL_ENV_DIR" ]; then
echo -e "\n----- There was a problem while initializing micromamba. Cannot continue. -----\n"
exit
fi
fi
rm -f micromamba.exe
export PATH="$INSTALL_ENV_DIR/bin:$PATH"
# Download/unpack/clean up InvokeAI release sourceball
_err_msg="\n----- InvokeAI source download failed -----\n"
curl -L $RELEASE_URL/$RELEASE_SOURCEBALL --output InvokeAI.tgz
_err_exit $? _err_msg
_err_msg="\n----- InvokeAI source unpack failed -----\n"
tar -zxf InvokeAI.tgz
_err_exit $? _err_msg
rm -f InvokeAI.tgz
_err_msg="\n----- InvokeAI source copy failed -----\n"
cd InvokeAI-*
cp -r . ..
_err_exit $? _err_msg
cd ..
# cleanup
rm -rf InvokeAI-*/
rm -rf .dev_scripts/ .github/ docker-build/ tests/ requirements.in requirements-mkdocs.txt shell.nix
echo -e "\n***** Unpacked InvokeAI source *****\n"
# Download/unpack/clean up python-build-standalone
_err_msg="\n----- Python download failed -----\n"
curl -L $PYTHON_BUILD_STANDALONE_URL/$PYTHON_BUILD_STANDALONE --output python.tgz
_err_exit $? _err_msg
_err_msg="\n----- Python unpack failed -----\n"
tar -zxf python.tgz
_err_exit $? _err_msg
rm -f python.tgz
echo -e "\n***** Unpacked python-build-standalone *****\n"
# create venv
_err_msg="\n----- problem creating venv -----\n"
if [ "$OS_NAME" == "darwin" ]; then
# patch sysconfig so that extensions can build properly
# adapted from https://github.com/cashapp/hermit-packages/commit/fcba384663892f4d9cfb35e8639ff7a28166ee43
PYTHON_INSTALL_DIR="$(pwd)/python"
SYSCONFIG="$(echo python/lib/python*/_sysconfigdata_*.py)"
TMPFILE="$(mktemp)"
chmod +w "${SYSCONFIG}"
cp "${SYSCONFIG}" "${TMPFILE}"
sed "s,'/install,'${PYTHON_INSTALL_DIR},g" "${TMPFILE}" > "${SYSCONFIG}"
rm -f "${TMPFILE}"
fi
./python/bin/python3 -E -s -m venv .venv
_err_exit $? _err_msg
source .venv/bin/activate
echo -e "\n***** Created Python virtual environment *****\n"
# Print venv's Python version
_err_msg="\n----- problem calling venv's python -----\n"
echo -e "We're running under"
.venv/bin/python3 --version
_err_exit $? _err_msg
_err_msg="\n----- pip update failed -----\n"
.venv/bin/python3 -m pip install $no_cache_dir --no-warn-script-location --upgrade pip
_err_exit $? _err_msg
echo -e "\n***** Updated pip *****\n"
_err_msg="\n----- requirements file copy failed -----\n"
cp binary_installer/py3.10-${OS_NAME}-"${OS_ARCH}"-${CD}-reqs.txt requirements.txt
_err_exit $? _err_msg
_err_msg="\n----- main pip install failed -----\n"
.venv/bin/python3 -m pip install $no_cache_dir --no-warn-script-location -r requirements.txt
_err_exit $? _err_msg
echo -e "\n***** Installed Python dependencies *****\n"
_err_msg="\n----- InvokeAI setup failed -----\n"
.venv/bin/python3 -m pip install $no_cache_dir --no-warn-script-location -e .
_err_exit $? _err_msg
echo -e "\n***** Installed InvokeAI *****\n"
cp binary_installer/invoke.sh.in ./invoke.sh
chmod a+rx ./invoke.sh
echo -e "\n***** Installed invoke launcher script ******\n"
# more cleanup
rm -rf binary_installer/ installer_files/
# preload the models
.venv/bin/python3 scripts/configure_invokeai.py
_err_msg="\n----- model download clone failed -----\n"
_err_exit $? _err_msg
deactivate
echo -e "\n***** Finished downloading models *****\n"
echo "All done! Run the command"
echo " $scriptdir/invoke.sh"
echo "to start InvokeAI."
read -p "Press any key to exit..."
exit

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@ -0,0 +1,36 @@
@echo off
PUSHD "%~dp0"
call .venv\Scripts\activate.bat
echo Do you want to generate images using the
echo 1. command-line
echo 2. browser-based UI
echo OR
echo 3. open the developer console
set /p choice="Please enter 1, 2 or 3: "
if /i "%choice%" == "1" (
echo Starting the InvokeAI command-line.
.venv\Scripts\python scripts\invoke.py %*
) else if /i "%choice%" == "2" (
echo Starting the InvokeAI browser-based UI.
.venv\Scripts\python scripts\invoke.py --web %*
) else if /i "%choice%" == "3" (
echo Developer Console
echo Python command is:
where python
echo Python version is:
python --version
echo *************************
echo You are now in the system shell, with the local InvokeAI Python virtual environment activated,
echo so that you can troubleshoot this InvokeAI installation as necessary.
echo *************************
echo *** Type `exit` to quit this shell and deactivate the Python virtual environment ***
call cmd /k
) else (
echo Invalid selection
pause
exit /b
)
deactivate

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#!/usr/bin/env sh
set -eu
. .venv/bin/activate
# set required env var for torch on mac MPS
if [ "$(uname -s)" == "Darwin" ]; then
export PYTORCH_ENABLE_MPS_FALLBACK=1
fi
echo "Do you want to generate images using the"
echo "1. command-line"
echo "2. browser-based UI"
echo "OR"
echo "3. open the developer console"
echo "Please enter 1, 2, or 3:"
read choice
case $choice in
1)
printf "\nStarting the InvokeAI command-line..\n";
.venv/bin/python scripts/invoke.py $*;
;;
2)
printf "\nStarting the InvokeAI browser-based UI..\n";
.venv/bin/python scripts/invoke.py --web $*;
;;
3)
printf "\nDeveloper Console:\n";
printf "Python command is:\n\t";
which python;
printf "Python version is:\n\t";
python --version;
echo "*************************"
echo "You are now in your user shell ($SHELL) with the local InvokeAI Python virtual environment activated,";
echo "so that you can troubleshoot this InvokeAI installation as necessary.";
printf "*************************\n"
echo "*** Type \`exit\` to quit this shell and deactivate the Python virtual environment *** ";
/usr/bin/env "$SHELL";
;;
*)
echo "Invalid selection";
exit
;;
esac

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InvokeAI
Project homepage: https://github.com/invoke-ai/InvokeAI
Installation on Windows:
NOTE: You might need to enable Windows Long Paths. If you're not sure,
then you almost certainly need to. Simply double-click the 'WinLongPathsEnabled.reg'
file. Note that you will need to have admin privileges in order to
do this.
Please double-click the 'install.bat' file (while keeping it inside the invokeAI folder).
Installation on Linux and Mac:
Please open the terminal, and run './install.sh' (while keeping it inside the invokeAI folder).
After installation, please run the 'invoke.bat' file (on Windows) or 'invoke.sh'
file (on Linux/Mac) to start InvokeAI.

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--prefer-binary
--extra-index-url https://download.pytorch.org/whl/torch_stable.html
--extra-index-url https://download.pytorch.org/whl/cu116
--trusted-host https://download.pytorch.org
accelerate~=0.15
albumentations
diffusers[torch]~=0.11
einops
eventlet
flask_cors
flask_socketio
flaskwebgui==1.0.3
getpass_asterisk
imageio-ffmpeg
pyreadline3
realesrgan
send2trash
streamlit
taming-transformers-rom1504
test-tube
torch-fidelity
torch==1.12.1 ; platform_system == 'Darwin'
torch==1.12.0+cu116 ; platform_system == 'Linux' or platform_system == 'Windows'
torchvision==0.13.1 ; platform_system == 'Darwin'
torchvision==0.13.0+cu116 ; platform_system == 'Linux' or platform_system == 'Windows'
transformers
picklescan
https://github.com/openai/CLIP/archive/d50d76daa670286dd6cacf3bcd80b5e4823fc8e1.zip
https://github.com/invoke-ai/clipseg/archive/1f754751c85d7d4255fa681f4491ff5711c1c288.zip
https://github.com/invoke-ai/GFPGAN/archive/3f5d2397361199bc4a91c08bb7d80f04d7805615.zip ; platform_system=='Windows'
https://github.com/invoke-ai/GFPGAN/archive/c796277a1cf77954e5fc0b288d7062d162894248.zip ; platform_system=='Linux' or platform_system=='Darwin'
https://github.com/Birch-san/k-diffusion/archive/363386981fee88620709cf8f6f2eea167bd6cd74.zip
https://github.com/invoke-ai/PyPatchMatch/archive/129863937a8ab37f6bbcec327c994c0f932abdbc.zip

4
coverage/.gitignore vendored
View File

@ -1,4 +0,0 @@
# Ignore everything in this directory
*
# Except this file
!.gitignore

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@ -1,13 +0,0 @@
## Make a copy of this file named `.env` and fill in the values below.
## Any environment variables supported by InvokeAI can be specified here.
# INVOKEAI_ROOT is the path to a path on the local filesystem where InvokeAI will store data.
# Outputs will also be stored here by default.
# This **must** be an absolute path.
INVOKEAI_ROOT=
HUGGINGFACE_TOKEN=
## optional variables specific to the docker setup
# GPU_DRIVER=cuda
# CONTAINER_UID=1000

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@ -1,129 +1,103 @@
# syntax=docker/dockerfile:1.4
# syntax=docker/dockerfile:1
## Builder stage
ARG PYTHON_VERSION=3.9
##################
## base image ##
##################
FROM python:${PYTHON_VERSION}-slim AS python-base
FROM library/ubuntu:22.04 AS builder
LABEL org.opencontainers.image.authors="mauwii@outlook.de"
ARG DEBIAN_FRONTEND=noninteractive
RUN rm -f /etc/apt/apt.conf.d/docker-clean; echo 'Binary::apt::APT::Keep-Downloaded-Packages "true";' > /etc/apt/apt.conf.d/keep-cache
RUN --mount=type=cache,target=/var/cache/apt,sharing=locked \
--mount=type=cache,target=/var/lib/apt,sharing=locked \
apt update && apt-get install -y \
git \
python3.10-venv \
python3-pip \
build-essential
# prepare for buildkit cache
RUN rm -f /etc/apt/apt.conf.d/docker-clean \
&& echo 'Binary::apt::APT::Keep-Downloaded-Packages "true";' >/etc/apt/apt.conf.d/keep-cache
ENV INVOKEAI_SRC=/opt/invokeai
ENV VIRTUAL_ENV=/opt/venv/invokeai
# Install necessary packages
RUN \
--mount=type=cache,target=/var/cache/apt,sharing=locked \
--mount=type=cache,target=/var/lib/apt,sharing=locked \
apt-get update \
&& apt-get install -y \
--no-install-recommends \
libgl1-mesa-glx=20.3.* \
libglib2.0-0=2.66.* \
libopencv-dev=4.5.*
ENV PATH="$VIRTUAL_ENV/bin:$PATH"
ARG TORCH_VERSION=2.0.1
ARG TORCHVISION_VERSION=0.15.2
ARG GPU_DRIVER=cuda
ARG TARGETPLATFORM="linux/amd64"
# unused but available
ARG BUILDPLATFORM
# set working directory and env
ARG APPDIR=/usr/src
ARG APPNAME=InvokeAI
WORKDIR ${APPDIR}
ENV PATH ${APPDIR}/${APPNAME}/bin:$PATH
# Keeps Python from generating .pyc files in the container
ENV PYTHONDONTWRITEBYTECODE 1
# Turns off buffering for easier container logging
ENV PYTHONUNBUFFERED 1
# don't fall back to legacy build system
ENV PIP_USE_PEP517=1
WORKDIR ${INVOKEAI_SRC}
#######################
## build pyproject ##
#######################
FROM python-base AS pyproject-builder
# Install pytorch before all other pip packages
# NOTE: there are no pytorch builds for arm64 + cuda, only cpu
# x86_64/CUDA is default
RUN --mount=type=cache,target=/root/.cache/pip \
python3 -m venv ${VIRTUAL_ENV} &&\
if [ "$TARGETPLATFORM" = "linux/arm64" ] || [ "$GPU_DRIVER" = "cpu" ]; then \
extra_index_url_arg="--extra-index-url https://download.pytorch.org/whl/cpu"; \
elif [ "$GPU_DRIVER" = "rocm" ]; then \
extra_index_url_arg="--extra-index-url https://download.pytorch.org/whl/rocm5.4.2"; \
else \
extra_index_url_arg="--extra-index-url https://download.pytorch.org/whl/cu118"; \
fi &&\
pip install $extra_index_url_arg \
torch==$TORCH_VERSION \
torchvision==$TORCHVISION_VERSION
# Install dependencies
RUN \
--mount=type=cache,target=/var/cache/apt,sharing=locked \
--mount=type=cache,target=/var/lib/apt,sharing=locked \
apt-get update \
&& apt-get install -y \
--no-install-recommends \
build-essential=12.9 \
gcc=4:10.2.* \
python3-dev=3.9.*
# Install the local package.
# Editable mode helps use the same image for development:
# the local working copy can be bind-mounted into the image
# at path defined by ${INVOKEAI_SRC}
COPY invokeai ./invokeai
COPY pyproject.toml ./
RUN --mount=type=cache,target=/root/.cache/pip \
# xformers + triton fails to install on arm64
if [ "$GPU_DRIVER" = "cuda" ] && [ "$TARGETPLATFORM" = "linux/amd64" ]; then \
pip install -e ".[xformers]"; \
else \
pip install -e "."; \
fi
# prepare pip for buildkit cache
ARG PIP_CACHE_DIR=/var/cache/buildkit/pip
ENV PIP_CACHE_DIR ${PIP_CACHE_DIR}
RUN mkdir -p ${PIP_CACHE_DIR}
# #### Build the Web UI ------------------------------------
# create virtual environment
RUN --mount=type=cache,target=${PIP_CACHE_DIR},sharing=locked \
python3 -m venv "${APPNAME}" \
--upgrade-deps
FROM node:18 AS web-builder
WORKDIR /build
COPY invokeai/frontend/web/ ./
RUN --mount=type=cache,target=/usr/lib/node_modules \
npm install --include dev
RUN --mount=type=cache,target=/usr/lib/node_modules \
yarn vite build
# copy sources
COPY --link . .
#### Runtime stage ---------------------------------------
FROM library/ubuntu:22.04 AS runtime
ARG DEBIAN_FRONTEND=noninteractive
ENV PYTHONUNBUFFERED=1
ENV PYTHONDONTWRITEBYTECODE=1
RUN apt update && apt install -y --no-install-recommends \
git \
curl \
vim \
tmux \
ncdu \
iotop \
bzip2 \
gosu \
libglib2.0-0 \
libgl1-mesa-glx \
python3-venv \
python3-pip \
build-essential \
libopencv-dev \
libstdc++-10-dev &&\
apt-get clean && apt-get autoclean
# globally add magic-wormhole
# for ease of transferring data to and from the container
# when running in sandboxed cloud environments; e.g. Runpod etc.
RUN pip install magic-wormhole
ENV INVOKEAI_SRC=/opt/invokeai
ENV VIRTUAL_ENV=/opt/venv/invokeai
ENV INVOKEAI_ROOT=/invokeai
ENV PATH="$VIRTUAL_ENV/bin:$INVOKEAI_SRC:$PATH"
# --link requires buldkit w/ dockerfile syntax 1.4
COPY --link --from=builder ${INVOKEAI_SRC} ${INVOKEAI_SRC}
COPY --link --from=builder ${VIRTUAL_ENV} ${VIRTUAL_ENV}
COPY --link --from=web-builder /build/dist ${INVOKEAI_SRC}/invokeai/frontend/web/dist
# Link amdgpu.ids for ROCm builds
# contributed by https://github.com/Rubonnek
RUN mkdir -p "/opt/amdgpu/share/libdrm" &&\
ln -s "/usr/share/libdrm/amdgpu.ids" "/opt/amdgpu/share/libdrm/amdgpu.ids"
WORKDIR ${INVOKEAI_SRC}
# install pyproject.toml
ARG PIP_EXTRA_INDEX_URL
ENV PIP_EXTRA_INDEX_URL ${PIP_EXTRA_INDEX_URL}
RUN --mount=type=cache,target=${PIP_CACHE_DIR},sharing=locked \
"${APPNAME}/bin/pip" install .
# build patchmatch
RUN cd /usr/lib/$(uname -p)-linux-gnu/pkgconfig/ && ln -sf opencv4.pc opencv.pc
RUN python3 -c "from patchmatch import patch_match"
# Create unprivileged user and make the local dir
RUN useradd --create-home --shell /bin/bash -u 1000 --comment "container local user" invoke
RUN mkdir -p ${INVOKEAI_ROOT} && chown -R invoke:invoke ${INVOKEAI_ROOT}
#####################
## runtime image ##
#####################
FROM python-base AS runtime
COPY docker/docker-entrypoint.sh ./
ENTRYPOINT ["/opt/invokeai/docker-entrypoint.sh"]
CMD ["invokeai-web", "--host", "0.0.0.0"]
# Create a new user
ARG UNAME=appuser
RUN useradd \
--no-log-init \
-m \
-U \
"${UNAME}"
# create volume directory
ARG VOLUME_DIR=/data
RUN mkdir -p "${VOLUME_DIR}" \
&& chown -R "${UNAME}" "${VOLUME_DIR}"
# setup runtime environment
USER ${UNAME}
COPY --chown=${UNAME} --from=pyproject-builder ${APPDIR}/${APPNAME} ${APPNAME}
ENV INVOKEAI_ROOT ${VOLUME_DIR}
ENV TRANSFORMERS_CACHE ${VOLUME_DIR}/.cache
ENV INVOKE_MODEL_RECONFIGURE "--yes --default_only"
EXPOSE 9090
ENTRYPOINT [ "invokeai" ]
CMD [ "--web", "--host", "0.0.0.0", "--port", "9090" ]
VOLUME [ "${VOLUME_DIR}" ]

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@ -1,77 +0,0 @@
# InvokeAI Containerized
All commands are to be run from the `docker` directory: `cd docker`
#### Linux
1. Ensure builkit is enabled in the Docker daemon settings (`/etc/docker/daemon.json`)
2. Install the `docker compose` plugin using your package manager, or follow a [tutorial](https://www.digitalocean.com/community/tutorials/how-to-install-and-use-docker-compose-on-ubuntu-22-04).
- The deprecated `docker-compose` (hyphenated) CLI continues to work for now.
3. Ensure docker daemon is able to access the GPU.
- You may need to install [nvidia-container-toolkit](https://docs.nvidia.com/datacenter/cloud-native/container-toolkit/latest/install-guide.html)
#### macOS
1. Ensure Docker has at least 16GB RAM
2. Enable VirtioFS for file sharing
3. Enable `docker compose` V2 support
This is done via Docker Desktop preferences
## Quickstart
1. Make a copy of `env.sample` and name it `.env` (`cp env.sample .env` (Mac/Linux) or `copy example.env .env` (Windows)). Make changes as necessary. Set `INVOKEAI_ROOT` to an absolute path to:
a. the desired location of the InvokeAI runtime directory, or
b. an existing, v3.0.0 compatible runtime directory.
1. `docker compose up`
The image will be built automatically if needed.
The runtime directory (holding models and outputs) will be created in the location specified by `INVOKEAI_ROOT`. The default location is `~/invokeai`. The runtime directory will be populated with the base configs and models necessary to start generating.
### Use a GPU
- Linux is *recommended* for GPU support in Docker.
- WSL2 is *required* for Windows.
- only `x86_64` architecture is supported.
The Docker daemon on the system must be already set up to use the GPU. In case of Linux, this involves installing `nvidia-docker-runtime` and configuring the `nvidia` runtime as default. Steps will be different for AMD. Please see Docker documentation for the most up-to-date instructions for using your GPU with Docker.
## Customize
Check the `.env.sample` file. It contains some environment variables for running in Docker. Copy it, name it `.env`, and fill it in with your own values. Next time you run `docker compose up`, your custom values will be used.
You can also set these values in `docker compose.yml` directly, but `.env` will help avoid conflicts when code is updated.
Example (most values are optional):
```
INVOKEAI_ROOT=/Volumes/WorkDrive/invokeai
HUGGINGFACE_TOKEN=the_actual_token
CONTAINER_UID=1000
GPU_DRIVER=cuda
```
## Even Moar Customizing!
See the `docker compose.yaml` file. The `command` instruction can be uncommented and used to run arbitrary startup commands. Some examples below.
### Reconfigure the runtime directory
Can be used to download additional models from the supported model list
In conjunction with `INVOKEAI_ROOT` can be also used to initialize a runtime directory
```
command:
- invokeai-configure
- --yes
```
Or install models:
```
command:
- invokeai-model-install
```

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@ -1,11 +1,51 @@
#!/usr/bin/env bash
set -e
build_args=""
# If you want to build a specific flavor, set the CONTAINER_FLAVOR environment variable
# e.g. CONTAINER_FLAVOR=cpu ./build.sh
# Possible Values are:
# - cpu
# - cuda
# - rocm
# Don't forget to also set it when executing run.sh
# if it is not set, the script will try to detect the flavor by itself.
#
# Doc can be found here:
# https://invoke-ai.github.io/InvokeAI/installation/040_INSTALL_DOCKER/
[[ -f ".env" ]] && build_args=$(awk '$1 ~ /\=[^$]/ {print "--build-arg " $0 " "}' .env)
SCRIPTDIR=$(dirname "${BASH_SOURCE[0]}")
cd "$SCRIPTDIR" || exit 1
echo "docker-compose build args:"
echo $build_args
source ./env.sh
docker-compose build $build_args
DOCKERFILE=${INVOKE_DOCKERFILE:-./Dockerfile}
# print the settings
echo -e "You are using these values:\n"
echo -e "Dockerfile:\t\t${DOCKERFILE}"
echo -e "index-url:\t\t${PIP_EXTRA_INDEX_URL:-none}"
echo -e "Volumename:\t\t${VOLUMENAME}"
echo -e "Platform:\t\t${PLATFORM}"
echo -e "Container Registry:\t${CONTAINER_REGISTRY}"
echo -e "Container Repository:\t${CONTAINER_REPOSITORY}"
echo -e "Container Tag:\t\t${CONTAINER_TAG}"
echo -e "Container Flavor:\t${CONTAINER_FLAVOR}"
echo -e "Container Image:\t${CONTAINER_IMAGE}\n"
# Create docker volume
if [[ -n "$(docker volume ls -f name="${VOLUMENAME}" -q)" ]]; then
echo -e "Volume already exists\n"
else
echo -n "creating docker volume "
docker volume create "${VOLUMENAME}"
fi
# Build Container
DOCKER_BUILDKIT=1 docker build \
--platform="${PLATFORM:-linux/amd64}" \
--tag="${CONTAINER_IMAGE:-invokeai}" \
${CONTAINER_FLAVOR:+--build-arg="CONTAINER_FLAVOR=${CONTAINER_FLAVOR}"} \
${PIP_EXTRA_INDEX_URL:+--build-arg="PIP_EXTRA_INDEX_URL=${PIP_EXTRA_INDEX_URL}"} \
${PIP_PACKAGE:+--build-arg="PIP_PACKAGE=${PIP_PACKAGE}"} \
--file="${DOCKERFILE}" \
..

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@ -1,48 +0,0 @@
# Copyright (c) 2023 Eugene Brodsky https://github.com/ebr
version: '3.8'
services:
invokeai:
image: "local/invokeai:latest"
# edit below to run on a container runtime other than nvidia-container-runtime.
# not yet tested with rocm/AMD GPUs
# Comment out the "deploy" section to run on CPU only
deploy:
resources:
reservations:
devices:
- driver: nvidia
count: 1
capabilities: [gpu]
build:
context: ..
dockerfile: docker/Dockerfile
# variables without a default will automatically inherit from the host environment
environment:
- INVOKEAI_ROOT
- HF_HOME
# Create a .env file in the same directory as this docker-compose.yml file
# and populate it with environment variables. See .env.sample
env_file:
- .env
ports:
- "${INVOKEAI_PORT:-9090}:9090"
volumes:
- ${INVOKEAI_ROOT:-~/invokeai}:${INVOKEAI_ROOT:-/invokeai}
- ${HF_HOME:-~/.cache/huggingface}:${HF_HOME:-/invokeai/.cache/huggingface}
# - ${INVOKEAI_MODELS_DIR:-${INVOKEAI_ROOT:-/invokeai/models}}
# - ${INVOKEAI_MODELS_CONFIG_PATH:-${INVOKEAI_ROOT:-/invokeai/configs/models.yaml}}
tty: true
stdin_open: true
# # Example of running alternative commands/scripts in the container
# command:
# - bash
# - -c
# - |
# invokeai-model-install --yes --default-only --config_file ${INVOKEAI_ROOT}/config_custom.yaml
# invokeai-nodes-web --host 0.0.0.0

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@ -1,65 +0,0 @@
#!/bin/bash
set -e -o pipefail
### Container entrypoint
# Runs the CMD as defined by the Dockerfile or passed to `docker run`
# Can be used to configure the runtime dir
# Bypass by using ENTRYPOINT or `--entrypoint`
### Set INVOKEAI_ROOT pointing to a valid runtime directory
# Otherwise configure the runtime dir first.
### Configure the InvokeAI runtime directory (done by default)):
# docker run --rm -it <this image> --configure
# or skip with --no-configure
### Set the CONTAINER_UID envvar to match your user.
# Ensures files created in the container are owned by you:
# docker run --rm -it -v /some/path:/invokeai -e CONTAINER_UID=$(id -u) <this image>
# Default UID: 1000 chosen due to popularity on Linux systems. Possibly 501 on MacOS.
USER_ID=${CONTAINER_UID:-1000}
USER=invoke
usermod -u ${USER_ID} ${USER} 1>/dev/null
configure() {
# Configure the runtime directory
if [[ -f ${INVOKEAI_ROOT}/invokeai.yaml ]]; then
echo "${INVOKEAI_ROOT}/invokeai.yaml exists. InvokeAI is already configured."
echo "To reconfigure InvokeAI, delete the above file."
echo "======================================================================"
else
mkdir -p ${INVOKEAI_ROOT}
chown --recursive ${USER} ${INVOKEAI_ROOT}
gosu ${USER} invokeai-configure --yes --default_only
fi
}
## Skip attempting to configure.
## Must be passed first, before any other args.
if [[ $1 != "--no-configure" ]]; then
configure
else
shift
fi
### Set the $PUBLIC_KEY env var to enable SSH access.
# We do not install openssh-server in the image by default to avoid bloat.
# but it is useful to have the full SSH server e.g. on Runpod.
# (use SCP to copy files to/from the image, etc)
if [[ -v "PUBLIC_KEY" ]] && [[ ! -d "${HOME}/.ssh" ]]; then
apt-get update
apt-get install -y openssh-server
pushd $HOME
mkdir -p .ssh
echo ${PUBLIC_KEY} > .ssh/authorized_keys
chmod -R 700 .ssh
popd
service ssh start
fi
cd ${INVOKEAI_ROOT}
# Run the CMD as the Container User (not root).
exec gosu ${USER} "$@"

51
docker/env.sh Normal file
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@ -0,0 +1,51 @@
#!/usr/bin/env bash
# This file is used to set environment variables for the build.sh and run.sh scripts.
# Try to detect the container flavor if no PIP_EXTRA_INDEX_URL got specified
if [[ -z "$PIP_EXTRA_INDEX_URL" ]]; then
# Activate virtual environment if not already activated and exists
if [[ -z $VIRTUAL_ENV ]]; then
[[ -e "$(dirname "${BASH_SOURCE[0]}")/../.venv/bin/activate" ]] \
&& source "$(dirname "${BASH_SOURCE[0]}")/../.venv/bin/activate" \
&& echo "Activated virtual environment: $VIRTUAL_ENV"
fi
# Decide which container flavor to build if not specified
if [[ -z "$CONTAINER_FLAVOR" ]] && python -c "import torch" &>/dev/null; then
# Check for CUDA and ROCm
CUDA_AVAILABLE=$(python -c "import torch;print(torch.cuda.is_available())")
ROCM_AVAILABLE=$(python -c "import torch;print(torch.version.hip is not None)")
if [[ "${CUDA_AVAILABLE}" == "True" ]]; then
CONTAINER_FLAVOR="cuda"
elif [[ "${ROCM_AVAILABLE}" == "True" ]]; then
CONTAINER_FLAVOR="rocm"
else
CONTAINER_FLAVOR="cpu"
fi
fi
# Set PIP_EXTRA_INDEX_URL based on container flavor
if [[ "$CONTAINER_FLAVOR" == "rocm" ]]; then
PIP_EXTRA_INDEX_URL="https://download.pytorch.org/whl/rocm"
elif [[ "$CONTAINER_FLAVOR" == "cpu" ]]; then
PIP_EXTRA_INDEX_URL="https://download.pytorch.org/whl/cpu"
# elif [[ -z "$CONTAINER_FLAVOR" || "$CONTAINER_FLAVOR" == "cuda" ]]; then
# PIP_PACKAGE=${PIP_PACKAGE-".[xformers]"}
fi
fi
# Variables shared by build.sh and run.sh
REPOSITORY_NAME="${REPOSITORY_NAME-$(basename "$(git rev-parse --show-toplevel)")}"
REPOSITORY_NAME="${REPOSITORY_NAME,,}"
VOLUMENAME="${VOLUMENAME-"${REPOSITORY_NAME}_data"}"
ARCH="${ARCH-$(uname -m)}"
PLATFORM="${PLATFORM-linux/${ARCH}}"
INVOKEAI_BRANCH="${INVOKEAI_BRANCH-$(git branch --show)}"
CONTAINER_REGISTRY="${CONTAINER_REGISTRY-"ghcr.io"}"
CONTAINER_REPOSITORY="${CONTAINER_REPOSITORY-"$(whoami)/${REPOSITORY_NAME}"}"
CONTAINER_FLAVOR="${CONTAINER_FLAVOR-cuda}"
CONTAINER_TAG="${CONTAINER_TAG-"${INVOKEAI_BRANCH##*/}-${CONTAINER_FLAVOR}"}"
CONTAINER_IMAGE="${CONTAINER_REGISTRY}/${CONTAINER_REPOSITORY}:${CONTAINER_TAG}"
CONTAINER_IMAGE="${CONTAINER_IMAGE,,}"

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@ -1,8 +1,41 @@
#!/usr/bin/env bash
set -e
# How to use: https://invoke-ai.github.io/InvokeAI/installation/040_INSTALL_DOCKER/
SCRIPTDIR=$(dirname "${BASH_SOURCE[0]}")
cd "$SCRIPTDIR" || exit 1
docker-compose up --build -d
docker-compose logs -f
source ./env.sh
# Create outputs directory if it does not exist
[[ -d ./outputs ]] || mkdir ./outputs
echo -e "You are using these values:\n"
echo -e "Volumename:\t${VOLUMENAME}"
echo -e "Invokeai_tag:\t${CONTAINER_IMAGE}"
echo -e "local Models:\t${MODELSPATH:-unset}\n"
docker run \
--interactive \
--tty \
--rm \
--platform="${PLATFORM}" \
--name="${REPOSITORY_NAME,,}" \
--hostname="${REPOSITORY_NAME,,}" \
--mount=source="${VOLUMENAME}",target=/data \
--mount type=bind,source="$(pwd)"/outputs,target=/data/outputs \
${MODELSPATH:+--mount="type=bind,source=${MODELSPATH},target=/data/models"} \
${HUGGING_FACE_HUB_TOKEN:+--env="HUGGING_FACE_HUB_TOKEN=${HUGGING_FACE_HUB_TOKEN}"} \
--publish=9090:9090 \
--cap-add=sys_nice \
${GPU_FLAGS:+--gpus="${GPU_FLAGS}"} \
"${CONTAINER_IMAGE}" ${@:+$@}
# Remove Trash folder
for f in outputs/.Trash*; do
if [ -e "$f" ]; then
rm -Rf "$f"
break
fi
done

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@ -1,60 +0,0 @@
# InvokeAI - A Stable Diffusion Toolkit
Stable Diffusion distribution by InvokeAI: https://github.com/invoke-ai
The Docker image tracks the `main` branch of the InvokeAI project, which means it includes the latest features, but may contain some bugs.
Your working directory is mounted under the `/workspace` path inside the pod. The models are in `/workspace/invokeai/models`, and outputs are in `/workspace/invokeai/outputs`.
> **Only the /workspace directory will persist between pod restarts!**
> **If you _terminate_ (not just _stop_) the pod, the /workspace will be lost.**
## Quickstart
1. Launch a pod from this template. **It will take about 5-10 minutes to run through the initial setup**. Be patient.
1. Wait for the application to load.
- TIP: you know it's ready when the CPU usage goes idle
- You can also check the logs for a line that says "_Point your browser at..._"
1. Open the Invoke AI web UI: click the `Connect` => `connect over HTTP` button.
1. Generate some art!
## Other things you can do
At any point you may edit the pod configuration and set an arbitrary Docker command. For example, you could run a command to downloads some models using `curl`, or fetch some images and place them into your outputs to continue a working session.
If you need to run *multiple commands*, define them in the Docker Command field like this:
`bash -c "cd ${INVOKEAI_ROOT}/outputs; wormhole receive 2-foo-bar; invoke.py --web --host 0.0.0.0"`
### Copying your data in and out of the pod
This image includes a couple of handy tools to help you get the data into the pod (such as your custom models or embeddings), and out of the pod (such as downloading your outputs). Here are your options for getting your data in and out of the pod:
- **SSH server**:
1. Make sure to create and set your Public Key in the RunPod settings (follow the official instructions)
1. Add an exposed port 22 (TCP) in the pod settings!
1. When your pod restarts, you will see a new entry in the `Connect` dialog. Use this SSH server to `scp` or `sftp` your files as necessary, or SSH into the pod using the fully fledged SSH server.
- [**Magic Wormhole**](https://magic-wormhole.readthedocs.io/en/latest/welcome.html):
1. On your computer, `pip install magic-wormhole` (see above instructions for details)
1. Connect to the command line **using the "light" SSH client** or the browser-based console. _Currently there's a bug where `wormhole` isn't available when connected to "full" SSH server, as described above_.
1. `wormhole send /workspace/invokeai/outputs` will send the entire `outputs` directory. You can also send individual files.
1. Once packaged, you will see a `wormhole receive <123-some-words>` command. Copy it
1. Paste this command into the terminal on your local machine to securely download the payload.
1. It works the same in reverse: you can `wormhole send` some models from your computer to the pod. Again, save your files somewhere in `/workspace` or they will be lost when the pod is stopped.
- **RunPod's Cloud Sync feature** may be used to sync the persistent volume to cloud storage. You could, for example, copy the entire `/workspace` to S3, add some custom models to it, and copy it back from S3 when launching new pod configurations. Follow the Cloud Sync instructions.
### Disable the NSFW checker
The NSFW checker is enabled by default. To disable it, edit the pod configuration and set the following command:
```
invoke --web --host 0.0.0.0 --no-nsfw_checker
```
---
Template ©2023 Eugene Brodsky [ebr](https://github.com/ebr)

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@ -4,236 +4,6 @@ title: Changelog
# :octicons-log-16: **Changelog**
## v2.3.5 <small>(22 May 2023)</small>
This release (along with the post1 and post2 follow-on releases) expands support for additional LoRA and LyCORIS models, upgrades diffusers versions, and fixes a few bugs.
### LoRA and LyCORIS Support Improvement
A number of LoRA/LyCORIS fine-tune files (those which alter the text encoder as well as the unet model) were not having the desired effect in InvokeAI. This bug has now been fixed. Full documentation of LoRA support is available at InvokeAI LoRA Support.
Previously, InvokeAI did not distinguish between LoRA/LyCORIS models based on Stable Diffusion v1.5 vs those based on v2.0 and 2.1, leading to a crash when an incompatible model was loaded. This has now been fixed. In addition, the web pulldown menus for LoRA and Textual Inversion selection have been enhanced to show only those files that are compatible with the currently-selected Stable Diffusion model.
Support for the newer LoKR LyCORIS files has been added.
### Library Updates and Speed/Reproducibility Advancements
The major enhancement in this version is that NVIDIA users no longer need to decide between speed and reproducibility. Previously, if you activated the Xformers library, you would see improvements in speed and memory usage, but multiple images generated with the same seed and other parameters would be slightly different from each other. This is no longer the case. Relative to 2.3.5 you will see improved performance when running without Xformers, and even better performance when Xformers is activated. In both cases, images generated with the same settings will be identical.
Here are the new library versions:
Library Version
Torch 2.0.0
Diffusers 0.16.1
Xformers 0.0.19
Compel 1.1.5
Other Improvements
### Performance Improvements
When a model is loaded for the first time, InvokeAI calculates its checksum for incorporation into the PNG metadata. This process could take up to a minute on network-mounted disks and WSL mounts. This release noticeably speeds up the process.
### Bug Fixes
The "import models from directory" and "import from URL" functionality in the console-based model installer has now been fixed.
When running the WebUI, we have reduced the number of times that InvokeAI reaches out to HuggingFace to fetch the list of embeddable Textual Inversion models. We have also caught and fixed a problem with the updater not correctly detecting when another instance of the updater is running
## v2.3.4 <small>(7 April 2023)</small>
What's New in 2.3.4
This features release adds support for LoRA (Low-Rank Adaptation) and LyCORIS (Lora beYond Conventional) models, as well as some minor bug fixes.
### LoRA and LyCORIS Support
LoRA files contain fine-tuning weights that enable particular styles, subjects or concepts to be applied to generated images. LyCORIS files are an extended variant of LoRA. InvokeAI supports the most common LoRA/LyCORIS format, which ends in the suffix .safetensors. You will find numerous LoRA and LyCORIS models for download at Civitai, and a small but growing number at Hugging Face. Full documentation of LoRA support is available at InvokeAI LoRA Support.( Pre-release note: this page will only be available after release)
To use LoRA/LyCORIS models in InvokeAI:
Download the .safetensors files of your choice and place in /path/to/invokeai/loras. This directory was not present in earlier version of InvokeAI but will be created for you the first time you run the command-line or web client. You can also create the directory manually.
Add withLora(lora-file,weight) to your prompts. The weight is optional and will default to 1.0. A few examples, assuming that a LoRA file named loras/sushi.safetensors is present:
family sitting at dinner table eating sushi withLora(sushi,0.9)
family sitting at dinner table eating sushi withLora(sushi, 0.75)
family sitting at dinner table eating sushi withLora(sushi)
Multiple withLora() prompt fragments are allowed. The weight can be arbitrarily large, but the useful range is roughly 0.5 to 1.0. Higher weights make the LoRA's influence stronger. Negative weights are also allowed, which can lead to some interesting effects.
Generate as you usually would! If you find that the image is too "crisp" try reducing the overall CFG value or reducing individual LoRA weights. As is the case with all fine-tunes, you'll get the best results when running the LoRA on top of the model similar to, or identical with, the one that was used during the LoRA's training. Don't try to load a SD 1.x-trained LoRA into a SD 2.x model, and vice versa. This will trigger a non-fatal error message and generation will not proceed.
You can change the location of the loras directory by passing the --lora_directory option to `invokeai.
### New WebUI LoRA and Textual Inversion Buttons
This version adds two new web interface buttons for inserting LoRA and Textual Inversion triggers into the prompt as shown in the screenshot below.
Clicking on one or the other of the buttons will bring up a menu of available LoRA/LyCORIS or Textual Inversion trigger terms. Select a menu item to insert the properly-formatted withLora() or <textual-inversion> prompt fragment into the positive prompt. The number in parentheses indicates the number of trigger terms currently in the prompt. You may click the button again and deselect the LoRA or trigger to remove it from the prompt, or simply edit the prompt directly.
Currently terms are inserted into the positive prompt textbox only. However, some textual inversion embeddings are designed to be used with negative prompts. To move a textual inversion trigger into the negative prompt, simply cut and paste it.
By default the Textual Inversion menu only shows locally installed models found at startup time in /path/to/invokeai/embeddings. However, InvokeAI has the ability to dynamically download and install additional Textual Inversion embeddings from the HuggingFace Concepts Library. You may choose to display the most popular of these (with five or more likes) in the Textual Inversion menu by going to Settings and turning on "Show Textual Inversions from HF Concepts Library." When this option is activated, the locally-installed TI embeddings will be shown first, followed by uninstalled terms from Hugging Face. See The Hugging Face Concepts Library and Importing Textual Inversion files for more information.
### Minor features and fixes
This release changes model switching behavior so that the command-line and Web UIs save the last model used and restore it the next time they are launched. It also improves the behavior of the installer so that the pip utility is kept up to date.
### Known Bugs in 2.3.4
These are known bugs in the release.
The Ancestral DPMSolverMultistepScheduler (k_dpmpp_2a) sampler is not yet implemented for diffusers models and will disappear from the WebUI Sampler menu when a diffusers model is selected.
Windows Defender will sometimes raise Trojan or backdoor alerts for the codeformer.pth face restoration model, as well as the CIDAS/clipseg and runwayml/stable-diffusion-v1.5 models. These are false positives and can be safely ignored. InvokeAI performs a malware scan on all models as they are loaded. For additional security, you should use safetensors models whenever they are available.
## v2.3.3 <small>(28 March 2023)</small>
This is a bugfix and minor feature release.
### Bugfixes
Since version 2.3.2 the following bugs have been fixed:
Bugs
When using legacy checkpoints with an external VAE, the VAE file is now scanned for malware prior to loading. Previously only the main model weights file was scanned.
Textual inversion will select an appropriate batchsize based on whether xformers is active, and will default to xformers enabled if the library is detected.
The batch script log file names have been fixed to be compatible with Windows.
Occasional corruption of the .next_prefix file (which stores the next output file name in sequence) on Windows systems is now detected and corrected.
Support loading of legacy config files that have no personalization (textual inversion) section.
An infinite loop when opening the developer's console from within the invoke.sh script has been corrected.
Documentation fixes, including a recipe for detecting and fixing problems with the AMD GPU ROCm driver.
Enhancements
It is now possible to load and run several community-contributed SD-2.0 based models, including the often-requested "Illuminati" model.
The "NegativePrompts" embedding file, and others like it, can now be loaded by placing it in the InvokeAI embeddings directory.
If no --model is specified at launch time, InvokeAI will remember the last model used and restore it the next time it is launched.
On Linux systems, the invoke.sh launcher now uses a prettier console-based interface. To take advantage of it, install the dialog package using your package manager (e.g. sudo apt install dialog).
When loading legacy models (safetensors/ckpt) you can specify a custom config file and/or a VAE by placing like-named files in the same directory as the model following this example:
my-favorite-model.ckpt
my-favorite-model.yaml
my-favorite-model.vae.pt # or my-favorite-model.vae.safetensors
### Known Bugs in 2.3.3
These are known bugs in the release.
The Ancestral DPMSolverMultistepScheduler (k_dpmpp_2a) sampler is not yet implemented for diffusers models and will disappear from the WebUI Sampler menu when a diffusers model is selected.
Windows Defender will sometimes raise Trojan or backdoor alerts for the codeformer.pth face restoration model, as well as the CIDAS/clipseg and runwayml/stable-diffusion-v1.5 models. These are false positives and can be safely ignored. InvokeAI performs a malware scan on all models as they are loaded. For additional security, you should use safetensors models whenever they are available.
## v2.3.2 <small>(11 March 2023)</small>
This is a bugfix and minor feature release.
### Bugfixes
Since version 2.3.1 the following bugs have been fixed:
Black images appearing for potential NSFW images when generating with legacy checkpoint models and both --no-nsfw_checker and --ckpt_convert turned on.
Black images appearing when generating from models fine-tuned on Stable-Diffusion-2-1-base. When importing V2-derived models, you may be asked to select whether the model was derived from a "base" model (512 pixels) or the 768-pixel SD-2.1 model.
The "Use All" button was not restoring the Hi-Res Fix setting on the WebUI
When using the model installer console app, models failed to import correctly when importing from directories with spaces in their names. A similar issue with the output directory was also fixed.
Crashes that occurred during model merging.
Restore previous naming of Stable Diffusion base and 768 models.
Upgraded to latest versions of diffusers, transformers, safetensors and accelerate libraries upstream. We hope that this will fix the assertion NDArray > 2**32 issue that MacOS users have had when generating images larger than 768x768 pixels. Please report back.
As part of the upgrade to diffusers, the location of the diffusers-based models has changed from models/diffusers to models/hub. When you launch InvokeAI for the first time, it will prompt you to OK a one-time move. This should be quick and harmless, but if you have modified your models/diffusers directory in some way, for example using symlinks, you may wish to cancel the migration and make appropriate adjustments.
New "Invokeai-batch" script
### Invoke AI Batch
2.3.2 introduces a new command-line only script called invokeai-batch that can be used to generate hundreds of images from prompts and settings that vary systematically. This can be used to try the same prompt across multiple combinations of models, steps, CFG settings and so forth. It also allows you to template prompts and generate a combinatorial list like:
a shack in the mountains, photograph
a shack in the mountains, watercolor
a shack in the mountains, oil painting
a chalet in the mountains, photograph
a chalet in the mountains, watercolor
a chalet in the mountains, oil painting
a shack in the desert, photograph
...
If you have a system with multiple GPUs, or a single GPU with lots of VRAM, you can parallelize generation across the combinatorial set, reducing wait times and using your system's resources efficiently (make sure you have good GPU cooling).
To try invokeai-batch out. Launch the "developer's console" using the invoke launcher script, or activate the invokeai virtual environment manually. From the console, give the command invokeai-batch --help in order to learn how the script works and create your first template file for dynamic prompt generation.
### Known Bugs in 2.3.2
These are known bugs in the release.
The Ancestral DPMSolverMultistepScheduler (k_dpmpp_2a) sampler is not yet implemented for diffusers models and will disappear from the WebUI Sampler menu when a diffusers model is selected.
Windows Defender will sometimes raise a Trojan alert for the codeformer.pth face restoration model. As far as we have been able to determine, this is a false positive and can be safely whitelisted.
## v2.3.1 <small>(22 February 2023)</small>
This is primarily a bugfix release, but it does provide several new features that will improve the user experience.
### Enhanced support for model management
InvokeAI now makes it convenient to add, remove and modify models. You can individually import models that are stored on your local system, scan an entire folder and its subfolders for models and import them automatically, and even directly import models from the internet by providing their download URLs. You also have the option of designating a local folder to scan for new models each time InvokeAI is restarted.
There are three ways of accessing the model management features:
From the WebUI, click on the cube to the right of the model selection menu. This will bring up a form that allows you to import models individually from your local disk or scan a directory for models to import.
Using the Model Installer App
Choose option (5) download and install models from the invoke launcher script to start a new console-based application for model management. You can use this to select from a curated set of starter models, or import checkpoint, safetensors, and diffusers models from a local disk or the internet. The example below shows importing two checkpoint URLs from popular SD sites and a HuggingFace diffusers model using its Repository ID. It also shows how to designate a folder to be scanned at startup time for new models to import.
Command-line users can start this app using the command invokeai-model-install.
Using the Command Line Client (CLI)
The !install_model and !convert_model commands have been enhanced to allow entering of URLs and local directories to scan and import. The first command installs .ckpt and .safetensors files as-is. The second one converts them into the faster diffusers format before installation.
Internally InvokeAI is able to probe the contents of a .ckpt or .safetensors file to distinguish among v1.x, v2.x and inpainting models. This means that you do not need to include "inpaint" in your model names to use an inpainting model. Note that Stable Diffusion v2.x models will be autoconverted into a diffusers model the first time you use it.
Please see INSTALLING MODELS for more information on model management.
### An Improved Installer Experience
The installer now launches a console-based UI for setting and changing commonly-used startup options:
After selecting the desired options, the installer installs several support models needed by InvokeAI's face reconstruction and upscaling features and then launches the interface for selecting and installing models shown earlier. At any time, you can edit the startup options by launching invoke.sh/invoke.bat and entering option (6) change InvokeAI startup options
Command-line users can launch the new configure app using invokeai-configure.
This release also comes with a renewed updater. To do an update without going through a whole reinstallation, launch invoke.sh or invoke.bat and choose option (9) update InvokeAI . This will bring you to a screen that prompts you to update to the latest released version, to the most current development version, or any released or unreleased version you choose by selecting the tag or branch of the desired version.
Command-line users can run this interface by typing invokeai-configure
### Image Symmetry Options
There are now features to generate horizontal and vertical symmetry during generation. The way these work is to wait until a selected step in the generation process and then to turn on a mirror image effect. In addition to generating some cool images, you can also use this to make side-by-side comparisons of how an image will look with more or fewer steps. Access this option from the WebUI by selecting Symmetry from the image generation settings, or within the CLI by using the options --h_symmetry_time_pct and --v_symmetry_time_pct (these can be abbreviated to --h_sym and --v_sym like all other options).
### A New Unified Canvas Look
This release introduces a beta version of the WebUI Unified Canvas. To try it out, open up the settings dialogue in the WebUI (gear icon) and select Use Canvas Beta Layout:
Refresh the screen and go to to Unified Canvas (left side of screen, third icon from the top). The new layout is designed to provide more space to work in and to keep the image controls close to the image itself:
Model conversion and merging within the WebUI
The WebUI now has an intuitive interface for model merging, as well as for permanent conversion of models from legacy .ckpt/.safetensors formats into diffusers format. These options are also available directly from the invoke.sh/invoke.bat scripts.
An easier way to contribute translations to the WebUI
We have migrated our translation efforts to Weblate, a FOSS translation product. Maintaining the growing project's translations is now far simpler for the maintainers and community. Please review our brief translation guide for more information on how to contribute.
Numerous internal bugfixes and performance issues
### Bug Fixes
This releases quashes multiple bugs that were reported in 2.3.0. Major internal changes include upgrading to diffusers 0.13.0, and using the compel library for prompt parsing. See Detailed Change Log for a detailed list of bugs caught and squished.
Summary of InvokeAI command line scripts (all accessible via the launcher menu)
Command Description
invokeai Command line interface
invokeai --web Web interface
invokeai-model-install Model installer with console forms-based front end
invokeai-ti --gui Textual inversion, with a console forms-based front end
invokeai-merge --gui Model merging, with a console forms-based front end
invokeai-configure Startup configuration; can also be used to reinstall support models
invokeai-update InvokeAI software updater
### Known Bugs in 2.3.1
These are known bugs in the release.
MacOS users generating 768x768 pixel images or greater using diffusers models may experience a hard crash with assertion NDArray > 2**32 This appears to be an issu...
## v2.3.0 <small>(15 January 2023)</small>
**Transition to diffusers
@ -494,7 +264,7 @@ sections describe what's new for InvokeAI.
[Manual Installation](installation/020_INSTALL_MANUAL.md).
- The ability to save frequently-used startup options (model to load, steps,
sampler, etc) in a `.invokeai` file. See
[Client](deprecated/CLI.md)
[Client](features/CLI.md)
- Support for AMD GPU cards (non-CUDA) on Linux machines.
- Multiple bugs and edge cases squashed.
@ -617,6 +387,8 @@ sections describe what's new for InvokeAI.
- `dream.py` script renamed `invoke.py`. A `dream.py` script wrapper remains for
backward compatibility.
- Completely new WebGUI - launch with `python3 scripts/invoke.py --web`
- Support for [inpainting](features/INPAINTING.md) and
[outpainting](features/OUTPAINTING.md)
- img2img runs on all k\* samplers
- Support for
[negative prompts](features/PROMPTS.md#negative-and-unconditioned-prompts)
@ -627,7 +399,7 @@ sections describe what's new for InvokeAI.
using facial reconstruction, ESRGAN upscaling, outcropping (similar to DALL-E
infinite canvas), and "embiggen" upscaling. See the `!fix` command.
- New `--hires` option on `invoke>` line allows
[larger images to be created without duplicating elements](deprecated/CLI.md#this-is-an-example-of-txt2img),
[larger images to be created without duplicating elements](features/CLI.md#this-is-an-example-of-txt2img),
at the cost of some performance.
- New `--perlin` and `--threshold` options allow you to add and control
variation during image generation (see
@ -636,7 +408,7 @@ sections describe what's new for InvokeAI.
of images and tweaking of previous settings.
- Command-line completion in `invoke.py` now works on Windows, Linux and Mac
platforms.
- Improved [command-line completion behavior](deprecated/CLI.md) New commands
- Improved [command-line completion behavior](features/CLI.md) New commands
added:
- List command-line history with `!history`
- Search command-line history with `!search`

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## Welcome to Invoke AI
We're thrilled to have you here and we're excited for you to contribute.
Invoke AI originated as a project built by the community, and that vision carries forward today as we aim to build the best pro-grade tools available. We work together to incorporate the latest in AI/ML research, making these tools available in over 20 languages to artists and creatives around the world as part of our fully permissive OSS project designed for individual users to self-host and use.
Here are some guidelines to help you get started:
### Technical Prerequisites
Front-end: You'll need a working knowledge of React and TypeScript.
Back-end: Depending on the scope of your contribution, you may need to know SQLite, FastAPI, Python, and Socketio. Also, a good majority of the backend logic involved in processing images is built in a modular way using a concept called "Nodes", which are isolated functions that carry out individual, discrete operations. This design allows for easy contributions of novel pipelines and capabilities.
### How to Submit Contributions
To start contributing, please follow these steps:
1. Familiarize yourself with our roadmap and open projects to see where your skills and interests align. These documents can serve as a source of inspiration.
2. Open a Pull Request (PR) with a clear description of the feature you're adding or the problem you're solving. Make sure your contribution aligns with the project's vision.
3. Adhere to general best practices. This includes assuming interoperability with other nodes, keeping the scope of your functions as small as possible, and organizing your code according to our architecture documents.
### Types of Contributions We're Looking For
We welcome all contributions that improve the project. Right now, we're especially looking for:
1. Quality of life (QOL) enhancements on the front-end.
2. New backend capabilities added through nodes.
3. Incorporating additional optimizations from the broader open-source software community.
### Communication and Decision-making Process
Project maintainers and code owners review PRs to ensure they align with the project's goals. They may provide design or architectural guidance, suggestions on user experience, or provide more significant feedback on the contribution itself. Expect to receive feedback on your submissions, and don't hesitate to ask questions or propose changes.
For more robust discussions, or if you're planning to add capabilities not currently listed on our roadmap, please reach out to us on our Discord server. That way, we can ensure your proposed contribution aligns with the project's direction before you start writing code.
### Code of Conduct and Contribution Expectations
We want everyone in our community to have a positive experience. To facilitate this, we've established a code of conduct and a statement of values that we expect all contributors to adhere to. Please take a moment to review these documents—they're essential to maintaining a respectful and inclusive environment.
By making a contribution to this project, you certify that:
1. The contribution was created in whole or in part by you and you have the right to submit it under the open-source license indicated in this projects GitHub repository; or
2. The contribution is based upon previous work that, to the best of your knowledge, is covered under an appropriate open-source license and you have the right under that license to submit that work with modifications, whether created in whole or in part by you, under the same open-source license (unless you are permitted to submit under a different license); or
3. The contribution was provided directly to you by some other person who certified (1) or (2) and you have not modified it; or
4. You understand and agree that this project and the contribution are public and that a record of the contribution (including all personal information you submit with it, including your sign-off) is maintained indefinitely and may be redistributed consistent with this project or the open-source license(s) involved.
This disclaimer is not a license and does not grant any rights or permissions. You must obtain necessary permissions and licenses, including from third parties, before contributing to this project.
This disclaimer is provided "as is" without warranty of any kind, whether expressed or implied, including but not limited to the warranties of merchantability, fitness for a particular purpose, or non-infringement. In no event shall the authors or copyright holders be liable for any claim, damages, or other liability, whether in an action of contract, tort, or otherwise, arising from, out of, or in connection with the contribution or the use or other dealings in the contribution.
---
Remember, your contributions help make this project great. We're excited to see what you'll bring to our community!

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@ -1,790 +1,105 @@
# Invocations
Features in InvokeAI are added in the form of modular node-like systems called
**Invocations**.
An Invocation is simply a single operation that takes in some inputs and gives
out some outputs. We can then chain multiple Invocations together to create more
complex functionality.
## Invocations Directory
InvokeAI Invocations can be found in the `invokeai/app/invocations` directory.
You can add your new functionality to one of the existing Invocations in this
directory or create a new file in this directory as per your needs.
**Note:** _All Invocations must be inside this directory for InvokeAI to
recognize them as valid Invocations._
## Creating A New Invocation
In order to understand the process of creating a new Invocation, let us actually
create one.
In our example, let us create an Invocation that will take in an image, resize
it and output the resized image.
The first set of things we need to do when creating a new Invocation are -
- Create a new class that derives from a predefined parent class called
`BaseInvocation`.
- The name of every Invocation must end with the word `Invocation` in order for
it to be recognized as an Invocation.
- Every Invocation must have a `docstring` that describes what this Invocation
does.
- Every Invocation must have a unique `type` field defined which becomes its
indentifier.
- Invocations are strictly typed. We make use of the native
[typing](https://docs.python.org/3/library/typing.html) library and the
installed [pydantic](https://pydantic-docs.helpmanual.io/) library for
validation.
So let us do that.
```python
from typing import Literal
from .baseinvocation import BaseInvocation
class ResizeInvocation(BaseInvocation):
'''Resizes an image'''
type: Literal['resize'] = 'resize'
```
That's great.
Now we have setup the base of our new Invocation. Let us think about what inputs
our Invocation takes.
- We need an `image` that we are going to resize.
- We will need new `width` and `height` values to which we need to resize the
image to.
### **Inputs**
Every Invocation input is a pydantic `Field` and like everything else should be
strictly typed and defined.
So let us create these inputs for our Invocation. First up, the `image` input we
need. Generally, we can use standard variable types in Python but InvokeAI
already has a custom `ImageField` type that handles all the stuff that is needed
for image inputs.
But what is this `ImageField` ..? It is a special class type specifically
written to handle how images are dealt with in InvokeAI. We will cover how to
create your own custom field types later in this guide. For now, let's go ahead
and use it.
```python
from typing import Literal, Union
from pydantic import Field
from .baseinvocation import BaseInvocation
from ..models.image import ImageField
class ResizeInvocation(BaseInvocation):
'''Resizes an image'''
type: Literal['resize'] = 'resize'
# Inputs
image: Union[ImageField, None] = Field(description="The input image", default=None)
```
Let us break down our input code.
```python
image: Union[ImageField, None] = Field(description="The input image", default=None)
```
| Part | Value | Description |
| --------- | ---------------------------------------------------- | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| Name | `image` | The variable that will hold our image |
| Type Hint | `Union[ImageField, None]` | The types for our field. Indicates that the image can either be an `ImageField` type or `None` |
| Field | `Field(description="The input image", default=None)` | The image variable is a field which needs a description and a default value that we set to `None`. |
Great. Now let us create our other inputs for `width` and `height`
```python
from typing import Literal, Union
from pydantic import Field
from .baseinvocation import BaseInvocation
from ..models.image import ImageField
class ResizeInvocation(BaseInvocation):
'''Resizes an image'''
type: Literal['resize'] = 'resize'
# Inputs
image: Union[ImageField, None] = Field(description="The input image", default=None)
width: int = Field(default=512, ge=64, le=2048, description="Width of the new image")
height: int = Field(default=512, ge=64, le=2048, description="Height of the new image")
```
As you might have noticed, we added two new parameters to the field type for
`width` and `height` called `gt` and `le`. These basically stand for _greater
than or equal to_ and _less than or equal to_. There are various other param
types for field that you can find on the **pydantic** documentation.
**Note:** _Any time it is possible to define constraints for our field, we
should do it so the frontend has more information on how to parse this field._
Perfect. We now have our inputs. Let us do something with these.
### **Invoke Function**
The `invoke` function is where all the magic happens. This function provides you
the `context` parameter that is of the type `InvocationContext` which will give
you access to the current context of the generation and all the other services
that are provided by it by InvokeAI.
Let us create this function first.
```python
from typing import Literal, Union
from pydantic import Field
from .baseinvocation import BaseInvocation, InvocationContext
from ..models.image import ImageField
class ResizeInvocation(BaseInvocation):
'''Resizes an image'''
type: Literal['resize'] = 'resize'
# Inputs
image: Union[ImageField, None] = Field(description="The input image", default=None)
width: int = Field(default=512, ge=64, le=2048, description="Width of the new image")
height: int = Field(default=512, ge=64, le=2048, description="Height of the new image")
def invoke(self, context: InvocationContext):
pass
```
### **Outputs**
The output of our Invocation will be whatever is returned by this `invoke`
function. Like with our inputs, we need to strongly type and define our outputs
too.
What is our output going to be? Another image. Normally you'd have to create a
type for this but InvokeAI already offers you an `ImageOutput` type that handles
all the necessary info related to image outputs. So let us use that.
We will cover how to create your own output types later in this guide.
```python
from typing import Literal, Union
from pydantic import Field
from .baseinvocation import BaseInvocation, InvocationContext
from ..models.image import ImageField
from .image import ImageOutput
class ResizeInvocation(BaseInvocation):
'''Resizes an image'''
type: Literal['resize'] = 'resize'
# Inputs
image: Union[ImageField, None] = Field(description="The input image", default=None)
width: int = Field(default=512, ge=64, le=2048, description="Width of the new image")
height: int = Field(default=512, ge=64, le=2048, description="Height of the new image")
def invoke(self, context: InvocationContext) -> ImageOutput:
pass
```
Perfect. Now that we have our Invocation setup, let us do what we want to do.
- We will first load the image. Generally we do this using the `PIL` library but
we can use one of the services provided by InvokeAI to load the image.
- We will resize the image using `PIL` to our input data.
- We will output this image in the format we set above.
So let's do that.
```python
from typing import Literal, Union
from pydantic import Field
from .baseinvocation import BaseInvocation, InvocationContext
from ..models.image import ImageField, ResourceOrigin, ImageCategory
from .image import ImageOutput
class ResizeInvocation(BaseInvocation):
'''Resizes an image'''
type: Literal['resize'] = 'resize'
# Inputs
image: Union[ImageField, None] = Field(description="The input image", default=None)
width: int = Field(default=512, ge=64, le=2048, description="Width of the new image")
height: int = Field(default=512, ge=64, le=2048, description="Height of the new image")
def invoke(self, context: InvocationContext) -> ImageOutput:
# Load the image using InvokeAI's predefined Image Service.
image = context.services.images.get_pil_image(self.image.image_origin, self.image.image_name)
# Resizing the image
# Because we used the above service, we already have a PIL image. So we can simply resize.
resized_image = image.resize((self.width, self.height))
# Preparing the image for output using InvokeAI's predefined Image Service.
output_image = context.services.images.create(
image=resized_image,
image_origin=ResourceOrigin.INTERNAL,
image_category=ImageCategory.GENERAL,
node_id=self.id,
session_id=context.graph_execution_state_id,
is_intermediate=self.is_intermediate,
)
# Returning the Image
return ImageOutput(
image=ImageField(
image_name=output_image.image_name,
image_origin=output_image.image_origin,
),
width=output_image.width,
height=output_image.height,
)
```
**Note:** Do not be overwhelmed by the `ImageOutput` process. InvokeAI has a
certain way that the images need to be dispatched in order to be stored and read
correctly. In 99% of the cases when dealing with an image output, you can simply
copy-paste the template above.
That's it. You made your own **Resize Invocation**.
## Result
Once you make your Invocation correctly, the rest of the process is fully
automated for you.
When you launch InvokeAI, you can go to `http://localhost:9090/docs` and see
your new Invocation show up there with all the relevant info.
![resize invocation](../assets/contributing/resize_invocation.png)
When you launch the frontend UI, you can go to the Node Editor tab and find your
new Invocation ready to be used.
![resize node editor](../assets/contributing/resize_node_editor.png)
# Advanced
## Custom Input Fields
Now that you know how to create your own Invocations, let us dive into slightly
more advanced topics.
While creating your own Invocations, you might run into a scenario where the
existing input types in InvokeAI do not meet your requirements. In such cases,
you can create your own input types.
Let us create one as an example. Let us say we want to create a color input
field that represents a color code. But before we start on that here are some
general good practices to keep in mind.
**Good Practices**
- There is no naming convention for input fields but we highly recommend that
you name it something appropriate like `ColorField`.
- It is not mandatory but it is heavily recommended to add a relevant
`docstring` to describe your input field.
- Keep your field in the same file as the Invocation that it is made for or in
another file where it is relevant.
All input types a class that derive from the `BaseModel` type from `pydantic`.
So let's create one.
```python
from pydantic import BaseModel
class ColorField(BaseModel):
'''A field that holds the rgba values of a color'''
pass
```
Perfect. Now let us create our custom inputs for our field. This is exactly
similar how you created input fields for your Invocation. All the same rules
apply. Let us create four fields representing the _red(r)_, _blue(b)_,
_green(g)_ and _alpha(a)_ channel of the color.
```python
class ColorField(BaseModel):
'''A field that holds the rgba values of a color'''
r: int = Field(ge=0, le=255, description="The red channel")
g: int = Field(ge=0, le=255, description="The green channel")
b: int = Field(ge=0, le=255, description="The blue channel")
a: int = Field(ge=0, le=255, description="The alpha channel")
```
That's it. We now have a new input field type that we can use in our Invocations
like this.
```python
color: ColorField = Field(default=ColorField(r=0, g=0, b=0, a=0), description='Background color of an image')
```
**Extra Config**
All input fields also take an additional `Config` class that you can use to do
various advanced things like setting required parameters and etc.
Let us do that for our _ColorField_ and enforce all the values because we did
not define any defaults for our fields.
```python
class ColorField(BaseModel):
'''A field that holds the rgba values of a color'''
r: int = Field(ge=0, le=255, description="The red channel")
g: int = Field(ge=0, le=255, description="The green channel")
b: int = Field(ge=0, le=255, description="The blue channel")
a: int = Field(ge=0, le=255, description="The alpha channel")
class Config:
schema_extra = {"required": ["r", "g", "b", "a"]}
```
Now it becomes mandatory for the user to supply all the values required by our
input field.
We will discuss the `Config` class in extra detail later in this guide and how
you can use it to make your Invocations more robust.
## Custom Output Types
Like with custom inputs, sometimes you might find yourself needing custom
outputs that InvokeAI does not provide. We can easily set one up.
Now that you are familiar with Invocations and Inputs, let us use that knowledge
to put together a custom output type for an Invocation that returns _width_,
_height_ and _background_color_ that we need to create a blank image.
- A custom output type is a class that derives from the parent class of
`BaseInvocationOutput`.
- It is not mandatory but we recommend using names ending with `Output` for
output types. So we'll call our class `BlankImageOutput`
- It is not mandatory but we highly recommend adding a `docstring` to describe
what your output type is for.
- Like Invocations, each output type should have a `type` variable that is
**unique**
Now that we know the basic rules for creating a new output type, let us go ahead
and make it.
```python
from typing import Literal
from pydantic import Field
from .baseinvocation import BaseInvocationOutput
class BlankImageOutput(BaseInvocationOutput):
'''Base output type for creating a blank image'''
type: Literal['blank_image_output'] = 'blank_image_output'
# Inputs
width: int = Field(description='Width of blank image')
height: int = Field(description='Height of blank image')
bg_color: ColorField = Field(description='Background color of blank image')
class Config:
schema_extra = {"required": ["type", "width", "height", "bg_color"]}
```
All set. We now have an output type that requires what we need to create a
blank_image. And if you noticed it, we even used the `Config` class to ensure
the fields are required.
## Custom Configuration
As you might have noticed when making inputs and outputs, we used a class called
`Config` from _pydantic_ to further customize them. Because our inputs and
outputs essentially inherit from _pydantic_'s `BaseModel` class, all
[configuration options](https://docs.pydantic.dev/latest/usage/schema/#schema-customization)
that are valid for _pydantic_ classes are also valid for our inputs and outputs.
You can do the same for your Invocations too but InvokeAI makes our life a
little bit easier on that end.
InvokeAI provides a custom configuration class called `InvocationConfig`
particularly for configuring Invocations. This is exactly the same as the raw
`Config` class from _pydantic_ with some extra stuff on top to help faciliate
parsing of the scheme in the frontend UI.
At the current moment, tihs `InvocationConfig` class is further improved with
the following features related the `ui`.
| Config Option | Field Type | Example |
| ------------- | ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| type_hints | `Dict[str, Literal["integer", "float", "boolean", "string", "enum", "image", "latents", "model", "control"]]` | `type_hint: "model"` provides type hints related to the model like displaying a list of available models |
| tags | `List[str]` | `tags: ['resize', 'image']` will classify your invocation under the tags of resize and image. |
| title | `str` | `title: 'Resize Image` will rename your to this custom title rather than infer from the name of the Invocation class. |
So let us update your `ResizeInvocation` with some extra configuration and see
how that works.
```python
from typing import Literal, Union
from pydantic import Field
from .baseinvocation import BaseInvocation, InvocationContext, InvocationConfig
from ..models.image import ImageField, ResourceOrigin, ImageCategory
from .image import ImageOutput
class ResizeInvocation(BaseInvocation):
'''Resizes an image'''
type: Literal['resize'] = 'resize'
# Inputs
image: Union[ImageField, None] = Field(description="The input image", default=None)
width: int = Field(default=512, ge=64, le=2048, description="Width of the new image")
height: int = Field(default=512, ge=64, le=2048, description="Height of the new image")
class Config(InvocationConfig):
schema_extra: {
ui: {
tags: ['resize', 'image'],
title: ['My Custom Resize']
}
}
def invoke(self, context: InvocationContext) -> ImageOutput:
# Load the image using InvokeAI's predefined Image Service.
image = context.services.images.get_pil_image(self.image.image_origin, self.image.image_name)
# Resizing the image
# Because we used the above service, we already have a PIL image. So we can simply resize.
resized_image = image.resize((self.width, self.height))
# Preparing the image for output using InvokeAI's predefined Image Service.
output_image = context.services.images.create(
image=resized_image,
image_origin=ResourceOrigin.INTERNAL,
image_category=ImageCategory.GENERAL,
node_id=self.id,
session_id=context.graph_execution_state_id,
is_intermediate=self.is_intermediate,
)
# Returning the Image
return ImageOutput(
image=ImageField(
image_name=output_image.image_name,
image_origin=output_image.image_origin,
),
width=output_image.width,
height=output_image.height,
)
```
We now customized our code to let the frontend know that our Invocation falls
under `resize` and `image` categories. So when the user searches for these
particular words, our Invocation will show up too.
We also set a custom title for our Invocation. So instead of being called
`Resize`, it will be called `My Custom Resize`.
As simple as that.
As time goes by, InvokeAI will further improve and add more customizability for
Invocation configuration. We will have more documentation regarding this at a
later time.
# **[TODO]**
## Custom Components For Frontend
Every backend input type should have a corresponding frontend component so the
UI knows what to render when you use a particular field type.
If you are using existing field types, we already have components for those. So
you don't have to worry about creating anything new. But this might not always
be the case. Sometimes you might want to create new field types and have the
frontend UI deal with it in a different way.
This is where we venture into the world of React and Javascript and create our
own new components for our Invocations. Do not fear the world of JS. It's
actually pretty straightforward.
Let us create a new component for our custom color field we created above. When
we use a color field, let us say we want the UI to display a color picker for
the user to pick from rather than entering values. That is what we will build
now.
---
# OLD -- TO BE DELETED OR MOVED LATER
---
Invocations represent a single operation, its inputs, and its outputs. These operations and their outputs can be chained together to generate and modify images.
## Creating a new invocation
To create a new invocation, either find the appropriate module file in
`/ldm/invoke/app/invocations` to add your invocation to, or create a new one in
that folder. All invocations in that folder will be discovered and made
available to the CLI and API automatically. Invocations make use of
[typing](https://docs.python.org/3/library/typing.html) and
[pydantic](https://pydantic-docs.helpmanual.io/) for validation and integration
into the CLI and API.
To create a new invocation, either find the appropriate module file in `/ldm/invoke/app/invocations` to add your invocation to, or create a new one in that folder. All invocations in that folder will be discovered and made available to the CLI and API automatically. Invocations make use of [typing](https://docs.python.org/3/library/typing.html) and [pydantic](https://pydantic-docs.helpmanual.io/) for validation and integration into the CLI and API.
An invocation looks like this:
```py
class UpscaleInvocation(BaseInvocation):
"""Upscales an image."""
# fmt: off
type: Literal["upscale"] = "upscale"
type: Literal['upscale'] = 'upscale'
# Inputs
image: Union[ImageField, None] = Field(description="The input image", default=None)
strength: float = Field(default=0.75, gt=0, le=1, description="The strength")
level: Literal[2, 4] = Field(default=2, description="The upscale level")
# fmt: on
# Schema customisation
class Config(InvocationConfig):
schema_extra = {
"ui": {
"tags": ["upscaling", "image"],
},
}
image: Union[ImageField,None] = Field(description="The input image")
strength: float = Field(default=0.75, gt=0, le=1, description="The strength")
level: Literal[2,4] = Field(default=2, description = "The upscale level")
def invoke(self, context: InvocationContext) -> ImageOutput:
image = context.services.images.get_pil_image(
self.image.image_origin, self.image.image_name
)
results = context.services.restoration.upscale_and_reconstruct(
image_list=[[image, 0]],
upscale=(self.level, self.strength),
strength=0.0, # GFPGAN strength
save_original=False,
image_callback=None,
image = context.services.images.get(self.image.image_type, self.image.image_name)
results = context.services.generate.upscale_and_reconstruct(
image_list = [[image, 0]],
upscale = (self.level, self.strength),
strength = 0.0, # GFPGAN strength
save_original = False,
image_callback = None,
)
# Results are image and seed, unwrap for now
# TODO: can this return multiple results?
image_dto = context.services.images.create(
image=results[0][0],
image_origin=ResourceOrigin.INTERNAL,
image_category=ImageCategory.GENERAL,
node_id=self.id,
session_id=context.graph_execution_state_id,
is_intermediate=self.is_intermediate,
)
image_type = ImageType.RESULT
image_name = context.services.images.create_name(context.graph_execution_state_id, self.id)
context.services.images.save(image_type, image_name, results[0][0])
return ImageOutput(
image=ImageField(
image_name=image_dto.image_name,
image_origin=image_dto.image_origin,
),
width=image_dto.width,
height=image_dto.height,
image = ImageField(image_type = image_type, image_name = image_name)
)
```
Each portion is important to implement correctly.
### Class definition and type
```py
class UpscaleInvocation(BaseInvocation):
"""Upscales an image."""
type: Literal['upscale'] = 'upscale'
```
All invocations must derive from `BaseInvocation`. They should have a docstring
that declares what they do in a single, short line. They should also have a
`type` with a type hint that's `Literal["command_name"]`, where `command_name`
is what the user will type on the CLI or use in the API to create this
invocation. The `command_name` must be unique. The `type` must be assigned to
the value of the literal in the type hint.
All invocations must derive from `BaseInvocation`. They should have a docstring that declares what they do in a single, short line. They should also have a `type` with a type hint that's `Literal["command_name"]`, where `command_name` is what the user will type on the CLI or use in the API to create this invocation. The `command_name` must be unique. The `type` must be assigned to the value of the literal in the type hint.
### Inputs
```py
# Inputs
image: Union[ImageField,None] = Field(description="The input image")
strength: float = Field(default=0.75, gt=0, le=1, description="The strength")
level: Literal[2,4] = Field(default=2, description="The upscale level")
```
Inputs consist of three parts: a name, a type hint, and a `Field` with default, description, and validation information. For example:
| Part | Value | Description |
| ---- | ----- | ----------- |
| Name | `strength` | This field is referred to as `strength` |
| Type Hint | `float` | This field must be of type `float` |
| Field | `Field(default=0.75, gt=0, le=1, description="The strength")` | The default value is `0.75`, the value must be in the range (0,1], and help text will show "The strength" for this field. |
Inputs consist of three parts: a name, a type hint, and a `Field` with default,
description, and validation information. For example:
Notice that `image` has type `Union[ImageField,None]`. The `Union` allows this field to be parsed with `None` as a value, which enables linking to previous invocations. All fields should either provide a default value or allow `None` as a value, so that they can be overwritten with a linked output from another invocation.
| Part | Value | Description |
| --------- | ------------------------------------------------------------- | ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| Name | `strength` | This field is referred to as `strength` |
| Type Hint | `float` | This field must be of type `float` |
| Field | `Field(default=0.75, gt=0, le=1, description="The strength")` | The default value is `0.75`, the value must be in the range (0,1], and help text will show "The strength" for this field. |
The special type `ImageField` is also used here. All images are passed as `ImageField`, which protects them from pydantic validation errors (since images only ever come from links).
Notice that `image` has type `Union[ImageField,None]`. The `Union` allows this
field to be parsed with `None` as a value, which enables linking to previous
invocations. All fields should either provide a default value or allow `None` as
a value, so that they can be overwritten with a linked output from another
invocation.
The special type `ImageField` is also used here. All images are passed as
`ImageField`, which protects them from pydantic validation errors (since images
only ever come from links).
Finally, note that for all linking, the `type` of the linked fields must match.
If the `name` also matches, then the field can be **automatically linked** to a
previous invocation by name and matching.
### Config
```py
# Schema customisation
class Config(InvocationConfig):
schema_extra = {
"ui": {
"tags": ["upscaling", "image"],
},
}
```
This is an optional configuration for the invocation. It inherits from
pydantic's model `Config` class, and it used primarily to customize the
autogenerated OpenAPI schema.
The UI relies on the OpenAPI schema in two ways:
- An API client & Typescript types are generated from it. This happens at build
time.
- The node editor parses the schema into a template used by the UI to create the
node editor UI. This parsing happens at runtime.
In this example, a `ui` key has been added to the `schema_extra` dict to provide
some tags for the UI, to facilitate filtering nodes.
See the Schema Generation section below for more information.
Finally, note that for all linking, the `type` of the linked fields must match. If the `name` also matches, then the field can be **automatically linked** to a previous invocation by name and matching.
### Invoke Function
```py
def invoke(self, context: InvocationContext) -> ImageOutput:
image = context.services.images.get_pil_image(
self.image.image_origin, self.image.image_name
)
results = context.services.restoration.upscale_and_reconstruct(
image_list=[[image, 0]],
upscale=(self.level, self.strength),
strength=0.0, # GFPGAN strength
save_original=False,
image_callback=None,
image = context.services.images.get(self.image.image_type, self.image.image_name)
results = context.services.generate.upscale_and_reconstruct(
image_list = [[image, 0]],
upscale = (self.level, self.strength),
strength = 0.0, # GFPGAN strength
save_original = False,
image_callback = None,
)
# Results are image and seed, unwrap for now
# TODO: can this return multiple results?
image_dto = context.services.images.create(
image=results[0][0],
image_origin=ResourceOrigin.INTERNAL,
image_category=ImageCategory.GENERAL,
node_id=self.id,
session_id=context.graph_execution_state_id,
is_intermediate=self.is_intermediate,
)
image_type = ImageType.RESULT
image_name = context.services.images.create_name(context.graph_execution_state_id, self.id)
context.services.images.save(image_type, image_name, results[0][0])
return ImageOutput(
image=ImageField(
image_name=image_dto.image_name,
image_origin=image_dto.image_origin,
),
width=image_dto.width,
height=image_dto.height,
image = ImageField(image_type = image_type, image_name = image_name)
)
```
The `invoke` function is the last portion of an invocation. It is provided an `InvocationContext` which contains services to perform work as well as a `session_id` for use as needed. It should return a class with output values that derives from `BaseInvocationOutput`.
The `invoke` function is the last portion of an invocation. It is provided an
`InvocationContext` which contains services to perform work as well as a
`session_id` for use as needed. It should return a class with output values that
derives from `BaseInvocationOutput`.
Before being called, the invocation will have all of its fields set from defaults, inputs, and finally links (overriding in that order).
Before being called, the invocation will have all of its fields set from
defaults, inputs, and finally links (overriding in that order).
Assume that this invocation may be running simultaneously with other
invocations, may be running on another machine, or in other interesting
scenarios. If you need functionality, please provide it as a service in the
`InvocationServices` class, and make sure it can be overridden.
Assume that this invocation may be running simultaneously with other invocations, may be running on another machine, or in other interesting scenarios. If you need functionality, please provide it as a service in the `InvocationServices` class, and make sure it can be overridden.
### Outputs
```py
class ImageOutput(BaseInvocationOutput):
"""Base class for invocations that output an image"""
type: Literal['image'] = 'image'
# fmt: off
type: Literal["image_output"] = "image_output"
image: ImageField = Field(default=None, description="The output image")
width: int = Field(description="The width of the image in pixels")
height: int = Field(description="The height of the image in pixels")
# fmt: on
class Config:
schema_extra = {"required": ["type", "image", "width", "height"]}
image: ImageField = Field(default=None, description="The output image")
```
Output classes look like an invocation class without the invoke method. Prefer
to use an existing output class if available, and prefer to name inputs the same
as outputs when possible, to promote automatic invocation linking.
## Schema Generation
Invocation, output and related classes are used to generate an OpenAPI schema.
### Required Properties
The schema generation treat all properties with default values as optional. This
makes sense internally, but when when using these classes via the generated
schema, we end up with e.g. the `ImageOutput` class having its `image` property
marked as optional.
We know that this property will always be present, so the additional logic
needed to always check if the property exists adds a lot of extraneous cruft.
To fix this, we can leverage `pydantic`'s
[schema customisation](https://docs.pydantic.dev/usage/schema/#schema-customization)
to mark properties that we know will always be present as required.
Here's that `ImageOutput` class, without the needed schema customisation:
```python
class ImageOutput(BaseInvocationOutput):
"""Base class for invocations that output an image"""
# fmt: off
type: Literal["image_output"] = "image_output"
image: ImageField = Field(default=None, description="The output image")
width: int = Field(description="The width of the image in pixels")
height: int = Field(description="The height of the image in pixels")
# fmt: on
```
The OpenAPI schema that results from this `ImageOutput` will have the `type`,
`image`, `width` and `height` properties marked as optional, even though we know
they will always have a value.
```python
class ImageOutput(BaseInvocationOutput):
"""Base class for invocations that output an image"""
# fmt: off
type: Literal["image_output"] = "image_output"
image: ImageField = Field(default=None, description="The output image")
width: int = Field(description="The width of the image in pixels")
height: int = Field(description="The height of the image in pixels")
# fmt: on
# Add schema customization
class Config:
schema_extra = {"required": ["type", "image", "width", "height"]}
```
With the customization in place, the schema will now show these properties as
required, obviating the need for extensive null checks in client code.
See this `pydantic` issue for discussion on this solution:
<https://github.com/pydantic/pydantic/discussions/4577>
Output classes look like an invocation class without the invoke method. Prefer to use an existing output class if available, and prefer to name inputs the same as outputs when possible, to promote automatic invocation linking.

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@ -1,273 +0,0 @@
# Local Development
If you are looking to contribute you will need to have a local development
environment. See the
[Developer Install](../installation/020_INSTALL_MANUAL.md#developer-install) for
full details.
Broadly this involves cloning the repository, installing the pre-reqs, and
InvokeAI (in editable form). Assuming this is working, choose your area of
focus.
## Documentation
We use [mkdocs](https://www.mkdocs.org) for our documentation with the
[material theme](https://squidfunk.github.io/mkdocs-material/). Documentation is
written in markdown files under the `./docs` folder and then built into a static
website for hosting with GitHub Pages at
[invoke-ai.github.io/InvokeAI](https://invoke-ai.github.io/InvokeAI).
To contribute to the documentation you'll need to install the dependencies. Note
the use of `"`.
```zsh
pip install ".[docs]"
```
Now, to run the documentation locally with hot-reloading for changes made.
```zsh
mkdocs serve
```
You'll then be prompted to connect to `http://127.0.0.1:8080` in order to
access.
## Backend
The backend is contained within the `./invokeai/backend` folder structure. To
get started however please install the development dependencies.
From the root of the repository run the following command. Note the use of `"`.
```zsh
pip install ".[test]"
```
This in an optional group of packages which is defined within the
`pyproject.toml` and will be required for testing the changes you make the the
code.
### Running Tests
We use [pytest](https://docs.pytest.org/en/7.2.x/) for our test suite. Tests can
be found under the `./tests` folder and can be run with a single `pytest`
command. Optionally, to review test coverage you can append `--cov`.
```zsh
pytest --cov
```
Test outcomes and coverage will be reported in the terminal. In addition a more
detailed report is created in both XML and HTML format in the `./coverage`
folder. The HTML one in particular can help identify missing statements
requiring tests to ensure coverage. This can be run by opening
`./coverage/html/index.html`.
For example.
```zsh
pytest --cov; open ./coverage/html/index.html
```
??? info "HTML coverage report output"
![html-overview](../assets/contributing/html-overview.png)
![html-detail](../assets/contributing/html-detail.png)
## Front End
<!--#TODO: get input from blessedcoolant here, for the moment inserted the frontend README via snippets extension.-->
--8<-- "invokeai/frontend/web/README.md"
## Developing InvokeAI in VSCode
VSCode offers some nice tools:
- python debugger
- automatic `venv` activation
- remote dev (e.g. run InvokeAI on a beefy linux desktop while you type in
comfort on your macbook)
### Setup
You'll need the
[Python](https://marketplace.visualstudio.com/items?itemName=ms-python.python)
and
[Pylance](https://marketplace.visualstudio.com/items?itemName=ms-python.vscode-pylance)
extensions installed first.
It's also really handy to install the `Jupyter` extensions:
- [Jupyter](https://marketplace.visualstudio.com/items?itemName=ms-toolsai.jupyter)
- [Jupyter Cell Tags](https://marketplace.visualstudio.com/items?itemName=ms-toolsai.vscode-jupyter-cell-tags)
- [Jupyter Notebook Renderers](https://marketplace.visualstudio.com/items?itemName=ms-toolsai.jupyter-renderers)
- [Jupyter Slide Show](https://marketplace.visualstudio.com/items?itemName=ms-toolsai.vscode-jupyter-slideshow)
#### InvokeAI workspace
Creating a VSCode workspace for working on InvokeAI is highly recommended. It
can hold InvokeAI-specific settings and configs.
To make a workspace:
- Open the InvokeAI repo dir in VSCode
- `File` > `Save Workspace As` > save it _outside_ the repo
#### Default python interpreter (i.e. automatic virtual environment activation)
- Use command palette to run command
`Preferences: Open Workspace Settings (JSON)`
- Add `python.defaultInterpreterPath` to `settings`, pointing to your `venv`'s
python
Should look something like this:
```jsonc
{
// I like to have all InvokeAI-related folders in my workspace
"folders": [
{
// repo root
"path": "InvokeAI"
},
{
// InvokeAI root dir, where `invokeai.yaml` lives
"path": "/path/to/invokeai_root"
}
],
"settings": {
// Where your InvokeAI `venv`'s python executable lives
"python.defaultInterpreterPath": "/path/to/invokeai_root/.venv/bin/python"
}
}
```
Now when you open the VSCode integrated terminal, or do anything that needs to
run python, it will automatically be in your InvokeAI virtual environment.
Bonus: When you create a Jupyter notebook, when you run it, you'll be prompted
for the python interpreter to run in. This will default to your `venv` python,
and so you'll have access to the same python environment as the InvokeAI app.
This is _super_ handy.
#### Debugging configs with `launch.json`
Debugging configs are managed in a `launch.json` file. Like most VSCode configs,
these can be scoped to a workspace or folder.
Follow the [official guide](https://code.visualstudio.com/docs/python/debugging)
to set up your `launch.json` and try it out.
Now we can create the InvokeAI debugging configs:
```jsonc
{
// Use IntelliSense to learn about possible attributes.
// Hover to view descriptions of existing attributes.
// For more information, visit: https://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?linkid=830387
"version": "0.2.0",
"configurations": [
{
// Run the InvokeAI backend & serve the pre-built UI
"name": "InvokeAI Web",
"type": "python",
"request": "launch",
"program": "scripts/invokeai-web.py",
"args": [
// Your InvokeAI root dir (where `invokeai.yaml` lives)
"--root",
"/path/to/invokeai_root",
// Access the app from anywhere on your local network
"--host",
"0.0.0.0"
],
"justMyCode": true
},
{
// Run the nodes-based CLI
"name": "InvokeAI CLI",
"type": "python",
"request": "launch",
"program": "scripts/invokeai-cli.py",
"justMyCode": true
},
{
// Run tests
"name": "InvokeAI Test",
"type": "python",
"request": "launch",
"module": "pytest",
"args": ["--capture=no"],
"justMyCode": true
},
{
// Run a single test
"name": "InvokeAI Single Test",
"type": "python",
"request": "launch",
"module": "pytest",
"args": [
// Change this to point to the specific test you are working on
"tests/nodes/test_invoker.py"
],
"justMyCode": true
},
{
// This is the default, useful to just run a single file
"name": "Python: File",
"type": "python",
"request": "launch",
"program": "${file}",
"justMyCode": true
}
]
}
```
You'll see these configs in the debugging configs drop down. Running them will
start InvokeAI with attached debugger, in the correct environment, and work just
like the normal app.
Enjoy debugging InvokeAI with ease (not that we have any bugs of course).
#### Remote dev
This is very easy to set up and provides the same very smooth experience as
local development. Environments and debugging, as set up above, just work,
though you'd need to recreate the workspace and debugging configs on the remote.
Consult the
[official guide](https://code.visualstudio.com/docs/remote/remote-overview) to
get it set up.
Suggest using VSCode's included settings sync so that your remote dev host has
all the same app settings and extensions automagically.
##### One remote dev gotcha
I've found the automatic port forwarding to be very flakey. You can disable it
in `Preferences: Open Remote Settings (ssh: hostname)`. Search for
`remote.autoForwardPorts` and untick the box.
To forward ports very reliably, use SSH on the remote dev client (e.g. your
macbook). Here's how to forward both backend API port (`9090`) and the frontend
live dev server port (`5173`):
```bash
ssh \
-L 9090:localhost:9090 \
-L 5173:localhost:5173 \
user@remote-dev-host
```
The forwarding stops when you close the terminal window, so suggest to do this
_outside_ the VSCode integrated terminal in case you need to restart VSCode for
an extension update or something
Now, on your remote dev client, you can open `localhost:9090` and access the UI,
now served from the remote dev host, just the same as if it was running on the
client.

View File

@ -1,589 +0,0 @@
---
title: Command-Line Interface
---
# :material-bash: CLI
## **Interactive Command Line Interface**
The InvokeAI command line interface (CLI) provides scriptable access
to InvokeAI's features.Some advanced features are only available
through the CLI, though they eventually find their way into the WebUI.
The CLI is accessible from the `invoke.sh`/`invoke.bat` launcher by
selecting option (1). Alternatively, it can be launched directly from
the command line by activating the InvokeAI environment and giving the
command:
```bash
invokeai
```
After some startup messages, you will be presented with the `invoke> `
prompt. Here you can type prompts to generate images and issue other
commands to load and manipulate generative models. The CLI has a large
number of command-line options that control its behavior. To get a
concise summary of the options, call `invokeai` with the `--help` argument:
```bash
invokeai --help
```
The script uses the readline library to allow for in-line editing, command
history (++up++ and ++down++), autocompletion, and more. To help keep track of
which prompts generated which images, the script writes a log file of image
names and prompts to the selected output directory.
Here is a typical session
```bash
PS1:C:\Users\fred> invokeai
* Initializing, be patient...
* Initializing, be patient...
>> Initialization file /home/lstein/invokeai/invokeai.init found. Loading...
>> Internet connectivity is True
>> InvokeAI, version 2.3.0-rc5
>> InvokeAI runtime directory is "/home/lstein/invokeai"
>> GFPGAN Initialized
>> CodeFormer Initialized
>> ESRGAN Initialized
>> Using device_type cuda
>> xformers memory-efficient attention is available and enabled
(...more initialization messages...)
* Initialization done! Awaiting your command (-h for help, 'q' to quit)
invoke> ashley judd riding a camel -n2 -s150
Outputs:
outputs/img-samples/00009.png: "ashley judd riding a camel" -n2 -s150 -S 416354203
outputs/img-samples/00010.png: "ashley judd riding a camel" -n2 -s150 -S 1362479620
invoke> "there's a fly in my soup" -n6 -g
outputs/img-samples/00011.png: "there's a fly in my soup" -n6 -g -S 2685670268
seeds for individual rows: [2685670268, 1216708065, 2335773498, 822223658, 714542046, 3395302430]
invoke> q
```
![invoke-py-demo](../assets/dream-py-demo.png)
## Arguments
The script recognizes a series of command-line switches that will
change important global defaults, such as the directory for image
outputs and the location of the model weight files.
### List of arguments recognized at the command line
These command-line arguments can be passed to `invoke.py` when you first run it
from the Windows, Mac or Linux command line. Some set defaults that can be
overridden on a per-prompt basis (see
[List of prompt arguments](#list-of-prompt-arguments). Others
| Argument <img width="240" align="right"/> | Shortcut <img width="100" align="right"/> | Default <img width="320" align="right"/> | Description |
| ----------------------------------------- | ----------------------------------------- | ---------------------------------------------- | ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| `--help` | `-h` | | Print a concise help message. |
| `--outdir <path>` | `-o<path>` | `outputs/img_samples` | Location for generated images. |
| `--prompt_as_dir` | `-p` | `False` | Name output directories using the prompt text. |
| `--from_file <path>` | | `None` | Read list of prompts from a file. Use `-` to read from standard input |
| `--model <modelname>` | | `stable-diffusion-1.5` | Loads the initial model specified in configs/models.yaml. |
| `--ckpt_convert ` | | `False` | If provided both .ckpt and .safetensors files will be auto-converted into diffusers format in memory |
| `--autoconvert <path>` | | `None` | On startup, scan the indicated directory for new .ckpt/.safetensor files and automatically convert and import them |
| `--precision` | | `fp16` | Provide `fp32` for full precision mode, `fp16` for half-precision. `fp32` needed for Macintoshes and some NVidia cards. |
| `--png_compression <0-9>` | `-z<0-9>` | `6` | Select level of compression for output files, from 0 (no compression) to 9 (max compression) |
| `--safety-checker` | | `False` | Activate safety checker for NSFW and other potentially disturbing imagery |
| `--patchmatch`, `--no-patchmatch` | | `--patchmatch` | Load/Don't load the PatchMatch inpainting extension |
| `--xformers`, `--no-xformers` | | `--xformers` | Load/Don't load the Xformers memory-efficient attention module (CUDA only) |
| `--web` | | `False` | Start in web server mode |
| `--host <ip addr>` | | `localhost` | Which network interface web server should listen on. Set to 0.0.0.0 to listen on any. |
| `--port <port>` | | `9090` | Which port web server should listen for requests on. |
| `--config <path>` | | `configs/models.yaml` | Configuration file for models and their weights. |
| `--iterations <int>` | `-n<int>` | `1` | How many images to generate per prompt. |
| `--width <int>` | `-W<int>` | `512` | Width of generated image |
| `--height <int>` | `-H<int>` | `512` | Height of generated image | `--steps <int>` | `-s<int>` | `50` | How many steps of refinement to apply |
| `--strength <float>` | `-s<float>` | `0.75` | For img2img: how hard to try to match the prompt to the initial image. Ranges from 0.0-0.99, with higher values replacing the initial image completely. |
| `--fit` | `-F` | `False` | For img2img: scale the init image to fit into the specified -H and -W dimensions |
| `--grid` | `-g` | `False` | Save all image series as a grid rather than individually. |
| `--sampler <sampler>` | `-A<sampler>` | `k_lms` | Sampler to use. Use `-h` to get list of available samplers. |
| `--seamless` | | `False` | Create interesting effects by tiling elements of the image. |
| `--embedding_path <path>` | | `None` | Path to pre-trained embedding manager checkpoints, for custom models |
| `--gfpgan_model_path` | | `experiments/pretrained_models/GFPGANv1.4.pth` | Path to GFPGAN model file. |
| `--free_gpu_mem` | | `False` | Free GPU memory after sampling, to allow image decoding and saving in low VRAM conditions |
| `--precision` | | `auto` | Set model precision, default is selected by device. Options: auto, float32, float16, autocast |
!!! warning "These arguments are deprecated but still work"
<div align="center" markdown>
| Argument | Shortcut | Default | Description |
|--------------------|------------|---------------------|--------------|
| `--full_precision` | | `False` | Same as `--precision=fp32`|
| `--weights <path>` | | `None` | Path to weights file; use `--model stable-diffusion-1.4` instead |
| `--laion400m` | `-l` | `False` | Use older LAION400m weights; use `--model=laion400m` instead |
</div>
!!! tip
On Windows systems, you may run into
problems when passing the invoke script standard backslashed path
names because the Python interpreter treats "\" as an escape.
You can either double your slashes (ick): `C:\\path\\to\\my\\file`, or
use Linux/Mac style forward slashes (better): `C:/path/to/my/file`.
## The .invokeai initialization file
To start up invoke.py with your preferred settings, place your desired
startup options in a file in your home directory named `.invokeai` The
file should contain the startup options as you would type them on the
command line (`--steps=10 --grid`), one argument per line, or a
mixture of both using any of the accepted command switch formats:
!!! example "my unmodified initialization file"
```bash title="~/.invokeai" linenums="1"
# InvokeAI initialization file
# This is the InvokeAI initialization file, which contains command-line default values.
# Feel free to edit. If anything goes wrong, you can re-initialize this file by deleting
# or renaming it and then running invokeai-configure again.
# The --root option below points to the folder in which InvokeAI stores its models, configs and outputs.
--root="/Users/mauwii/invokeai"
# the --outdir option controls the default location of image files.
--outdir="/Users/mauwii/invokeai/outputs"
# You may place other frequently-used startup commands here, one or more per line.
# Examples:
# --web --host=0.0.0.0
# --steps=20
# -Ak_euler_a -C10.0
```
!!! note
The initialization file only accepts the command line arguments.
There are additional arguments that you can provide on the `invoke>` command
line (such as `-n` or `--iterations`) that cannot be entered into this file.
Also be alert for empty blank lines at the end of the file, which will cause
an arguments error at startup time.
## List of prompt arguments
After the invoke.py script initializes, it will present you with a `invoke>`
prompt. Here you can enter information to generate images from text
([txt2img](#txt2img)), to embellish an existing image or sketch
([img2img](#img2img)), or to selectively alter chosen regions of the image
([inpainting](#inpainting)).
### txt2img
!!! example ""
```bash
invoke> waterfall and rainbow -W640 -H480
```
This will create the requested image with the dimensions 640 (width)
and 480 (height).
Here are the invoke> command that apply to txt2img:
| Argument <img width="680" align="right"/> | Shortcut <img width="420" align="right"/> | Default <img width="480" align="right"/> | Description |
| ----------------------------------------- | ----------------------------------------- | ---------------------------------------- | ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ |
| "my prompt" | | | Text prompt to use. The quotation marks are optional. |
| `--width <int>` | `-W<int>` | `512` | Width of generated image |
| `--height <int>` | `-H<int>` | `512` | Height of generated image |
| `--iterations <int>` | `-n<int>` | `1` | How many images to generate from this prompt |
| `--steps <int>` | `-s<int>` | `50` | How many steps of refinement to apply |
| `--cfg_scale <float>` | `-C<float>` | `7.5` | How hard to try to match the prompt to the generated image; any number greater than 1.0 works, but the useful range is roughly 5.0 to 20.0 |
| `--seed <int>` | `-S<int>` | `None` | Set the random seed for the next series of images. This can be used to recreate an image generated previously. |
| `--sampler <sampler>` | `-A<sampler>` | `k_lms` | Sampler to use. Use -h to get list of available samplers. |
| `--karras_max <int>` | | `29` | When using k\_\* samplers, set the maximum number of steps before shifting from using the Karras noise schedule (good for low step counts) to the LatentDiffusion noise schedule (good for high step counts) This value is sticky. [29] |
| `--hires_fix` | | | Larger images often have duplication artefacts. This option suppresses duplicates by generating the image at low res, and then using img2img to increase the resolution |
| `--png_compression <0-9>` | `-z<0-9>` | `6` | Select level of compression for output files, from 0 (no compression) to 9 (max compression) |
| `--grid` | `-g` | `False` | Turn on grid mode to return a single image combining all the images generated by this prompt |
| `--individual` | `-i` | `True` | Turn off grid mode (deprecated; leave off --grid instead) |
| `--outdir <path>` | `-o<path>` | `outputs/img_samples` | Temporarily change the location of these images |
| `--seamless` | | `False` | Activate seamless tiling for interesting effects |
| `--seamless_axes` | | `x,y` | Specify which axes to use circular convolution on. |
| `--log_tokenization` | `-t` | `False` | Display a color-coded list of the parsed tokens derived from the prompt |
| `--skip_normalization` | `-x` | `False` | Weighted subprompts will not be normalized. See [Weighted Prompts](../features/OTHER.md#weighted-prompts) |
| `--upscale <int> <float>` | `-U <int> <float>` | `-U 1 0.75` | Upscale image by magnification factor (2, 4), and set strength of upscaling (0.0-1.0). If strength not set, will default to 0.75. |
| `--facetool_strength <float>` | `-G <float> ` | `-G0` | Fix faces (defaults to using the GFPGAN algorithm); argument indicates how hard the algorithm should try (0.0-1.0) |
| `--facetool <name>` | `-ft <name>` | `-ft gfpgan` | Select face restoration algorithm to use: gfpgan, codeformer |
| `--codeformer_fidelity` | `-cf <float>` | `0.75` | Used along with CodeFormer. Takes values between 0 and 1. 0 produces high quality but low accuracy. 1 produces high accuracy but low quality |
| `--save_original` | `-save_orig` | `False` | When upscaling or fixing faces, this will cause the original image to be saved rather than replaced. |
| `--variation <float>` | `-v<float>` | `0.0` | Add a bit of noise (0.0=none, 1.0=high) to the image in order to generate a series of variations. Usually used in combination with `-S<seed>` and `-n<int>` to generate a series a riffs on a starting image. See [Variations](../features/VARIATIONS.md). |
| `--with_variations <pattern>` | | `None` | Combine two or more variations. See [Variations](../features/VARIATIONS.md) for now to use this. |
| `--save_intermediates <n>` | | `None` | Save the image from every nth step into an "intermediates" folder inside the output directory |
| `--h_symmetry_time_pct <float>` | | `None` | Create symmetry along the X axis at the desired percent complete of the generation process. (Must be between 0.0 and 1.0; set to a very small number like 0.0001 for just after the first step of generation.) |
| `--v_symmetry_time_pct <float>` | | `None` | Create symmetry along the Y axis at the desired percent complete of the generation process. (Must be between 0.0 and 1.0; set to a very small number like 0.0001 for just after the first step of generation.) |
!!! note
the width and height of the image must be multiples of 64. You can
provide different values, but they will be rounded down to the nearest multiple
of 64.
!!! example "This is a example of img2img"
```bash
invoke> waterfall and rainbow -I./vacation-photo.png -W640 -H480 --fit
```
This will modify the indicated vacation photograph by making it more like the
prompt. Results will vary greatly depending on what is in the image. We also ask
to --fit the image into a box no bigger than 640x480. Otherwise the image size
will be identical to the provided photo and you may run out of memory if it is
large.
In addition to the command-line options recognized by txt2img, img2img accepts
additional options:
| Argument <img width="160" align="right"/> | Shortcut | Default | Description |
| ----------------------------------------- | ----------- | ------- | ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ |
| `--init_img <path>` | `-I<path>` | `None` | Path to the initialization image |
| `--fit` | `-F` | `False` | Scale the image to fit into the specified -H and -W dimensions |
| `--strength <float>` | `-s<float>` | `0.75` | How hard to try to match the prompt to the initial image. Ranges from 0.0-0.99, with higher values replacing the initial image completely. |
### inpainting
!!! example ""
```bash
invoke> waterfall and rainbow -I./vacation-photo.png -M./vacation-mask.png -W640 -H480 --fit
```
This will do the same thing as img2img, but image alterations will
only occur within transparent areas defined by the mask file specified
by `-M`. You may also supply just a single initial image with the areas
to overpaint made transparent, but you must be careful not to destroy
the pixels underneath when you create the transparent areas. See
[Inpainting](INPAINTING.md) for details.
inpainting accepts all the arguments used for txt2img and img2img, as well as
the --mask (-M) and --text_mask (-tm) arguments:
| Argument <img width="100" align="right"/> | Shortcut | Default | Description |
| ----------------------------------------- | ------------------------ | ------- | ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ |
| `--init_mask <path>` | `-M<path>` | `None` | Path to an image the same size as the initial_image, with areas for inpainting made transparent. |
| `--invert_mask ` | | False | If true, invert the mask so that transparent areas are opaque and vice versa. |
| `--text_mask <prompt> [<float>]` | `-tm <prompt> [<float>]` | <none> | Create a mask from a text prompt describing part of the image |
The mask may either be an image with transparent areas, in which case the
inpainting will occur in the transparent areas only, or a black and white image,
in which case all black areas will be painted into.
`--text_mask` (short form `-tm`) is a way to generate a mask using a text
description of the part of the image to replace. For example, if you have an
image of a breakfast plate with a bagel, toast and scrambled eggs, you can
selectively mask the bagel and replace it with a piece of cake this way:
```bash
invoke> a piece of cake -I /path/to/breakfast.png -tm bagel
```
The algorithm uses <a
href="https://github.com/timojl/clipseg">clipseg</a> to classify different
regions of the image. The classifier puts out a confidence score for each region
it identifies. Generally regions that score above 0.5 are reliable, but if you
are getting too much or too little masking you can adjust the threshold down (to
get more mask), or up (to get less). In this example, by passing `-tm` a higher
value, we are insisting on a more stringent classification.
```bash
invoke> a piece of cake -I /path/to/breakfast.png -tm bagel 0.6
```
### Custom Styles and Subjects
You can load and use hundreds of community-contributed Textual
Inversion models just by typing the appropriate trigger phrase. Please
see [Concepts Library](../features/CONCEPTS.md) for more details.
## Other Commands
The CLI offers a number of commands that begin with "!".
### Postprocessing images
To postprocess a file using face restoration or upscaling, use the `!fix`
command.
#### `!fix`
This command runs a post-processor on a previously-generated image. It takes a
PNG filename or path and applies your choice of the `-U`, `-G`, or `--embiggen`
switches in order to fix faces or upscale. If you provide a filename, the script
will look for it in the current output directory. Otherwise you can provide a
full or partial path to the desired file.
Some examples:
!!! example "Upscale to 4X its original size and fix faces using codeformer"
```bash
invoke> !fix 0000045.4829112.png -G1 -U4 -ft codeformer
```
!!! example "Use the GFPGAN algorithm to fix faces, then upscale to 3X using --embiggen"
```bash
invoke> !fix 0000045.4829112.png -G0.8 -ft gfpgan
>> fixing outputs/img-samples/0000045.4829112.png
>> retrieved seed 4829112 and prompt "boy enjoying a banana split"
>> GFPGAN - Restoring Faces for image seed:4829112
Outputs:
[1] outputs/img-samples/000017.4829112.gfpgan-00.png: !fix "outputs/img-samples/0000045.4829112.png" -s 50 -S -W 512 -H 512 -C 7.5 -A k_lms -G 0.8
```
#### `!mask`
This command takes an image, a text prompt, and uses the `clipseg` algorithm to
automatically generate a mask of the area that matches the text prompt. It is
useful for debugging the text masking process prior to inpainting with the
`--text_mask` argument. See [INPAINTING.md] for details.
### Model selection and importation
The CLI allows you to add new models on the fly, as well as to switch
among them rapidly without leaving the script. There are several
different model formats, each described in the [Model Installation
Guide](../installation/050_INSTALLING_MODELS.md).
#### `!models`
This prints out a list of the models defined in `config/models.yaml'. The active
model is bold-faced
Example:
<pre>
inpainting-1.5 not loaded Stable Diffusion inpainting model
<b>stable-diffusion-1.5 active Stable Diffusion v1.5</b>
waifu-diffusion not loaded Waifu Diffusion v1.4
</pre>
#### `!switch <model>`
This quickly switches from one model to another without leaving the CLI script.
`invoke.py` uses a memory caching system; once a model has been loaded,
switching back and forth is quick. The following example shows this in action.
Note how the second column of the `!models` table changes to `cached` after a
model is first loaded, and that the long initialization step is not needed when
loading a cached model.
#### `!import_model <hugging_face_repo_ID>`
This imports and installs a `diffusers`-style model that is stored on
the [HuggingFace Web Site](https://huggingface.co). You can look up
any [Stable Diffusion diffusers
model](https://huggingface.co/models?library=diffusers) and install it
with a command like the following:
```bash
!import_model prompthero/openjourney
```
#### `!import_model <path/to/diffusers/directory>`
If you have a copy of a `diffusers`-style model saved to disk, you can
import it by passing the path to model's top-level directory.
#### `!import_model <url>`
For a `.ckpt` or `.safetensors` file, if you have a direct download
URL for the file, you can provide it to `!import_model` and the file
will be downloaded and installed for you.
#### `!import_model <path/to/model/weights.ckpt>`
This command imports a new model weights file into InvokeAI, makes it available
for image generation within the script, and writes out the configuration for the
model into `config/models.yaml` for use in subsequent sessions.
Provide `!import_model` with the path to a weights file ending in `.ckpt`. If
you type a partial path and press tab, the CLI will autocomplete. Although it
will also autocomplete to `.vae` files, these are not currenty supported (but
will be soon).
When you hit return, the CLI will prompt you to fill in additional information
about the model, including the short name you wish to use for it with the
`!switch` command, a brief description of the model, the default image width and
height to use with this model, and the model's configuration file. The latter
three fields are automatically filled with reasonable defaults. In the example
below, the bold-faced text shows what the user typed in with the exception of
the width, height and configuration file paths, which were filled in
automatically.
#### `!import_model <path/to/directory_of_models>`
If you provide the path of a directory that contains one or more
`.ckpt` or `.safetensors` files, the CLI will scan the directory and
interactively offer to import the models it finds there. Also see the
`--autoconvert` command-line option.
#### `!edit_model <name_of_model>`
The `!edit_model` command can be used to modify a model that is already defined
in `config/models.yaml`. Call it with the short name of the model you wish to
modify, and it will allow you to modify the model's `description`, `weights` and
other fields.
Example:
<pre>
invoke> <b>!edit_model waifu-diffusion</b>
>> Editing model waifu-diffusion from configuration file ./configs/models.yaml
description: <b>Waifu diffusion v1.4beta</b>
weights: models/ldm/stable-diffusion-v1/<b>model-epoch10-float16.ckpt</b>
config: configs/stable-diffusion/v1-inference.yaml
width: 512
height: 512
>> New configuration:
waifu-diffusion:
config: configs/stable-diffusion/v1-inference.yaml
description: Waifu diffusion v1.4beta
weights: models/ldm/stable-diffusion-v1/model-epoch10-float16.ckpt
height: 512
width: 512
OK to import [n]? y
>> Caching model stable-diffusion-1.4 in system RAM
>> Loading waifu-diffusion from models/ldm/stable-diffusion-v1/model-epoch10-float16.ckpt
...
</pre>
### History processing
The CLI provides a series of convenient commands for reviewing previous actions,
retrieving them, modifying them, and re-running them.
#### `!history`
The invoke script keeps track of all the commands you issue during a session,
allowing you to re-run them. On Mac and Linux systems, it also writes the
command-line history out to disk, giving you access to the most recent 1000
commands issued.
The `!history` command will return a numbered list of all the commands issued
during the session (Windows), or the most recent 1000 commands (Mac|Linux). You
can then repeat a command by using the command `!NNN`, where "NNN" is the
history line number. For example:
!!! example ""
```bash
invoke> !history
...
[14] happy woman sitting under tree wearing broad hat and flowing garment
[15] beautiful woman sitting under tree wearing broad hat and flowing garment
[18] beautiful woman sitting under tree wearing broad hat and flowing garment -v0.2 -n6
[20] watercolor of beautiful woman sitting under tree wearing broad hat and flowing garment -v0.2 -n6 -S2878767194
[21] surrealist painting of beautiful woman sitting under tree wearing broad hat and flowing garment -v0.2 -n6 -S2878767194
...
invoke> !20
invoke> watercolor of beautiful woman sitting under tree wearing broad hat and flowing garment -v0.2 -n6 -S2878767194
```
####`!fetch`
This command retrieves the generation parameters from a previously generated
image and either loads them into the command line (Linux|Mac), or prints them
out in a comment for copy-and-paste (Windows). You may provide either the name
of a file in the current output directory, or a full file path. Specify path to
a folder with image png files, and wildcard \*.png to retrieve the dream command
used to generate the images, and save them to a file commands.txt for further
processing.
!!! example "load the generation command for a single png file"
```bash
invoke> !fetch 0000015.8929913.png
# the script returns the next line, ready for editing and running:
invoke> a fantastic alien landscape -W 576 -H 512 -s 60 -A plms -C 7.5
```
!!! example "fetch the generation commands from a batch of files and store them into `selected.txt`"
```bash
invoke> !fetch outputs\selected-imgs\*.png selected.txt
```
#### `!replay`
This command replays a text file generated by !fetch or created manually
!!! example
```bash
invoke> !replay outputs\selected-imgs\selected.txt
```
!!! note
These commands may behave unexpectedly if given a PNG file that was
not generated by InvokeAI.
#### `!search <search string>`
This is similar to !history but it only returns lines that contain
`search string`. For example:
```bash
invoke> !search surreal
[21] surrealist painting of beautiful woman sitting under tree wearing broad hat and flowing garment -v0.2 -n6 -S2878767194
```
#### `!clear`
This clears the search history from memory and disk. Be advised that this
operation is irreversible and does not issue any warnings!
## Command-line editing and completion
The command-line offers convenient history tracking, editing, and command
completion.
- To scroll through previous commands and potentially edit/reuse them, use the
++up++ and ++down++ keys.
- To edit the current command, use the ++left++ and ++right++ keys to position
the cursor, and then ++backspace++, ++delete++ or insert characters.
- To move to the very beginning of the command, type ++ctrl+a++ (or
++command+a++ on the Mac)
- To move to the end of the command, type ++ctrl+e++.
- To cut a section of the command, position the cursor where you want to start
cutting and type ++ctrl+k++
- To paste a cut section back in, position the cursor where you want to paste,
and type ++ctrl+y++
Windows users can get similar, but more limited, functionality if they launch
`invoke.py` with the `winpty` program and have the `pyreadline3` library
installed:
```batch
> winpty python scripts\invoke.py
```
On the Mac and Linux platforms, when you exit invoke.py, the last 1000 lines of
your command-line history will be saved. When you restart `invoke.py`, you can
access the saved history using the ++up++ key.
In addition, limited command-line completion is installed. In various contexts,
you can start typing your command and press ++tab++. A list of potential
completions will be presented to you. You can then type a little more, hit
++tab++ again, and eventually autocomplete what you want.
When specifying file paths using the one-letter shortcuts, the CLI will attempt
to complete pathnames for you. This is most handy for the `-I` (init image) and
`-M` (init mask) paths. To initiate completion, start the path with a slash
(`/`) or `./`. For example:
```bash
invoke> zebra with a mustache -I./test-pictures<TAB>
-I./test-pictures/Lincoln-and-Parrot.png -I./test-pictures/zebra.jpg -I./test-pictures/madonna.png
-I./test-pictures/bad-sketch.png -I./test-pictures/man_with_eagle/
```
You can then type ++z++, hit ++tab++ again, and it will autofill to `zebra.jpg`.
More text completion features (such as autocompleting seeds) are on their way.

View File

@ -1,310 +0,0 @@
---
title: Inpainting
---
# :octicons-paintbrush-16: Inpainting
## **Creating Transparent Regions for Inpainting**
Inpainting is really cool. To do it, you start with an initial image and use a
photoeditor to make one or more regions transparent (i.e. they have a "hole" in
them). You then provide the path to this image at the dream> command line using
the `-I` switch. Stable Diffusion will only paint within the transparent region.
There's a catch. In the current implementation, you have to prepare the initial
image correctly so that the underlying colors are preserved under the
transparent area. Many imaging editing applications will by default erase the
color information under the transparent pixels and replace them with white or
black, which will lead to suboptimal inpainting. It often helps to apply
incomplete transparency, such as any value between 1 and 99%
You also must take care to export the PNG file in such a way that the color
information is preserved. There is often an option in the export dialog that
lets you specify this.
If your photoeditor is erasing the underlying color information, `dream.py` will
give you a big fat warning. If you can't find a way to coax your photoeditor to
retain color values under transparent areas, then you can combine the `-I` and
`-M` switches to provide both the original unedited image and the masked
(partially transparent) image:
```bash
invoke> "man with cat on shoulder" -I./images/man.png -M./images/man-transparent.png
```
## **Masking using Text**
You can also create a mask using a text prompt to select the part of the image
you want to alter, using the [clipseg](https://github.com/timojl/clipseg)
algorithm. This works on any image, not just ones generated by InvokeAI.
The `--text_mask` (short form `-tm`) option takes two arguments. The first
argument is a text description of the part of the image you wish to mask (paint
over). If the text description contains a space, you must surround it with
quotation marks. The optional second argument is the minimum threshold for the
mask classifier's confidence score, described in more detail below.
To see how this works in practice, here's an image of a still life painting that
I got off the web.
<figure markdown>
![still life scaled](../assets/still-life-scaled.jpg)
</figure>
You can selectively mask out the orange and replace it with a baseball in this
way:
```bash
invoke> a baseball -I /path/to/still_life.png -tm orange
```
<figure markdown>
![](../assets/still-life-inpainted.png)
</figure>
The clipseg classifier produces a confidence score for each region it
identifies. Generally regions that score above 0.5 are reliable, but if you are
getting too much or too little masking you can adjust the threshold down (to get
more mask), or up (to get less). In this example, by passing `-tm` a higher
value, we are insisting on a tigher mask. However, if you make it too high, the
orange may not be picked up at all!
```bash
invoke> a baseball -I /path/to/breakfast.png -tm orange 0.6
```
The `!mask` command may be useful for debugging problems with the text2mask
feature. The syntax is `!mask /path/to/image.png -tm <text> <threshold>`
It will generate three files:
- The image with the selected area highlighted.
- it will be named XXXXX.<imagename>.<prompt>.selected.png
- The image with the un-selected area highlighted.
- it will be named XXXXX.<imagename>.<prompt>.deselected.png
- The image with the selected area converted into a black and white image
according to the threshold level
- it will be named XXXXX.<imagename>.<prompt>.masked.png
The `.masked.png` file can then be directly passed to the `invoke>` prompt in
the CLI via the `-M` argument. Do not attempt this with the `selected.png` or
`deselected.png` files, as they contain some transparency throughout the image
and will not produce the desired results.
Here is an example of how `!mask` works:
```bash
invoke> !mask ./test-pictures/curly.png -tm hair 0.5
>> generating masks from ./test-pictures/curly.png
>> Initializing clipseg model for text to mask inference
Outputs:
[941.1] outputs/img-samples/000019.curly.hair.deselected.png: !mask ./test-pictures/curly.png -tm hair 0.5
[941.2] outputs/img-samples/000019.curly.hair.selected.png: !mask ./test-pictures/curly.png -tm hair 0.5
[941.3] outputs/img-samples/000019.curly.hair.masked.png: !mask ./test-pictures/curly.png -tm hair 0.5
```
<figure markdown>
![curly](../assets/outpainting/curly.png)
<figcaption>Original image "curly.png"</figcaption>
</figure>
<figure markdown>
![curly hair selected](../assets/inpainting/000019.curly.hair.selected.png)
<figcaption>000019.curly.hair.selected.png</figcaption>
</figure>
<figure markdown>
![curly hair deselected](../assets/inpainting/000019.curly.hair.deselected.png)
<figcaption>000019.curly.hair.deselected.png</figcaption>
</figure>
<figure markdown>
![curly hair masked](../assets/inpainting/000019.curly.hair.masked.png)
<figcaption>000019.curly.hair.masked.png</figcaption>
</figure>
It looks like we selected the hair pretty well at the 0.5 threshold (which is
the default, so we didn't actually have to specify it), so let's have some fun:
```bash
invoke> medusa with cobras -I ./test-pictures/curly.png -M 000019.curly.hair.masked.png -C20
>> loaded input image of size 512x512 from ./test-pictures/curly.png
...
Outputs:
[946] outputs/img-samples/000024.801380492.png: "medusa with cobras" -s 50 -S 801380492 -W 512 -H 512 -C 20.0 -I ./test-pictures/curly.png -A k_lms -f 0.75
```
<figure markdown>
![](../assets/inpainting/000024.801380492.png)
</figure>
You can also skip the `!mask` creation step and just select the masked
region directly:
```bash
invoke> medusa with cobras -I ./test-pictures/curly.png -tm hair -C20
```
## Using the RunwayML inpainting model
The
[RunwayML Inpainting Model v1.5](https://huggingface.co/runwayml/stable-diffusion-inpainting)
is a specialized version of
[Stable Diffusion v1.5](https://huggingface.co/spaces/runwayml/stable-diffusion-v1-5)
that contains extra channels specifically designed to enhance inpainting and
outpainting. While it can do regular `txt2img` and `img2img`, it really shines
when filling in missing regions. It has an almost uncanny ability to blend the
new regions with existing ones in a semantically coherent way.
To install the inpainting model, follow the
[instructions](../installation/050_INSTALLING_MODELS.md) for installing a new model.
You may use either the CLI (`invoke.py` script) or directly edit the
`configs/models.yaml` configuration file to do this. The main thing to watch out
for is that the the model `config` option must be set up to use
`v1-inpainting-inference.yaml` rather than the `v1-inference.yaml` file that is
used by Stable Diffusion 1.4 and 1.5.
After installation, your `models.yaml` should contain an entry that looks like
this one:
```yml
inpainting-1.5:
weights: models/ldm/stable-diffusion-v1/sd-v1-5-inpainting.ckpt
description: SD inpainting v1.5
config: configs/stable-diffusion/v1-inpainting-inference.yaml
vae: models/ldm/stable-diffusion-v1/vae-ft-mse-840000-ema-pruned.ckpt
width: 512
height: 512
```
As shown in the example, you may include a VAE fine-tuning weights file as well.
This is strongly recommended.
To use the custom inpainting model, launch `invoke.py` with the argument
`--model inpainting-1.5` or alternatively from within the script use the
`!switch inpainting-1.5` command to load and switch to the inpainting model.
You can now do inpainting and outpainting exactly as described above, but there
will (likely) be a noticeable improvement in coherence. Txt2img and Img2img will
work as well.
There are a few caveats to be aware of:
1. The inpainting model is larger than the standard model, and will use nearly 4
GB of GPU VRAM. This makes it unlikely to run on a 4 GB graphics card.
2. When operating in Img2img mode, the inpainting model is much less steerable
than the standard model. It is great for making small changes, such as
changing the pattern of a fabric, or slightly changing a subject's expression
or hair, but the model will resist making the dramatic alterations that the
standard model lets you do.
3. While the `--hires` option works fine with the inpainting model, some special
features, such as `--embiggen` are disabled.
4. Prompt weighting (`banana++ sushi`) and merging work well with the inpainting
model, but prompt swapping
(`a ("fluffy cat").swap("smiling dog") eating a hotdog`) will not have any
effect due to the way the model is set up. You may use text masking (with
`-tm thing-to-mask`) as an effective replacement.
5. The model tends to oversharpen image if you use high step or CFG values. If
you need to do large steps, use the standard model.
6. The `--strength` (`-f`) option has no effect on the inpainting model due to
its fundamental differences with the standard model. It will always take the
full number of steps you specify.
## Troubleshooting
Here are some troubleshooting tips for inpainting and outpainting.
## Inpainting is not changing the masked region enough!
One of the things to understand about how inpainting works is that it is
equivalent to running img2img on just the masked (transparent) area. img2img
builds on top of the existing image data, and therefore will attempt to preserve
colors, shapes and textures to the best of its ability. Unfortunately this means
that if you want to make a dramatic change in the inpainted region, for example
replacing a red wall with a blue one, the algorithm will fight you.
You have a couple of options. The first is to increase the values of the
requested steps (`-sXXX`), strength (`-f0.XX`), and/or condition-free guidance
(`-CXX.X`). If this is not working for you, a more extreme step is to provide
the `--inpaint_replace 0.X` (`-r0.X`) option. This value ranges from 0.0 to 1.0.
The higher it is the less attention the algorithm will pay to the data
underneath the masked region. At high values this will enable you to replace
colored regions entirely, but beware that the masked region mayl not blend in
with the surrounding unmasked regions as well.
---
## Recipe for GIMP
[GIMP](https://www.gimp.org/) is a popular Linux photoediting tool.
1. Open image in GIMP.
2. Layer->Transparency->Add Alpha Channel
3. Use lasso tool to select region to mask
4. Choose Select -> Float to create a floating selection
5. Open the Layers toolbar (^L) and select "Floating Selection"
6. Set opacity to a value between 0% and 99%
7. Export as PNG
8. In the export dialogue, Make sure the "Save colour values from transparent
pixels" checkbox is selected.
---
## Recipe for Adobe Photoshop
1. Open image in Photoshop
<figure markdown>
![step1](../assets/step1.png)
</figure>
2. Use any of the selection tools (Marquee, Lasso, or Wand) to select the area
you desire to inpaint.
<figure markdown>
![step2](../assets/step2.png)
</figure>
3. Because we'll be applying a mask over the area we want to preserve, you
should now select the inverse by using the ++shift+ctrl+i++ shortcut, or
right clicking and using the "Select Inverse" option.
4. You'll now create a mask by selecting the image layer, and Masking the
selection. Make sure that you don't delete any of the underlying image, or
your inpainting results will be dramatically impacted.
<figure markdown>
![step4](../assets/step4.png)
</figure>
5. Make sure to hide any background layers that are present. You should see the
mask applied to your image layer, and the image on your canvas should display
the checkered background.
<figure markdown>
![step5](../assets/step5.png)
</figure>
6. Save the image as a transparent PNG by using `File`-->`Save a Copy` from the
menu bar, or by using the keyboard shortcut ++alt+ctrl+s++
<figure markdown>
![step6](../assets/step6.png)
</figure>
7. After following the inpainting instructions above (either through the CLI or
the Web UI), marvel at your newfound ability to selectively invoke. Lookin'
good!
<figure markdown>
![step7](../assets/step7.png)
</figure>
8. In the export dialogue, Make sure the "Save colour values from transparent
pixels" checkbox is selected.

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@ -0,0 +1,589 @@
---
title: Command-Line Interface
---
# :material-bash: CLI
## **Interactive Command Line Interface**
The InvokeAI command line interface (CLI) provides scriptable access
to InvokeAI's features.Some advanced features are only available
through the CLI, though they eventually find their way into the WebUI.
The CLI is accessible from the `invoke.sh`/`invoke.bat` launcher by
selecting option (1). Alternatively, it can be launched directly from
the command line by activating the InvokeAI environment and giving the
command:
```bash
invokeai
```
After some startup messages, you will be presented with the `invoke> `
prompt. Here you can type prompts to generate images and issue other
commands to load and manipulate generative models. The CLI has a large
number of command-line options that control its behavior. To get a
concise summary of the options, call `invokeai` with the `--help` argument:
```bash
invokeai --help
```
The script uses the readline library to allow for in-line editing, command
history (++up++ and ++down++), autocompletion, and more. To help keep track of
which prompts generated which images, the script writes a log file of image
names and prompts to the selected output directory.
Here is a typical session
```bash
PS1:C:\Users\fred> invokeai
* Initializing, be patient...
* Initializing, be patient...
>> Initialization file /home/lstein/invokeai/invokeai.init found. Loading...
>> Internet connectivity is True
>> InvokeAI, version 2.3.0-rc5
>> InvokeAI runtime directory is "/home/lstein/invokeai"
>> GFPGAN Initialized
>> CodeFormer Initialized
>> ESRGAN Initialized
>> Using device_type cuda
>> xformers memory-efficient attention is available and enabled
(...more initialization messages...)
* Initialization done! Awaiting your command (-h for help, 'q' to quit)
invoke> ashley judd riding a camel -n2 -s150
Outputs:
outputs/img-samples/00009.png: "ashley judd riding a camel" -n2 -s150 -S 416354203
outputs/img-samples/00010.png: "ashley judd riding a camel" -n2 -s150 -S 1362479620
invoke> "there's a fly in my soup" -n6 -g
outputs/img-samples/00011.png: "there's a fly in my soup" -n6 -g -S 2685670268
seeds for individual rows: [2685670268, 1216708065, 2335773498, 822223658, 714542046, 3395302430]
invoke> q
```
![invoke-py-demo](../assets/dream-py-demo.png)
## Arguments
The script recognizes a series of command-line switches that will
change important global defaults, such as the directory for image
outputs and the location of the model weight files.
### List of arguments recognized at the command line
These command-line arguments can be passed to `invoke.py` when you first run it
from the Windows, Mac or Linux command line. Some set defaults that can be
overridden on a per-prompt basis (see
[List of prompt arguments](#list-of-prompt-arguments). Others
| Argument <img width="240" align="right"/> | Shortcut <img width="100" align="right"/> | Default <img width="320" align="right"/> | Description |
| ----------------------------------------- | ----------------------------------------- | ---------------------------------------------- | ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| `--help` | `-h` | | Print a concise help message. |
| `--outdir <path>` | `-o<path>` | `outputs/img_samples` | Location for generated images. |
| `--prompt_as_dir` | `-p` | `False` | Name output directories using the prompt text. |
| `--from_file <path>` | | `None` | Read list of prompts from a file. Use `-` to read from standard input |
| `--model <modelname>` | | `stable-diffusion-1.5` | Loads the initial model specified in configs/models.yaml. |
| `--ckpt_convert ` | | `False` | If provided both .ckpt and .safetensors files will be auto-converted into diffusers format in memory |
| `--autoconvert <path>` | | `None` | On startup, scan the indicated directory for new .ckpt/.safetensor files and automatically convert and import them |
| `--precision` | | `fp16` | Provide `fp32` for full precision mode, `fp16` for half-precision. `fp32` needed for Macintoshes and some NVidia cards. |
| `--png_compression <0-9>` | `-z<0-9>` | `6` | Select level of compression for output files, from 0 (no compression) to 9 (max compression) |
| `--safety-checker` | | `False` | Activate safety checker for NSFW and other potentially disturbing imagery |
| `--patchmatch`, `--no-patchmatch` | | `--patchmatch` | Load/Don't load the PatchMatch inpainting extension |
| `--xformers`, `--no-xformers` | | `--xformers` | Load/Don't load the Xformers memory-efficient attention module (CUDA only) |
| `--web` | | `False` | Start in web server mode |
| `--host <ip addr>` | | `localhost` | Which network interface web server should listen on. Set to 0.0.0.0 to listen on any. |
| `--port <port>` | | `9090` | Which port web server should listen for requests on. |
| `--config <path>` | | `configs/models.yaml` | Configuration file for models and their weights. |
| `--iterations <int>` | `-n<int>` | `1` | How many images to generate per prompt. |
| `--width <int>` | `-W<int>` | `512` | Width of generated image |
| `--height <int>` | `-H<int>` | `512` | Height of generated image | `--steps <int>` | `-s<int>` | `50` | How many steps of refinement to apply |
| `--strength <float>` | `-s<float>` | `0.75` | For img2img: how hard to try to match the prompt to the initial image. Ranges from 0.0-0.99, with higher values replacing the initial image completely. |
| `--fit` | `-F` | `False` | For img2img: scale the init image to fit into the specified -H and -W dimensions |
| `--grid` | `-g` | `False` | Save all image series as a grid rather than individually. |
| `--sampler <sampler>` | `-A<sampler>` | `k_lms` | Sampler to use. Use `-h` to get list of available samplers. |
| `--seamless` | | `False` | Create interesting effects by tiling elements of the image. |
| `--embedding_path <path>` | | `None` | Path to pre-trained embedding manager checkpoints, for custom models |
| `--gfpgan_model_path` | | `experiments/pretrained_models/GFPGANv1.4.pth` | Path to GFPGAN model file. |
| `--free_gpu_mem` | | `False` | Free GPU memory after sampling, to allow image decoding and saving in low VRAM conditions |
| `--precision` | | `auto` | Set model precision, default is selected by device. Options: auto, float32, float16, autocast |
!!! warning "These arguments are deprecated but still work"
<div align="center" markdown>
| Argument | Shortcut | Default | Description |
|--------------------|------------|---------------------|--------------|
| `--full_precision` | | `False` | Same as `--precision=fp32`|
| `--weights <path>` | | `None` | Path to weights file; use `--model stable-diffusion-1.4` instead |
| `--laion400m` | `-l` | `False` | Use older LAION400m weights; use `--model=laion400m` instead |
</div>
!!! tip
On Windows systems, you may run into
problems when passing the invoke script standard backslashed path
names because the Python interpreter treats "\" as an escape.
You can either double your slashes (ick): `C:\\path\\to\\my\\file`, or
use Linux/Mac style forward slashes (better): `C:/path/to/my/file`.
## The .invokeai initialization file
To start up invoke.py with your preferred settings, place your desired
startup options in a file in your home directory named `.invokeai` The
file should contain the startup options as you would type them on the
command line (`--steps=10 --grid`), one argument per line, or a
mixture of both using any of the accepted command switch formats:
!!! example "my unmodified initialization file"
```bash title="~/.invokeai" linenums="1"
# InvokeAI initialization file
# This is the InvokeAI initialization file, which contains command-line default values.
# Feel free to edit. If anything goes wrong, you can re-initialize this file by deleting
# or renaming it and then running invokeai-configure again.
# The --root option below points to the folder in which InvokeAI stores its models, configs and outputs.
--root="/Users/mauwii/invokeai"
# the --outdir option controls the default location of image files.
--outdir="/Users/mauwii/invokeai/outputs"
# You may place other frequently-used startup commands here, one or more per line.
# Examples:
# --web --host=0.0.0.0
# --steps=20
# -Ak_euler_a -C10.0
```
!!! note
The initialization file only accepts the command line arguments.
There are additional arguments that you can provide on the `invoke>` command
line (such as `-n` or `--iterations`) that cannot be entered into this file.
Also be alert for empty blank lines at the end of the file, which will cause
an arguments error at startup time.
## List of prompt arguments
After the invoke.py script initializes, it will present you with a `invoke>`
prompt. Here you can enter information to generate images from text
([txt2img](#txt2img)), to embellish an existing image or sketch
([img2img](#img2img)), or to selectively alter chosen regions of the image
([inpainting](#inpainting)).
### txt2img
!!! example ""
```bash
invoke> waterfall and rainbow -W640 -H480
```
This will create the requested image with the dimensions 640 (width)
and 480 (height).
Here are the invoke> command that apply to txt2img:
| Argument <img width="680" align="right"/> | Shortcut <img width="420" align="right"/> | Default <img width="480" align="right"/> | Description |
| ----------------------------------------- | ----------------------------------------- | ---------------------------------------- | ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ |
| "my prompt" | | | Text prompt to use. The quotation marks are optional. |
| `--width <int>` | `-W<int>` | `512` | Width of generated image |
| `--height <int>` | `-H<int>` | `512` | Height of generated image |
| `--iterations <int>` | `-n<int>` | `1` | How many images to generate from this prompt |
| `--steps <int>` | `-s<int>` | `50` | How many steps of refinement to apply |
| `--cfg_scale <float>` | `-C<float>` | `7.5` | How hard to try to match the prompt to the generated image; any number greater than 1.0 works, but the useful range is roughly 5.0 to 20.0 |
| `--seed <int>` | `-S<int>` | `None` | Set the random seed for the next series of images. This can be used to recreate an image generated previously. |
| `--sampler <sampler>` | `-A<sampler>` | `k_lms` | Sampler to use. Use -h to get list of available samplers. |
| `--karras_max <int>` | | `29` | When using k\_\* samplers, set the maximum number of steps before shifting from using the Karras noise schedule (good for low step counts) to the LatentDiffusion noise schedule (good for high step counts) This value is sticky. [29] |
| `--hires_fix` | | | Larger images often have duplication artefacts. This option suppresses duplicates by generating the image at low res, and then using img2img to increase the resolution |
| `--png_compression <0-9>` | `-z<0-9>` | `6` | Select level of compression for output files, from 0 (no compression) to 9 (max compression) |
| `--grid` | `-g` | `False` | Turn on grid mode to return a single image combining all the images generated by this prompt |
| `--individual` | `-i` | `True` | Turn off grid mode (deprecated; leave off --grid instead) |
| `--outdir <path>` | `-o<path>` | `outputs/img_samples` | Temporarily change the location of these images |
| `--seamless` | | `False` | Activate seamless tiling for interesting effects |
| `--seamless_axes` | | `x,y` | Specify which axes to use circular convolution on. |
| `--log_tokenization` | `-t` | `False` | Display a color-coded list of the parsed tokens derived from the prompt |
| `--skip_normalization` | `-x` | `False` | Weighted subprompts will not be normalized. See [Weighted Prompts](./OTHER.md#weighted-prompts) |
| `--upscale <int> <float>` | `-U <int> <float>` | `-U 1 0.75` | Upscale image by magnification factor (2, 4), and set strength of upscaling (0.0-1.0). If strength not set, will default to 0.75. |
| `--facetool_strength <float>` | `-G <float> ` | `-G0` | Fix faces (defaults to using the GFPGAN algorithm); argument indicates how hard the algorithm should try (0.0-1.0) |
| `--facetool <name>` | `-ft <name>` | `-ft gfpgan` | Select face restoration algorithm to use: gfpgan, codeformer |
| `--codeformer_fidelity` | `-cf <float>` | `0.75` | Used along with CodeFormer. Takes values between 0 and 1. 0 produces high quality but low accuracy. 1 produces high accuracy but low quality |
| `--save_original` | `-save_orig` | `False` | When upscaling or fixing faces, this will cause the original image to be saved rather than replaced. |
| `--variation <float>` | `-v<float>` | `0.0` | Add a bit of noise (0.0=none, 1.0=high) to the image in order to generate a series of variations. Usually used in combination with `-S<seed>` and `-n<int>` to generate a series a riffs on a starting image. See [Variations](./VARIATIONS.md). |
| `--with_variations <pattern>` | | `None` | Combine two or more variations. See [Variations](./VARIATIONS.md) for now to use this. |
| `--save_intermediates <n>` | | `None` | Save the image from every nth step into an "intermediates" folder inside the output directory |
| `--h_symmetry_time_pct <float>` | | `None` | Create symmetry along the X axis at the desired percent complete of the generation process. (Must be between 0.0 and 1.0; set to a very small number like 0.0001 for just after the first step of generation.) |
| `--v_symmetry_time_pct <float>` | | `None` | Create symmetry along the Y axis at the desired percent complete of the generation process. (Must be between 0.0 and 1.0; set to a very small number like 0.0001 for just after the first step of generation.) |
!!! note
the width and height of the image must be multiples of 64. You can
provide different values, but they will be rounded down to the nearest multiple
of 64.
!!! example "This is a example of img2img"
```bash
invoke> waterfall and rainbow -I./vacation-photo.png -W640 -H480 --fit
```
This will modify the indicated vacation photograph by making it more like the
prompt. Results will vary greatly depending on what is in the image. We also ask
to --fit the image into a box no bigger than 640x480. Otherwise the image size
will be identical to the provided photo and you may run out of memory if it is
large.
In addition to the command-line options recognized by txt2img, img2img accepts
additional options:
| Argument <img width="160" align="right"/> | Shortcut | Default | Description |
| ----------------------------------------- | ----------- | ------- | ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ |
| `--init_img <path>` | `-I<path>` | `None` | Path to the initialization image |
| `--fit` | `-F` | `False` | Scale the image to fit into the specified -H and -W dimensions |
| `--strength <float>` | `-s<float>` | `0.75` | How hard to try to match the prompt to the initial image. Ranges from 0.0-0.99, with higher values replacing the initial image completely. |
### inpainting
!!! example ""
```bash
invoke> waterfall and rainbow -I./vacation-photo.png -M./vacation-mask.png -W640 -H480 --fit
```
This will do the same thing as img2img, but image alterations will
only occur within transparent areas defined by the mask file specified
by `-M`. You may also supply just a single initial image with the areas
to overpaint made transparent, but you must be careful not to destroy
the pixels underneath when you create the transparent areas. See
[Inpainting](./INPAINTING.md) for details.
inpainting accepts all the arguments used for txt2img and img2img, as well as
the --mask (-M) and --text_mask (-tm) arguments:
| Argument <img width="100" align="right"/> | Shortcut | Default | Description |
| ----------------------------------------- | ------------------------ | ------- | ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ |
| `--init_mask <path>` | `-M<path>` | `None` | Path to an image the same size as the initial_image, with areas for inpainting made transparent. |
| `--invert_mask ` | | False | If true, invert the mask so that transparent areas are opaque and vice versa. |
| `--text_mask <prompt> [<float>]` | `-tm <prompt> [<float>]` | <none> | Create a mask from a text prompt describing part of the image |
The mask may either be an image with transparent areas, in which case the
inpainting will occur in the transparent areas only, or a black and white image,
in which case all black areas will be painted into.
`--text_mask` (short form `-tm`) is a way to generate a mask using a text
description of the part of the image to replace. For example, if you have an
image of a breakfast plate with a bagel, toast and scrambled eggs, you can
selectively mask the bagel and replace it with a piece of cake this way:
```bash
invoke> a piece of cake -I /path/to/breakfast.png -tm bagel
```
The algorithm uses <a
href="https://github.com/timojl/clipseg">clipseg</a> to classify different
regions of the image. The classifier puts out a confidence score for each region
it identifies. Generally regions that score above 0.5 are reliable, but if you
are getting too much or too little masking you can adjust the threshold down (to
get more mask), or up (to get less). In this example, by passing `-tm` a higher
value, we are insisting on a more stringent classification.
```bash
invoke> a piece of cake -I /path/to/breakfast.png -tm bagel 0.6
```
### Custom Styles and Subjects
You can load and use hundreds of community-contributed Textual
Inversion models just by typing the appropriate trigger phrase. Please
see [Concepts Library](CONCEPTS.md) for more details.
## Other Commands
The CLI offers a number of commands that begin with "!".
### Postprocessing images
To postprocess a file using face restoration or upscaling, use the `!fix`
command.
#### `!fix`
This command runs a post-processor on a previously-generated image. It takes a
PNG filename or path and applies your choice of the `-U`, `-G`, or `--embiggen`
switches in order to fix faces or upscale. If you provide a filename, the script
will look for it in the current output directory. Otherwise you can provide a
full or partial path to the desired file.
Some examples:
!!! example "Upscale to 4X its original size and fix faces using codeformer"
```bash
invoke> !fix 0000045.4829112.png -G1 -U4 -ft codeformer
```
!!! example "Use the GFPGAN algorithm to fix faces, then upscale to 3X using --embiggen"
```bash
invoke> !fix 0000045.4829112.png -G0.8 -ft gfpgan
>> fixing outputs/img-samples/0000045.4829112.png
>> retrieved seed 4829112 and prompt "boy enjoying a banana split"
>> GFPGAN - Restoring Faces for image seed:4829112
Outputs:
[1] outputs/img-samples/000017.4829112.gfpgan-00.png: !fix "outputs/img-samples/0000045.4829112.png" -s 50 -S -W 512 -H 512 -C 7.5 -A k_lms -G 0.8
```
#### `!mask`
This command takes an image, a text prompt, and uses the `clipseg` algorithm to
automatically generate a mask of the area that matches the text prompt. It is
useful for debugging the text masking process prior to inpainting with the
`--text_mask` argument. See [INPAINTING.md] for details.
### Model selection and importation
The CLI allows you to add new models on the fly, as well as to switch
among them rapidly without leaving the script. There are several
different model formats, each described in the [Model Installation
Guide](../installation/050_INSTALLING_MODELS.md).
#### `!models`
This prints out a list of the models defined in `config/models.yaml'. The active
model is bold-faced
Example:
<pre>
inpainting-1.5 not loaded Stable Diffusion inpainting model
<b>stable-diffusion-1.5 active Stable Diffusion v1.5</b>
waifu-diffusion not loaded Waifu Diffusion v1.4
</pre>
#### `!switch <model>`
This quickly switches from one model to another without leaving the CLI script.
`invoke.py` uses a memory caching system; once a model has been loaded,
switching back and forth is quick. The following example shows this in action.
Note how the second column of the `!models` table changes to `cached` after a
model is first loaded, and that the long initialization step is not needed when
loading a cached model.
#### `!import_model <hugging_face_repo_ID>`
This imports and installs a `diffusers`-style model that is stored on
the [HuggingFace Web Site](https://huggingface.co). You can look up
any [Stable Diffusion diffusers
model](https://huggingface.co/models?library=diffusers) and install it
with a command like the following:
```bash
!import_model prompthero/openjourney
```
#### `!import_model <path/to/diffusers/directory>`
If you have a copy of a `diffusers`-style model saved to disk, you can
import it by passing the path to model's top-level directory.
#### `!import_model <url>`
For a `.ckpt` or `.safetensors` file, if you have a direct download
URL for the file, you can provide it to `!import_model` and the file
will be downloaded and installed for you.
#### `!import_model <path/to/model/weights.ckpt>`
This command imports a new model weights file into InvokeAI, makes it available
for image generation within the script, and writes out the configuration for the
model into `config/models.yaml` for use in subsequent sessions.
Provide `!import_model` with the path to a weights file ending in `.ckpt`. If
you type a partial path and press tab, the CLI will autocomplete. Although it
will also autocomplete to `.vae` files, these are not currenty supported (but
will be soon).
When you hit return, the CLI will prompt you to fill in additional information
about the model, including the short name you wish to use for it with the
`!switch` command, a brief description of the model, the default image width and
height to use with this model, and the model's configuration file. The latter
three fields are automatically filled with reasonable defaults. In the example
below, the bold-faced text shows what the user typed in with the exception of
the width, height and configuration file paths, which were filled in
automatically.
#### `!import_model <path/to/directory_of_models>`
If you provide the path of a directory that contains one or more
`.ckpt` or `.safetensors` files, the CLI will scan the directory and
interactively offer to import the models it finds there. Also see the
`--autoconvert` command-line option.
#### `!edit_model <name_of_model>`
The `!edit_model` command can be used to modify a model that is already defined
in `config/models.yaml`. Call it with the short name of the model you wish to
modify, and it will allow you to modify the model's `description`, `weights` and
other fields.
Example:
<pre>
invoke> <b>!edit_model waifu-diffusion</b>
>> Editing model waifu-diffusion from configuration file ./configs/models.yaml
description: <b>Waifu diffusion v1.4beta</b>
weights: models/ldm/stable-diffusion-v1/<b>model-epoch10-float16.ckpt</b>
config: configs/stable-diffusion/v1-inference.yaml
width: 512
height: 512
>> New configuration:
waifu-diffusion:
config: configs/stable-diffusion/v1-inference.yaml
description: Waifu diffusion v1.4beta
weights: models/ldm/stable-diffusion-v1/model-epoch10-float16.ckpt
height: 512
width: 512
OK to import [n]? y
>> Caching model stable-diffusion-1.4 in system RAM
>> Loading waifu-diffusion from models/ldm/stable-diffusion-v1/model-epoch10-float16.ckpt
...
</pre>
### History processing
The CLI provides a series of convenient commands for reviewing previous actions,
retrieving them, modifying them, and re-running them.
#### `!history`
The invoke script keeps track of all the commands you issue during a session,
allowing you to re-run them. On Mac and Linux systems, it also writes the
command-line history out to disk, giving you access to the most recent 1000
commands issued.
The `!history` command will return a numbered list of all the commands issued
during the session (Windows), or the most recent 1000 commands (Mac|Linux). You
can then repeat a command by using the command `!NNN`, where "NNN" is the
history line number. For example:
!!! example ""
```bash
invoke> !history
...
[14] happy woman sitting under tree wearing broad hat and flowing garment
[15] beautiful woman sitting under tree wearing broad hat and flowing garment
[18] beautiful woman sitting under tree wearing broad hat and flowing garment -v0.2 -n6
[20] watercolor of beautiful woman sitting under tree wearing broad hat and flowing garment -v0.2 -n6 -S2878767194
[21] surrealist painting of beautiful woman sitting under tree wearing broad hat and flowing garment -v0.2 -n6 -S2878767194
...
invoke> !20
invoke> watercolor of beautiful woman sitting under tree wearing broad hat and flowing garment -v0.2 -n6 -S2878767194
```
####`!fetch`
This command retrieves the generation parameters from a previously generated
image and either loads them into the command line (Linux|Mac), or prints them
out in a comment for copy-and-paste (Windows). You may provide either the name
of a file in the current output directory, or a full file path. Specify path to
a folder with image png files, and wildcard \*.png to retrieve the dream command
used to generate the images, and save them to a file commands.txt for further
processing.
!!! example "load the generation command for a single png file"
```bash
invoke> !fetch 0000015.8929913.png
# the script returns the next line, ready for editing and running:
invoke> a fantastic alien landscape -W 576 -H 512 -s 60 -A plms -C 7.5
```
!!! example "fetch the generation commands from a batch of files and store them into `selected.txt`"
```bash
invoke> !fetch outputs\selected-imgs\*.png selected.txt
```
#### `!replay`
This command replays a text file generated by !fetch or created manually
!!! example
```bash
invoke> !replay outputs\selected-imgs\selected.txt
```
!!! note
These commands may behave unexpectedly if given a PNG file that was
not generated by InvokeAI.
#### `!search <search string>`
This is similar to !history but it only returns lines that contain
`search string`. For example:
```bash
invoke> !search surreal
[21] surrealist painting of beautiful woman sitting under tree wearing broad hat and flowing garment -v0.2 -n6 -S2878767194
```
#### `!clear`
This clears the search history from memory and disk. Be advised that this
operation is irreversible and does not issue any warnings!
## Command-line editing and completion
The command-line offers convenient history tracking, editing, and command
completion.
- To scroll through previous commands and potentially edit/reuse them, use the
++up++ and ++down++ keys.
- To edit the current command, use the ++left++ and ++right++ keys to position
the cursor, and then ++backspace++, ++delete++ or insert characters.
- To move to the very beginning of the command, type ++ctrl+a++ (or
++command+a++ on the Mac)
- To move to the end of the command, type ++ctrl+e++.
- To cut a section of the command, position the cursor where you want to start
cutting and type ++ctrl+k++
- To paste a cut section back in, position the cursor where you want to paste,
and type ++ctrl+y++
Windows users can get similar, but more limited, functionality if they launch
`invoke.py` with the `winpty` program and have the `pyreadline3` library
installed:
```batch
> winpty python scripts\invoke.py
```
On the Mac and Linux platforms, when you exit invoke.py, the last 1000 lines of
your command-line history will be saved. When you restart `invoke.py`, you can
access the saved history using the ++up++ key.
In addition, limited command-line completion is installed. In various contexts,
you can start typing your command and press ++tab++. A list of potential
completions will be presented to you. You can then type a little more, hit
++tab++ again, and eventually autocomplete what you want.
When specifying file paths using the one-letter shortcuts, the CLI will attempt
to complete pathnames for you. This is most handy for the `-I` (init image) and
`-M` (init mask) paths. To initiate completion, start the path with a slash
(`/`) or `./`. For example:
```bash
invoke> zebra with a mustache -I./test-pictures<TAB>
-I./test-pictures/Lincoln-and-Parrot.png -I./test-pictures/zebra.jpg -I./test-pictures/madonna.png
-I./test-pictures/bad-sketch.png -I./test-pictures/man_with_eagle/
```
You can then type ++z++, hit ++tab++ again, and it will autofill to `zebra.jpg`.
More text completion features (such as autocompleting seeds) are on their way.

View File

@ -1,12 +1,9 @@
---
title: Concepts
title: Concepts Library
---
# :material-library-shelves: The Hugging Face Concepts Library and Importing Textual Inversion files
With the advances in research, many new capabilities are available to customize the knowledge and understanding of novel concepts not originally contained in the base model.
## Using Textual Inversion Files
Textual inversion (TI) files are small models that customize the output of
@ -15,16 +12,18 @@ and artistic styles. They are also known as "embeds" in the machine learning
world.
Each TI file introduces one or more vocabulary terms to the SD model. These are
known in InvokeAI as "triggers." Triggers are denoted using angle brackets
as in "&lt;trigger-phrase&gt;". The two most common type of
known in InvokeAI as "triggers." Triggers are often, but not always, denoted
using angle brackets as in "&lt;trigger-phrase&gt;". The two most common type of
TI files that you'll encounter are `.pt` and `.bin` files, which are produced by
different TI training packages. InvokeAI supports both formats, but its
[built-in TI training system](TRAINING.md) produces `.pt`.
[built-in TI training system](TEXTUAL_INVERSION.md) produces `.pt`.
The [Hugging Face company](https://huggingface.co/sd-concepts-library) has
amassed a large ligrary of &gt;800 community-contributed TI files covering a
broad range of subjects and styles. You can also install your own or others' TI files
by placing them in the designated directory for the compatible model type
broad range of subjects and styles. InvokeAI has built-in support for this
library which downloads and merges TI files automatically upon request. You can
also install your own or others' TI files by placing them in a designated
directory.
### An Example
@ -42,43 +41,91 @@ You can also combine styles and concepts:
| :--------------------------------------------------------: |
| ![](../assets/concepts/image5.png) |
</figure>
## Using a Hugging Face Concept
!!! warning "Authenticating to HuggingFace"
Some concepts require valid authentication to HuggingFace. Without it, they will not be downloaded
and will be silently ignored.
If you used an installer to install InvokeAI, you may have already set a HuggingFace token.
If you skipped this step, you can:
- run the InvokeAI configuration script again (if you used a manual installer): `invokeai-configure`
- set one of the `HUGGINGFACE_TOKEN` or `HUGGING_FACE_HUB_TOKEN` environment variables to contain your token
Finally, if you already used any HuggingFace library on your computer, you might already have a token
in your local cache. Check for a hidden `.huggingface` directory in your home folder. If it
contains a `token` file, then you are all set.
Hugging Face TI concepts are downloaded and installed automatically as you
require them. This requires your machine to be connected to the Internet. To
find out what each concept is for, you can browse the
[Hugging Face concepts library](https://huggingface.co/sd-concepts-library) and
look at examples of what each concept produces.
When you have an idea of a concept you wish to try, go to the command-line
client (CLI) and type a `<` character and the beginning of the Hugging Face
concept name you wish to load. Press ++tab++, and the CLI will show you all
matching concepts. You can also type `<` and hit ++tab++ to get a listing of all
~800 concepts, but be prepared to scroll up to see them all! If there is more
than one match you can continue to type and ++tab++ until the concept is
completed.
!!! example
if you type in `<x` and hit ++tab++, you'll be prompted with the completions:
```py
<xatu2> <xatu> <xbh> <xi> <xidiversity> <xioboma> <xuna> <xyz>
```
Now type `id` and press ++tab++. It will be autocompleted to `<xidiversity>`
because this is a unique match.
Finish your prompt and generate as usual. You may include multiple concept terms
in the prompt.
If you have never used this concept before, you will see a message that the TI
model is being downloaded and installed. After this, the concept will be saved
locally (in the `models/sd-concepts-library` directory) for future use.
Several steps happen during downloading and installation, including a scan of
the file for malicious code. Should any errors occur, you will be warned and the
concept will fail to load. Generation will then continue treating the trigger
term as a normal string of characters (e.g. as literal `<ghibli-face>`).
You can also use `<concept-names>` in the WebGUI's prompt textbox. There is no
autocompletion at this time.
## Installing your Own TI Files
You may install any number of `.pt` and `.bin` files simply by copying them into
the `embedding` directory of the corresponding InvokeAI models directory (usually `invokeai`
in your home directory). For example, you can simply move a Stable Diffusion 1.5 embedding file to
the `sd-1/embedding` folder. Be careful not to overwrite one file with another.
the `embeddings` directory of the InvokeAI runtime directory (usually `invokeai`
in your home directory). You may create subdirectories in order to organize the
files in any way you wish. Be careful not to overwrite one file with another.
For example, TI files generated by the Hugging Face toolkit share the named
`learned_embedding.bin`. You can rename these, or use subdirectories to keep them distinct.
`learned_embedding.bin`. You can use subdirectories to keep them distinct.
At startup time, InvokeAI will scan the various `embedding` directories and load any TI
files it finds there for compatible models. At startup you will see a message similar to this one:
At startup time, InvokeAI will scan the `embeddings` directory and load any TI
files it finds there. At startup you will see a message similar to this one:
```bash
>> Current embedding manager terms: <HOI4-Leader>, <princess-knight>
>> Current embedding manager terms: *, <HOI4-Leader>, <princess-knight>
```
To use these when generating, simply type the `<` key in your prompt to open the Textual Inversion WebUI and
select the embedding you'd like to use. This UI has type-ahead support, so you can easily find supported embeddings.
## Using LoRAs
Note the `*` trigger term. This is a placeholder term that many early TI
tutorials taught people to use rather than a more descriptive term.
Unfortunately, if you have multiple TI files that all use this term, only the
first one loaded will be triggered by use of the term.
LoRA files are models that customize the output of Stable Diffusion image generation.
Larger than embeddings, but much smaller than full models, they augment SD with improved
understanding of subjects and artistic styles.
To avoid this problem, you can use the `merge_embeddings.py` script to merge two
or more TI files together. If it encounters a collision of terms, the script
will prompt you to select new terms that do not collide. See
[Textual Inversion](TEXTUAL_INVERSION.md) for details.
Unlike TI files, LoRAs do not introduce novel vocabulary into the model's known tokens. Instead,
LoRAs augment the model's weights that are applied to generate imagery. LoRAs may be supplied
with a "trigger" word that they have been explicitly trained on, or may simply apply their
effect without being triggered.
LoRAs are typically stored in .safetensors files, which are the most secure way to store and transmit
these types of weights. You may install any number of `.safetensors` LoRA files simply by copying them into
the `lora` directory of the corresponding InvokeAI models directory (usually `invokeai`
in your home directory). For example, you can simply move a Stable Diffusion 1.5 LoRA file to
the `sd-1/lora` folder.
To use these when generating, open the LoRA menu item in the options panel, select the LoRAs you want to apply
and ensure that they have the appropriate weight recommended by the model provider. Typically, most LoRAs perform best at a weight of .75-1.
## Further Reading
Please see [the repository](https://github.com/rinongal/textual_inversion) and
associated paper for details and limitations.

View File

@ -1,287 +0,0 @@
---
title: Configuration
---
# :material-tune-variant: InvokeAI Configuration
## Intro
InvokeAI has numerous runtime settings which can be used to adjust
many aspects of its operations, including the location of files and
directories, memory usage, and performance. These settings can be
viewed and customized in several ways:
1. By editing settings in the `invokeai.yaml` file.
2. By setting environment variables.
3. On the command-line, when InvokeAI is launched.
In addition, the most commonly changed settings are accessible
graphically via the `invokeai-configure` script.
### How the Configuration System Works
When InvokeAI is launched, the very first thing it needs to do is to
find its "root" directory, which contains its configuration files,
installed models, its database of images, and the folder(s) of
generated images themselves. In this document, the root directory will
be referred to as ROOT.
#### Finding the Root Directory
To find its root directory, InvokeAI uses the following recipe:
1. It first looks for the argument `--root <path>` on the command line
it was launched from, and uses the indicated path if present.
2. Next it looks for the environment variable INVOKEAI_ROOT, and uses
the directory path found there if present.
3. If neither of these are present, then InvokeAI looks for the
folder containing the `.venv` Python virtual environment directory for
the currently active environment. This directory is checked for files
expected inside the InvokeAI root before it is used.
4. Finally, InvokeAI looks for a directory in the current user's home
directory named `invokeai`.
#### Reading the InvokeAI Configuration File
Once the root directory has been located, InvokeAI looks for a file
named `ROOT/invokeai.yaml`, and if present reads configuration values
from it. The top of this file looks like this:
```
InvokeAI:
Web Server:
host: localhost
port: 9090
allow_origins: []
allow_credentials: true
allow_methods:
- '*'
allow_headers:
- '*'
Features:
esrgan: true
internet_available: true
log_tokenization: false
nsfw_checker: false
patchmatch: true
restore: true
...
```
This lines in this file are used to establish default values for
Invoke's settings. In the above fragment, the Web Server's listening
port is set to 9090 by the `port` setting.
You can edit this file with a text editor such as "Notepad" (do not
use Word or any other word processor). When editing, be careful to
maintain the indentation, and do not add extraneous text, as syntax
errors will prevent InvokeAI from launching. A basic guide to the
format of YAML files can be found
[here](https://circleci.com/blog/what-is-yaml-a-beginner-s-guide/).
You can fix a broken `invokeai.yaml` by deleting it and running the
configuration script again -- option [7] in the launcher, "Re-run the
configure script".
#### Reading Environment Variables
Next InvokeAI looks for defined environment variables in the format
`INVOKEAI_<setting_name>`, for example `INVOKEAI_port`. Environment
variable values take precedence over configuration file variables. On
a Macintosh system, for example, you could change the port that the
web server listens on by setting the environment variable this way:
```
export INVOKEAI_port=8000
invokeai-web
```
Please check out these
[Macintosh](https://phoenixnap.com/kb/set-environment-variable-mac)
and
[Windows](https://phoenixnap.com/kb/windows-set-environment-variable)
guides for setting temporary and permanent environment variables.
#### Reading the Command Line
Lastly, InvokeAI takes settings from the command line, which override
everything else. The command-line settings have the same name as the
corresponding configuration file settings, preceded by a `--`, for
example `--port 8000`.
If you are using the launcher (`invoke.sh` or `invoke.bat`) to launch
InvokeAI, then just pass the command-line arguments to the launcher:
```
invoke.bat --port 8000 --host 0.0.0.0
```
The arguments will be applied when you select the web server option
(and the other options as well).
If, on the other hand, you prefer to launch InvokeAI directly from the
command line, you would first activate the virtual environment (known
as the "developer's console" in the launcher), and run `invokeai-web`:
```
> C:\Users\Fred\invokeai\.venv\scripts\activate
(.venv) > invokeai-web --port 8000 --host 0.0.0.0
```
You can get a listing and brief instructions for each of the
command-line options by giving the `--help` argument:
```
(.venv) > invokeai-web --help
usage: InvokeAI [-h] [--host HOST] [--port PORT] [--allow_origins [ALLOW_ORIGINS ...]] [--allow_credentials | --no-allow_credentials]
[--allow_methods [ALLOW_METHODS ...]] [--allow_headers [ALLOW_HEADERS ...]] [--esrgan | --no-esrgan]
[--internet_available | --no-internet_available] [--log_tokenization | --no-log_tokenization]
[--nsfw_checker | --no-nsfw_checker] [--patchmatch | --no-patchmatch] [--restore | --no-restore]
[--always_use_cpu | --no-always_use_cpu] [--free_gpu_mem | --no-free_gpu_mem] [--max_cache_size MAX_CACHE_SIZE]
[--max_vram_cache_size MAX_VRAM_CACHE_SIZE] [--precision {auto,float16,float32,autocast}]
[--sequential_guidance | --no-sequential_guidance] [--xformers_enabled | --no-xformers_enabled]
[--tiled_decode | --no-tiled_decode] [--root ROOT] [--autoimport_dir AUTOIMPORT_DIR] [--lora_dir LORA_DIR]
[--embedding_dir EMBEDDING_DIR] [--controlnet_dir CONTROLNET_DIR] [--conf_path CONF_PATH] [--models_dir MODELS_DIR]
[--legacy_conf_dir LEGACY_CONF_DIR] [--db_dir DB_DIR] [--outdir OUTDIR] [--from_file FROM_FILE]
[--use_memory_db | --no-use_memory_db] [--model MODEL] [--log_handlers [LOG_HANDLERS ...]]
[--log_format {plain,color,syslog,legacy}] [--log_level {debug,info,warning,error,critical}]
...
```
## The Configuration Settings
The configuration settings are divided into several distinct
groups in `invokeia.yaml`:
### Web Server
| Setting | Default Value | Description |
|----------|----------------|--------------|
| `host` | `localhost` | Name or IP address of the network interface that the web server will listen on |
| `port` | `9090` | Network port number that the web server will listen on |
| `allow_origins` | `[]` | A list of host names or IP addresses that are allowed to connect to the InvokeAI API in the format `['host1','host2',...]` |
| `allow_credentials | `true` | Require credentials for a foreign host to access the InvokeAI API (don't change this) |
| `allow_methods` | `*` | List of HTTP methods ("GET", "POST") that the web server is allowed to use when accessing the API |
| `allow_headers` | `*` | List of HTTP headers that the web server will accept when accessing the API |
The documentation for InvokeAI's API can be accessed by browsing to the following URL: [http://localhost:9090/docs].
### Features
These configuration settings allow you to enable and disable various InvokeAI features:
| Setting | Default Value | Description |
|----------|----------------|--------------|
| `esrgan` | `true` | Activate the ESRGAN upscaling options|
| `internet_available` | `true` | When a resource is not available locally, try to fetch it via the internet |
| `log_tokenization` | `false` | Before each text2image generation, print a color-coded representation of the prompt to the console; this can help understand why a prompt is not working as expected |
| `nsfw_checker` | `true` | Activate the NSFW checker to blur out risque images |
| `patchmatch` | `true` | Activate the "patchmatch" algorithm for improved inpainting |
| `restore` | `true` | Activate the facial restoration features (DEPRECATED; restoration features will be removed in 3.0.0) |
### Memory/Performance
These options tune InvokeAI's memory and performance characteristics.
| Setting | Default Value | Description |
|----------|----------------|--------------|
| `always_use_cpu` | `false` | Use the CPU to generate images, even if a GPU is available |
| `free_gpu_mem` | `false` | Aggressively free up GPU memory after each operation; this will allow you to run in low-VRAM environments with some performance penalties |
| `max_cache_size` | `6` | Amount of CPU RAM (in GB) to reserve for caching models in memory; more cache allows you to keep models in memory and switch among them quickly |
| `max_vram_cache_size` | `2.75` | Amount of GPU VRAM (in GB) to reserve for caching models in VRAM; more cache speeds up generation but reduces the size of the images that can be generated. This can be set to zero to maximize the amount of memory available for generation. |
| `precision` | `auto` | Floating point precision. One of `auto`, `float16` or `float32`. `float16` will consume half the memory of `float32` but produce slightly lower-quality images. The `auto` setting will guess the proper precision based on your video card and operating system |
| `sequential_guidance` | `false` | Calculate guidance in serial rather than in parallel, lowering memory requirements at the cost of some performance loss |
| `xformers_enabled` | `true` | If the x-formers memory-efficient attention module is installed, activate it for better memory usage and generation speed|
| `tiled_decode` | `false` | If true, then during the VAE decoding phase the image will be decoded a section at a time, reducing memory consumption at the cost of a performance hit |
### Paths
These options set the paths of various directories and files used by
InvokeAI. Relative paths are interpreted relative to INVOKEAI_ROOT, so
if INVOKEAI_ROOT is `/home/fred/invokeai` and the path is
`autoimport/main`, then the corresponding directory will be located at
`/home/fred/invokeai/autoimport/main`.
| Setting | Default Value | Description |
|----------|----------------|--------------|
| `autoimport_dir` | `autoimport/main` | At startup time, read and import any main model files found in this directory |
| `lora_dir` | `autoimport/lora` | At startup time, read and import any LoRA/LyCORIS models found in this directory |
| `embedding_dir` | `autoimport/embedding` | At startup time, read and import any textual inversion (embedding) models found in this directory |
| `controlnet_dir` | `autoimport/controlnet` | At startup time, read and import any ControlNet models found in this directory |
| `conf_path` | `configs/models.yaml` | Location of the `models.yaml` model configuration file |
| `models_dir` | `models` | Location of the directory containing models installed by InvokeAI's model manager |
| `legacy_conf_dir` | `configs/stable-diffusion` | Location of the directory containing the .yaml configuration files for legacy checkpoint models |
| `db_dir` | `databases` | Location of the directory containing InvokeAI's image, schema and session database |
| `outdir` | `outputs` | Location of the directory in which the gallery of generated and uploaded images will be stored |
| `use_memory_db` | `false` | Keep database information in memory rather than on disk; this will not preserve image gallery information across restarts |
Note that the autoimport directories will be searched recursively,
allowing you to organize the models into folders and subfolders in any
way you wish. In addition, while we have split up autoimport
directories by the type of model they contain, this isn't
necessary. You can combine different model types in the same folder
and InvokeAI will figure out what they are. So you can easily use just
one autoimport directory by commenting out the unneeded paths:
```
Paths:
autoimport_dir: autoimport
# lora_dir: null
# embedding_dir: null
# controlnet_dir: null
```
### Logging
These settings control the information, warning, and debugging
messages printed to the console log while InvokeAI is running:
| Setting | Default Value | Description |
|----------|----------------|--------------|
| `log_handlers` | `console` | This controls where log messages are sent, and can be a list of one or more destinations. Values include `console`, `file`, `syslog` and `http`. These are described in more detail below |
| `log_format` | `color` | This controls the formatting of the log messages. Values are `plain`, `color`, `legacy` and `syslog` |
| `log_level` | `debug` | This filters messages according to the level of severity and can be one of `debug`, `info`, `warning`, `error` and `critical`. For example, setting to `warning` will display all messages at the warning level or higher, but won't display "debug" or "info" messages |
Several different log handler destinations are available, and multiple destinations are supported by providing a list:
```
log_handlers:
- console
- syslog=localhost
- file=/var/log/invokeai.log
```
* `console` is the default. It prints log messages to the command-line window from which InvokeAI was launched.
* `syslog` is only available on Linux and Macintosh systems. It uses
the operating system's "syslog" facility to write log file entries
locally or to a remote logging machine. `syslog` offers a variety
of configuration options:
```
syslog=/dev/log` - log to the /dev/log device
syslog=localhost` - log to the network logger running on the local machine
syslog=localhost:512` - same as above, but using a non-standard port
syslog=fredserver,facility=LOG_USER,socktype=SOCK_DRAM`
- Log to LAN-connected server "fredserver" using the facility LOG_USER and datagram packets.
```
* `http` can be used to log to a remote web server. The server must be
properly configured to receive and act on log messages. The option
accepts the URL to the web server, and a `method` argument
indicating whether the message should be submitted using the GET or
POST method.
```
http=http://my.server/path/to/logger,method=POST
```
The `log_format` option provides several alternative formats:
* `color` - default format providing time, date and a message, using text colors to distinguish different log severities
* `plain` - same as above, but monochrome text only
* `syslog` - the log level and error message only, allowing the syslog system to attach the time and date
* `legacy` - a format similar to the one used by the legacy 2.3 InvokeAI releases.

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@ -1,92 +0,0 @@
---
title: ControlNet
---
# :material-loupe: ControlNet
## ControlNet
ControlNet
ControlNet is a powerful set of features developed by the open-source community (notably, Stanford researcher [**@ilyasviel**](https://github.com/lllyasviel)) that allows you to apply a secondary neural network model to your image generation process in Invoke.
With ControlNet, you can get more control over the output of your image generation, providing you with a way to direct the network towards generating images that better fit your desired style or outcome.
### How it works
ControlNet works by analyzing an input image, pre-processing that image to identify relevant information that can be interpreted by each specific ControlNet model, and then inserting that control information into the generation process. This can be used to adjust the style, composition, or other aspects of the image to better achieve a specific result.
### Models
As part of the model installation, ControlNet models can be selected including a variety of pre-trained models that have been added to achieve different effects or styles in your generated images. Further ControlNet models may require additional code functionality to also be incorporated into Invoke's Invocations folder. You should expect to follow any installation instructions for ControlNet models loaded outside the default models provided by Invoke. The default models include:
**Canny**:
When the Canny model is used in ControlNet, Invoke will attempt to generate images that match the edges detected.
Canny edge detection works by detecting the edges in an image by looking for abrupt changes in intensity. It is known for its ability to detect edges accurately while reducing noise and false edges, and the preprocessor can identify more information by decreasing the thresholds.
**M-LSD**:
M-LSD is another edge detection algorithm used in ControlNet. It stands for Multi-Scale Line Segment Detector.
It detects straight line segments in an image by analyzing the local structure of the image at multiple scales. It can be useful for architectural imagery, or anything where straight-line structural information is needed for the resulting output.
**Lineart**:
The Lineart model in ControlNet generates line drawings from an input image. The resulting pre-processed image is a simplified version of the original, with only the outlines of objects visible.The Lineart model in ControlNet is known for its ability to accurately capture the contours of the objects in an input sketch.
**Lineart Anime**:
A variant of the Lineart model that generates line drawings with a distinct style inspired by anime and manga art styles.
**Depth**:
A model that generates depth maps of images, allowing you to create more realistic 3D models or to simulate depth effects in post-processing.
**Normal Map (BAE):**
A model that generates normal maps from input images, allowing for more realistic lighting effects in 3D rendering.
**Image Segmentation**:
A model that divides input images into segments or regions, each of which corresponds to a different object or part of the image. (More details coming soon)
**Openpose**:
The OpenPose control model allows for the identification of the general pose of a character by pre-processing an existing image with a clear human structure. With advanced options, Openpose can also detect the face or hands in the image.
**Mediapipe Face**:
The MediaPipe Face identification processor is able to clearly identify facial features in order to capture vivid expressions of human faces.
**Tile (experimental)**:
The Tile model fills out details in the image to match the image, rather than the prompt. The Tile Model is a versatile tool that offers a range of functionalities. Its primary capabilities can be boiled down to two main behaviors:
- It can reinterpret specific details within an image and create fresh, new elements.
- It has the ability to disregard global instructions if there's a discrepancy between them and the local context or specific parts of the image. In such cases, it uses the local context to guide the process.
The Tile Model can be a powerful tool in your arsenal for enhancing image quality and details. If there are undesirable elements in your images, such as blurriness caused by resizing, this model can effectively eliminate these issues, resulting in cleaner, crisper images. Moreover, it can generate and add refined details to your images, improving their overall quality and appeal.
**Pix2Pix (experimental)**
With Pix2Pix, you can input an image into the controlnet, and then "instruct" the model to change it using your prompt. For example, you can say "Make it winter" to add more wintry elements to a scene.
**Inpaint**: Coming Soon - Currently this model is available but not functional on the Canvas. An upcoming release will provide additional capabilities for using this model when inpainting.
Each of these models can be adjusted and combined with other ControlNet models to achieve different results, giving you even more control over your image generation process.
## Using ControlNet
To use ControlNet, you can simply select the desired model and adjust both the ControlNet and Pre-processor settings to achieve the desired result. You can also use multiple ControlNet models at the same time, allowing you to achieve even more complex effects or styles in your generated images.
Each ControlNet has two settings that are applied to the ControlNet.
Weight - Strength of the Controlnet model applied to the generation for the section, defined by start/end.
Start/End - 0 represents the start of the generation, 1 represents the end. The Start/end setting controls what steps during the generation process have the ControlNet applied.
Additionally, each ControlNet section can be expanded in order to manipulate settings for the image pre-processor that adjusts your uploaded image before using it in when you Invoke.

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@ -4,13 +4,86 @@ title: Image-to-Image
# :material-image-multiple: Image-to-Image
InvokeAI provides an "img2img" feature that lets you seed your
creations with an initial drawing or photo. This is a really cool
feature that tells stable diffusion to build the prompt on top of the
image you provide, preserving the original's basic shape and layout.
Both the Web and command-line interfaces provide an "img2img" feature
that lets you seed your creations with an initial drawing or
photo. This is a really cool feature that tells stable diffusion to
build the prompt on top of the image you provide, preserving the
original's basic shape and layout.
For a walkthrough of using Image-to-Image in the Web UI, see [InvokeAI
Web Server](./WEB.md#image-to-image).
See the [WebUI Guide](WEB.md) for a walkthrough of the img2img feature
in the InvokeAI web server. This document describes how to use img2img
in the command-line tool.
## Basic Usage
Launch the command-line client by launching `invoke.sh`/`invoke.bat`
and choosing option (1). Alternative, activate the InvokeAI
environment and issue the command `invokeai`.
Once the `invoke> ` prompt appears, you can start an img2img render by
pointing to a seed file with the `-I` option as shown here:
!!! example ""
```commandline
tree on a hill with a river, nature photograph, national geographic -I./test-pictures/tree-and-river-sketch.png -f 0.85
```
<figure markdown>
| original image | generated image |
| :------------: | :-------------: |
| ![original-image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/50542132/193946000-c42a96d8-5a74-4f8a-b4c3-5213e6cadcce.png){ width=320 } | ![generated-image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/111189/194135515-53d4c060-e994-4016-8121-7c685e281ac9.png){ width=320 } |
</figure>
The `--init_img` (`-I`) option gives the path to the seed picture. `--strength`
(`-f`) controls how much the original will be modified, ranging from `0.0` (keep
the original intact), to `1.0` (ignore the original completely). The default is
`0.75`, and ranges from `0.25-0.90` give interesting results. Other relevant
options include `-C` (classification free guidance scale), and `-s` (steps).
Unlike `txt2img`, adding steps will continuously change the resulting image and
it will not converge.
You may also pass a `-v<variation_amount>` option to generate `-n<iterations>`
count variants on the original image. This is done by passing the first
generated image back into img2img the requested number of times. It generates
interesting variants.
Note that the prompt makes a big difference. For example, this slight variation
on the prompt produces a very different image:
<figure markdown>
![](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/111189/194135220-16b62181-b60c-4248-8989-4834a8fd7fbd.png){ width=320 }
<caption markdown>photograph of a tree on a hill with a river</caption>
</figure>
!!! tip
When designing prompts, think about how the images scraped from the internet were
captioned. Very few photographs will be labeled "photograph" or "photorealistic."
They will, however, be captioned with the publication, photographer, camera model,
or film settings.
If the initial image contains transparent regions, then Stable Diffusion will
only draw within the transparent regions, a process called
[`inpainting`](./INPAINTING.md#creating-transparent-regions-for-inpainting).
However, for this to work correctly, the color information underneath the
transparent needs to be preserved, not erased.
!!! warning "**IMPORTANT ISSUE** "
`img2img` does not work properly on initial images smaller
than 512x512. Please scale your image to at least 512x512 before using it.
Larger images are not a problem, but may run out of VRAM on your GPU card. To
fix this, use the --fit option, which downscales the initial image to fit within
the box specified by width x height:
```
tree on a hill with a river, national geographic -I./test-pictures/big-sketch.png -H512 -W512 --fit
```
## How does it actually work, though?
The main difference between `img2img` and `prompt2img` is the starting point.
While `prompt2img` always starts with pure gaussian noise and progressively
@ -26,6 +99,10 @@ seed `1592514025` develops something like this:
!!! example ""
```bash
invoke> "fire" -s10 -W384 -H384 -S1592514025
```
<figure markdown>
![latent steps](../assets/img2img/000019.steps.png){ width=720 }
</figure>
@ -80,8 +157,17 @@ Diffusion has less chance to refine itself, so the result ends up inheriting all
the problems of my bad drawing.
If you want to try this out yourself, all of these are using a seed of
`1592514025` with a width/height of `384`, step count `10`, the
`k_lms` sampler, and the single-word prompt `"fire"`.
`1592514025` with a width/height of `384`, step count `10`, the default sampler
(`k_lms`), and the single-word prompt `"fire"`:
```bash
invoke> "fire" -s10 -W384 -H384 -S1592514025 -I /tmp/fire-drawing.png --strength 0.7
```
The code for rendering intermediates is on my (damian0815's) branch
[document-img2img](https://github.com/damian0815/InvokeAI/tree/document-img2img) -
run `invoke.py` and check your `outputs/img-samples/intermediates` folder while
generating an image.
### Compensating for the reduced step count
@ -94,6 +180,10 @@ give each generation 20 steps.
Here's strength `0.4` (note step count `50`, which is `20 ÷ 0.4` to make sure SD
does `20` steps from my image):
```bash
invoke> "fire" -s50 -W384 -H384 -S1592514025 -I /tmp/fire-drawing.png -f 0.4
```
<figure markdown>
![000035.1592514025](../assets/img2img/000035.1592514025.png)
</figure>
@ -101,6 +191,10 @@ does `20` steps from my image):
and here is strength `0.7` (note step count `30`, which is roughly `20 ÷ 0.7` to
make sure SD does `20` steps from my image):
```commandline
invoke> "fire" -s30 -W384 -H384 -S1592514025 -I /tmp/fire-drawing.png -f 0.7
```
<figure markdown>
![000046.1592514025](../assets/img2img/000046.1592514025.png)
</figure>

306
docs/features/INPAINTING.md Normal file
View File

@ -0,0 +1,306 @@
---
title: Inpainting
---
# :octicons-paintbrush-16: Inpainting
## **Creating Transparent Regions for Inpainting**
Inpainting is really cool. To do it, you start with an initial image and use a
photoeditor to make one or more regions transparent (i.e. they have a "hole" in
them). You then provide the path to this image at the dream> command line using
the `-I` switch. Stable Diffusion will only paint within the transparent region.
There's a catch. In the current implementation, you have to prepare the initial
image correctly so that the underlying colors are preserved under the
transparent area. Many imaging editing applications will by default erase the
color information under the transparent pixels and replace them with white or
black, which will lead to suboptimal inpainting. It often helps to apply
incomplete transparency, such as any value between 1 and 99%
You also must take care to export the PNG file in such a way that the color
information is preserved. There is often an option in the export dialog that
lets you specify this.
If your photoeditor is erasing the underlying color information, `dream.py` will
give you a big fat warning. If you can't find a way to coax your photoeditor to
retain color values under transparent areas, then you can combine the `-I` and
`-M` switches to provide both the original unedited image and the masked
(partially transparent) image:
```bash
invoke> "man with cat on shoulder" -I./images/man.png -M./images/man-transparent.png
```
## **Masking using Text**
You can also create a mask using a text prompt to select the part of the image
you want to alter, using the [clipseg](https://github.com/timojl/clipseg)
algorithm. This works on any image, not just ones generated by InvokeAI.
The `--text_mask` (short form `-tm`) option takes two arguments. The first
argument is a text description of the part of the image you wish to mask (paint
over). If the text description contains a space, you must surround it with
quotation marks. The optional second argument is the minimum threshold for the
mask classifier's confidence score, described in more detail below.
To see how this works in practice, here's an image of a still life painting that
I got off the web.
<figure markdown>
![still life scaled](../assets/still-life-scaled.jpg)
</figure>
You can selectively mask out the orange and replace it with a baseball in this
way:
```bash
invoke> a baseball -I /path/to/still_life.png -tm orange
```
<figure markdown>
![](../assets/still-life-inpainted.png)
</figure>
The clipseg classifier produces a confidence score for each region it
identifies. Generally regions that score above 0.5 are reliable, but if you are
getting too much or too little masking you can adjust the threshold down (to get
more mask), or up (to get less). In this example, by passing `-tm` a higher
value, we are insisting on a tigher mask. However, if you make it too high, the
orange may not be picked up at all!
```bash
invoke> a baseball -I /path/to/breakfast.png -tm orange 0.6
```
The `!mask` command may be useful for debugging problems with the text2mask
feature. The syntax is `!mask /path/to/image.png -tm <text> <threshold>`
It will generate three files:
- The image with the selected area highlighted.
- it will be named XXXXX.<imagename>.<prompt>.selected.png
- The image with the un-selected area highlighted.
- it will be named XXXXX.<imagename>.<prompt>.deselected.png
- The image with the selected area converted into a black and white image
according to the threshold level
- it will be named XXXXX.<imagename>.<prompt>.masked.png
The `.masked.png` file can then be directly passed to the `invoke>` prompt in
the CLI via the `-M` argument. Do not attempt this with the `selected.png` or
`deselected.png` files, as they contain some transparency throughout the image
and will not produce the desired results.
Here is an example of how `!mask` works:
```bash
invoke> !mask ./test-pictures/curly.png -tm hair 0.5
>> generating masks from ./test-pictures/curly.png
>> Initializing clipseg model for text to mask inference
Outputs:
[941.1] outputs/img-samples/000019.curly.hair.deselected.png: !mask ./test-pictures/curly.png -tm hair 0.5
[941.2] outputs/img-samples/000019.curly.hair.selected.png: !mask ./test-pictures/curly.png -tm hair 0.5
[941.3] outputs/img-samples/000019.curly.hair.masked.png: !mask ./test-pictures/curly.png -tm hair 0.5
```
<figure markdown>
![curly](../assets/outpainting/curly.png)
<figcaption>Original image "curly.png"</figcaption>
</figure>
<figure markdown>
![curly hair selected](../assets/inpainting/000019.curly.hair.selected.png)
<figcaption>000019.curly.hair.selected.png</figcaption>
</figure>
<figure markdown>
![curly hair deselected](../assets/inpainting/000019.curly.hair.deselected.png)
<figcaption>000019.curly.hair.deselected.png</figcaption>
</figure>
<figure markdown>
![curly hair masked](../assets/inpainting/000019.curly.hair.masked.png)
<figcaption>000019.curly.hair.masked.png</figcaption>
</figure>
It looks like we selected the hair pretty well at the 0.5 threshold (which is
the default, so we didn't actually have to specify it), so let's have some fun:
```bash
invoke> medusa with cobras -I ./test-pictures/curly.png -M 000019.curly.hair.masked.png -C20
>> loaded input image of size 512x512 from ./test-pictures/curly.png
...
Outputs:
[946] outputs/img-samples/000024.801380492.png: "medusa with cobras" -s 50 -S 801380492 -W 512 -H 512 -C 20.0 -I ./test-pictures/curly.png -A k_lms -f 0.75
```
<figure markdown>
![](../assets/inpainting/000024.801380492.png)
</figure>
You can also skip the `!mask` creation step and just select the masked
region directly:
```bash
invoke> medusa with cobras -I ./test-pictures/curly.png -tm hair -C20
```
## Using the RunwayML inpainting model
The
[RunwayML Inpainting Model v1.5](https://huggingface.co/runwayml/stable-diffusion-inpainting)
is a specialized version of
[Stable Diffusion v1.5](https://huggingface.co/spaces/runwayml/stable-diffusion-v1-5)
that contains extra channels specifically designed to enhance inpainting and
outpainting. While it can do regular `txt2img` and `img2img`, it really shines
when filling in missing regions. It has an almost uncanny ability to blend the
new regions with existing ones in a semantically coherent way.
To install the inpainting model, follow the
[instructions](../installation/050_INSTALLING_MODELS.md) for installing a new model.
You may use either the CLI (`invoke.py` script) or directly edit the
`configs/models.yaml` configuration file to do this. The main thing to watch out
for is that the the model `config` option must be set up to use
`v1-inpainting-inference.yaml` rather than the `v1-inference.yaml` file that is
used by Stable Diffusion 1.4 and 1.5.
After installation, your `models.yaml` should contain an entry that looks like
this one:
inpainting-1.5: weights: models/ldm/stable-diffusion-v1/sd-v1-5-inpainting.ckpt
description: SD inpainting v1.5 config:
configs/stable-diffusion/v1-inpainting-inference.yaml vae:
models/ldm/stable-diffusion-v1/vae-ft-mse-840000-ema-pruned.ckpt width: 512
height: 512
As shown in the example, you may include a VAE fine-tuning weights file as well.
This is strongly recommended.
To use the custom inpainting model, launch `invoke.py` with the argument
`--model inpainting-1.5` or alternatively from within the script use the
`!switch inpainting-1.5` command to load and switch to the inpainting model.
You can now do inpainting and outpainting exactly as described above, but there
will (likely) be a noticeable improvement in coherence. Txt2img and Img2img will
work as well.
There are a few caveats to be aware of:
1. The inpainting model is larger than the standard model, and will use nearly 4
GB of GPU VRAM. This makes it unlikely to run on a 4 GB graphics card.
2. When operating in Img2img mode, the inpainting model is much less steerable
than the standard model. It is great for making small changes, such as
changing the pattern of a fabric, or slightly changing a subject's expression
or hair, but the model will resist making the dramatic alterations that the
standard model lets you do.
3. While the `--hires` option works fine with the inpainting model, some special
features, such as `--embiggen` are disabled.
4. Prompt weighting (`banana++ sushi`) and merging work well with the inpainting
model, but prompt swapping
(`a ("fluffy cat").swap("smiling dog") eating a hotdog`) will not have any
effect due to the way the model is set up. You may use text masking (with
`-tm thing-to-mask`) as an effective replacement.
5. The model tends to oversharpen image if you use high step or CFG values. If
you need to do large steps, use the standard model.
6. The `--strength` (`-f`) option has no effect on the inpainting model due to
its fundamental differences with the standard model. It will always take the
full number of steps you specify.
## Troubleshooting
Here are some troubleshooting tips for inpainting and outpainting.
## Inpainting is not changing the masked region enough!
One of the things to understand about how inpainting works is that it is
equivalent to running img2img on just the masked (transparent) area. img2img
builds on top of the existing image data, and therefore will attempt to preserve
colors, shapes and textures to the best of its ability. Unfortunately this means
that if you want to make a dramatic change in the inpainted region, for example
replacing a red wall with a blue one, the algorithm will fight you.
You have a couple of options. The first is to increase the values of the
requested steps (`-sXXX`), strength (`-f0.XX`), and/or condition-free guidance
(`-CXX.X`). If this is not working for you, a more extreme step is to provide
the `--inpaint_replace 0.X` (`-r0.X`) option. This value ranges from 0.0 to 1.0.
The higher it is the less attention the algorithm will pay to the data
underneath the masked region. At high values this will enable you to replace
colored regions entirely, but beware that the masked region mayl not blend in
with the surrounding unmasked regions as well.
---
## Recipe for GIMP
[GIMP](https://www.gimp.org/) is a popular Linux photoediting tool.
1. Open image in GIMP.
2. Layer->Transparency->Add Alpha Channel
3. Use lasso tool to select region to mask
4. Choose Select -> Float to create a floating selection
5. Open the Layers toolbar (^L) and select "Floating Selection"
6. Set opacity to a value between 0% and 99%
7. Export as PNG
8. In the export dialogue, Make sure the "Save colour values from transparent
pixels" checkbox is selected.
---
## Recipe for Adobe Photoshop
1. Open image in Photoshop
<figure markdown>
![step1](../assets/step1.png)
</figure>
2. Use any of the selection tools (Marquee, Lasso, or Wand) to select the area
you desire to inpaint.
<figure markdown>
![step2](../assets/step2.png)
</figure>
3. Because we'll be applying a mask over the area we want to preserve, you
should now select the inverse by using the ++shift+ctrl+i++ shortcut, or
right clicking and using the "Select Inverse" option.
4. You'll now create a mask by selecting the image layer, and Masking the
selection. Make sure that you don't delete any of the underlying image, or
your inpainting results will be dramatically impacted.
<figure markdown>
![step4](../assets/step4.png)
</figure>
5. Make sure to hide any background layers that are present. You should see the
mask applied to your image layer, and the image on your canvas should display
the checkered background.
<figure markdown>
![step5](../assets/step5.png)
</figure>
6. Save the image as a transparent PNG by using `File`-->`Save a Copy` from the
menu bar, or by using the keyboard shortcut ++alt+ctrl+s++
<figure markdown>
![step6](../assets/step6.png)
</figure>
7. After following the inpainting instructions above (either through the CLI or
the Web UI), marvel at your newfound ability to selectively invoke. Lookin'
good!
<figure markdown>
![step7](../assets/step7.png)
</figure>
8. In the export dialogue, Make sure the "Save colour values from transparent
pixels" checkbox is selected.

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@ -1,171 +0,0 @@
---
title: Controlling Logging
---
# :material-image-off: Controlling Logging
## Controlling How InvokeAI Logs Status Messages
InvokeAI logs status messages using a configurable logging system. You
can log to the terminal window, to a designated file on the local
machine, to the syslog facility on a Linux or Mac, or to a properly
configured web server. You can configure several logs at the same
time, and control the level of message logged and the logging format
(to a limited extent).
Three command-line options control logging:
### `--log_handlers <handler1> <handler2> ...`
This option activates one or more log handlers. Options are "console",
"file", "syslog" and "http". To specify more than one, separate them
by spaces:
```bash
invokeai-web --log_handlers console syslog=/dev/log file=C:\Users\fred\invokeai.log
```
The format of these options is described below.
### `--log_format {plain|color|legacy|syslog}`
This controls the format of log messages written to the console. Only
the "console" log handler is currently affected by this setting.
* "plain" provides formatted messages like this:
```bash
[2023-05-24 23:18:2[2023-05-24 23:18:50,352]::[InvokeAI]::DEBUG --> this is a debug message
[2023-05-24 23:18:50,352]::[InvokeAI]::INFO --> this is an informational messages
[2023-05-24 23:18:50,352]::[InvokeAI]::WARNING --> this is a warning
[2023-05-24 23:18:50,352]::[InvokeAI]::ERROR --> this is an error
[2023-05-24 23:18:50,352]::[InvokeAI]::CRITICAL --> this is a critical error
```
* "color" produces similar output, but the text will be color coded to
indicate the severity of the message.
* "legacy" produces output similar to InvokeAI versions 2.3 and earlier:
```bash
### this is a critical error
*** this is an error
** this is a warning
>> this is an informational messages
| this is a debug message
```
* "syslog" produces messages suitable for syslog entries:
```bash
InvokeAI [2691178] <CRITICAL> this is a critical error
InvokeAI [2691178] <ERROR> this is an error
InvokeAI [2691178] <WARNING> this is a warning
InvokeAI [2691178] <INFO> this is an informational messages
InvokeAI [2691178] <DEBUG> this is a debug message
```
(note that the date, time and hostname will be added by the syslog
system)
### `--log_level {debug|info|warning|error|critical}`
Providing this command-line option will cause only messages at the
specified level or above to be emitted.
## Console logging
When "console" is provided to `--log_handlers`, messages will be
written to the command line window in which InvokeAI was launched. By
default, the color formatter will be used unless overridden by
`--log_format`.
## File logging
When "file" is provided to `--log_handlers`, entries will be written
to the file indicated in the path argument. By default, the "plain"
format will be used:
```bash
invokeai-web --log_handlers file=/var/log/invokeai.log
```
## Syslog logging
When "syslog" is requested, entries will be sent to the syslog
system. There are a variety of ways to control where the log message
is sent:
* Send to the local machine using the `/dev/log` socket:
```
invokeai-web --log_handlers syslog=/dev/log
```
* Send to the local machine using a UDP message:
```
invokeai-web --log_handlers syslog=localhost
```
* Send to the local machine using a UDP message on a nonstandard
port:
```
invokeai-web --log_handlers syslog=localhost:512
```
* Send to a remote machine named "loghost" on the local LAN using
facility LOG_USER and UDP packets:
```
invokeai-web --log_handlers syslog=loghost,facility=LOG_USER,socktype=SOCK_DGRAM
```
This can be abbreviated `syslog=loghost`, as LOG_USER and SOCK_DGRAM
are defaults.
* Send to a remote machine named "loghost" using the facility LOCAL0
and using a TCP socket:
```
invokeai-web --log_handlers syslog=loghost,facility=LOG_LOCAL0,socktype=SOCK_STREAM
```
If no arguments are specified (just a bare "syslog"), then the logging
system will look for a UNIX socket named `/dev/log`, and if not found
try to send a UDP message to `localhost`. The Macintosh OS used to
support logging to a socket named `/var/run/syslog`, but this feature
has since been disabled.
## Web logging
If you have access to a web server that is configured to log messages
when a particular URL is requested, you can log using the "http"
method:
```
invokeai-web --log_handlers http=http://my.server/path/to/logger,method=POST
```
The optional [,method=] part can be used to specify whether the URL
accepts GET (default) or POST messages.
Currently password authentication and SSL are not supported.
## Using the configuration file
You can set and forget logging options by adding a "Logging" section
to `invokeai.yaml`:
```
InvokeAI:
[... other settings...]
Logging:
log_handlers:
- console
- syslog=/dev/log
log_level: info
log_format: color
```

View File

@ -71,3 +71,6 @@ under the selected name and register it with InvokeAI.
use InvokeAI conventions - only alphanumeric letters and the
characters ".+-".
## Caveats
This is a new script and may contain bugs.

View File

@ -1,206 +0,0 @@
# Nodes Editor (Experimental)
🚨
*The node editor is experimental. We've made it accessible because we use it to develop the application, but we have not addressed the many known rough edges. It's very easy to shoot yourself in the foot, and we cannot offer support for it until it sees full release (ETA v3.1). Everything is subject to change without warning.*
🚨
The nodes editor is a blank canvas allowing for the use of individual functions and image transformations to control the image generation workflow. The node processing flow is usually done from left (inputs) to right (outputs), though linearity can become abstracted the more complex the node graph becomes. Nodes inputs and outputs are connected by dragging connectors from node to node.
To better understand how nodes are used, think of how an electric power bar works. It takes in one input (electricity from a wall outlet) and passes it to multiple devices through multiple outputs. Similarly, a node could have multiple inputs and outputs functioning at the same (or different) time, but all node outputs pass information onward like a power bar passes electricity. Not all outputs are compatible with all inputs, however - Each node has different constraints on how it is expecting to input/output information. In general, node outputs are colour-coded to match compatible inputs of other nodes.
## Anatomy of a Node
Individual nodes are made up of the following:
- Inputs: Edge points on the left side of the node window where you connect outputs from other nodes.
- Outputs: Edge points on the right side of the node window where you connect to inputs on other nodes.
- Options: Various options which are either manually configured, or overridden by connecting an output from another node to the input.
## Diffusion Overview
Taking the time to understand the diffusion process will help you to understand how to set up your nodes in the nodes editor.
There are two main spaces Stable Diffusion works in: image space and latent space.
Image space represents images in pixel form that you look at. Latent space represents compressed inputs. Its in latent space that Stable Diffusion processes images. A VAE (Variational Auto Encoder) is responsible for compressing and encoding inputs into latent space, as well as decoding outputs back into image space.
When you generate an image using text-to-image, multiple steps occur in latent space:
1. Random noise is generated at the chosen height and width. The noises characteristics are dictated by the chosen (or not chosen) seed. This noise tensor is passed into latent space. Well call this noise A.
1. Using a models U-Net, a noise predictor examines noise A, and the words tokenized by CLIP from your prompt (conditioning). It generates its own noise tensor to predict what the final image might look like in latent space. Well call this noise B.
1. Noise B is subtracted from noise A in an attempt to create a final latent image indicative of the inputs. This step is repeated for the number of sampler steps chosen.
1. The VAE decodes the final latent image from latent space into image space.
image-to-image is a similar process, with only step 1 being different:
1. The input image is decoded from image space into latent space by the VAE. Noise is then added to the input latent image. Denoising Strength dictates how much noise is added, 0 being none, and 1 being all-encompassing. Well call this noise A. The process is then the same as steps 2-4 in the text-to-image explanation above.
Furthermore, a model provides the CLIP prompt tokenizer, the VAE, and a U-Net (where noise prediction occurs given a prompt and initial noise tensor).
A noise scheduler (eg. DPM++ 2M Karras) schedules the subtraction of noise from the latent image across the sampler steps chosen (step 3 above). Less noise is usually subtracted at higher sampler steps.
## Node Types (Base Nodes)
| Node <img width=160 align="right"> | Function |
| ---------------------------------- | --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------|
| Add | Adds two numbers |
| CannyImageProcessor | Canny edge detection for ControlNet |
| ClipSkip | Skip layers in clip text_encoder model |
| Collect | Collects values into a collection |
| Prompt (Compel) | Parse prompt using compel package to conditioning |
| ContentShuffleImageProcessor | Applies content shuffle processing to image |
| ControlNet | Collects ControlNet info to pass to other nodes |
| CvInpaint | Simple inpaint using opencv |
| Divide | Divides two numbers |
| DynamicPrompt | Parses a prompt using adieyal/dynamic prompt's random or combinatorial generator |
| FloatLinearRange | Creates a range |
| HedImageProcessor | Applies HED edge detection to image |
| ImageBlur | Blurs an image |
| ImageChannel | Gets a channel from an image |
| ImageCollection | Load a collection of images and provide it as output |
| ImageConvert | Converts an image to a different mode |
| ImageCrop | Crops an image to a specified box. The box can be outside of the image. |
| ImageInverseLerp | Inverse linear interpolation of all pixels of an image |
| ImageLerp | Linear interpolation of all pixels of an image |
| ImageMultiply | Multiplies two images together using `PIL.ImageChops.Multiply()` |
| ImagePaste | Pastes an image into another image |
| ImageProcessor | Base class for invocations that reprocess images for ControlNet |
| ImageResize | Resizes an image to specific dimensions |
| ImageScale | Scales an image by a factor |
| ImageToLatents | Scales latents by a given factor |
| InfillColor | Infills transparent areas of an image with a solid color |
| InfillPatchMatch | Infills transparent areas of an image using the PatchMatch algorithm |
| InfillTile | Infills transparent areas of an image with tiles of the image |
| Inpaint | Generates an image using inpaint |
| Iterate | Iterates over a list of items |
| LatentsToImage | Generates an image from latents |
| LatentsToLatents | Generates latents using latents as base image |
| LeresImageProcessor | Applies leres processing to image |
| LineartAnimeImageProcessor | Applies line art anime processing to image |
| LineartImageProcessor | Applies line art processing to image |
| LoadImage | Load an image and provide it as output |
| Lora Loader | Apply selected lora to unet and text_encoder |
| Model Loader | Loads a main model, outputting its submodels |
| MaskFromAlpha | Extracts the alpha channel of an image as a mask |
| MediapipeFaceProcessor | Applies mediapipe face processing to image |
| MidasDepthImageProcessor | Applies Midas depth processing to image |
| MlsdImageProcessor | Applied MLSD processing to image |
| Multiply | Multiplies two numbers |
| Noise | Generates latent noise |
| NormalbaeImageProcessor | Applies NormalBAE processing to image |
| OpenposeImageProcessor | Applies Openpose processing to image |
| ParamFloat | A float parameter |
| ParamInt | An integer parameter |
| PidiImageProcessor | Applies PIDI processing to an image |
| Progress Image | Displays the progress image in the Node Editor |
| RandomInit | Outputs a single random integer |
| RandomRange | Creates a collection of random numbers |
| Range | Creates a range of numbers from start to stop with step |
| RangeOfSize | Creates a range from start to start + size with step |
| ResizeLatents | Resizes latents to explicit width/height (in pixels). Provided dimensions are floor-divided by 8. |
| RestoreFace | Restores faces in the image |
| ScaleLatents | Scales latents by a given factor |
| SegmentAnythingProcessor | Applies segment anything processing to image |
| ShowImage | Displays a provided image, and passes it forward in the pipeline |
| StepParamEasing | Experimental per-step parameter for easing for denoising steps |
| Subtract | Subtracts two numbers |
| TextToLatents | Generates latents from conditionings |
| TileResampleProcessor | Bass class for invocations that preprocess images for ControlNet |
| Upscale | Upscales an image |
| VAE Loader | Loads a VAE model, outputting a VaeLoaderOutput |
| ZoeDepthImageProcessor | Applies Zoe depth processing to image |
## Node Grouping Concepts
There are several node grouping concepts that can be examined with a narrow focus. These (and other) groupings can be pieced together to make up functional graph setups, and are important to understanding how groups of nodes work together as part of a whole. Note that the screenshots below aren't examples of complete functioning node graphs (see Examples).
### Noise
As described, an initial noise tensor is necessary for the latent diffusion process. As a result, all non-image *ToLatents nodes require a noise node input.
<img width="654" alt="groupsnoise" src="https://github.com/ymgenesis/InvokeAI/assets/25252829/2e8d297e-ad55-4d27-bc93-c119dad2a2c5">
### Conditioning
As described, conditioning is necessary for the latent diffusion process, whether empty or not. As a result, all non-image *ToLatents nodes require positive and negative conditioning inputs. Conditioning is reliant on a CLIP tokenizer provided by the Model Loader node.
<img width="1024" alt="groupsconditioning" src="https://github.com/ymgenesis/InvokeAI/assets/25252829/f8f7ad8a-8d9c-418e-b5ad-1437b774b27e">
### Image Space & VAE
The ImageToLatents node doesn't require a noise node input, but requires a VAE input to convert the image from image space into latent space. In reverse, the LatentsToImage node requires a VAE input to convert from latent space back into image space.
<img width="637" alt="groupsimgvae" src="https://github.com/ymgenesis/InvokeAI/assets/25252829/dd99969c-e0a8-4f78-9b17-3ffe179cef9a">
### Defined & Random Seeds
It is common to want to use both the same seed (for continuity) and random seeds (for variance). To define a seed, simply enter it into the 'Seed' field on a noise node. Conversely, the RandomInt node generates a random integer between 'Low' and 'High', and can be used as input to the 'Seed' edge point on a noise node to randomize your seed.
<img width="922" alt="groupsrandseed" src="https://github.com/ymgenesis/InvokeAI/assets/25252829/af55bc20-60f6-438e-aba5-3ec871443710">
### Control
Control means to guide the diffusion process to adhere to a defined input or structure. Control can be provided as input to non-image *ToLatents nodes from ControlNet nodes. ControlNet nodes usually require an image processor which converts an input image for use with ControlNet.
<img width="805" alt="groupscontrol" src="https://github.com/ymgenesis/InvokeAI/assets/25252829/cc9c5de7-23a7-46c8-bbad-1f3609d999a6">
### LoRA
The Lora Loader node lets you load a LoRA (say that ten times fast) and pass it as output to both the Prompt (Compel) and non-image *ToLatents nodes. A model's CLIP tokenizer is passed through the LoRA into Prompt (Compel), where it affects conditioning. A model's U-Net is also passed through the LoRA into a non-image *ToLatents node, where it affects noise prediction.
<img width="993" alt="groupslora" src="https://github.com/ymgenesis/InvokeAI/assets/25252829/630962b0-d914-4505-b3ea-ccae9b0269da">
### Scaling
Use the ImageScale, ScaleLatents, and Upscale nodes to upscale images and/or latent images. The chosen method differs across contexts. However, be aware that latents are already noisy and compressed at their original resolution; scaling an image could produce more detailed results.
<img width="644" alt="groupsallscale" src="https://github.com/ymgenesis/InvokeAI/assets/25252829/99314f05-dd9f-4b6d-b378-31de55346a13">
### Iteration + Multiple Images as Input
Iteration is a common concept in any processing, and means to repeat a process with given input. In nodes, you're able to use the Iterate node to iterate through collections usually gathered by the Collect node. The Iterate node has many potential uses, from processing a collection of images one after another, to varying seeds across multiple image generations and more. This screenshot demonstrates how to collect several images and pass them out one at a time.
<img width="788" alt="groupsiterate" src="https://github.com/ymgenesis/InvokeAI/assets/25252829/4af5ca27-82c9-4018-8c5b-024d3ee0a121">
### Multiple Image Generation + Random Seeds
Multiple image generation in the node editor is done using the RandomRange node. In this case, the 'Size' field represents the number of images to generate. As RandomRange produces a collection of integers, we need to add the Iterate node to iterate through the collection.
To control seeds across generations takes some care. The first row in the screenshot will generate multiple images with different seeds, but using the same RandomRange parameters across invocations will result in the same group of random seeds being used across the images, producing repeatable results. In the second row, adding the RandomInt node as input to RandomRange's 'Seed' edge point will ensure that seeds are varied across all images across invocations, producing varied results.
<img width="1027" alt="groupsmultigenseeding" src="https://github.com/ymgenesis/InvokeAI/assets/25252829/518d1b2b-fed1-416b-a052-ab06552521b3">
## Examples
With our knowledge of node grouping and the diffusion process, lets break down some basic graphs in the nodes editor. Note that a node's options can be overridden by inputs from other nodes. These examples aren't strict rules to follow and only demonstrate some basic configurations.
### Basic text-to-image Node Graph
<img width="875" alt="nodest2i" src="https://github.com/ymgenesis/InvokeAI/assets/25252829/17c67720-c376-4db8-94f0-5e00381a61ee">
- Model Loader: A necessity to generating images (as weve read above). We choose our model from the dropdown. It outputs a U-Net, CLIP tokenizer, and VAE.
- Prompt (Compel): Another necessity. Two prompt nodes are created. One will output positive conditioning (what you want, dog), one will output negative (what you dont want, cat). They both input the CLIP tokenizer that the Model Loader node outputs.
- Noise: Consider this noise A from step one of the text-to-image explanation above. Choose a seed number, width, and height.
- TextToLatents: This node takes many inputs for converting and processing text & noise from image space into latent space, hence the name TextTo**Latents**. In this setup, it inputs positive and negative conditioning from the prompt nodes for processing (step 2 above). It inputs noise from the noise node for processing (steps 2 & 3 above). Lastly, it inputs a U-Net from the Model Loader node for processing (step 2 above). It outputs latents for use in the next LatentsToImage node. Choose number of sampler steps, CFG scale, and scheduler.
- LatentsToImage: This node takes in processed latents from the TextToLatents node, and the models VAE from the Model Loader node which is responsible for decoding latents back into the image space, hence the name LatentsTo**Image**. This node is the last stop, and once the image is decoded, it is saved to the gallery.
### Basic image-to-image Node Graph
<img width="998" alt="nodesi2i" src="https://github.com/ymgenesis/InvokeAI/assets/25252829/3f2c95d5-cee7-4415-9b79-b46ee60a92fe">
- Model Loader: Choose a model from the dropdown.
- Prompt (Compel): Two prompt nodes. One positive (dog), one negative (dog). Same CLIP inputs from the Model Loader node as before.
- ImageToLatents: Upload a source image directly in the node window, via drag'n'drop from the gallery, or passed in as input. The ImageToLatents node inputs the VAE from the Model Loader node to decode the chosen image from image space into latent space, hence the name ImageTo**Latents**. It outputs latents for use in the next LatentsToLatents node. It also outputs the source image's width and height for use in the next Noise node if the final image is to be the same dimensions as the source image.
- Noise: A noise tensor is created with the width and height of the source image, and connected to the next LatentsToLatents node. Notice the width and height fields are overridden by the input from the ImageToLatents width and height outputs.
- LatentsToLatents: The inputs and options are nearly identical to TextToLatents, except that LatentsToLatents also takes latents as an input. Considering our source image is already converted to latents in the last ImageToLatents node, and text + noise are no longer the only inputs to process, we use the LatentsToLatents node.
- LatentsToImage: Like previously, the LatentsToImage node will use the VAE from the Model Loader as input to decode the latents from LatentsToLatents into image space, and save it to the gallery.
### Basic ControlNet Node Graph
<img width="703" alt="nodescontrol" src="https://github.com/ymgenesis/InvokeAI/assets/25252829/b02ded86-ceb4-44a2-9910-e19ad184d471">
- Model Loader
- Prompt (Compel)
- Noise: Width and height of the CannyImageProcessor ControlNet image is passed in to set the dimensions of the noise passed to TextToLatents.
- CannyImageProcessor: The CannyImageProcessor node is used to process the source image being used as a ControlNet. Each ControlNet processor node applies control in different ways, and has some different options to configure. Width and height are passed to noise, as mentioned. The processed ControlNet image is output to the ControlNet node.
- ControlNet: Select the type of control model. In this case, canny is chosen as the CannyImageProcessor was used to generate the ControlNet image. Configure the control node options, and pass the control output to TextToLatents.
- TextToLatents: Similar to the basic text-to-image example, except ControlNet is passed to the control input edge point.
- LatentsToImage

View File

@ -31,22 +31,10 @@ turned on and off on the command line using `--nsfw_checker` and
At installation time, InvokeAI will ask whether the checker should be
activated by default (neither argument given on the command line). The
response is stored in the InvokeAI initialization file
(`invokeai.yaml` in the InvokeAI root directory). You can change the
default at any time by opening this file in a text editor and
changing the line `nsfw_checker:` from true to false or vice-versa:
```
...
Features:
esrgan: true
internet_available: true
log_tokenization: false
nsfw_checker: true
patchmatch: true
restore: true
```
response is stored in the InvokeAI initialization file (usually
`.invokeai` in your home directory). You can change the default at any
time by opening this file in a text editor and commenting or
uncommenting the line `--nsfw_checker`.
## Caveats
@ -91,3 +79,11 @@ generates. However, it does write metadata into the PNG data area,
including the prompt used to generate the image and relevant parameter
settings. These fields can be examined using the `sd-metadata.py`
script that comes with the InvokeAI package.
Note that several other Stable Diffusion distributions offer
wavelet-based "invisible" watermarking. We have experimented with the
library used to generate these watermarks and have reached the
conclusion that while the watermarking library may be adding
watermarks to PNG images, the currently available version is unable to
retrieve them successfully. If and when a functioning version of the
library becomes available, we will offer this feature as well.

View File

@ -18,16 +18,43 @@ Output Example:
## **Seamless Tiling**
The seamless tiling mode causes generated images to seamlessly tile
with itself creating repetitive wallpaper-like patterns. To use it,
activate the Seamless Tiling option in the Web GUI and then select
whether to tile on the X (horizontal) and/or Y (vertical) axes. Tiling
will then be active for the next set of generations.
A nice prompt to test seamless tiling with is:
The seamless tiling mode causes generated images to seamlessly tile with itself. To use it, add the
`--seamless` option when starting the script which will result in all generated images to tile, or
for each `invoke>` prompt as shown here:
```python
invoke> "pond garden with lotus by claude monet" --seamless -s100 -n4
```
pond garden with lotus by claude monet"
By default this will tile on both the X and Y axes. However, you can also specify specific axes to tile on with `--seamless_axes`.
Possible values are `x`, `y`, and `x,y`:
```python
invoke> "pond garden with lotus by claude monet" --seamless --seamless_axes=x -s100 -n4
```
---
## **Shortcuts: Reusing Seeds**
Since it is so common to reuse seeds while refining a prompt, there is now a shortcut as of version
1.11. Provide a `-S` (or `--seed`) switch of `-1` to use the seed of the most recent image
generated. If you produced multiple images with the `-n` switch, then you can go back further
using `-2`, `-3`, etc. up to the first image generated by the previous command. Sorry, but you can't go
back further than one command.
Here's an example of using this to do a quick refinement. It also illustrates using the new `-G`
switch to turn on upscaling and face enhancement (see previous section):
```bash
invoke> a cute child playing hopscotch -G0.5
[...]
outputs/img-samples/000039.3498014304.png: "a cute child playing hopscotch" -s50 -W512 -H512 -C7.5 -mk_lms -S3498014304
# I wonder what it will look like if I bump up the steps and set facial enhancement to full strength?
invoke> a cute child playing hopscotch -G1.0 -s100 -S -1
reusing previous seed 3498014304
[...]
outputs/img-samples/000040.3498014304.png: "a cute child playing hopscotch" -G1.0 -s100 -W512 -H512 -C7.5 -mk_lms -S3498014304
```
---
@ -46,27 +73,66 @@ This will tell the sampler to invest 25% of its effort on the tabby cat aspect o
on the white duck aspect (surprisingly, this example actually works). The prompt weights can use any
combination of integers and floating point numbers, and they do not need to add up to 1.
---
## **Filename Format**
The argument `--fnformat` allows to specify the filename of the
image. Supported wildcards are all arguments what can be set such as
`perlin`, `seed`, `threshold`, `height`, `width`, `gfpgan_strength`,
`sampler_name`, `steps`, `model`, `upscale`, `prompt`, `cfg_scale`,
`prefix`.
The following prompt
```bash
dream> a red car --steps 25 -C 9.8 --perlin 0.1 --fnformat {prompt}_steps.{steps}_cfg.{cfg_scale}_perlin.{perlin}.png
```
generates a file with the name: `outputs/img-samples/a red car_steps.25_cfg.9.8_perlin.0.1.png`
---
## **Thresholding and Perlin Noise Initialization Options**
Under the Noise section of the Web UI, you will find two options named
Perlin Noise and Noise Threshold. [Perlin
noise](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Perlin_noise) is a type of
structured noise used to simulate terrain and other natural
textures. The slider controls the percentage of perlin noise that will
be mixed into the image at the beginning of generation. Adding a little
perlin noise to a generation will alter the image substantially.
The noise threshold limits the range of the latent values during
sampling and helps combat the oversharpening seem with higher CFG
scale values.
Two new options are the thresholding (`--threshold`) and the perlin noise initialization (`--perlin`) options. Thresholding limits the range of the latent values during optimization, which helps combat oversaturation with higher CFG scale values. Perlin noise initialization starts with a percentage (a value ranging from 0 to 1) of perlin noise mixed into the initial noise. Both features allow for more variations and options in the course of generating images.
For better intuition into what these options do in practice:
![here is a graphic demonstrating them both](../assets/truncation_comparison.jpg)
In generating this graphic, perlin noise at initialization was
programmatically varied going across on the diagram by values 0.0,
0.1, 0.2, 0.4, 0.5, 0.6, 0.8, 0.9, 1.0; and the threshold was varied
going down from 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 10, 20, 100. The other options are
fixed using the prompt "a portrait of a beautiful young lady" a CFG of
20, 100 steps, and a seed of 1950357039.
In generating this graphic, perlin noise at initialization was programmatically varied going across on the diagram by values 0.0, 0.1, 0.2, 0.4, 0.5, 0.6, 0.8, 0.9, 1.0; and the threshold was varied going down from
0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 10, 20, 100. The other options are fixed, so the initial prompt is as follows (no thresholding or perlin noise):
```bash
invoke> "a portrait of a beautiful young lady" -S 1950357039 -s 100 -C 20 -A k_euler_a --threshold 0 --perlin 0
```
Here's an example of another prompt used when setting the threshold to 5 and perlin noise to 0.2:
```bash
invoke> "a portrait of a beautiful young lady" -S 1950357039 -s 100 -C 20 -A k_euler_a --threshold 5 --perlin 0.2
```
!!! note
currently the thresholding feature is only implemented for the k-diffusion style samplers, and empirically appears to work best with `k_euler_a` and `k_dpm_2_a`. Using 0 disables thresholding. Using 0 for perlin noise disables using perlin noise for initialization. Finally, using 1 for perlin noise uses only perlin noise for initialization.
---
## **Simplified API**
For programmers who wish to incorporate stable-diffusion into other products, this repository
includes a simplified API for text to image generation, which lets you create images from a prompt
in just three lines of code:
```bash
from ldm.generate import Generate
g = Generate()
outputs = g.txt2img("a unicorn in manhattan")
```
Outputs is a list of lists in the format [filename1,seed1],[filename2,seed2]...].
Please see the documentation in ldm/generate.py for more information.
---

View File

@ -8,6 +8,12 @@ title: Postprocessing
This extension provides the ability to restore faces and upscale images.
Face restoration and upscaling can be applied at the time you generate the
images, or at any later time against a previously-generated PNG file, using the
[!fix](#fixing-previously-generated-images) command.
[Outpainting and outcropping](OUTPAINTING.md) can only be applied after the
fact.
## Face Fixing
The default face restoration module is GFPGAN. The default upscale is
@ -17,7 +23,8 @@ Real-ESRGAN. For an alternative face restoration module, see
As of version 1.14, environment.yaml will install the Real-ESRGAN package into
the standard install location for python packages, and will put GFPGAN into a
subdirectory of "src" in the InvokeAI directory. Upscaling with Real-ESRGAN
should "just work" without further intervention. Simply indicate the desired scale on
should "just work" without further intervention. Simply pass the `--upscale`
(`-U`) option on the `invoke>` command line, or indicate the desired scale on
the popup in the Web GUI.
**GFPGAN** requires a series of downloadable model files to work. These are
@ -34,75 +41,48 @@ reconstruction.
### Upscaling
Open the upscaling dialog by clicking on the "expand" icon located
above the image display area in the Web UI:
`-U : <upscaling_factor> <upscaling_strength>`
<figure markdown>
![upscale1](../assets/features/upscale-dialog.png)
</figure>
The upscaling prompt argument takes two values. The first value is a scaling
factor and should be set to either `2` or `4` only. This will either scale the
image 2x or 4x respectively using different models.
There are three different upscaling parameters that you can
adjust. The first is the scale itself, either 2x or 4x.
You can set the scaling stength between `0` and `1.0` to control intensity of
the of the scaling. This is handy because AI upscalers generally tend to smooth
out texture details. If you wish to retain some of those for natural looking
results, we recommend using values between `0.5 to 0.8`.
The second is the "Denoising Strength." Higher values will smooth out
the image and remove digital chatter, but may lose fine detail at
higher values.
Third, "Upscale Strength" allows you to adjust how the You can set the
scaling stength between `0` and `1.0` to control the intensity of the
scaling. AI upscalers generally tend to smooth out texture details. If
you wish to retain some of those for natural looking results, we
recommend using values between `0.5 to 0.8`.
[This figure](../assets/features/upscaling-montage.png) illustrates
the effects of denoising and strength. The original image was 512x512,
4x scaled to 2048x2048. The "original" version on the upper left was
scaled using simple pixel averaging. The remainder use the ESRGAN
upscaling algorithm at different levels of denoising and strength.
<figure markdown>
![upscaling](../assets/features/upscaling-montage.png){ width=720 }
</figure>
Both denoising and strength default to 0.75.
If you do not explicitly specify an upscaling_strength, it will default to 0.75.
### Face Restoration
InvokeAI offers alternative two face restoration algorithms,
[GFPGAN](https://github.com/TencentARC/GFPGAN) and
[CodeFormer](https://huggingface.co/spaces/sczhou/CodeFormer). These
algorithms improve the appearance of faces, particularly eyes and
mouths. Issues with faces are less common with the latest set of
Stable Diffusion models than with the original 1.4 release, but the
restoration algorithms can still make a noticeable improvement in
certain cases. You can also apply restoration to old photographs you
upload.
`-G : <facetool_strength>`
To access face restoration, click the "smiley face" icon in the
toolbar above the InvokeAI image panel. You will be presented with a
dialog that offers a choice between the two algorithm and sliders that
allow you to adjust their parameters. Alternatively, you may open the
left-hand accordion panel labeled "Face Restoration" and have the
restoration algorithm of your choice applied to generated images
automatically.
This prompt argument controls the strength of the face restoration that is being
applied. Similar to upscaling, values between `0.5 to 0.8` are recommended.
You can use either one or both without any conflicts. In cases where you use
both, the image will be first upscaled and then the face restoration process
will be executed to ensure you get the highest quality facial features.
Like upscaling, there are a number of parameters that adjust the face
restoration output. GFPGAN has a single parameter, `strength`, which
controls how much the algorithm is allowed to adjust the
image. CodeFormer has two parameters, `strength`, and `fidelity`,
which together control the quality of the output image as described in
the [CodeFormer project
page](https://shangchenzhou.com/projects/CodeFormer/). Default values
are 0.75 for both parameters, which achieves a reasonable balance
between changing the image too much and not enough.
`--save_orig`
[This figure](../assets/features/restoration-montage.png) illustrates
the effects of adjusting GFPGAN and CodeFormer parameters.
When you use either `-U` or `-G`, the final result you get is upscaled or face
modified. If you want to save the original Stable Diffusion generation, you can
use the `-save_orig` prompt argument to save the original unaffected version
too.
<figure markdown>
![upscaling](../assets/features/restoration-montage.png){ width=720 }
</figure>
### Example Usage
```bash
invoke> "superman dancing with a panda bear" -U 2 0.6 -G 0.4
```
This also works with img2img:
```bash
invoke> "a man wearing a pineapple hat" -I path/to/your/file.png -U 2 0.5 -G 0.6
```
!!! note
@ -115,8 +95,69 @@ the effects of adjusting GFPGAN and CodeFormer parameters.
process is complete. While the image generation is taking place, you will still be able to preview
the base images.
If you wish to stop during the image generation but want to upscale or face
restore a particular generated image, pass it again with the same prompt and
generated seed along with the `-U` and `-G` prompt arguments to perform those
actions.
## CodeFormer Support
This repo also allows you to perform face restoration using
[CodeFormer](https://github.com/sczhou/CodeFormer).
In order to setup CodeFormer to work, you need to download the models like with
GFPGAN. You can do this either by running `invokeai-configure` or by manually
downloading the
[model file](https://github.com/sczhou/CodeFormer/releases/download/v0.1.0/codeformer.pth)
and saving it to `ldm/invoke/restoration/codeformer/weights` folder.
You can use `-ft` prompt argument to swap between CodeFormer and the default
GFPGAN. The above mentioned `-G` prompt argument will allow you to control the
strength of the restoration effect.
### CodeFormer Usage
The following command will perform face restoration with CodeFormer instead of
the default gfpgan.
`<prompt> -G 0.8 -ft codeformer`
### Other Options
- `-cf` - cf or CodeFormer Fidelity takes values between `0` and `1`. 0 produces
high quality results but low accuracy and 1 produces lower quality results but
higher accuacy to your original face.
The following command will perform face restoration with CodeFormer. CodeFormer
will output a result that is closely matching to the input face.
`<prompt> -G 1.0 -ft codeformer -cf 0.9`
The following command will perform face restoration with CodeFormer. CodeFormer
will output a result that is the best restoration possible. This may deviate
slightly from the original face. This is an excellent option to use in
situations when there is very little facial data to work with.
`<prompt> -G 1.0 -ft codeformer -cf 0.1`
## Fixing Previously-Generated Images
It is easy to apply face restoration and/or upscaling to any
previously-generated file. Just use the syntax
`!fix path/to/file.png <options>`. For example, to apply GFPGAN at strength 0.8
and upscale 2X for a file named `./outputs/img-samples/000044.2945021133.png`,
just run:
```bash
invoke> !fix ./outputs/img-samples/000044.2945021133.png -G 0.8 -U 2
```
A new file named `000044.2945021133.fixed.png` will be created in the output
directory. Note that the `!fix` command does not replace the original file,
unlike the behavior at generate time.
## How to disable
If, for some reason, you do not wish to load the GFPGAN and/or ESRGAN libraries,
you can disable them on the invoke.py command line with the `--no_restore` and
`--no_esrgan` options, respectively.
`--no_upscale` options, respectively.

View File

@ -4,12 +4,77 @@ title: Prompting-Features
# :octicons-command-palette-24: Prompting-Features
## **Reading Prompts from a File**
You can automate `invoke.py` by providing a text file with the prompts you want
to run, one line per prompt. The text file must be composed with a text editor
(e.g. Notepad) and not a word processor. Each line should look like what you
would type at the invoke> prompt:
```bash
"a beautiful sunny day in the park, children playing" -n4 -C10
"stormy weather on a mountain top, goats grazing" -s100
"innovative packaging for a squid's dinner" -S137038382
```
Then pass this file's name to `invoke.py` when you invoke it:
```bash
python scripts/invoke.py --from_file "/path/to/prompts.txt"
```
You may also read a series of prompts from standard input by providing
a filename of `-`. For example, here is a python script that creates a
matrix of prompts, each one varying slightly:
```bash
#!/usr/bin/env python
adjectives = ['sunny','rainy','overcast']
samplers = ['k_lms','k_euler_a','k_heun']
cfg = [7.5, 9, 11]
for adj in adjectives:
for samp in samplers:
for cg in cfg:
print(f'a {adj} day -A{samp} -C{cg}')
```
Its output looks like this (abbreviated):
```bash
a sunny day -Aklms -C7.5
a sunny day -Aklms -C9
a sunny day -Aklms -C11
a sunny day -Ak_euler_a -C7.5
a sunny day -Ak_euler_a -C9
...
a overcast day -Ak_heun -C9
a overcast day -Ak_heun -C11
```
To feed it to invoke.py, pass the filename of "-"
```bash
python matrix.py | python scripts/invoke.py --from_file -
```
When the script is finished, each of the 27 combinations
of adjective, sampler and CFG will be executed.
The command-line interface provides `!fetch` and `!replay` commands
which allow you to read the prompts from a single previously-generated
image or a whole directory of them, write the prompts to a file, and
then replay them. Or you can create your own file of prompts and feed
them to the command-line client from within an interactive session.
See [Command-Line Interface](CLI.md) for details.
---
## **Negative and Unconditioned Prompts**
Any words between a pair of square brackets will instruct Stable
Diffusion to attempt to ban the concept from the generated image. The
same effect is achieved by placing words in the "Negative Prompts"
textbox in the Web UI.
Any words between a pair of square brackets will instruct Stable Diffusion to
attempt to ban the concept from the generated image.
```text
this is a test prompt [not really] to make you understand [cool] how this works.
@ -22,9 +87,7 @@ Here's a prompt that depicts what it does.
original prompt:
`#!bash "A fantastical translucent pony made of water and foam, ethereal, radiant, hyperalism, scottish folklore, digital painting, artstation, concept art, smooth, 8 k frostbite 3 engine, ultra detailed, art by artgerm and greg rutkowski and magali villeneuve"`
`#!bash parameters: steps=20, dimensions=512x768, CFG=7.5, Scheduler=k_euler_a, seed=1654590180`
`#!bash "A fantastical translucent pony made of water and foam, ethereal, radiant, hyperalism, scottish folklore, digital painting, artstation, concept art, smooth, 8 k frostbite 3 engine, ultra detailed, art by artgerm and greg rutkowski and magali villeneuve" -s 20 -W 512 -H 768 -C 7.5 -A k_euler_a -S 1654590180`
<figure markdown>
@ -36,8 +99,7 @@ That image has a woman, so if we want the horse without a rider, we can
influence the image not to have a woman by putting [woman] in the prompt, like
this:
`#!bash "A fantastical translucent poney made of water and foam, ethereal, radiant, hyperalism, scottish folklore, digital painting, artstation, concept art, smooth, 8 k frostbite 3 engine, ultra detailed, art by artgerm and greg rutkowski and magali villeneuve [woman]"`
(same parameters as above)
`#!bash "A fantastical translucent poney made of water and foam, ethereal, radiant, hyperalism, scottish folklore, digital painting, artstation, concept art, smooth, 8 k frostbite 3 engine, ultra detailed, art by artgerm and greg rutkowski and magali villeneuve [woman]" -s 20 -W 512 -H 768 -C 7.5 -A k_euler_a -S 1654590180`
<figure markdown>
@ -48,8 +110,7 @@ this:
That's nice - but say we also don't want the image to be quite so blue. We can
add "blue" to the list of negative prompts, so it's now [woman blue]:
`#!bash "A fantastical translucent poney made of water and foam, ethereal, radiant, hyperalism, scottish folklore, digital painting, artstation, concept art, smooth, 8 k frostbite 3 engine, ultra detailed, art by artgerm and greg rutkowski and magali villeneuve [woman blue]"`
(same parameters as above)
`#!bash "A fantastical translucent poney made of water and foam, ethereal, radiant, hyperalism, scottish folklore, digital painting, artstation, concept art, smooth, 8 k frostbite 3 engine, ultra detailed, art by artgerm and greg rutkowski and magali villeneuve [woman blue]" -s 20 -W 512 -H 768 -C 7.5 -A k_euler_a -S 1654590180`
<figure markdown>
@ -60,8 +121,7 @@ add "blue" to the list of negative prompts, so it's now [woman blue]:
Getting close - but there's no sense in having a saddle when our horse doesn't
have a rider, so we'll add one more negative prompt: [woman blue saddle].
`#!bash "A fantastical translucent poney made of water and foam, ethereal, radiant, hyperalism, scottish folklore, digital painting, artstation, concept art, smooth, 8 k frostbite 3 engine, ultra detailed, art by artgerm and greg rutkowski and magali villeneuve [woman blue saddle]"`
(same parameters as above)
`#!bash "A fantastical translucent poney made of water and foam, ethereal, radiant, hyperalism, scottish folklore, digital painting, artstation, concept art, smooth, 8 k frostbite 3 engine, ultra detailed, art by artgerm and greg rutkowski and magali villeneuve [woman blue saddle]" -s 20 -W 512 -H 768 -C 7.5 -A k_euler_a -S 1654590180`
<figure markdown>
@ -201,6 +261,19 @@ Prompt2prompt `.swap()` is not compatible with xformers, which will be temporari
The `prompt2prompt` code is based off
[bloc97's colab](https://github.com/bloc97/CrossAttentionControl).
Note that `prompt2prompt` is not currently working with the runwayML inpainting
model, and may never work due to the way this model is set up. If you attempt to
use `prompt2prompt` you will get the original image back. However, since this
model is so good at inpainting, a good substitute is to use the `clipseg` text
masking option:
```bash
invoke> a fluffy cat eating a hotdot
Outputs:
[1010] outputs/000025.2182095108.png: a fluffy cat eating a hotdog
invoke> a smiling dog eating a hotdog -I 000025.2182095108.png -tm cat
```
### Escaping parantheses () and speech marks ""
If the model you are using has parentheses () or speech marks "" as part of its
@ -301,48 +374,6 @@ summoning up the concept of some sort of scifi creature? Let's find out.
Indeed, removing the word "hybrid" produces an image that is more like what we'd
expect.
## Dynamic Prompts
Dynamic Prompts are a powerful feature designed to produce a variety of prompts based on user-defined options. Using a special syntax, you can construct a prompt with multiple possibilities, and the system will automatically generate a series of permutations based on your settings. This is extremely beneficial for ideation, exploring various scenarios, or testing different concepts swiftly and efficiently.
### Structure of a Dynamic Prompt
A Dynamic Prompt comprises of regular text, supplemented with alternatives enclosed within curly braces {} and separated by a vertical bar |. For example: {option1|option2|option3}. The system will then select one of the options to include in the final prompt. This flexible system allows for options to be placed throughout the text as needed.
Furthermore, Dynamic Prompts can designate multiple selections from a single group of options. This feature is triggered by prefixing the options with a numerical value followed by $$. For example, in {2$$option1|option2|option3}, the system will select two distinct options from the set.
### Creating Dynamic Prompts
To create a Dynamic Prompt, follow these steps:
Draft your sentence or phrase, identifying words or phrases with multiple possible options.
Encapsulate the different options within curly braces {}.
Within the braces, separate each option using a vertical bar |.
If you want to include multiple options from a single group, prefix with the desired number and $$.
For instance: A {house|apartment|lodge|cottage} in {summer|winter|autumn|spring} designed in {2$$style1|style2|style3}.
### How Dynamic Prompts Work
Once a Dynamic Prompt is configured, the system generates an array of combinations using the options provided. Each group of options in curly braces is treated independently, with the system selecting one option from each group. For a prefixed set (e.g., 2$$), the system will select two distinct options.
For example, the following prompts could be generated from the above Dynamic Prompt:
A house in summer designed in style1, style2
A lodge in autumn designed in style3, style1
A cottage in winter designed in style2, style3
And many more!
When the `Combinatorial` setting is on, Invoke will disable the "Images" selection, and generate every combination up until the setting for Max Prompts is reached.
When the `Combinatorial` setting is off, Invoke will randomly generate combinations up until the setting for Images has been reached.
### Tips and Tricks for Using Dynamic Prompts
Below are some useful strategies for creating Dynamic Prompts:
Utilize Dynamic Prompts to generate a wide spectrum of prompts, perfect for brainstorming and exploring diverse ideas.
Ensure that the options within a group are contextually relevant to the part of the sentence where they are used. For instance, group building types together, and seasons together.
Apply the 2$$ prefix when you want to incorporate more than one option from a single group. This becomes quite handy when mixing and matching different elements.
Experiment with different quantities for the prefix. For example, 3$$ will select three distinct options.
Be aware of coherence in your prompts. Although the system can generate all possible combinations, not all may semantically make sense. Therefore, carefully choose the options for each group.
Always review and fine-tune the generated prompts as needed. While Dynamic Prompts can help you generate a multitude of combinations, the final polishing and refining remain in your hands.
In conclusion, prompt blending is great for exploring creative space, but can be
difficult to direct. A forthcoming release of InvokeAI will feature more
deterministic prompt weighting.

View File

@ -0,0 +1,287 @@
---
title: Textual-Inversion
---
# :material-file-document: Textual Inversion
## **Personalizing Text-to-Image Generation**
You may personalize the generated images to provide your own styles or objects
by training a new LDM checkpoint and introducing a new vocabulary to the fixed
model as a (.pt) embeddings file. Alternatively, you may use or train
HuggingFace Concepts embeddings files (.bin) from
<https://huggingface.co/sd-concepts-library> and its associated
notebooks.
## **Hardware and Software Requirements**
You will need a GPU to perform training in a reasonable length of
time, and at least 12 GB of VRAM. We recommend using the [`xformers`
library](../installation/070_INSTALL_XFORMERS) to accelerate the
training process further. During training, about ~8 GB is temporarily
needed in order to store intermediate models, checkpoints and logs.
## **Preparing for Training**
To train, prepare a folder that contains 3-5 images that illustrate
the object or concept. It is good to provide a variety of examples or
poses to avoid overtraining the system. Format these images as PNG
(preferred) or JPG. You do not need to resize or crop the images in
advance, but for more control you may wish to do so.
Place the training images in a directory on the machine InvokeAI runs
on. We recommend placing them in a subdirectory of the
`text-inversion-training-data` folder located in the InvokeAI root
directory, ordinarily `~/invokeai` (Linux/Mac), or
`C:\Users\your_name\invokeai` (Windows). For example, to create an
embedding for the "psychedelic" style, you'd place the training images
into the directory
`~invokeai/text-inversion-training-data/psychedelic`.
## **Launching Training Using the Console Front End**
InvokeAI 2.3 and higher comes with a text console-based training front
end. From within the `invoke.sh`/`invoke.bat` Invoke launcher script,
start the front end by selecting choice (3):
```sh
Do you want to generate images using the
1. command-line
2. browser-based UI
3. textual inversion training
4. open the developer console
Please enter 1, 2, 3, or 4: [1] 3
```
From the command line, with the InvokeAI virtual environment active,
you can launch the front end with the command `invokeai-ti --gui`.
This will launch a text-based front end that will look like this:
<figure markdown>
![ti-frontend](../assets/textual-inversion/ti-frontend.png)
</figure>
The interface is keyboard-based. Move from field to field using
control-N (^N) to move to the next field and control-P (^P) to the
previous one. <Tab> and <shift-TAB> work as well. Once a field is
active, use the cursor keys. In a checkbox group, use the up and down
cursor keys to move from choice to choice, and <space> to select a
choice. In a scrollbar, use the left and right cursor keys to increase
and decrease the value of the scroll. In textfields, type the desired
values.
The number of parameters may look intimidating, but in most cases the
predefined defaults work fine. The red circled fields in the above
illustration are the ones you will adjust most frequently.
### Model Name
This will list all the diffusers models that are currently
installed. Select the one you wish to use as the basis for your
embedding. Be aware that if you use a SD-1.X-based model for your
training, you will only be able to use this embedding with other
SD-1.X-based models. Similarly, if you train on SD-2.X, you will only
be able to use the embeddings with models based on SD-2.X.
### Trigger Term
This is the prompt term you will use to trigger the embedding. Type a
single word or phrase you wish to use as the trigger, example
"psychedelic" (without angle brackets). Within InvokeAI, you will then
be able to activate the trigger using the syntax `<psychedelic>`.
### Initializer
This is a single character that is used internally during the training
process as a placeholder for the trigger term. It defaults to "*" and
can usually be left alone.
### Resume from last saved checkpoint
As training proceeds, textual inversion will write a series of
intermediate files that can be used to resume training from where it
was left off in the case of an interruption. This checkbox will be
automatically selected if you provide a previously used trigger term
and at least one checkpoint file is found on disk.
Note that as of 20 January 2023, resume does not seem to be working
properly due to an issue with the upstream code.
### Data Training Directory
This is the location of the images to be used for training. When you
select a trigger term like "my-trigger", the frontend will prepopulate
this field with `~/invokeai/text-inversion-training-data/my-trigger`,
but you can change the path to wherever you want.
### Output Destination Directory
This is the location of the logs, checkpoint files, and embedding
files created during training. When you select a trigger term like
"my-trigger", the frontend will prepopulate this field with
`~/invokeai/text-inversion-output/my-trigger`, but you can change the
path to wherever you want.
### Image resolution
The images in the training directory will be automatically scaled to
the value you use here. For best results, you will want to use the
same default resolution of the underlying model (512 pixels for
SD-1.5, 768 for the larger version of SD-2.1).
### Center crop images
If this is selected, your images will be center cropped to make them
square before resizing them to the desired resolution. Center cropping
can indiscriminately cut off the top of subjects' heads for portrait
aspect images, so if you have images like this, you may wish to use a
photoeditor to manually crop them to a square aspect ratio.
### Mixed precision
Select the floating point precision for the embedding. "no" will
result in a full 32-bit precision, "fp16" will provide 16-bit
precision, and "bf16" will provide mixed precision (only available
when XFormers is used).
### Max training steps
How many steps the training will take before the model converges. Most
training sets will converge with 2000-3000 steps.
### Batch size
This adjusts how many training images are processed simultaneously in
each step. Higher values will cause the training process to run more
quickly, but use more memory. The default size will run with GPUs with
as little as 12 GB.
### Learning rate
The rate at which the system adjusts its internal weights during
training. Higher values risk overtraining (getting the same image each
time), and lower values will take more steps to train a good
model. The default of 0.0005 is conservative; you may wish to increase
it to 0.005 to speed up training.
### Scale learning rate by number of GPUs, steps and batch size
If this is selected (the default) the system will adjust the provided
learning rate to improve performance.
### Use xformers acceleration
This will activate XFormers memory-efficient attention. You need to
have XFormers installed for this to have an effect.
### Learning rate scheduler
This adjusts how the learning rate changes over the course of
training. The default "constant" means to use a constant learning rate
for the entire training session. The other values scale the learning
rate according to various formulas.
Only "constant" is supported by the XFormers library.
### Gradient accumulation steps
This is a parameter that allows you to use bigger batch sizes than
your GPU's VRAM would ordinarily accommodate, at the cost of some
performance.
### Warmup steps
If "constant_with_warmup" is selected in the learning rate scheduler,
then this provides the number of warmup steps. Warmup steps have a
very low learning rate, and are one way of preventing early
overtraining.
## The training run
Start the training run by advancing to the OK button (bottom right)
and pressing <enter>. A series of progress messages will be displayed
as the training process proceeds. This may take an hour or two,
depending on settings and the speed of your system. Various log and
checkpoint files will be written into the output directory (ordinarily
`~/invokeai/text-inversion-output/my-model/`)
At the end of successful training, the system will copy the file
`learned_embeds.bin` into the InvokeAI root directory's `embeddings`
directory, using a subdirectory named after the trigger token. For
example, if the trigger token was `psychedelic`, then look for the
embeddings file in
`~/invokeai/embeddings/psychedelic/learned_embeds.bin`
You may now launch InvokeAI and try out a prompt that uses the trigger
term. For example `a plate of banana sushi in <psychedelic> style`.
## **Training with the Command-Line Script**
Training can also be done using a traditional command-line script. It
can be launched from within the "developer's console", or from the
command line after activating InvokeAI's virtual environment.
It accepts a large number of arguments, which can be summarized by
passing the `--help` argument:
```sh
invokeai-ti --help
```
Typical usage is shown here:
```sh
invokeai-ti \
--model=stable-diffusion-1.5 \
--resolution=512 \
--learnable_property=style \
--initializer_token='*' \
--placeholder_token='<psychedelic>' \
--train_data_dir=/home/lstein/invokeai/training-data/psychedelic \
--output_dir=/home/lstein/invokeai/text-inversion-training/psychedelic \
--scale_lr \
--train_batch_size=8 \
--gradient_accumulation_steps=4 \
--max_train_steps=3000 \
--learning_rate=0.0005 \
--resume_from_checkpoint=latest \
--lr_scheduler=constant \
--mixed_precision=fp16 \
--only_save_embeds
```
## Using Embeddings
After training completes, the resultant embeddings will be saved into your `$INVOKEAI_ROOT/embeddings/<trigger word>/learned_embeds.bin`.
These will be automatically loaded when you start InvokeAI.
Add the trigger word, surrounded by angle brackets, to use that embedding. For example, if your trigger word was `terence`, use `<terence>` in prompts. This is the same syntax used by the HuggingFace concepts library.
**Note:** `.pt` embeddings do not require the angle brackets.
## Troubleshooting
### `Cannot load embedding for <trigger>. It was trained on a model with token dimension 1024, but the current model has token dimension 768`
Messages like this indicate you trained the embedding on a different base model than the currently selected one.
For example, in the error above, the training was done on SD2.1 (768x768) but it was used on SD1.5 (512x512).
## Reading
For more information on textual inversion, please see the following
resources:
* The [textual inversion repository](https://github.com/rinongal/textual_inversion) and
associated paper for details and limitations.
* [HuggingFace's textual inversion training
page](https://huggingface.co/docs/diffusers/training/text_inversion)
* [HuggingFace example script
documentation](https://github.com/huggingface/diffusers/tree/main/examples/textual_inversion)
(Note that this script is similar to, but not identical, to
`textual_inversion`, but produces embed files that are completely compatible.
---
copyright (c) 2023, Lincoln Stein and the InvokeAI Development Team

View File

@ -1,286 +0,0 @@
---
title: Training
---
# :material-file-document: Training
# Textual Inversion Training
## **Personalizing Text-to-Image Generation**
You may personalize the generated images to provide your own styles or objects
by training a new LDM checkpoint and introducing a new vocabulary to the fixed
model as a (.pt) embeddings file. Alternatively, you may use or train
HuggingFace Concepts embeddings files (.bin) from
<https://huggingface.co/sd-concepts-library> and its associated
notebooks.
## **Hardware and Software Requirements**
You will need a GPU to perform training in a reasonable length of
time, and at least 12 GB of VRAM. We recommend using the [`xformers`
library](../installation/070_INSTALL_XFORMERS.md) to accelerate the
training process further. During training, about ~8 GB is temporarily
needed in order to store intermediate models, checkpoints and logs.
## **Preparing for Training**
To train, prepare a folder that contains 3-5 images that illustrate
the object or concept. It is good to provide a variety of examples or
poses to avoid overtraining the system. Format these images as PNG
(preferred) or JPG. You do not need to resize or crop the images in
advance, but for more control you may wish to do so.
Place the training images in a directory on the machine InvokeAI runs
on. We recommend placing them in a subdirectory of the
`text-inversion-training-data` folder located in the InvokeAI root
directory, ordinarily `~/invokeai` (Linux/Mac), or
`C:\Users\your_name\invokeai` (Windows). For example, to create an
embedding for the "psychedelic" style, you'd place the training images
into the directory
`~invokeai/text-inversion-training-data/psychedelic`.
## **Launching Training Using the Console Front End**
InvokeAI 2.3 and higher comes with a text console-based training front
end. From within the `invoke.sh`/`invoke.bat` Invoke launcher script,
start the front end by selecting choice (3):
```sh
Do you want to generate images using the
1: Browser-based UI
2: Command-line interface
3: Run textual inversion training
4: Merge models (diffusers type only)
5: Download and install models
6: Change InvokeAI startup options
7: Re-run the configure script to fix a broken install
8: Open the developer console
9: Update InvokeAI
10: Command-line help
Q: Quit
Please enter 1-10, Q: [1]
```
From the command line, with the InvokeAI virtual environment active,
you can launch the front end with the command `invokeai-ti --gui`.
This will launch a text-based front end that will look like this:
<figure markdown>
![ti-frontend](../assets/textual-inversion/ti-frontend.png)
</figure>
The interface is keyboard-based. Move from field to field using
control-N (^N) to move to the next field and control-P (^P) to the
previous one. <Tab> and <shift-TAB> work as well. Once a field is
active, use the cursor keys. In a checkbox group, use the up and down
cursor keys to move from choice to choice, and <space> to select a
choice. In a scrollbar, use the left and right cursor keys to increase
and decrease the value of the scroll. In textfields, type the desired
values.
The number of parameters may look intimidating, but in most cases the
predefined defaults work fine. The red circled fields in the above
illustration are the ones you will adjust most frequently.
### Model Name
This will list all the diffusers models that are currently
installed. Select the one you wish to use as the basis for your
embedding. Be aware that if you use a SD-1.X-based model for your
training, you will only be able to use this embedding with other
SD-1.X-based models. Similarly, if you train on SD-2.X, you will only
be able to use the embeddings with models based on SD-2.X.
### Trigger Term
This is the prompt term you will use to trigger the embedding. Type a
single word or phrase you wish to use as the trigger, example
"psychedelic" (without angle brackets). Within InvokeAI, you will then
be able to activate the trigger using the syntax `<psychedelic>`.
### Initializer
This is a single character that is used internally during the training
process as a placeholder for the trigger term. It defaults to "*" and
can usually be left alone.
### Resume from last saved checkpoint
As training proceeds, textual inversion will write a series of
intermediate files that can be used to resume training from where it
was left off in the case of an interruption. This checkbox will be
automatically selected if you provide a previously used trigger term
and at least one checkpoint file is found on disk.
Note that as of 20 January 2023, resume does not seem to be working
properly due to an issue with the upstream code.
### Data Training Directory
This is the location of the images to be used for training. When you
select a trigger term like "my-trigger", the frontend will prepopulate
this field with `~/invokeai/text-inversion-training-data/my-trigger`,
but you can change the path to wherever you want.
### Output Destination Directory
This is the location of the logs, checkpoint files, and embedding
files created during training. When you select a trigger term like
"my-trigger", the frontend will prepopulate this field with
`~/invokeai/text-inversion-output/my-trigger`, but you can change the
path to wherever you want.
### Image resolution
The images in the training directory will be automatically scaled to
the value you use here. For best results, you will want to use the
same default resolution of the underlying model (512 pixels for
SD-1.5, 768 for the larger version of SD-2.1).
### Center crop images
If this is selected, your images will be center cropped to make them
square before resizing them to the desired resolution. Center cropping
can indiscriminately cut off the top of subjects' heads for portrait
aspect images, so if you have images like this, you may wish to use a
photoeditor to manually crop them to a square aspect ratio.
### Mixed precision
Select the floating point precision for the embedding. "no" will
result in a full 32-bit precision, "fp16" will provide 16-bit
precision, and "bf16" will provide mixed precision (only available
when XFormers is used).
### Max training steps
How many steps the training will take before the model converges. Most
training sets will converge with 2000-3000 steps.
### Batch size
This adjusts how many training images are processed simultaneously in
each step. Higher values will cause the training process to run more
quickly, but use more memory. The default size will run with GPUs with
as little as 12 GB.
### Learning rate
The rate at which the system adjusts its internal weights during
training. Higher values risk overtraining (getting the same image each
time), and lower values will take more steps to train a good
model. The default of 0.0005 is conservative; you may wish to increase
it to 0.005 to speed up training.
### Scale learning rate by number of GPUs, steps and batch size
If this is selected (the default) the system will adjust the provided
learning rate to improve performance.
### Use xformers acceleration
This will activate XFormers memory-efficient attention. You need to
have XFormers installed for this to have an effect.
### Learning rate scheduler
This adjusts how the learning rate changes over the course of
training. The default "constant" means to use a constant learning rate
for the entire training session. The other values scale the learning
rate according to various formulas.
Only "constant" is supported by the XFormers library.
### Gradient accumulation steps
This is a parameter that allows you to use bigger batch sizes than
your GPU's VRAM would ordinarily accommodate, at the cost of some
performance.
### Warmup steps
If "constant_with_warmup" is selected in the learning rate scheduler,
then this provides the number of warmup steps. Warmup steps have a
very low learning rate, and are one way of preventing early
overtraining.
## The training run
Start the training run by advancing to the OK button (bottom right)
and pressing <enter>. A series of progress messages will be displayed
as the training process proceeds. This may take an hour or two,
depending on settings and the speed of your system. Various log and
checkpoint files will be written into the output directory (ordinarily
`~/invokeai/text-inversion-output/my-model/`)
At the end of successful training, the system will copy the file
`learned_embeds.bin` into the InvokeAI root directory's `embeddings`
directory, using a subdirectory named after the trigger token. For
example, if the trigger token was `psychedelic`, then look for the
embeddings file in
`~/invokeai/embeddings/psychedelic/learned_embeds.bin`
You may now launch InvokeAI and try out a prompt that uses the trigger
term. For example `a plate of banana sushi in <psychedelic> style`.
## **Training with the Command-Line Script**
Training can also be done using a traditional command-line script. It
can be launched from within the "developer's console", or from the
command line after activating InvokeAI's virtual environment.
It accepts a large number of arguments, which can be summarized by
passing the `--help` argument:
```sh
invokeai-ti --help
```
Typical usage is shown here:
```sh
invokeai-ti \
--model=stable-diffusion-1.5 \
--resolution=512 \
--learnable_property=style \
--initializer_token='*' \
--placeholder_token='<psychedelic>' \
--train_data_dir=/home/lstein/invokeai/training-data/psychedelic \
--output_dir=/home/lstein/invokeai/text-inversion-training/psychedelic \
--scale_lr \
--train_batch_size=8 \
--gradient_accumulation_steps=4 \
--max_train_steps=3000 \
--learning_rate=0.0005 \
--resume_from_checkpoint=latest \
--lr_scheduler=constant \
--mixed_precision=fp16 \
--only_save_embeds
```
## Troubleshooting
### `Cannot load embedding for <trigger>. It was trained on a model with token dimension 1024, but the current model has token dimension 768`
Messages like this indicate you trained the embedding on a different base model than the currently selected one.
For example, in the error above, the training was done on SD2.1 (768x768) but it was used on SD1.5 (512x512).
## Reading
For more information on textual inversion, please see the following
resources:
* The [textual inversion repository](https://github.com/rinongal/textual_inversion) and
associated paper for details and limitations.
* [HuggingFace's textual inversion training
page](https://huggingface.co/docs/diffusers/training/text_inversion)
* [HuggingFace example script
documentation](https://github.com/huggingface/diffusers/tree/main/examples/textual_inversion)
(Note that this script is similar to, but not identical, to
`textual_inversion`, but produces embed files that are completely compatible.
---
copyright (c) 2023, Lincoln Stein and the InvokeAI Development Team

View File

@ -6,7 +6,9 @@ title: Variations
## Intro
InvokeAI's support for variations enables you to do the following:
Release 1.13 of SD-Dream adds support for image variations.
You are able to do the following:
1. Generate a series of systematic variations of an image, given a prompt. The
amount of variation from one image to the next can be controlled.
@ -28,7 +30,19 @@ The prompt we will use throughout is:
This will be indicated as `#!bash "prompt"` in the examples below.
First we let SD create a series of images in the usual way, in this case
requesting six iterations.
requesting six iterations:
```bash
invoke> lucy lawless as xena, warrior princess, character portrait, high resolution -n6
...
Outputs:
./outputs/Xena/000001.1579445059.png: "prompt" -s50 -W512 -H512 -C7.5 -Ak_lms -S1579445059
./outputs/Xena/000001.1880768722.png: "prompt" -s50 -W512 -H512 -C7.5 -Ak_lms -S1880768722
./outputs/Xena/000001.332057179.png: "prompt" -s50 -W512 -H512 -C7.5 -Ak_lms -S332057179
./outputs/Xena/000001.2224800325.png: "prompt" -s50 -W512 -H512 -C7.5 -Ak_lms -S2224800325
./outputs/Xena/000001.465250761.png: "prompt" -s50 -W512 -H512 -C7.5 -Ak_lms -S465250761
./outputs/Xena/000001.3357757885.png: "prompt" -s50 -W512 -H512 -C7.5 -Ak_lms -S3357757885
```
<figure markdown>
![var1](../assets/variation_walkthru/000001.3357757885.png)
@ -39,16 +53,22 @@ requesting six iterations.
## Step 2 - Generating Variations
Let's try to generate some variations on this image. We select the "*"
symbol in the line of icons above the image in order to fix the prompt
and seed. Then we open up the "Variations" section of the generation
panel and use the slider to set the variation amount to 0.2. The
higher this value, the more each generated image will differ from the
previous one.
Let's try to generate some variations. Using the same seed, we pass the argument
`-v0.1` (or --variant_amount), which generates a series of variations each
differing by a variation amount of 0.2. This number ranges from `0` to `1.0`,
with higher numbers being larger amounts of variation.
Now we run the prompt a second time, requesting six iterations. You
will see six images that are thematically related to each other. Try
increasing and decreasing the variation amount and see what happens.
```bash
invoke> "prompt" -n6 -S3357757885 -v0.2
...
Outputs:
./outputs/Xena/000002.784039624.png: "prompt" -s50 -W512 -H512 -C7.5 -Ak_lms -V 784039624:0.2 -S3357757885
./outputs/Xena/000002.3647897225.png: "prompt" -s50 -W512 -H512 -C7.5 -Ak_lms -V 3647897225:0.2 -S3357757885
./outputs/Xena/000002.917731034.png: "prompt" -s50 -W512 -H512 -C7.5 -Ak_lms -V 917731034:0.2 -S3357757885
./outputs/Xena/000002.4116285959.png: "prompt" -s50 -W512 -H512 -C7.5 -Ak_lms -V 4116285959:0.2 -S3357757885
./outputs/Xena/000002.1614299449.png: "prompt" -s50 -W512 -H512 -C7.5 -Ak_lms -V 1614299449:0.2 -S3357757885
./outputs/Xena/000002.1335553075.png: "prompt" -s50 -W512 -H512 -C7.5 -Ak_lms -V 1335553075:0.2 -S3357757885
```
### **Variation Sub Seeding**

View File

@ -76,10 +76,10 @@ From top to bottom, these are:
with outpainting,and modify interior portions of the image with
inpainting, erase portions of a starting image and have the AI fill in
the erased region from a text prompt.
4. Node Editor - this panel allows you to create
4. Workflow Management (not yet implemented) - this panel will allow you to create
pipelines of common operations and combine them into workflows.
5. Model Manager - this panel allows you to import and configure new
models using URLs, local paths, or HuggingFace diffusers repo_ids.
5. Training (not yet implemented) - this panel will provide an interface to [textual
inversion training](TEXTUAL_INVERSION.md) and fine tuning.
The inpainting, outpainting and postprocessing tabs are currently in
development. However, limited versions of their features can already be accessed
@ -299,6 +299,14 @@ initial image" icons are located.
See the [Unified Canvas Guide](UNIFIED_CANVAS.md)
## Parting remarks
This concludes the walkthrough, but there are several more features that you can
explore. Please check out the [Command Line Interface](CLI.md) documentation for
further explanation of the advanced features that were not covered here.
The WebUI is only rapid development. Check back regularly for updates!
## Reference
### Additional Options
@ -341,9 +349,11 @@ the settings configured in the toolbar.
See below for additional documentation related to each feature:
- [Core Prompt Settings](./CLI.md)
- [Variations](./VARIATIONS.md)
- [Upscaling](./POSTPROCESS.md#upscaling)
- [Image to Image](./IMG2IMG.md)
- [Inpainting](./INPAINTING.md)
- [Other](./OTHER.md)
#### Invocation Gallery

View File

@ -13,16 +13,28 @@ Build complex scenes by combine and modifying multiple images in a stepwise
fashion. This feature combines img2img, inpainting and outpainting in
a single convenient digital artist-optimized user interface.
### * The [Command Line Interface (CLI)](CLI.md)
Scriptable access to InvokeAI's features.
## Image Generation
### * [Prompt Engineering](PROMPTS.md)
Get the images you want with the InvokeAI prompt engineering language.
## * [Post-Processing](POSTPROCESS.md)
Restore mangled faces and make images larger with upscaling. Also see the [Embiggen Upscaling Guide](EMBIGGEN.md).
## * The [Concepts Library](CONCEPTS.md)
Add custom subjects and styles using HuggingFace's repository of embeddings.
### * [Image-to-Image Guide](IMG2IMG.md)
### * [Image-to-Image Guide for the CLI](IMG2IMG.md)
Use a seed image to build new creations in the CLI.
### * [Inpainting Guide for the CLI](INPAINTING.md)
Selectively erase and replace portions of an existing image in the CLI.
### * [Outpainting Guide for the CLI](OUTPAINTING.md)
Extend the borders of the image with an "outcrop" function within the CLI.
### * [Generating Variations](VARIATIONS.md)
Have an image you like and want to generate many more like it? Variations
are the ticket.
@ -37,7 +49,7 @@ guide also covers optimizing models to load quickly.
Teach an old model new tricks. Merge 2-3 models together to create a
new model that combines characteristics of the originals.
## * [Textual Inversion](TRAINING.md)
## * [Textual Inversion](TEXTUAL_INVERSION.md)
Personalize models by adding your own style or subjects.
# Other Features
@ -45,9 +57,6 @@ Personalize models by adding your own style or subjects.
## * [The NSFW Checker](NSFW.md)
Prevent InvokeAI from displaying unwanted racy images.
## * [Controlling Logging](LOGGING.md)
Control how InvokeAI logs status messages.
## * [Miscellaneous](OTHER.md)
Run InvokeAI on Google Colab, generate images with repeating patterns,
batch process a file of prompts, increase the "creativity" of image

View File

@ -13,7 +13,6 @@ title: Home
<div align="center" markdown>
[![project logo](assets/invoke_ai_banner.png)](https://github.com/invoke-ai/InvokeAI)
[![discord badge]][discord link]
@ -68,7 +67,7 @@ title: Home
implementation of Stable Diffusion, the open source text-to-image and
image-to-image generator. It provides a streamlined process with various new
features and options to aid the image generation process. It runs on Windows,
Mac and Linux machines, and runs on GPU cards with as little as 4 GB of RAM.
Mac and Linux machines, and runs on GPU cards with as little as 4 GB or RAM.
**Quick links**: [<a href="https://discord.gg/ZmtBAhwWhy">Discord Server</a>]
[<a href="https://github.com/invoke-ai/InvokeAI/">Code and Downloads</a>] [<a
@ -132,13 +131,17 @@ This method is recommended for those familiar with running Docker containers
- [WebUI overview](features/WEB.md)
- [WebUI hotkey reference guide](features/WEBUIHOTKEYS.md)
- [WebUI Unified Canvas for Img2Img, inpainting and outpainting](features/UNIFIED_CANVAS.md)
<!-- separator -->
### The InvokeAI Command Line Interface
- [Command Line Interace Reference Guide](features/CLI.md)
<!-- separator -->
### Image Management
- [Image2Image](features/IMG2IMG.md)
- [Inpainting](features/INPAINTING.md)
- [Outpainting](features/OUTPAINTING.md)
- [Adding custom styles and subjects](features/CONCEPTS.md)
- [Upscaling and Face Reconstruction](features/POSTPROCESS.md)
- [Embiggen upscaling](features/EMBIGGEN.md)
- [Other Features](features/OTHER.md)
<!-- separator -->
@ -146,69 +149,90 @@ This method is recommended for those familiar with running Docker containers
- [Installing](installation/050_INSTALLING_MODELS.md)
- [Model Merging](features/MODEL_MERGING.md)
- [Style/Subject Concepts and Embeddings](features/CONCEPTS.md)
- [Textual Inversion](features/TEXTUAL_INVERSION.md)
- [Not Safe for Work (NSFW) Checker](features/NSFW.md)
<!-- seperator -->
### Prompt Engineering
- [Prompt Syntax](features/PROMPTS.md)
- [Generating Variations](features/VARIATIONS.md)
### InvokeAI Configuration
- [Guide to InvokeAI Runtime Settings](features/CONFIGURATION.md)
## :octicons-log-16: Latest Changes
## :octicons-log-16: Important Changes Since Version 2.3
### v2.3.0 <small>(9 February 2023)</small>
### Nodes
#### Migration to Stable Diffusion `diffusers` models
Behind the scenes, InvokeAI has been completely rewritten to support
"nodes," small unitary operations that can be combined into graphs to
form arbitrary workflows. For example, there is a prompt node that
processes the prompt string and feeds it to a text2latent node that
generates a latent image. The latents are then fed to a latent2image
node that translates the latent image into a PNG.
Previous versions of InvokeAI supported the original model file format introduced with Stable Diffusion 1.4. In the original format, known variously as "checkpoint", or "legacy" format, there is a single large weights file ending with `.ckpt` or `.safetensors`. Though this format has served the community well, it has a number of disadvantages, including file size, slow loading times, and a variety of non-standard variants that require special-case code to handle. In addition, because checkpoint files are actually a bundle of multiple machine learning sub-models, it is hard to swap different sub-models in and out, or to share common sub-models. A new format, introduced by the StabilityAI company in collaboration with HuggingFace, is called `diffusers` and consists of a directory of individual models. The most immediate benefit of `diffusers` is that they load from disk very quickly. A longer term benefit is that in the near future `diffusers` models will be able to share common sub-models, dramatically reducing disk space when you have multiple fine-tune models derived from the same base.
The WebGUI has a node editor that allows you to graphically design and
execute custom node graphs. The ability to save and load graphs is
still a work in progress, but coming soon.
When you perform a new install of version 2.3.0, you will be offered the option to install the `diffusers` versions of a number of popular SD models, including Stable Diffusion versions 1.5 and 2.1 (including the 768x768 pixel version of 2.1). These will act and work just like the checkpoint versions. Do not be concerned if you already have a lot of ".ckpt" or ".safetensors" models on disk! InvokeAI 2.3.0 can still load these and generate images from them without any extra intervention on your part.
### Command-Line Interface Retired
To take advantage of the optimized loading times of `diffusers` models, InvokeAI offers options to convert legacy checkpoint models into optimized `diffusers` models. If you use the `invokeai` command line interface, the relevant commands are:
The original "invokeai" command-line interface has been retired. The
`invokeai` command will now launch a new command-line client that can
be used by developers to create and test nodes. It is not intended to
be used for routine image generation or manipulation.
* `!convert_model` -- Take the path to a local checkpoint file or a URL that is pointing to one, convert it into a `diffusers` model, and import it into InvokeAI's models registry file.
* `!optimize_model` -- If you already have a checkpoint model in your InvokeAI models file, this command will accept its short name and convert it into a like-named `diffusers` model, optionally deleting the original checkpoint file.
* `!import_model` -- Take the local path of either a checkpoint file or a `diffusers` model directory and import it into InvokeAI's registry file. You may also provide the ID of any diffusers model that has been published on the [HuggingFace models repository](https://huggingface.co/models?pipeline_tag=text-to-image&sort=downloads) and it will be downloaded and installed automatically.
To launch the Web GUI from the command-line, use the command
`invokeai-web` rather than the traditional `invokeai --web`.
The WebGUI offers similar functionality for model management.
### ControlNet
For advanced users, new command-line options provide additional functionality. Launching `invokeai` with the argument `--autoconvert <path to directory>` takes the path to a directory of checkpoint files, automatically converts them into `diffusers` models and imports them. Each time the script is launched, the directory will be scanned for new checkpoint files to be loaded. Alternatively, the `--ckpt_convert` argument will cause any checkpoint or safetensors model that is already registered with InvokeAI to be converted into a `diffusers` model on the fly, allowing you to take advantage of future diffusers-only features without explicitly converting the model and saving it to disk.
This version of InvokeAI features ControlNet, a system that allows you
to achieve exact poses for human and animal figures by providing a
model to follow. Full details are found in [ControlNet](features/CONTROLNET.md)
Please see [INSTALLING MODELS](https://invoke-ai.github.io/InvokeAI/installation/050_INSTALLING_MODELS/) for more information on model management in both the command-line and Web interfaces.
### New Schedulers
#### Support for the `XFormers` Memory-Efficient Crossattention Package
The list of schedulers has been completely revamped and brought up to date:
On CUDA (Nvidia) systems, version 2.3.0 supports the `XFormers` library. Once installed, the`xformers` package dramatically reduces the memory footprint of loaded Stable Diffusion models files and modestly increases image generation speed. `xformers` will be installed and activated automatically if you specify a CUDA system at install time.
| **Short Name** | **Scheduler** | **Notes** |
|----------------|---------------------------------|-----------------------------|
| **ddim** | DDIMScheduler | |
| **ddpm** | DDPMScheduler | |
| **deis** | DEISMultistepScheduler | |
| **lms** | LMSDiscreteScheduler | |
| **pndm** | PNDMScheduler | |
| **heun** | HeunDiscreteScheduler | original noise schedule |
| **heun_k** | HeunDiscreteScheduler | using karras noise schedule |
| **euler** | EulerDiscreteScheduler | original noise schedule |
| **euler_k** | EulerDiscreteScheduler | using karras noise schedule |
| **kdpm_2** | KDPM2DiscreteScheduler | |
| **kdpm_2_a** | KDPM2AncestralDiscreteScheduler | |
| **dpmpp_2s** | DPMSolverSinglestepScheduler | |
| **dpmpp_2m** | DPMSolverMultistepScheduler | original noise scnedule |
| **dpmpp_2m_k** | DPMSolverMultistepScheduler | using karras noise schedule |
| **unipc** | UniPCMultistepScheduler | CPU only |
The caveat with using `xformers` is that it introduces slightly non-deterministic behavior, and images generated using the same seed and other settings will be subtly different between invocations. Generally the changes are unnoticeable unless you rapidly shift back and forth between images, but to disable `xformers` and restore fully deterministic behavior, you may launch InvokeAI using the `--no-xformers` option. This is most conveniently done by opening the file `invokeai/invokeai.init` with a text editor, and adding the line `--no-xformers` at the bottom.
Please see [3.0.0 Release Notes](https://github.com/invoke-ai/InvokeAI/releases/tag/v3.0.0) for further details.
#### A Negative Prompt Box in the WebUI
There is now a separate text input box for negative prompts in the WebUI. This is convenient for stashing frequently-used negative prompts ("mangled limbs, bad anatomy"). The `[negative prompt]` syntax continues to work in the main prompt box as well.
To see exactly how your prompts are being parsed, launch `invokeai` with the `--log_tokenization` option. The console window will then display the tokenization process for both positive and negative prompts.
#### Model Merging
Version 2.3.0 offers an intuitive user interface for merging up to three Stable Diffusion models using an intuitive user interface. Model merging allows you to mix the behavior of models to achieve very interesting effects. To use this, each of the models must already be imported into InvokeAI and saved in `diffusers` format, then launch the merger using a new menu item in the InvokeAI launcher script (`invoke.sh`, `invoke.bat`) or directly from the command line with `invokeai-merge --gui`. You will be prompted to select the models to merge, the proportions in which to mix them, and the mixing algorithm. The script will create a new merged `diffusers` model and import it into InvokeAI for your use.
See [MODEL MERGING](https://invoke-ai.github.io/InvokeAI/features/MODEL_MERGING/) for more details.
#### Textual Inversion Training
Textual Inversion (TI) is a technique for training a Stable Diffusion model to emit a particular subject or style when triggered by a keyword phrase. You can perform TI training by placing a small number of images of the subject or style in a directory, and choosing a distinctive trigger phrase, such as "pointillist-style". After successful training, The subject or style will be activated by including `<pointillist-style>` in your prompt.
Previous versions of InvokeAI were able to perform TI, but it required using a command-line script with dozens of obscure command-line arguments. Version 2.3.0 features an intuitive TI frontend that will build a TI model on top of any `diffusers` model. To access training you can launch from a new item in the launcher script or from the command line using `invokeai-ti --gui`.
See [TEXTUAL INVERSION](https://invoke-ai.github.io/InvokeAI/features/TEXTUAL_INVERSION/) for further details.
#### A New Installer Experience
The InvokeAI installer has been upgraded in order to provide a smoother and hopefully more glitch-free experience. In addition, InvokeAI is now packaged as a PyPi project, allowing developers and power-users to install InvokeAI with the command `pip install InvokeAI --use-pep517`. Please see [Installation](#installation) for details.
Developers should be aware that the `pip` installation procedure has been simplified and that the `conda` method is no longer supported at all. Accordingly, the `environments_and_requirements` directory has been deleted from the repository.
#### Command-line name changes
All of InvokeAI's functionality, including the WebUI, command-line interface, textual inversion training and model merging, can all be accessed from the `invoke.sh` and `invoke.bat` launcher scripts. The menu of options has been expanded to add the new functionality. For the convenience of developers and power users, we have normalized the names of the InvokeAI command-line scripts:
* `invokeai` -- Command-line client
* `invokeai --web` -- Web GUI
* `invokeai-merge --gui` -- Model merging script with graphical front end
* `invokeai-ti --gui` -- Textual inversion script with graphical front end
* `invokeai-configure` -- Configuration tool for initializing the `invokeai` directory and selecting popular starter models.
For backward compatibility, the old command names are also recognized, including `invoke.py` and `configure-invokeai.py`. However, these are deprecated and will eventually be removed.
Developers should be aware that the locations of the script's source code has been moved. The new locations are:
* `invokeai` => `ldm/invoke/CLI.py`
* `invokeai-configure` => `ldm/invoke/config/configure_invokeai.py`
* `invokeai-ti`=> `ldm/invoke/training/textual_inversion.py`
* `invokeai-merge` => `ldm/invoke/merge_diffusers`
Developers are strongly encouraged to perform an "editable" install of InvokeAI using `pip install -e . --use-pep517` in the Git repository, and then to call the scripts using their 2.3.0 names, rather than executing the scripts directly. Developers should also be aware that the several important data files have been relocated into a new directory named `invokeai`. This includes the WebGUI's `frontend` and `backend` directories, and the `INITIAL_MODELS.yaml` files used by the installer to select starter models. Eventually all InvokeAI modules will be in subdirectories of `invokeai`.
Please see [2.3.0 Release Notes](https://github.com/invoke-ai/InvokeAI/releases/tag/v2.3.0) for further details.
For older changelogs, please visit the
**[CHANGELOG](CHANGELOG/#v223-2-december-2022)**.
## :material-target: Troubleshooting
@ -244,3 +268,8 @@ free to send me an email if you use and like the script.
Original portions of the software are Copyright (c) 2022-23
by [The InvokeAI Team](https://github.com/invoke-ai).
## :octicons-book-24: Further Reading
Please see the original README for more information on this software and
underlying algorithm, located in the file
[README-CompViz.md](other/README-CompViz.md).

View File

@ -89,7 +89,7 @@ experimental versions later.
sudo apt update
sudo apt install -y software-properties-common
sudo add-apt-repository -y ppa:deadsnakes/ppa
sudo apt install -y python3.10 python3-pip python3.10-venv
sudo apt install python3.10 python3-pip python3.10-venv
sudo update-alternatives --install /usr/local/bin/python python /usr/bin/python3.10 3
```
@ -354,8 +354,8 @@ experimental versions later.
12. **InvokeAI Options**: You can launch InvokeAI with several different command-line arguments that
customize its behavior. For example, you can change the location of the
image output directory or balance memory usage vs performance. See
[Configuration](../features/CONFIGURATION.md) for a full list of the options.
image output directory, or select your favorite sampler. See the
[Command-Line Interface](../features/CLI.md) for a full list of the options.
- To set defaults that will take effect every time you launch InvokeAI,
use a text editor (e.g. Notepad) to exit the file
@ -417,7 +417,7 @@ Then type the following commands:
=== "AMD System"
```bash
pip install torch torchvision --force-reinstall --extra-index-url https://download.pytorch.org/whl/rocm5.4.2
pip install torch torchvision --force-reinstall --extra-index-url https://download.pytorch.org/whl/rocm5.2
```
### Corrupted configuration file

View File

@ -148,13 +148,13 @@ manager, please follow these steps:
=== "CUDA (NVidia)"
```bash
pip install "InvokeAI[xformers]" --use-pep517 --extra-index-url https://download.pytorch.org/whl/cu117
pip install InvokeAI[xformers] --use-pep517 --extra-index-url https://download.pytorch.org/whl/cu117
```
=== "ROCm (AMD)"
```bash
pip install InvokeAI --use-pep517 --extra-index-url https://download.pytorch.org/whl/rocm5.4.2
pip install InvokeAI --use-pep517 --extra-index-url https://download.pytorch.org/whl/rocm5.2
```
=== "CPU (Intel Macs & non-GPU systems)"
@ -216,7 +216,7 @@ manager, please follow these steps:
9. Run the command-line- or the web- interface:
From within INVOKEAI_ROOT, activate the environment
(with `source .venv/bin/activate` or `.venv\scripts\activate`), and then run
(with `source .venv/bin/activate` or `.venv\scripts\activate), and then run
the script `invokeai`. If the virtual environment you selected is NOT inside
INVOKEAI_ROOT, then you must specify the path to the root directory by adding
`--root_dir \path\to\invokeai` to the commands below:
@ -256,7 +256,7 @@ manager, please follow these steps:
10. Render away!
Browse the [features](../features/index.md) section to learn about all the
Browse the [features](../features/CLI.md) section to learn about all the
things you can do with InvokeAI.
@ -270,7 +270,7 @@ manager, please follow these steps:
12. Other scripts
The [Textual Inversion](../features/TRAINING.md) script can be launched with the command:
The [Textual Inversion](../features/TEXTUAL_INVERSION.md) script can be launched with the command:
```bash
invokeai-ti --gui
@ -315,7 +315,7 @@ installation protocol (important!)
=== "ROCm (AMD)"
```bash
pip install -e . --use-pep517 --extra-index-url https://download.pytorch.org/whl/rocm5.4.2
pip install -e . --use-pep517 --extra-index-url https://download.pytorch.org/whl/rocm5.2
```
=== "CPU (Intel Macs & non-GPU systems)"

View File

@ -110,7 +110,7 @@ recipes are available
When installing torch and torchvision manually with `pip`, remember to provide
the argument `--extra-index-url
https://download.pytorch.org/whl/rocm5.4.2` as described in the [Manual
https://download.pytorch.org/whl/rocm5.2` as described in the [Manual
Installation Guide](020_INSTALL_MANUAL.md).
This will be done automatically for you if you use the installer

View File

@ -43,7 +43,24 @@ InvokeAI comes with support for a good set of starter models. You'll
find them listed in the master models file
`configs/INITIAL_MODELS.yaml` in the InvokeAI root directory. The
subset that are currently installed are found in
`configs/models.yaml`.
`configs/models.yaml`. As of v2.3.1, the list of starter models is:
|Model Name | HuggingFace Repo ID | Description | URL |
|---------- | ---------- | ----------- | --- |
|stable-diffusion-1.5|runwayml/stable-diffusion-v1-5|Stable Diffusion version 1.5 diffusers model (4.27 GB)|https://huggingface.co/runwayml/stable-diffusion-v1-5 |
|sd-inpainting-1.5|runwayml/stable-diffusion-inpainting|RunwayML SD 1.5 model optimized for inpainting, diffusers version (4.27 GB)|https://huggingface.co/runwayml/stable-diffusion-inpainting |
|stable-diffusion-2.1|stabilityai/stable-diffusion-2-1|Stable Diffusion version 2.1 diffusers model, trained on 768 pixel images (5.21 GB)|https://huggingface.co/stabilityai/stable-diffusion-2-1 |
|sd-inpainting-2.0|stabilityai/stable-diffusion-2-1|Stable Diffusion version 2.0 inpainting model (5.21 GB)|https://huggingface.co/stabilityai/stable-diffusion-2-1 |
|analog-diffusion-1.0|wavymulder/Analog-Diffusion|An SD-1.5 model trained on diverse analog photographs (2.13 GB)|https://huggingface.co/wavymulder/Analog-Diffusion |
|deliberate-1.0|XpucT/Deliberate|Versatile model that produces detailed images up to 768px (4.27 GB)|https://huggingface.co/XpucT/Deliberate |
|d&d-diffusion-1.0|0xJustin/Dungeons-and-Diffusion|Dungeons & Dragons characters (2.13 GB)|https://huggingface.co/0xJustin/Dungeons-and-Diffusion |
|dreamlike-photoreal-2.0|dreamlike-art/dreamlike-photoreal-2.0|A photorealistic model trained on 768 pixel images based on SD 1.5 (2.13 GB)|https://huggingface.co/dreamlike-art/dreamlike-photoreal-2.0 |
|inkpunk-1.0|Envvi/Inkpunk-Diffusion|Stylized illustrations inspired by Gorillaz, FLCL and Shinkawa; prompt with "nvinkpunk" (4.27 GB)|https://huggingface.co/Envvi/Inkpunk-Diffusion |
|openjourney-4.0|prompthero/openjourney|An SD 1.5 model fine tuned on Midjourney; prompt with "mdjrny-v4 style" (2.13 GB)|https://huggingface.co/prompthero/openjourney |
|portrait-plus-1.0|wavymulder/portraitplus|An SD-1.5 model trained on close range portraits of people; prompt with "portrait+" (2.13 GB)|https://huggingface.co/wavymulder/portraitplus |
|seek-art-mega-1.0|coreco/seek.art_MEGA|A general use SD-1.5 "anything" model that supports multiple styles (2.1 GB)|https://huggingface.co/coreco/seek.art_MEGA |
|trinart-2.0|naclbit/trinart_stable_diffusion_v2|An SD-1.5 model finetuned with ~40K assorted high resolution manga/anime-style images (2.13 GB)|https://huggingface.co/naclbit/trinart_stable_diffusion_v2 |
|waifu-diffusion-1.4|hakurei/waifu-diffusion|An SD-1.5 model trained on 680k anime/manga-style images (2.13 GB)|https://huggingface.co/hakurei/waifu-diffusion |
Note that these files are covered by an "Ethical AI" license which
forbids certain uses. When you initially download them, you are asked
@ -54,7 +71,8 @@ with the model terms by visiting the URLs in the table above.
## Community-Contributed Models
[HuggingFace](https://huggingface.co/models?library=diffusers)
There are too many to list here and more are being contributed every
day. [HuggingFace](https://huggingface.co/models?library=diffusers)
is a great resource for diffusers models, and is also the home of a
[fast-growing repository](https://huggingface.co/sd-concepts-library)
of embedding (".bin") models that add subjects and/or styles to your
@ -68,106 +86,310 @@ only `.safetensors` and `.ckpt` models, but they can be easily loaded
into InvokeAI and/or converted into optimized `diffusers` models. Be
aware that CIVITAI hosts many models that generate NSFW content.
!!! note
InvokeAI 2.3.x does not support directly importing and
running Stable Diffusion version 2 checkpoint models. You may instead
convert them into `diffusers` models using the conversion methods
described below.
## Installation
There are two ways to install and manage models:
There are multiple ways to install and manage models:
1. The `invokeai-model-install` script which will download and install
them for you. In addition to supporting main models, you can install
ControlNet, LoRA and Textual Inversion models.
1. The `invokeai-configure` script which will download and install them for you.
2. The web interface (WebUI) has a GUI for importing and managing
2. The command-line tool (CLI) has commands that allows you to import, configure and modify
models files.
3. The web interface (WebUI) has a GUI for importing and managing
models.
3. By placing models (or symbolic links to models) inside one of the
InvokeAI root directory's `autoimport` folder.
### Installation via `invokeai-configure`
### Installation via `invokeai-model-install`
From the `invoke` launcher, choose option (6) "re-run the configure
script to download new models." This will launch the same script that
prompted you to select models at install time. You can use this to add
models that you skipped the first time around. It is all right to
specify a model that was previously downloaded; the script will just
confirm that the files are complete.
From the `invoke` launcher, choose option [5] "Download and install
models." This will launch the same script that prompted you to select
models at install time. You can use this to add models that you
skipped the first time around. It is all right to specify a model that
was previously downloaded; the script will just confirm that the files
are complete.
### Installation via the CLI
The installer has different panels for installing main models from
HuggingFace, models from Civitai and other arbitrary web sites,
ControlNet models, LoRA/LyCORIS models, and Textual Inversion
embeddings. Each section has a text box in which you can enter a new
model to install. You can refer to a model using its:
You can install a new model, including any of the community-supported ones, via
the command-line client's `!import_model` command.
1. Local path to the .ckpt, .safetensors or diffusers folder on your local machine
2. A directory on your machine that contains multiple models
3. A URL that points to a downloadable model
4. A HuggingFace repo id
#### Installing individual `.ckpt` and `.safetensors` models
Previously-installed models are shown with checkboxes. Uncheck a box
to unregister the model from InvokeAI. Models that are physically
installed inside the InvokeAI root directory will be deleted and
purged (after a confirmation warning). Models that are located outside
the InvokeAI root directory will be unregistered but not deleted.
If the model is already downloaded to your local disk, use
`!import_model /path/to/file.ckpt` to load it. For example:
Note: The installer script uses a console-based text interface that requires
significant amounts of horizontal and vertical space. If the display
looks messed up, just enlarge the terminal window and/or relaunch the
script.
If you wish you can script model addition and deletion, as well as
listing installed models. Start the "developer's console" and give the
command `invokeai-model-install --help`. This will give you a series
of command-line parameters that will let you control model
installation. Examples:
```
# (list all controlnet models)
invokeai-model-install --list controlnet
# (install the model at the indicated URL)
invokeai-model-install --add http://civitai.com/2860
# (delete the named model)
invokeai-model-install --delete sd-1/main/analog-diffusion
```bash
invoke> !import_model C:/Users/fred/Downloads/martians.safetensors
```
### Installation via the Web GUI
!!! tip "Forward Slashes"
On Windows systems, use forward slashes rather than backslashes
in your file paths.
If you do use backslashes,
you must double them like this:
`C:\\Users\\fred\\Downloads\\martians.safetensors`
To install a new model using the Web GUI, do the following:
Alternatively you can directly import the file using its URL:
1. Open the InvokeAI Model Manager (cube at the bottom of the
left-hand panel) and navigate to *Import Models*
```bash
invoke> !import_model https://example.org/sd_models/martians.safetensors
```
2. In the field labeled *Location* type in the path to the model you
wish to install. You may use a URL, HuggingFace repo id, or a path on
your local disk.
For this to work, the URL must not be password-protected. Otherwise
you will receive a 404 error.
3. Alternatively, the *Scan for Models* button allows you to paste in
the path to a folder somewhere on your machine. It will be scanned for
importable models and prompt you to add the ones of your choice.
When you import a legacy model, the CLI will first ask you what type
of model this is. You can indicate whether it is a model based on
Stable Diffusion 1.x (1.4 or 1.5), one based on Stable Diffusion 2.x,
or a 1.x inpainting model. Be careful to indicate the correct model
type, or it will not load correctly. You can correct the model type
after the fact using the `!edit_model` command.
4. Press *Add Model* and wait for confirmation that the model
was added.
The system will then ask you a few other questions about the model,
including what size image it was trained on (usually 512x512), what
name and description you wish to use for it, and whether you would
like to install a custom VAE (variable autoencoder) file for the
model. For recent models, the answer to the VAE question is usually
"no," but it won't hurt to answer "yes".
To delete a model, Select *Model Manager* to list all the currently
installed models. Press the trash can icons to delete any models you
wish to get rid of. Models whose weights are located inside the
InvokeAI `models` directory will be purged from disk, while those
located outside will be unregistered from InvokeAI, but not deleted.
After importing, the model will load. If this is successful, you will
be asked if you want to keep the model loaded in memory to start
generating immediately. You'll also be asked if you wish to make this
the default model on startup. You can change this later using
`!edit_model`.
You can see where model weights are located by clicking on the model name.
This will bring up an editable info panel showing the model's characteristics,
including the `Model Location` of its files.
#### Importing a batch of `.ckpt` and `.safetensors` models from a directory
### Installation via the `autoimport` function
You may also point `!import_model` to a directory containing a set of
`.ckpt` or `.safetensors` files. They will be imported _en masse_.
In the InvokeAI root directory you will find a series of folders under
`autoimport`, one each for main models, controlnets, embeddings and
Loras. Any models that you add to these directories will be scanned
at startup time and registered automatically.
!!! example
You may create symbolic links from these folders to models located
elsewhere on disk and they will be autoimported. You can also create
subfolders and organize them as you wish.
```console
invoke> !import_model C:/Users/fred/Downloads/civitai_models/
```
The location of the autoimport directories are controlled by settings
in `invokeai.yaml`. See [Configuration](../features/CONFIGURATION.md).
You will be given the option to import all models found in the
directory, or select which ones to import. If there are subfolders
within the directory, they will be searched for models to import.
#### Installing `diffusers` models
You can install a `diffusers` model from the HuggingFace site using
`!import_model` and the HuggingFace repo_id for the model:
```bash
invoke> !import_model andite/anything-v4.0
```
Alternatively, you can download the model to disk and import it from
there. The model may be distributed as a ZIP file, or as a Git
repository:
```bash
invoke> !import_model C:/Users/fred/Downloads/andite--anything-v4.0
```
!!! tip "The CLI supports file path autocompletion"
Type a bit of the path name and hit ++tab++ in order to get a choice of
possible completions.
!!! tip "On Windows, you can drag model files onto the command-line"
Once you have typed in `!import_model `, you can drag the
model file or directory onto the command-line to insert the model path. This way, you don't need to
type it or copy/paste. However, you will need to reverse or
double backslashes as noted above.
Before installing, the CLI will ask you for a short name and
description for the model, whether to make this the default model that
is loaded at InvokeAI startup time, and whether to replace its
VAE. Generally the answer to the latter question is "no".
### Converting legacy models into `diffusers`
The CLI `!convert_model` will convert a `.safetensors` or `.ckpt`
models file into `diffusers` and install it.This will enable the model
to load and run faster without loss of image quality.
The usage is identical to `!import_model`. You may point the command
to either a downloaded model file on disk, or to a (non-password
protected) URL:
```bash
invoke> !convert_model C:/Users/fred/Downloads/martians.safetensors
```
After a successful conversion, the CLI will offer you the option of
deleting the original `.ckpt` or `.safetensors` file.
### Optimizing a previously-installed model
Lastly, if you have previously installed a `.ckpt` or `.safetensors`
file and wish to convert it into a `diffusers` model, you can do this
without re-downloading and converting the original file using the
`!optimize_model` command. Simply pass the short name of an existing
installed model:
```bash
invoke> !optimize_model martians-v1.0
```
The model will be converted into `diffusers` format and replace the
previously installed version. You will again be offered the
opportunity to delete the original `.ckpt` or `.safetensors` file.
### Related CLI Commands
There are a whole series of additional model management commands in
the CLI that you can read about in [Command-Line
Interface](../features/CLI.md). These include:
* `!models` - List all installed models
* `!switch <model name>` - Switch to the indicated model
* `!edit_model <model name>` - Edit the indicated model to change its name, description or other properties
* `!del_model <model name>` - Delete the indicated model
### Manually editing `configs/models.yaml`
If you are comfortable with a text editor then you may simply edit `models.yaml`
directly.
You will need to download the desired `.ckpt/.safetensors` file and
place it somewhere on your machine's filesystem. Alternatively, for a
`diffusers` model, record the repo_id or download the whole model
directory. Then using a **text** editor (e.g. the Windows Notepad
application), open the file `configs/models.yaml`, and add a new
stanza that follows this model:
#### A legacy model
A legacy `.ckpt` or `.safetensors` entry will look like this:
```yaml
arabian-nights-1.0:
description: A great fine-tune in Arabian Nights style
weights: ./path/to/arabian-nights-1.0.ckpt
config: ./configs/stable-diffusion/v1-inference.yaml
format: ckpt
width: 512
height: 512
default: false
```
Note that `format` is `ckpt` for both `.ckpt` and `.safetensors` files.
#### A diffusers model
A stanza for a `diffusers` model will look like this for a HuggingFace
model with a repository ID:
```yaml
arabian-nights-1.1:
description: An even better fine-tune of the Arabian Nights
repo_id: captahab/arabian-nights-1.1
format: diffusers
default: true
```
And for a downloaded directory:
```yaml
arabian-nights-1.1:
description: An even better fine-tune of the Arabian Nights
path: /path/to/captahab-arabian-nights-1.1
format: diffusers
default: true
```
There is additional syntax for indicating an external VAE to use with
this model. See `INITIAL_MODELS.yaml` and `models.yaml` for examples.
After you save the modified `models.yaml` file relaunch
`invokeai`. The new model will now be available for your use.
### Installation via the WebUI
To access the WebUI Model Manager, click on the button that looks like
a cube in the upper right side of the browser screen. This will bring
up a dialogue that lists the models you have already installed, and
allows you to load, delete or edit them:
<figure markdown>
![model-manager](../assets/installing-models/webui-models-1.png)
</figure>
To add a new model, click on **+ Add New** and select to either a
checkpoint/safetensors model, or a diffusers model:
<figure markdown>
![model-manager-add-new](../assets/installing-models/webui-models-2.png)
</figure>
In this example, we chose **Add Diffusers**. As shown in the figure
below, a new dialogue prompts you to enter the name to use for the
model, its description, and either the location of the `diffusers`
model on disk, or its Repo ID on the HuggingFace web site. If you
choose to enter a path to disk, the system will autocomplete for you
as you type:
<figure markdown>
![model-manager-add-diffusers](../assets/installing-models/webui-models-3.png)
</figure>
Press **Add Model** at the bottom of the dialogue (scrolled out of
site in the figure), and the model will be downloaded, imported, and
registered in `models.yaml`.
The **Add Checkpoint/Safetensor Model** option is similar, except that
in this case you can choose to scan an entire folder for
checkpoint/safetensors files to import. Simply type in the path of the
directory and press the "Search" icon. This will display the
`.ckpt` and `.safetensors` found inside the directory and its
subfolders, and allow you to choose which ones to import:
<figure markdown>
![model-manager-add-checkpoint](../assets/installing-models/webui-models-4.png)
</figure>
## Model Management Startup Options
The `invoke` launcher and the `invokeai` script accept a series of
command-line arguments that modify InvokeAI's behavior when loading
models. These can be provided on the command line, or added to the
InvokeAI root directory's `invokeai.init` initialization file.
The arguments are:
* `--model <model name>` -- Start up with the indicated model loaded
* `--ckpt_convert` -- When a checkpoint/safetensors model is loaded, convert it into a `diffusers` model in memory. This does not permanently save the converted model to disk.
* `--autoconvert <path/to/directory>` -- Scan the indicated directory path for new checkpoint/safetensors files, convert them into `diffusers` models, and import them into InvokeAI.
Here is an example of providing an argument on the command line using
the `invoke.sh` launch script:
```bash
invoke.sh --autoconvert /home/fred/stable-diffusion-checkpoints
```
And here is what the same argument looks like in `invokeai.init`:
```bash
--outdir="/home/fred/invokeai/outputs
--no-nsfw_checker
--autoconvert /home/fred/stable-diffusion-checkpoints
```

View File

@ -24,7 +24,7 @@ You need to have opencv installed so that pypatchmatch can be built:
brew install opencv
```
The next time you start `invoke`, after successfully installing opencv, pypatchmatch will be built.
The next time you start `invoke`, after sucesfully installing opencv, pypatchmatch will be built.
## Linux
@ -56,7 +56,7 @@ Prior to installing PyPatchMatch, you need to take the following steps:
5. Confirm that pypatchmatch is installed. At the command-line prompt enter
`python`, and then at the `>>>` line type
`from patchmatch import patch_match`: It should look like the following:
`from patchmatch import patch_match`: It should look like the follwing:
```py
Python 3.9.5 (default, Nov 23 2021, 15:27:38)
@ -87,18 +87,18 @@ Prior to installing PyPatchMatch, you need to take the following steps:
sudo pacman -S --needed base-devel
```
2. Install `opencv` and `blas`:
2. Install `opencv`:
```sh
sudo pacman -S opencv blas
sudo pacman -S opencv
```
or for CUDA support
```sh
sudo pacman -S opencv-cuda blas
sudo pacman -S opencv-cuda
```
3. Fix the naming of the `opencv` package configuration file:
```sh
@ -108,4 +108,4 @@ Prior to installing PyPatchMatch, you need to take the following steps:
[**Next, Follow Steps 4-6 from the Debian Section above**](#linux)
If you see no errors you're ready to go!
If you see no errors, then you're ready to go!

View File

@ -11,10 +11,10 @@ if [[ -v "VIRTUAL_ENV" ]]; then
exit -1
fi
VERSION=$(cd ..; python -c "from invokeai.version import __version__ as version; print(version)")
VERSION=$(cd ..; python -c "from ldm.invoke import __version__ as version; print(version)")
PATCH=""
VERSION="v${VERSION}${PATCH}"
LATEST_TAG="v3.0-latest"
LATEST_TAG="v2.3-latest"
echo Building installer for version $VERSION
echo "Be certain that you're in the 'installer' directory before continuing."
@ -24,8 +24,7 @@ read -e -p "Tag this repo with '${VERSION}' and '${LATEST_TAG}'? [n]: " input
RESPONSE=${input:='n'}
if [ "$RESPONSE" == 'y' ]; then
git push origin :refs/tags/$VERSION
if ! git tag -fa $VERSION ; then
if ! git tag $VERSION ; then
echo "Existing/invalid tag"
exit -1
fi

View File

@ -38,7 +38,6 @@ echo https://learn.microsoft.com/en-US/cpp/windows/latest-supported-vc-redist
echo.
echo See %INSTRUCTIONS% for more details.
echo.
echo FOR THE BEST USER EXPERIENCE WE SUGGEST MAXIMIZING THIS WINDOW NOW.
pause
@rem ---------------------------- check Python version ---------------

View File

@ -25,8 +25,7 @@ done
if [ -z "$PYTHON" ]; then
echo "A suitable Python interpreter could not be found"
echo "Please install Python $MINIMUM_PYTHON_VERSION or higher (maximum $MAXIMUM_PYTHON_VERSION) before running this script. See instructions at $INSTRUCTIONS for help."
echo "For the best user experience we suggest enlarging or maximizing this window now."
echo "Please install Python 3.9 or higher before running this script. See instructions at $INSTRUCTIONS for help."
read -p "Press any key to exit"
exit -1
fi

View File

@ -149,7 +149,7 @@ class Installer:
return venv_dir
def install(self, root: str = "~/invokeai-3", version: str = "latest", yes_to_all=False, find_links: Path = None) -> None:
def install(self, root: str = "~/invokeai", version: str = "latest", yes_to_all=False, find_links: Path = None) -> None:
"""
Install the InvokeAI application into the given runtime path
@ -247,9 +247,8 @@ class InvokeAiInstance:
pip[
"install",
"--require-virtualenv",
"torch~=2.0.0",
"torchmetrics==0.11.4",
"torchvision>=0.14.1",
"torch",
"torchvision",
"--force-reinstall",
"--find-links" if find_links is not None else None,
find_links,
@ -292,7 +291,7 @@ class InvokeAiInstance:
src = Path(__file__).parents[1].expanduser().resolve()
# if the above directory contains one of these files, we'll do a source install
next(src.glob("pyproject.toml"))
next(src.glob("invokeai"))
next(src.glob("ldm"))
except StopIteration:
print("Unable to find a wheel or perform a source install. Giving up.")
@ -343,14 +342,14 @@ class InvokeAiInstance:
introduction()
from invokeai.frontend.install import invokeai_configure
from ldm.invoke.config import invokeai_configure
# NOTE: currently the config script does its own arg parsing! this means the command-line switches
# from the installer will also automatically propagate down to the config script.
# this may change in the future with config refactoring!
succeeded = False
try:
invokeai_configure()
invokeai_configure.main()
succeeded = True
except requests.exceptions.ConnectionError as e:
print(f'\nA network error was encountered during configuration and download: {str(e)}')
@ -457,7 +456,7 @@ def get_torch_source() -> (Union[str, None],str):
optional_modules = None
if OS == "Linux":
if device == "rocm":
url = "https://download.pytorch.org/whl/rocm5.4.2"
url = "https://download.pytorch.org/whl/rocm5.2"
elif device == "cpu":
url = "https://download.pytorch.org/whl/cpu"

View File

@ -293,8 +293,6 @@ def introduction() -> None:
"3. Create initial configuration files.",
"",
"[i]At any point you may interrupt this program and resume later.",
"",
"[b]For the best user experience, please enlarge or maximize this window",
),
)
)

View File

@ -7,42 +7,42 @@ call .venv\Scripts\activate.bat
set INVOKEAI_ROOT=.
:start
echo Desired action:
echo 1. Generate images with the browser-based interface
echo 2. Explore InvokeAI nodes using a command-line interface
echo 3. Run textual inversion training
echo 4. Merge models (diffusers type only)
echo 5. Download and install models
echo 6. Change InvokeAI startup options
echo 7. Re-run the configure script to fix a broken install or to complete a major upgrade
echo 8. Open the developer console
echo 9. Update InvokeAI
echo 10. Command-line help
echo Q - Quit
set /P choice="Please enter 1-10, Q: [1] "
if not defined choice set choice=1
IF /I "%choice%" == "1" (
echo Starting the InvokeAI browser-based UI..
python .venv\Scripts\invokeai-web.exe %*
) ELSE IF /I "%choice%" == "2" (
echo Do you want to generate images using the
echo 1. command-line interface
echo 2. browser-based UI
echo 3. run textual inversion training
echo 4. merge models (diffusers type only)
echo 5. download and install models
echo 6. change InvokeAI startup options
echo 7. re-run the configure script to fix a broken install
echo 8. open the developer console
echo 9. update InvokeAI
echo 10. command-line help
echo Q - quit
set /P restore="Please enter 1-10, Q: [2] "
if not defined restore set restore=2
IF /I "%restore%" == "1" (
echo Starting the InvokeAI command-line..
python .venv\Scripts\invokeai.exe %*
) ELSE IF /I "%choice%" == "3" (
) ELSE IF /I "%restore%" == "2" (
echo Starting the InvokeAI browser-based UI..
python .venv\Scripts\invokeai.exe --web %*
) ELSE IF /I "%restore%" == "3" (
echo Starting textual inversion training..
python .venv\Scripts\invokeai-ti.exe --gui
) ELSE IF /I "%choice%" == "4" (
) ELSE IF /I "%restore%" == "4" (
echo Starting model merging script..
python .venv\Scripts\invokeai-merge.exe --gui
) ELSE IF /I "%choice%" == "5" (
) ELSE IF /I "%restore%" == "5" (
echo Running invokeai-model-install...
python .venv\Scripts\invokeai-model-install.exe
) ELSE IF /I "%choice%" == "6" (
) ELSE IF /I "%restore%" == "6" (
echo Running invokeai-configure...
python .venv\Scripts\invokeai-configure.exe --skip-sd-weight --skip-support-models
) ELSE IF /I "%choice%" == "7" (
) ELSE IF /I "%restore%" == "7" (
echo Running invokeai-configure...
python .venv\Scripts\invokeai-configure.exe --yes --default_only
) ELSE IF /I "%choice%" == "8" (
) ELSE IF /I "%restore%" == "8" (
echo Developer Console
echo Python command is:
where python
@ -54,15 +54,15 @@ IF /I "%choice%" == "1" (
echo *************************
echo *** Type `exit` to quit this shell and deactivate the Python virtual environment ***
call cmd /k
) ELSE IF /I "%choice%" == "9" (
) ELSE IF /I "%restore%" == "9" (
echo Running invokeai-update...
python -m invokeai.frontend.install.invokeai_update
) ELSE IF /I "%choice%" == "10" (
python .venv\Scripts\invokeai-update.exe %*
) ELSE IF /I "%restore%" == "10" (
echo Displaying command line help...
python .venv\Scripts\invokeai.exe --help %*
pause
exit /b
) ELSE IF /I "%choice%" == "q" (
) ELSE IF /I "%restore%" == "q" (
echo Goodbye!
goto ending
) ELSE (

View File

@ -1,10 +1,5 @@
#!/bin/bash
# MIT License
# Coauthored by Lincoln Stein, Eugene Brodsky and Joshua Kimsey
# Copyright 2023, The InvokeAI Development Team
####
# This launch script assumes that:
# 1. it is located in the runtime directory,
@ -16,168 +11,85 @@
set -eu
# Ensure we're in the correct folder in case user's CWD is somewhere else
# ensure we're in the correct folder in case user's CWD is somewhere else
scriptdir=$(dirname "$0")
cd "$scriptdir"
. .venv/bin/activate
export INVOKEAI_ROOT="$scriptdir"
PARAMS=$@
# Check to see if dialog is installed (it seems to be fairly standard, but good to check regardless) and if the user has passed the --no-tui argument to disable the dialog TUI
tui=true
if command -v dialog &>/dev/null; then
# This must use $@ to properly loop through the arguments passed by the user
for arg in "$@"; do
if [ "$arg" == "--no-tui" ]; then
tui=false
# Remove the --no-tui argument to avoid errors later on when passing arguments to InvokeAI
PARAMS=$(echo "$PARAMS" | sed 's/--no-tui//')
break
fi
done
else
tui=false
fi
# Set required env var for torch on mac MPS
# set required env var for torch on mac MPS
if [ "$(uname -s)" == "Darwin" ]; then
export PYTORCH_ENABLE_MPS_FALLBACK=1
fi
# Primary function for the case statement to determine user input
do_choice() {
case $1 in
1)
clear
printf "Generate images with a browser-based interface\n"
invokeai-web $PARAMS
;;
2)
clear
printf "Explore InvokeAI nodes using a command-line interface\n"
invokeai $PARAMS
;;
3)
clear
printf "Textual inversion training\n"
invokeai-ti --gui $PARAMS
;;
4)
clear
printf "Merge models (diffusers type only)\n"
invokeai-merge --gui $PARAMS
;;
5)
clear
printf "Download and install models\n"
invokeai-model-install --root ${INVOKEAI_ROOT}
;;
6)
clear
printf "Change InvokeAI startup options\n"
invokeai-configure --root ${INVOKEAI_ROOT} --skip-sd-weights --skip-support-models
;;
7)
clear
printf "Re-run the configure script to fix a broken install or to complete a major upgrade\n"
invokeai-configure --root ${INVOKEAI_ROOT} --yes --default_only
;;
8)
clear
printf "Open the developer console\n"
file_name=$(basename "${BASH_SOURCE[0]}")
bash --init-file "$file_name"
;;
9)
clear
printf "Update InvokeAI\n"
python -m invokeai.frontend.install.invokeai_update
;;
10)
clear
printf "Command-line help\n"
invokeai --help
;;
"HELP 1")
clear
printf "Command-line help\n"
invokeai --help
;;
*)
clear
printf "Exiting...\n"
exit
;;
esac
clear
}
# Dialog-based TUI for launcing Invoke functions
do_dialog() {
options=(
1 "Generate images with a browser-based interface"
2 "Explore InvokeAI nodes using a command-line interface"
3 "Textual inversion training"
4 "Merge models (diffusers type only)"
5 "Download and install models"
6 "Change InvokeAI startup options"
7 "Re-run the configure script to fix a broken install or to complete a major upgrade"
8 "Open the developer console"
9 "Update InvokeAI")
choice=$(dialog --clear \
--backtitle "\Zb\Zu\Z3InvokeAI" \
--colors \
--title "What would you like to do?" \
--ok-label "Run" \
--cancel-label "Exit" \
--help-button \
--help-label "CLI Help" \
--menu "Select an option:" \
0 0 0 \
"${options[@]}" \
2>&1 >/dev/tty) || clear
do_choice "$choice"
clear
}
# Command-line interface for launching Invoke functions
do_line_input() {
clear
printf " ** For a more attractive experience, please install the 'dialog' utility using your package manager. **\n\n"
printf "What would you like to do?\n"
printf "1: Generate images using the browser-based interface\n"
printf "2: Explore InvokeAI nodes using the command-line interface\n"
printf "3: Run textual inversion training\n"
printf "4: Merge models (diffusers type only)\n"
printf "5: Download and install models\n"
printf "6: Change InvokeAI startup options\n"
printf "7: Re-run the configure script to fix a broken install\n"
printf "8: Open the developer console\n"
printf "9: Update InvokeAI\n"
printf "10: Command-line help\n"
printf "Q: Quit\n\n"
read -p "Please enter 1-10, Q: [1] " yn
choice=${yn:='1'}
do_choice $choice
clear
}
# Main IF statement for launching Invoke with either the TUI or CLI, and for checking if the user is in the developer console
while true
do
if [ "$0" != "bash" ]; then
while true; do
if $tui; then
# .dialogrc must be located in the same directory as the invoke.sh script
export DIALOGRC="./.dialogrc"
do_dialog
else
do_line_input
fi
done
echo "Do you want to generate images using the"
echo "1. command-line interface"
echo "2. browser-based UI"
echo "3. run textual inversion training"
echo "4. merge models (diffusers type only)"
echo "5. download and install models"
echo "6. change InvokeAI startup options"
echo "7. re-run the configure script to fix a broken install"
echo "8. open the developer console"
echo "9. update InvokeAI"
echo "10. command-line help"
echo "Q - Quit"
echo ""
read -p "Please enter 1-10, Q: [2] " yn
choice=${yn:='2'}
case $choice in
1)
echo "Starting the InvokeAI command-line..."
invokeai $@
;;
2)
echo "Starting the InvokeAI browser-based UI..."
invokeai --web $@
;;
3)
echo "Starting Textual Inversion:"
invokeai-ti --gui $@
;;
4)
echo "Merging Models:"
invokeai-merge --gui $@
;;
5)
invokeai-model-install --root ${INVOKEAI_ROOT}
;;
6)
invokeai-configure --root ${INVOKEAI_ROOT} --skip-sd-weights --skip-support-models
;;
7)
invokeai-configure --root ${INVOKEAI_ROOT} --yes --default_only
;;
8)
echo "Developer Console:"
file_name=$(basename "${BASH_SOURCE[0]}")
bash --init-file "$file_name"
;;
9)
echo "Update:"
invokeai-update
;;
10)
invokeai --help
;;
[qQ])
exit 0
;;
*)
echo "Invalid selection"
exit;;
esac
else # in developer console
python --version
printf "Press ^D to exit\n"
echo "Press ^D to exit"
export PS1="(InvokeAI) \u@\h \w> "
fi
done

View File

@ -1,11 +1,3 @@
Organization of the source tree:
app -- Home of nodes invocations and services
assets -- Images and other data files used by InvokeAI
backend -- Non-user facing libraries, including the rendering
core.
configs -- Configuration files used at install and run times
frontend -- User-facing scripts, including the CLI and the WebUI
version -- Current InvokeAI version string, stored
in version/invokeai_version.py
After version 2.3 is released, the ldm/invoke modules will be migrated to this location
so that we have a proper invokeai distribution. Currently it is only being used for
data files.

View File

@ -1,143 +0,0 @@
# Copyright (c) 2022 Kyle Schouviller (https://github.com/kyle0654)
from logging import Logger
import os
from invokeai.app.services.board_image_record_storage import (
SqliteBoardImageRecordStorage,
)
from invokeai.app.services.board_images import (
BoardImagesService,
BoardImagesServiceDependencies,
)
from invokeai.app.services.board_record_storage import SqliteBoardRecordStorage
from invokeai.app.services.boards import BoardService, BoardServiceDependencies
from invokeai.app.services.config import InvokeAIAppConfig
from invokeai.app.services.image_record_storage import SqliteImageRecordStorage
from invokeai.app.services.images import ImageService, ImageServiceDependencies
from invokeai.app.services.resource_name import SimpleNameService
from invokeai.app.services.urls import LocalUrlService
from invokeai.backend.util.logging import InvokeAILogger
from invokeai.version.invokeai_version import __version__
from ..services.default_graphs import create_system_graphs
from ..services.latent_storage import DiskLatentsStorage, ForwardCacheLatentsStorage
from ..services.graph import GraphExecutionState, LibraryGraph
from ..services.image_file_storage import DiskImageFileStorage
from ..services.invocation_queue import MemoryInvocationQueue
from ..services.invocation_services import InvocationServices
from ..services.invoker import Invoker
from ..services.processor import DefaultInvocationProcessor
from ..services.sqlite import SqliteItemStorage
from ..services.model_manager_service import ModelManagerService
from .events import FastAPIEventService
# TODO: is there a better way to achieve this?
def check_internet() -> bool:
"""
Return true if the internet is reachable.
It does this by pinging huggingface.co.
"""
import urllib.request
host = "http://huggingface.co"
try:
urllib.request.urlopen(host, timeout=1)
return True
except:
return False
logger = InvokeAILogger.getLogger()
class ApiDependencies:
"""Contains and initializes all dependencies for the API"""
invoker: Invoker = None
@staticmethod
def initialize(config: InvokeAIAppConfig, event_handler_id: int, logger: Logger = logger):
logger.debug(f"InvokeAI version {__version__}")
logger.debug(f"Internet connectivity is {config.internet_available}")
events = FastAPIEventService(event_handler_id)
output_folder = config.output_path
# TODO: build a file/path manager?
db_location = config.db_path
db_location.parent.mkdir(parents=True, exist_ok=True)
graph_execution_manager = SqliteItemStorage[GraphExecutionState](
filename=db_location, table_name="graph_executions"
)
urls = LocalUrlService()
image_record_storage = SqliteImageRecordStorage(db_location)
image_file_storage = DiskImageFileStorage(f"{output_folder}/images")
names = SimpleNameService()
latents = ForwardCacheLatentsStorage(
DiskLatentsStorage(f"{output_folder}/latents")
)
board_record_storage = SqliteBoardRecordStorage(db_location)
board_image_record_storage = SqliteBoardImageRecordStorage(db_location)
boards = BoardService(
services=BoardServiceDependencies(
board_image_record_storage=board_image_record_storage,
board_record_storage=board_record_storage,
image_record_storage=image_record_storage,
url=urls,
logger=logger,
)
)
board_images = BoardImagesService(
services=BoardImagesServiceDependencies(
board_image_record_storage=board_image_record_storage,
board_record_storage=board_record_storage,
image_record_storage=image_record_storage,
url=urls,
logger=logger,
)
)
images = ImageService(
services=ImageServiceDependencies(
board_image_record_storage=board_image_record_storage,
image_record_storage=image_record_storage,
image_file_storage=image_file_storage,
url=urls,
logger=logger,
names=names,
graph_execution_manager=graph_execution_manager,
)
)
services = InvocationServices(
model_manager=ModelManagerService(config, logger),
events=events,
latents=latents,
images=images,
boards=boards,
board_images=board_images,
queue=MemoryInvocationQueue(),
graph_library=SqliteItemStorage[LibraryGraph](
filename=db_location, table_name="graphs"
),
graph_execution_manager=graph_execution_manager,
processor=DefaultInvocationProcessor(),
configuration=config,
logger=logger,
)
create_system_graphs(services.graph_library)
ApiDependencies.invoker = Invoker(services)
@staticmethod
def shutdown():
if ApiDependencies.invoker:
ApiDependencies.invoker.stop()

View File

@ -1,52 +0,0 @@
# Copyright (c) 2022 Kyle Schouviller (https://github.com/kyle0654)
import asyncio
import threading
from queue import Empty, Queue
from typing import Any
from fastapi_events.dispatcher import dispatch
from ..services.events import EventServiceBase
class FastAPIEventService(EventServiceBase):
event_handler_id: int
__queue: Queue
__stop_event: threading.Event
def __init__(self, event_handler_id: int) -> None:
self.event_handler_id = event_handler_id
self.__queue = Queue()
self.__stop_event = threading.Event()
asyncio.create_task(self.__dispatch_from_queue(stop_event=self.__stop_event))
super().__init__()
def stop(self, *args, **kwargs):
self.__stop_event.set()
self.__queue.put(None)
def dispatch(self, event_name: str, payload: Any) -> None:
self.__queue.put(dict(event_name=event_name, payload=payload))
async def __dispatch_from_queue(self, stop_event: threading.Event):
"""Get events on from the queue and dispatch them, from the correct thread"""
while not stop_event.is_set():
try:
event = self.__queue.get(block=False)
if not event: # Probably stopping
continue
dispatch(
event.get("event_name"),
payload=event.get("payload"),
middleware_id=self.event_handler_id,
)
except Empty:
await asyncio.sleep(0.1)
pass
except asyncio.CancelledError as e:
raise e # Raise a proper error

View File

@ -1,36 +0,0 @@
from fastapi.routing import APIRouter
from pydantic import BaseModel, Field
from invokeai.backend.image_util.patchmatch import PatchMatch
from invokeai.version import __version__
app_router = APIRouter(prefix="/v1/app", tags=["app"])
class AppVersion(BaseModel):
"""App Version Response"""
version: str = Field(description="App version")
class AppConfig(BaseModel):
"""App Config Response"""
infill_methods: list[str] = Field(description="List of available infill methods")
@app_router.get(
"/version", operation_id="app_version", status_code=200, response_model=AppVersion
)
async def get_version() -> AppVersion:
return AppVersion(version=__version__)
@app_router.get(
"/config", operation_id="get_config", status_code=200, response_model=AppConfig
)
async def get_config() -> AppConfig:
infill_methods = ['tile']
if PatchMatch.patchmatch_available():
infill_methods.append('patchmatch')
return AppConfig(infill_methods=infill_methods)

View File

@ -1,69 +0,0 @@
from fastapi import Body, HTTPException, Path, Query
from fastapi.routing import APIRouter
from invokeai.app.services.board_record_storage import BoardRecord, BoardChanges
from invokeai.app.services.image_record_storage import OffsetPaginatedResults
from invokeai.app.services.models.board_record import BoardDTO
from invokeai.app.services.models.image_record import ImageDTO
from ..dependencies import ApiDependencies
board_images_router = APIRouter(prefix="/v1/board_images", tags=["boards"])
@board_images_router.post(
"/",
operation_id="create_board_image",
responses={
201: {"description": "The image was added to a board successfully"},
},
status_code=201,
)
async def create_board_image(
board_id: str = Body(description="The id of the board to add to"),
image_name: str = Body(description="The name of the image to add"),
):
"""Creates a board_image"""
try:
result = ApiDependencies.invoker.services.board_images.add_image_to_board(board_id=board_id, image_name=image_name)
return result
except Exception as e:
raise HTTPException(status_code=500, detail="Failed to add to board")
@board_images_router.delete(
"/",
operation_id="remove_board_image",
responses={
201: {"description": "The image was removed from the board successfully"},
},
status_code=201,
)
async def remove_board_image(
board_id: str = Body(description="The id of the board"),
image_name: str = Body(description="The name of the image to remove"),
):
"""Deletes a board_image"""
try:
result = ApiDependencies.invoker.services.board_images.remove_image_from_board(board_id=board_id, image_name=image_name)
return result
except Exception as e:
raise HTTPException(status_code=500, detail="Failed to update board")
@board_images_router.get(
"/{board_id}",
operation_id="list_board_images",
response_model=OffsetPaginatedResults[ImageDTO],
)
async def list_board_images(
board_id: str = Path(description="The id of the board"),
offset: int = Query(default=0, description="The page offset"),
limit: int = Query(default=10, description="The number of boards per page"),
) -> OffsetPaginatedResults[ImageDTO]:
"""Gets a list of images for a board"""
results = ApiDependencies.invoker.services.board_images.get_images_for_board(
board_id,
)
return results

View File

@ -1,117 +0,0 @@
from typing import Optional, Union
from fastapi import Body, HTTPException, Path, Query
from fastapi.routing import APIRouter
from invokeai.app.services.board_record_storage import BoardChanges
from invokeai.app.services.image_record_storage import OffsetPaginatedResults
from invokeai.app.services.models.board_record import BoardDTO
from ..dependencies import ApiDependencies
boards_router = APIRouter(prefix="/v1/boards", tags=["boards"])
@boards_router.post(
"/",
operation_id="create_board",
responses={
201: {"description": "The board was created successfully"},
},
status_code=201,
response_model=BoardDTO,
)
async def create_board(
board_name: str = Query(description="The name of the board to create"),
) -> BoardDTO:
"""Creates a board"""
try:
result = ApiDependencies.invoker.services.boards.create(board_name=board_name)
return result
except Exception as e:
raise HTTPException(status_code=500, detail="Failed to create board")
@boards_router.get("/{board_id}", operation_id="get_board", response_model=BoardDTO)
async def get_board(
board_id: str = Path(description="The id of board to get"),
) -> BoardDTO:
"""Gets a board"""
try:
result = ApiDependencies.invoker.services.boards.get_dto(board_id=board_id)
return result
except Exception as e:
raise HTTPException(status_code=404, detail="Board not found")
@boards_router.patch(
"/{board_id}",
operation_id="update_board",
responses={
201: {
"description": "The board was updated successfully",
},
},
status_code=201,
response_model=BoardDTO,
)
async def update_board(
board_id: str = Path(description="The id of board to update"),
changes: BoardChanges = Body(description="The changes to apply to the board"),
) -> BoardDTO:
"""Updates a board"""
try:
result = ApiDependencies.invoker.services.boards.update(
board_id=board_id, changes=changes
)
return result
except Exception as e:
raise HTTPException(status_code=500, detail="Failed to update board")
@boards_router.delete("/{board_id}", operation_id="delete_board")
async def delete_board(
board_id: str = Path(description="The id of board to delete"),
include_images: Optional[bool] = Query(
description="Permanently delete all images on the board", default=False
),
) -> None:
"""Deletes a board"""
try:
if include_images is True:
ApiDependencies.invoker.services.images.delete_images_on_board(
board_id=board_id
)
ApiDependencies.invoker.services.boards.delete(board_id=board_id)
else:
ApiDependencies.invoker.services.boards.delete(board_id=board_id)
except Exception as e:
# TODO: Does this need any exception handling at all?
pass
@boards_router.get(
"/",
operation_id="list_boards",
response_model=Union[OffsetPaginatedResults[BoardDTO], list[BoardDTO]],
)
async def list_boards(
all: Optional[bool] = Query(default=None, description="Whether to list all boards"),
offset: Optional[int] = Query(default=None, description="The page offset"),
limit: Optional[int] = Query(
default=None, description="The number of boards per page"
),
) -> Union[OffsetPaginatedResults[BoardDTO], list[BoardDTO]]:
"""Gets a list of boards"""
if all:
return ApiDependencies.invoker.services.boards.get_all()
elif offset is not None and limit is not None:
return ApiDependencies.invoker.services.boards.get_many(
offset,
limit,
)
else:
raise HTTPException(
status_code=400,
detail="Invalid request: Must provide either 'all' or both 'offset' and 'limit'",
)

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@ -1,262 +0,0 @@
import io
from typing import Optional
from fastapi import (Body, HTTPException, Path, Query, Request, Response,
UploadFile)
from fastapi.responses import FileResponse
from fastapi.routing import APIRouter
from PIL import Image
from invokeai.app.invocations.metadata import ImageMetadata
from invokeai.app.models.image import ImageCategory, ResourceOrigin
from invokeai.app.services.image_record_storage import OffsetPaginatedResults
from invokeai.app.services.item_storage import PaginatedResults
from invokeai.app.services.models.image_record import (ImageDTO,
ImageRecordChanges,
ImageUrlsDTO)
from ..dependencies import ApiDependencies
images_router = APIRouter(prefix="/v1/images", tags=["images"])
# images are immutable; set a high max-age
IMAGE_MAX_AGE = 31536000
@images_router.post(
"/",
operation_id="upload_image",
responses={
201: {"description": "The image was uploaded successfully"},
415: {"description": "Image upload failed"},
},
status_code=201,
response_model=ImageDTO,
)
async def upload_image(
file: UploadFile,
request: Request,
response: Response,
image_category: ImageCategory = Query(description="The category of the image"),
is_intermediate: bool = Query(description="Whether this is an intermediate image"),
session_id: Optional[str] = Query(
default=None, description="The session ID associated with this upload, if any"
),
) -> ImageDTO:
"""Uploads an image"""
if not file.content_type.startswith("image"):
raise HTTPException(status_code=415, detail="Not an image")
contents = await file.read()
try:
pil_image = Image.open(io.BytesIO(contents))
except:
# Error opening the image
raise HTTPException(status_code=415, detail="Failed to read image")
try:
image_dto = ApiDependencies.invoker.services.images.create(
image=pil_image,
image_origin=ResourceOrigin.EXTERNAL,
image_category=image_category,
session_id=session_id,
is_intermediate=is_intermediate,
)
response.status_code = 201
response.headers["Location"] = image_dto.image_url
return image_dto
except Exception as e:
raise HTTPException(status_code=500, detail="Failed to create image")
@images_router.delete("/{image_name}", operation_id="delete_image")
async def delete_image(
image_name: str = Path(description="The name of the image to delete"),
) -> None:
"""Deletes an image"""
try:
ApiDependencies.invoker.services.images.delete(image_name)
except Exception as e:
# TODO: Does this need any exception handling at all?
pass
@images_router.patch(
"/{image_name}",
operation_id="update_image",
response_model=ImageDTO,
)
async def update_image(
image_name: str = Path(description="The name of the image to update"),
image_changes: ImageRecordChanges = Body(
description="The changes to apply to the image"
),
) -> ImageDTO:
"""Updates an image"""
try:
return ApiDependencies.invoker.services.images.update(image_name, image_changes)
except Exception as e:
raise HTTPException(status_code=400, detail="Failed to update image")
@images_router.get(
"/{image_name}",
operation_id="get_image_dto",
response_model=ImageDTO,
)
async def get_image_dto(
image_name: str = Path(description="The name of image to get"),
) -> ImageDTO:
"""Gets an image's DTO"""
try:
return ApiDependencies.invoker.services.images.get_dto(image_name)
except Exception as e:
raise HTTPException(status_code=404)
@images_router.get(
"/{image_name}/metadata",
operation_id="get_image_metadata",
response_model=ImageMetadata,
)
async def get_image_metadata(
image_name: str = Path(description="The name of image to get"),
) -> ImageMetadata:
"""Gets an image's metadata"""
try:
return ApiDependencies.invoker.services.images.get_metadata(image_name)
except Exception as e:
raise HTTPException(status_code=404)
@images_router.get(
"/{image_name}/full",
operation_id="get_image_full",
response_class=Response,
responses={
200: {
"description": "Return the full-resolution image",
"content": {"image/png": {}},
},
404: {"description": "Image not found"},
},
)
async def get_image_full(
image_name: str = Path(description="The name of full-resolution image file to get"),
) -> FileResponse:
"""Gets a full-resolution image file"""
try:
path = ApiDependencies.invoker.services.images.get_path(image_name)
if not ApiDependencies.invoker.services.images.validate_path(path):
raise HTTPException(status_code=404)
response = FileResponse(
path,
media_type="image/png",
filename=image_name,
content_disposition_type="inline",
)
response.headers["Cache-Control"] = f"max-age={IMAGE_MAX_AGE}"
return response
except Exception as e:
raise HTTPException(status_code=404)
@images_router.get(
"/{image_name}/thumbnail",
operation_id="get_image_thumbnail",
response_class=Response,
responses={
200: {
"description": "Return the image thumbnail",
"content": {"image/webp": {}},
},
404: {"description": "Image not found"},
},
)
async def get_image_thumbnail(
image_name: str = Path(description="The name of thumbnail image file to get"),
) -> FileResponse:
"""Gets a thumbnail image file"""
try:
path = ApiDependencies.invoker.services.images.get_path(
image_name, thumbnail=True
)
if not ApiDependencies.invoker.services.images.validate_path(path):
raise HTTPException(status_code=404)
response = FileResponse(
path, media_type="image/webp", content_disposition_type="inline"
)
response.headers["Cache-Control"] = f"max-age={IMAGE_MAX_AGE}"
return response
except Exception as e:
raise HTTPException(status_code=404)
@images_router.get(
"/{image_name}/urls",
operation_id="get_image_urls",
response_model=ImageUrlsDTO,
)
async def get_image_urls(
image_name: str = Path(description="The name of the image whose URL to get"),
) -> ImageUrlsDTO:
"""Gets an image and thumbnail URL"""
try:
image_url = ApiDependencies.invoker.services.images.get_url(image_name)
thumbnail_url = ApiDependencies.invoker.services.images.get_url(
image_name, thumbnail=True
)
return ImageUrlsDTO(
image_name=image_name,
image_url=image_url,
thumbnail_url=thumbnail_url,
)
except Exception as e:
raise HTTPException(status_code=404)
@images_router.get(
"/",
operation_id="list_image_dtos",
response_model=OffsetPaginatedResults[ImageDTO],
)
async def list_image_dtos(
image_origin: Optional[ResourceOrigin] = Query(
default=None, description="The origin of images to list"
),
categories: Optional[list[ImageCategory]] = Query(
default=None, description="The categories of image to include"
),
is_intermediate: Optional[bool] = Query(
default=None, description="Whether to list intermediate images"
),
board_id: Optional[str] = Query(
default=None, description="The board id to filter by"
),
offset: int = Query(default=0, description="The page offset"),
limit: int = Query(default=10, description="The number of images per page"),
) -> OffsetPaginatedResults[ImageDTO]:
"""Gets a list of image DTOs"""
image_dtos = ApiDependencies.invoker.services.images.get_many(
offset,
limit,
image_origin,
categories,
is_intermediate,
board_id,
)
return image_dtos

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@ -1,422 +0,0 @@
# Copyright (c) 2023 Kyle Schouviller (https://github.com/kyle0654), 2023 Kent Keirsey (https://github.com/hipsterusername), 2023 Lincoln D. Stein
import pathlib
from typing import Literal, List, Optional, Union
from fastapi import Body, Path, Query, Response
from fastapi.routing import APIRouter
from pydantic import BaseModel, parse_obj_as
from starlette.exceptions import HTTPException
from invokeai.backend import BaseModelType, ModelType
from invokeai.backend.model_management.models import (
OPENAPI_MODEL_CONFIGS,
SchedulerPredictionType,
ModelNotFoundException,
InvalidModelException,
)
from invokeai.backend.model_management import MergeInterpolationMethod
from ..dependencies import ApiDependencies
models_router = APIRouter(prefix="/v1/models", tags=["models"])
UpdateModelResponse = Union[tuple(OPENAPI_MODEL_CONFIGS)]
ImportModelResponse = Union[tuple(OPENAPI_MODEL_CONFIGS)]
ConvertModelResponse = Union[tuple(OPENAPI_MODEL_CONFIGS)]
MergeModelResponse = Union[tuple(OPENAPI_MODEL_CONFIGS)]
ImportModelAttributes = Union[tuple(OPENAPI_MODEL_CONFIGS)]
class ModelsList(BaseModel):
models: list[Union[tuple(OPENAPI_MODEL_CONFIGS)]]
@models_router.get(
"/",
operation_id="list_models",
responses={200: {"model": ModelsList }},
)
async def list_models(
base_models: Optional[List[BaseModelType]] = Query(default=None, description="Base models to include"),
model_type: Optional[ModelType] = Query(default=None, description="The type of model to get"),
) -> ModelsList:
"""Gets a list of models"""
if base_models and len(base_models)>0:
models_raw = list()
for base_model in base_models:
models_raw.extend(ApiDependencies.invoker.services.model_manager.list_models(base_model, model_type))
else:
models_raw = ApiDependencies.invoker.services.model_manager.list_models(None, model_type)
models = parse_obj_as(ModelsList, { "models": models_raw })
return models
@models_router.patch(
"/{base_model}/{model_type}/{model_name}",
operation_id="update_model",
responses={200: {"description" : "The model was updated successfully"},
400: {"description" : "Bad request"},
404: {"description" : "The model could not be found"},
409: {"description" : "There is already a model corresponding to the new name"},
},
status_code = 200,
response_model = UpdateModelResponse,
)
async def update_model(
base_model: BaseModelType = Path(description="Base model"),
model_type: ModelType = Path(description="The type of model"),
model_name: str = Path(description="model name"),
info: Union[tuple(OPENAPI_MODEL_CONFIGS)] = Body(description="Model configuration"),
) -> UpdateModelResponse:
""" Update model contents with a new config. If the model name or base fields are changed, then the model is renamed. """
logger = ApiDependencies.invoker.services.logger
try:
previous_info = ApiDependencies.invoker.services.model_manager.list_model(
model_name=model_name,
base_model=base_model,
model_type=model_type,
)
# rename operation requested
if info.model_name != model_name or info.base_model != base_model:
ApiDependencies.invoker.services.model_manager.rename_model(
base_model = base_model,
model_type = model_type,
model_name = model_name,
new_name = info.model_name,
new_base = info.base_model,
)
logger.info(f'Successfully renamed {base_model}/{model_name}=>{info.base_model}/{info.model_name}')
# update information to support an update of attributes
model_name = info.model_name
base_model = info.base_model
new_info = ApiDependencies.invoker.services.model_manager.list_model(
model_name=model_name,
base_model=base_model,
model_type=model_type,
)
if new_info.get('path') != previous_info.get('path'): # model manager moved model path during rename - don't overwrite it
info.path = new_info.get('path')
ApiDependencies.invoker.services.model_manager.update_model(
model_name=model_name,
base_model=base_model,
model_type=model_type,
model_attributes=info.dict()
)
model_raw = ApiDependencies.invoker.services.model_manager.list_model(
model_name=model_name,
base_model=base_model,
model_type=model_type,
)
model_response = parse_obj_as(UpdateModelResponse, model_raw)
except ModelNotFoundException as e:
raise HTTPException(status_code=404, detail=str(e))
except ValueError as e:
logger.error(str(e))
raise HTTPException(status_code=409, detail=str(e))
except Exception as e:
logger.error(str(e))
raise HTTPException(status_code=400, detail=str(e))
return model_response
@models_router.post(
"/import",
operation_id="import_model",
responses= {
201: {"description" : "The model imported successfully"},
404: {"description" : "The model could not be found"},
415: {"description" : "Unrecognized file/folder format"},
424: {"description" : "The model appeared to import successfully, but could not be found in the model manager"},
409: {"description" : "There is already a model corresponding to this path or repo_id"},
},
status_code=201,
response_model=ImportModelResponse
)
async def import_model(
location: str = Body(description="A model path, repo_id or URL to import"),
prediction_type: Optional[Literal['v_prediction','epsilon','sample']] = \
Body(description='Prediction type for SDv2 checkpoint files', default="v_prediction"),
) -> ImportModelResponse:
""" Add a model using its local path, repo_id, or remote URL. Model characteristics will be probed and configured automatically """
items_to_import = {location}
prediction_types = { x.value: x for x in SchedulerPredictionType }
logger = ApiDependencies.invoker.services.logger
try:
installed_models = ApiDependencies.invoker.services.model_manager.heuristic_import(
items_to_import = items_to_import,
prediction_type_helper = lambda x: prediction_types.get(prediction_type)
)
info = installed_models.get(location)
if not info:
logger.error("Import failed")
raise HTTPException(status_code=415)
logger.info(f'Successfully imported {location}, got {info}')
model_raw = ApiDependencies.invoker.services.model_manager.list_model(
model_name=info.name,
base_model=info.base_model,
model_type=info.model_type
)
return parse_obj_as(ImportModelResponse, model_raw)
except ModelNotFoundException as e:
logger.error(str(e))
raise HTTPException(status_code=404, detail=str(e))
except InvalidModelException as e:
logger.error(str(e))
raise HTTPException(status_code=415)
except ValueError as e:
logger.error(str(e))
raise HTTPException(status_code=409, detail=str(e))
@models_router.post(
"/add",
operation_id="add_model",
responses= {
201: {"description" : "The model added successfully"},
404: {"description" : "The model could not be found"},
424: {"description" : "The model appeared to add successfully, but could not be found in the model manager"},
409: {"description" : "There is already a model corresponding to this path or repo_id"},
},
status_code=201,
response_model=ImportModelResponse
)
async def add_model(
info: Union[tuple(OPENAPI_MODEL_CONFIGS)] = Body(description="Model configuration"),
) -> ImportModelResponse:
""" Add a model using the configuration information appropriate for its type. Only local models can be added by path"""
logger = ApiDependencies.invoker.services.logger
try:
ApiDependencies.invoker.services.model_manager.add_model(
info.model_name,
info.base_model,
info.model_type,
model_attributes = info.dict()
)
logger.info(f'Successfully added {info.model_name}')
model_raw = ApiDependencies.invoker.services.model_manager.list_model(
model_name=info.model_name,
base_model=info.base_model,
model_type=info.model_type
)
return parse_obj_as(ImportModelResponse, model_raw)
except ModelNotFoundException as e:
logger.error(str(e))
raise HTTPException(status_code=404, detail=str(e))
except ValueError as e:
logger.error(str(e))
raise HTTPException(status_code=409, detail=str(e))
@models_router.delete(
"/{base_model}/{model_type}/{model_name}",
operation_id="del_model",
responses={
204: { "description": "Model deleted successfully" },
404: { "description": "Model not found" }
},
status_code = 204,
response_model = None,
)
async def delete_model(
base_model: BaseModelType = Path(description="Base model"),
model_type: ModelType = Path(description="The type of model"),
model_name: str = Path(description="model name"),
) -> Response:
"""Delete Model"""
logger = ApiDependencies.invoker.services.logger
try:
ApiDependencies.invoker.services.model_manager.del_model(model_name,
base_model = base_model,
model_type = model_type
)
logger.info(f"Deleted model: {model_name}")
return Response(status_code=204)
except ModelNotFoundException as e:
logger.error(str(e))
raise HTTPException(status_code=404, detail=str(e))
@models_router.put(
"/convert/{base_model}/{model_type}/{model_name}",
operation_id="convert_model",
responses={
200: { "description": "Model converted successfully" },
400: {"description" : "Bad request" },
404: { "description": "Model not found" },
},
status_code = 200,
response_model = ConvertModelResponse,
)
async def convert_model(
base_model: BaseModelType = Path(description="Base model"),
model_type: ModelType = Path(description="The type of model"),
model_name: str = Path(description="model name"),
convert_dest_directory: Optional[str] = Query(default=None, description="Save the converted model to the designated directory"),
) -> ConvertModelResponse:
"""Convert a checkpoint model into a diffusers model, optionally saving to the indicated destination directory, or `models` if none."""
logger = ApiDependencies.invoker.services.logger
try:
logger.info(f"Converting model: {model_name}")
dest = pathlib.Path(convert_dest_directory) if convert_dest_directory else None
ApiDependencies.invoker.services.model_manager.convert_model(model_name,
base_model = base_model,
model_type = model_type,
convert_dest_directory = dest,
)
model_raw = ApiDependencies.invoker.services.model_manager.list_model(model_name,
base_model = base_model,
model_type = model_type)
response = parse_obj_as(ConvertModelResponse, model_raw)
except ModelNotFoundException as e:
raise HTTPException(status_code=404, detail=f"Model '{model_name}' not found: {str(e)}")
except ValueError as e:
raise HTTPException(status_code=400, detail=str(e))
return response
@models_router.get(
"/search",
operation_id="search_for_models",
responses={
200: { "description": "Directory searched successfully" },
404: { "description": "Invalid directory path" },
},
status_code = 200,
response_model = List[pathlib.Path]
)
async def search_for_models(
search_path: pathlib.Path = Query(description="Directory path to search for models")
)->List[pathlib.Path]:
if not search_path.is_dir():
raise HTTPException(status_code=404, detail=f"The search path '{search_path}' does not exist or is not directory")
return ApiDependencies.invoker.services.model_manager.search_for_models([search_path])
@models_router.get(
"/ckpt_confs",
operation_id="list_ckpt_configs",
responses={
200: { "description" : "paths retrieved successfully" },
},
status_code = 200,
response_model = List[pathlib.Path]
)
async def list_ckpt_configs(
)->List[pathlib.Path]:
"""Return a list of the legacy checkpoint configuration files stored in `ROOT/configs/stable-diffusion`, relative to ROOT."""
return ApiDependencies.invoker.services.model_manager.list_checkpoint_configs()
@models_router.get(
"/sync",
operation_id="sync_to_config",
responses={
201: { "description": "synchronization successful" },
},
status_code = 201,
response_model = None
)
async def sync_to_config(
)->None:
"""Call after making changes to models.yaml, autoimport directories or models directory to synchronize
in-memory data structures with disk data structures."""
return ApiDependencies.invoker.services.model_manager.sync_to_config()
@models_router.put(
"/merge/{base_model}",
operation_id="merge_models",
responses={
200: { "description": "Model converted successfully" },
400: { "description": "Incompatible models" },
404: { "description": "One or more models not found" },
},
status_code = 200,
response_model = MergeModelResponse,
)
async def merge_models(
base_model: BaseModelType = Path(description="Base model"),
model_names: List[str] = Body(description="model name", min_items=2, max_items=3),
merged_model_name: Optional[str] = Body(description="Name of destination model"),
alpha: Optional[float] = Body(description="Alpha weighting strength to apply to 2d and 3d models", default=0.5),
interp: Optional[MergeInterpolationMethod] = Body(description="Interpolation method"),
force: Optional[bool] = Body(description="Force merging of models created with different versions of diffusers", default=False),
merge_dest_directory: Optional[str] = Body(description="Save the merged model to the designated directory (with 'merged_model_name' appended)", default=None)
) -> MergeModelResponse:
"""Convert a checkpoint model into a diffusers model"""
logger = ApiDependencies.invoker.services.logger
try:
logger.info(f"Merging models: {model_names} into {merge_dest_directory or '<MODELS>'}/{merged_model_name}")
dest = pathlib.Path(merge_dest_directory) if merge_dest_directory else None
result = ApiDependencies.invoker.services.model_manager.merge_models(model_names,
base_model,
merged_model_name=merged_model_name or "+".join(model_names),
alpha=alpha,
interp=interp,
force=force,
merge_dest_directory = dest
)
model_raw = ApiDependencies.invoker.services.model_manager.list_model(result.name,
base_model = base_model,
model_type = ModelType.Main,
)
response = parse_obj_as(ConvertModelResponse, model_raw)
except ModelNotFoundException:
raise HTTPException(status_code=404, detail=f"One or more of the models '{model_names}' not found")
except ValueError as e:
raise HTTPException(status_code=400, detail=str(e))
return response
# The rename operation is now supported by update_model and no longer needs to be
# a standalone route.
# @models_router.post(
# "/rename/{base_model}/{model_type}/{model_name}",
# operation_id="rename_model",
# responses= {
# 201: {"description" : "The model was renamed successfully"},
# 404: {"description" : "The model could not be found"},
# 409: {"description" : "There is already a model corresponding to the new name"},
# },
# status_code=201,
# response_model=ImportModelResponse
# )
# async def rename_model(
# base_model: BaseModelType = Path(description="Base model"),
# model_type: ModelType = Path(description="The type of model"),
# model_name: str = Path(description="current model name"),
# new_name: Optional[str] = Query(description="new model name", default=None),
# new_base: Optional[BaseModelType] = Query(description="new model base", default=None),
# ) -> ImportModelResponse:
# """ Rename a model"""
# logger = ApiDependencies.invoker.services.logger
# try:
# result = ApiDependencies.invoker.services.model_manager.rename_model(
# base_model = base_model,
# model_type = model_type,
# model_name = model_name,
# new_name = new_name,
# new_base = new_base,
# )
# logger.debug(result)
# logger.info(f'Successfully renamed {model_name}=>{new_name}')
# model_raw = ApiDependencies.invoker.services.model_manager.list_model(
# model_name=new_name or model_name,
# base_model=new_base or base_model,
# model_type=model_type
# )
# return parse_obj_as(ImportModelResponse, model_raw)
# except ModelNotFoundException as e:
# logger.error(str(e))
# raise HTTPException(status_code=404, detail=str(e))
# except ValueError as e:
# logger.error(str(e))
# raise HTTPException(status_code=409, detail=str(e))

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@ -1,286 +0,0 @@
# Copyright (c) 2022 Kyle Schouviller (https://github.com/kyle0654)
from typing import Annotated, List, Optional, Union
from fastapi import Body, HTTPException, Path, Query, Response
from fastapi.routing import APIRouter
from pydantic.fields import Field
from ...invocations import *
from ...invocations.baseinvocation import BaseInvocation
from ...services.graph import (
Edge,
EdgeConnection,
Graph,
GraphExecutionState,
NodeAlreadyExecutedError,
)
from ...services.item_storage import PaginatedResults
from ..dependencies import ApiDependencies
session_router = APIRouter(prefix="/v1/sessions", tags=["sessions"])
@session_router.post(
"/",
operation_id="create_session",
responses={
200: {"model": GraphExecutionState},
400: {"description": "Invalid json"},
},
)
async def create_session(
graph: Optional[Graph] = Body(
default=None, description="The graph to initialize the session with"
)
) -> GraphExecutionState:
"""Creates a new session, optionally initializing it with an invocation graph"""
session = ApiDependencies.invoker.create_execution_state(graph)
return session
@session_router.get(
"/",
operation_id="list_sessions",
responses={200: {"model": PaginatedResults[GraphExecutionState]}},
)
async def list_sessions(
page: int = Query(default=0, description="The page of results to get"),
per_page: int = Query(default=10, description="The number of results per page"),
query: str = Query(default="", description="The query string to search for"),
) -> PaginatedResults[GraphExecutionState]:
"""Gets a list of sessions, optionally searching"""
if query == "":
result = ApiDependencies.invoker.services.graph_execution_manager.list(
page, per_page
)
else:
result = ApiDependencies.invoker.services.graph_execution_manager.search(
query, page, per_page
)
return result
@session_router.get(
"/{session_id}",
operation_id="get_session",
responses={
200: {"model": GraphExecutionState},
404: {"description": "Session not found"},
},
)
async def get_session(
session_id: str = Path(description="The id of the session to get"),
) -> GraphExecutionState:
"""Gets a session"""
session = ApiDependencies.invoker.services.graph_execution_manager.get(session_id)
if session is None:
raise HTTPException(status_code=404)
else:
return session
@session_router.post(
"/{session_id}/nodes",
operation_id="add_node",
responses={
200: {"model": str},
400: {"description": "Invalid node or link"},
404: {"description": "Session not found"},
},
)
async def add_node(
session_id: str = Path(description="The id of the session"),
node: Annotated[
Union[BaseInvocation.get_invocations()], Field(discriminator="type") # type: ignore
] = Body(description="The node to add"),
) -> str:
"""Adds a node to the graph"""
session = ApiDependencies.invoker.services.graph_execution_manager.get(session_id)
if session is None:
raise HTTPException(status_code=404)
try:
session.add_node(node)
ApiDependencies.invoker.services.graph_execution_manager.set(
session
) # TODO: can this be done automatically, or add node through an API?
return session.id
except NodeAlreadyExecutedError:
raise HTTPException(status_code=400)
except IndexError:
raise HTTPException(status_code=400)
@session_router.put(
"/{session_id}/nodes/{node_path}",
operation_id="update_node",
responses={
200: {"model": GraphExecutionState},
400: {"description": "Invalid node or link"},
404: {"description": "Session not found"},
},
)
async def update_node(
session_id: str = Path(description="The id of the session"),
node_path: str = Path(description="The path to the node in the graph"),
node: Annotated[
Union[BaseInvocation.get_invocations()], Field(discriminator="type") # type: ignore
] = Body(description="The new node"),
) -> GraphExecutionState:
"""Updates a node in the graph and removes all linked edges"""
session = ApiDependencies.invoker.services.graph_execution_manager.get(session_id)
if session is None:
raise HTTPException(status_code=404)
try:
session.update_node(node_path, node)
ApiDependencies.invoker.services.graph_execution_manager.set(
session
) # TODO: can this be done automatically, or add node through an API?
return session
except NodeAlreadyExecutedError:
raise HTTPException(status_code=400)
except IndexError:
raise HTTPException(status_code=400)
@session_router.delete(
"/{session_id}/nodes/{node_path}",
operation_id="delete_node",
responses={
200: {"model": GraphExecutionState},
400: {"description": "Invalid node or link"},
404: {"description": "Session not found"},
},
)
async def delete_node(
session_id: str = Path(description="The id of the session"),
node_path: str = Path(description="The path to the node to delete"),
) -> GraphExecutionState:
"""Deletes a node in the graph and removes all linked edges"""
session = ApiDependencies.invoker.services.graph_execution_manager.get(session_id)
if session is None:
raise HTTPException(status_code=404)
try:
session.delete_node(node_path)
ApiDependencies.invoker.services.graph_execution_manager.set(
session
) # TODO: can this be done automatically, or add node through an API?
return session
except NodeAlreadyExecutedError:
raise HTTPException(status_code=400)
except IndexError:
raise HTTPException(status_code=400)
@session_router.post(
"/{session_id}/edges",
operation_id="add_edge",
responses={
200: {"model": GraphExecutionState},
400: {"description": "Invalid node or link"},
404: {"description": "Session not found"},
},
)
async def add_edge(
session_id: str = Path(description="The id of the session"),
edge: Edge = Body(description="The edge to add"),
) -> GraphExecutionState:
"""Adds an edge to the graph"""
session = ApiDependencies.invoker.services.graph_execution_manager.get(session_id)
if session is None:
raise HTTPException(status_code=404)
try:
session.add_edge(edge)
ApiDependencies.invoker.services.graph_execution_manager.set(
session
) # TODO: can this be done automatically, or add node through an API?
return session
except NodeAlreadyExecutedError:
raise HTTPException(status_code=400)
except IndexError:
raise HTTPException(status_code=400)
# TODO: the edge being in the path here is really ugly, find a better solution
@session_router.delete(
"/{session_id}/edges/{from_node_id}/{from_field}/{to_node_id}/{to_field}",
operation_id="delete_edge",
responses={
200: {"model": GraphExecutionState},
400: {"description": "Invalid node or link"},
404: {"description": "Session not found"},
},
)
async def delete_edge(
session_id: str = Path(description="The id of the session"),
from_node_id: str = Path(description="The id of the node the edge is coming from"),
from_field: str = Path(description="The field of the node the edge is coming from"),
to_node_id: str = Path(description="The id of the node the edge is going to"),
to_field: str = Path(description="The field of the node the edge is going to"),
) -> GraphExecutionState:
"""Deletes an edge from the graph"""
session = ApiDependencies.invoker.services.graph_execution_manager.get(session_id)
if session is None:
raise HTTPException(status_code=404)
try:
edge = Edge(
source=EdgeConnection(node_id=from_node_id, field=from_field),
destination=EdgeConnection(node_id=to_node_id, field=to_field)
)
session.delete_edge(edge)
ApiDependencies.invoker.services.graph_execution_manager.set(
session
) # TODO: can this be done automatically, or add node through an API?
return session
except NodeAlreadyExecutedError:
raise HTTPException(status_code=400)
except IndexError:
raise HTTPException(status_code=400)
@session_router.put(
"/{session_id}/invoke",
operation_id="invoke_session",
responses={
200: {"model": None},
202: {"description": "The invocation is queued"},
400: {"description": "The session has no invocations ready to invoke"},
404: {"description": "Session not found"},
},
)
async def invoke_session(
session_id: str = Path(description="The id of the session to invoke"),
all: bool = Query(
default=False, description="Whether or not to invoke all remaining invocations"
),
) -> Response:
"""Invokes a session"""
session = ApiDependencies.invoker.services.graph_execution_manager.get(session_id)
if session is None:
raise HTTPException(status_code=404)
if session.is_complete():
raise HTTPException(status_code=400)
ApiDependencies.invoker.invoke(session, invoke_all=all)
return Response(status_code=202)
@session_router.delete(
"/{session_id}/invoke",
operation_id="cancel_session_invoke",
responses={
202: {"description": "The invocation is canceled"}
},
)
async def cancel_session_invoke(
session_id: str = Path(description="The id of the session to cancel"),
) -> Response:
"""Invokes a session"""
ApiDependencies.invoker.cancel(session_id)
return Response(status_code=202)

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@ -1,38 +0,0 @@
# Copyright (c) 2022 Kyle Schouviller (https://github.com/kyle0654)
from fastapi import FastAPI
from fastapi_events.handlers.local import local_handler
from fastapi_events.typing import Event
from fastapi_socketio import SocketManager
from ..services.events import EventServiceBase
class SocketIO:
__sio: SocketManager
def __init__(self, app: FastAPI):
self.__sio = SocketManager(app=app)
self.__sio.on("subscribe", handler=self._handle_sub)
self.__sio.on("unsubscribe", handler=self._handle_unsub)
local_handler.register(
event_name=EventServiceBase.session_event, _func=self._handle_session_event
)
async def _handle_session_event(self, event: Event):
await self.__sio.emit(
event=event[1]["event"],
data=event[1]["data"],
room=event[1]["data"]["graph_execution_state_id"],
)
async def _handle_sub(self, sid, data, *args, **kwargs):
if "session" in data:
self.__sio.enter_room(sid, data["session"])
# @app.sio.on('unsubscribe')
async def _handle_unsub(self, sid, data, *args, **kwargs):
if "session" in data:
self.__sio.leave_room(sid, data["session"])

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@ -1,204 +0,0 @@
# Copyright (c) 2022-2023 Kyle Schouviller (https://github.com/kyle0654) and the InvokeAI Team
import asyncio
import sys
from inspect import signature
import uvicorn
from fastapi import FastAPI
from fastapi.middleware.cors import CORSMiddleware
from fastapi.openapi.docs import get_redoc_html, get_swagger_ui_html
from fastapi.openapi.utils import get_openapi
from fastapi.staticfiles import StaticFiles
from fastapi_events.handlers.local import local_handler
from fastapi_events.middleware import EventHandlerASGIMiddleware
from pathlib import Path
from pydantic.schema import schema
#This should come early so that modules can log their initialization properly
from .services.config import InvokeAIAppConfig
from ..backend.util.logging import InvokeAILogger
app_config = InvokeAIAppConfig.get_config()
app_config.parse_args()
logger = InvokeAILogger.getLogger(config=app_config)
from invokeai.version.invokeai_version import __version__
# we call this early so that the message appears before
# other invokeai initialization messages
if app_config.version:
print(f'InvokeAI version {__version__}')
sys.exit(0)
import invokeai.frontend.web as web_dir
import mimetypes
from .api.dependencies import ApiDependencies
from .api.routers import sessions, models, images, boards, board_images, app_info
from .api.sockets import SocketIO
from .invocations.baseinvocation import BaseInvocation
import torch
import invokeai.backend.util.hotfixes
if torch.backends.mps.is_available():
import invokeai.backend.util.mps_fixes
# fix for windows mimetypes registry entries being borked
# see https://github.com/invoke-ai/InvokeAI/discussions/3684#discussioncomment-6391352
mimetypes.add_type('application/javascript', '.js')
mimetypes.add_type('text/css', '.css')
# Create the app
# TODO: create this all in a method so configuration/etc. can be passed in?
app = FastAPI(title="Invoke AI", docs_url=None, redoc_url=None)
# Add event handler
event_handler_id: int = id(app)
app.add_middleware(
EventHandlerASGIMiddleware,
handlers=[
local_handler
], # TODO: consider doing this in services to support different configurations
middleware_id=event_handler_id,
)
socket_io = SocketIO(app)
# Add startup event to load dependencies
@app.on_event("startup")
async def startup_event():
app.add_middleware(
CORSMiddleware,
allow_origins=app_config.allow_origins,
allow_credentials=app_config.allow_credentials,
allow_methods=app_config.allow_methods,
allow_headers=app_config.allow_headers,
)
ApiDependencies.initialize(
config=app_config, event_handler_id=event_handler_id, logger=logger
)
# Shut down threads
@app.on_event("shutdown")
async def shutdown_event():
ApiDependencies.shutdown()
# Include all routers
# TODO: REMOVE
# app.include_router(
# invocation.invocation_router,
# prefix = '/api')
app.include_router(sessions.session_router, prefix="/api")
app.include_router(models.models_router, prefix="/api")
app.include_router(images.images_router, prefix="/api")
app.include_router(boards.boards_router, prefix="/api")
app.include_router(board_images.board_images_router, prefix="/api")
app.include_router(app_info.app_router, prefix='/api')
# Build a custom OpenAPI to include all outputs
# TODO: can outputs be included on metadata of invocation schemas somehow?
def custom_openapi():
if app.openapi_schema:
return app.openapi_schema
openapi_schema = get_openapi(
title=app.title,
description="An API for invoking AI image operations",
version="1.0.0",
routes=app.routes,
)
# Add all outputs
all_invocations = BaseInvocation.get_invocations()
output_types = set()
output_type_titles = dict()
for invoker in all_invocations:
output_type = signature(invoker.invoke).return_annotation
output_types.add(output_type)
output_schemas = schema(output_types, ref_prefix="#/components/schemas/")
for schema_key, output_schema in output_schemas["definitions"].items():
openapi_schema["components"]["schemas"][schema_key] = output_schema
# TODO: note that we assume the schema_key here is the TYPE.__name__
# This could break in some cases, figure out a better way to do it
output_type_titles[schema_key] = output_schema["title"]
# Add a reference to the output type to additionalProperties of the invoker schema
for invoker in all_invocations:
invoker_name = invoker.__name__
output_type = signature(invoker.invoke).return_annotation
output_type_title = output_type_titles[output_type.__name__]
invoker_schema = openapi_schema["components"]["schemas"][invoker_name]
outputs_ref = {"$ref": f"#/components/schemas/{output_type_title}"}
invoker_schema["output"] = outputs_ref
from invokeai.backend.model_management.models import get_model_config_enums
for model_config_format_enum in set(get_model_config_enums()):
name = model_config_format_enum.__qualname__
if name in openapi_schema["components"]["schemas"]:
# print(f"Config with name {name} already defined")
continue
# "BaseModelType":{"title":"BaseModelType","description":"An enumeration.","enum":["sd-1","sd-2"],"type":"string"}
openapi_schema["components"]["schemas"][name] = dict(
title=name,
description="An enumeration.",
type="string",
enum=list(v.value for v in model_config_format_enum),
)
app.openapi_schema = openapi_schema
return app.openapi_schema
app.openapi = custom_openapi
# Override API doc favicons
app.mount("/static", StaticFiles(directory=Path(web_dir.__path__[0], 'static/dream_web')), name="static")
@app.get("/docs", include_in_schema=False)
def overridden_swagger():
return get_swagger_ui_html(
openapi_url=app.openapi_url,
title=app.title,
swagger_favicon_url="/static/favicon.ico",
)
@app.get("/redoc", include_in_schema=False)
def overridden_redoc():
return get_redoc_html(
openapi_url=app.openapi_url,
title=app.title,
redoc_favicon_url="/static/favicon.ico",
)
# Must mount *after* the other routes else it borks em
app.mount("/",
StaticFiles(directory=Path(web_dir.__path__[0],"dist"),
html=True
), name="ui"
)
def invoke_api():
# Start our own event loop for eventing usage
loop = asyncio.new_event_loop()
config = uvicorn.Config(app=app, host=app_config.host, port=app_config.port, loop=loop)
# Use access_log to turn off logging
server = uvicorn.Server(config)
loop.run_until_complete(server.serve())
if __name__ == "__main__":
invoke_api()

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@ -1,303 +0,0 @@
# Copyright (c) 2023 Kyle Schouviller (https://github.com/kyle0654)
from abc import ABC, abstractmethod
import argparse
from typing import Any, Callable, Iterable, Literal, Union, get_args, get_origin, get_type_hints
from pydantic import BaseModel, Field
import networkx as nx
import matplotlib.pyplot as plt
import invokeai.backend.util.logging as logger
from ..invocations.baseinvocation import BaseInvocation
from ..invocations.image import ImageField
from ..services.graph import GraphExecutionState, LibraryGraph, Edge
from ..services.invoker import Invoker
def add_field_argument(command_parser, name: str, field, default_override = None):
default = default_override if default_override is not None else field.default if field.default_factory is None else field.default_factory()
if get_origin(field.type_) == Literal:
allowed_values = get_args(field.type_)
allowed_types = set()
for val in allowed_values:
allowed_types.add(type(val))
allowed_types_list = list(allowed_types)
field_type = allowed_types_list[0] if len(allowed_types) == 1 else Union[allowed_types_list] # type: ignore
command_parser.add_argument(
f"--{name}",
dest=name,
type=field_type,
default=default,
choices=allowed_values,
help=field.field_info.description,
)
else:
command_parser.add_argument(
f"--{name}",
dest=name,
type=field.type_,
default=default,
help=field.field_info.description,
)
def add_parsers(
subparsers,
commands: list[type],
command_field: str = "type",
exclude_fields: list[str] = ["id", "type"],
add_arguments: Union[Callable[[argparse.ArgumentParser], None],None] = None
):
"""Adds parsers for each command to the subparsers"""
# Create subparsers for each command
for command in commands:
hints = get_type_hints(command)
cmd_name = get_args(hints[command_field])[0]
command_parser = subparsers.add_parser(cmd_name, help=command.__doc__)
if add_arguments is not None:
add_arguments(command_parser)
# Convert all fields to arguments
fields = command.__fields__ # type: ignore
for name, field in fields.items():
if name in exclude_fields:
continue
add_field_argument(command_parser, name, field)
def add_graph_parsers(
subparsers,
graphs: list[LibraryGraph],
add_arguments: Union[Callable[[argparse.ArgumentParser], None], None] = None
):
for graph in graphs:
command_parser = subparsers.add_parser(graph.name, help=graph.description)
if add_arguments is not None:
add_arguments(command_parser)
# Add arguments for inputs
for exposed_input in graph.exposed_inputs:
node = graph.graph.get_node(exposed_input.node_path)
field = node.__fields__[exposed_input.field]
default_override = getattr(node, exposed_input.field)
add_field_argument(command_parser, exposed_input.alias, field, default_override)
class CliContext:
invoker: Invoker
session: GraphExecutionState
parser: argparse.ArgumentParser
defaults: dict[str, Any]
graph_nodes: dict[str, str]
nodes_added: list[str]
def __init__(self, invoker: Invoker, session: GraphExecutionState, parser: argparse.ArgumentParser):
self.invoker = invoker
self.session = session
self.parser = parser
self.defaults = dict()
self.graph_nodes = dict()
self.nodes_added = list()
def get_session(self):
self.session = self.invoker.services.graph_execution_manager.get(self.session.id)
return self.session
def reset(self):
self.session = self.invoker.create_execution_state()
self.graph_nodes = dict()
self.nodes_added = list()
# Leave defaults unchanged
def add_node(self, node: BaseInvocation):
self.get_session()
self.session.graph.add_node(node)
self.nodes_added.append(node.id)
self.invoker.services.graph_execution_manager.set(self.session)
def add_edge(self, edge: Edge):
self.get_session()
self.session.add_edge(edge)
self.invoker.services.graph_execution_manager.set(self.session)
class ExitCli(Exception):
"""Exception to exit the CLI"""
pass
class BaseCommand(ABC, BaseModel):
"""A CLI command"""
# All commands must include a type name like this:
# type: Literal['your_command_name'] = 'your_command_name'
@classmethod
def get_all_subclasses(cls):
subclasses = []
toprocess = [cls]
while len(toprocess) > 0:
next = toprocess.pop(0)
next_subclasses = next.__subclasses__()
subclasses.extend(next_subclasses)
toprocess.extend(next_subclasses)
return subclasses
@classmethod
def get_commands(cls):
return tuple(BaseCommand.get_all_subclasses())
@classmethod
def get_commands_map(cls):
# Get the type strings out of the literals and into a dictionary
return dict(map(lambda t: (get_args(get_type_hints(t)['type'])[0], t),BaseCommand.get_all_subclasses()))
@abstractmethod
def run(self, context: CliContext) -> None:
"""Run the command. Raise ExitCli to exit."""
pass
class ExitCommand(BaseCommand):
"""Exits the CLI"""
type: Literal['exit'] = 'exit'
def run(self, context: CliContext) -> None:
raise ExitCli()
class HelpCommand(BaseCommand):
"""Shows help"""
type: Literal['help'] = 'help'
def run(self, context: CliContext) -> None:
context.parser.print_help()
def get_graph_execution_history(
graph_execution_state: GraphExecutionState,
) -> Iterable[str]:
"""Gets the history of fully-executed invocations for a graph execution"""
return (
n
for n in reversed(graph_execution_state.executed_history)
if n in graph_execution_state.graph.nodes
)
def get_invocation_command(invocation) -> str:
fields = invocation.__fields__.items()
type_hints = get_type_hints(type(invocation))
command = [invocation.type]
for name, field in fields:
if name in ["id", "type"]:
continue
# TODO: add links
# Skip image fields when serializing command
type_hint = type_hints.get(name) or None
if type_hint is ImageField or ImageField in get_args(type_hint):
continue
field_value = getattr(invocation, name)
field_default = field.default
if field_value != field_default:
if type_hint is str or str in get_args(type_hint):
command.append(f'--{name} "{field_value}"')
else:
command.append(f"--{name} {field_value}")
return " ".join(command)
class HistoryCommand(BaseCommand):
"""Shows the invocation history"""
type: Literal['history'] = 'history'
# Inputs
# fmt: off
count: int = Field(default=5, gt=0, description="The number of history entries to show")
# fmt: on
def run(self, context: CliContext) -> None:
history = list(get_graph_execution_history(context.get_session()))
for i in range(min(self.count, len(history))):
entry_id = history[-1 - i]
entry = context.get_session().graph.get_node(entry_id)
logger.info(f"{entry_id}: {get_invocation_command(entry)}")
class SetDefaultCommand(BaseCommand):
"""Sets a default value for a field"""
type: Literal['default'] = 'default'
# Inputs
# fmt: off
field: str = Field(description="The field to set the default for")
value: str = Field(description="The value to set the default to, or None to clear the default")
# fmt: on
def run(self, context: CliContext) -> None:
if self.value is None:
if self.field in context.defaults:
del context.defaults[self.field]
else:
context.defaults[self.field] = self.value
class DrawGraphCommand(BaseCommand):
"""Debugs a graph"""
type: Literal['draw_graph'] = 'draw_graph'
def run(self, context: CliContext) -> None:
session: GraphExecutionState = context.invoker.services.graph_execution_manager.get(context.session.id)
nxgraph = session.graph.nx_graph_flat()
# Draw the networkx graph
plt.figure(figsize=(20, 20))
pos = nx.spectral_layout(nxgraph)
nx.draw_networkx_nodes(nxgraph, pos, node_size=1000)
nx.draw_networkx_edges(nxgraph, pos, width=2)
nx.draw_networkx_labels(nxgraph, pos, font_size=20, font_family="sans-serif")
plt.axis("off")
plt.show()
class DrawExecutionGraphCommand(BaseCommand):
"""Debugs an execution graph"""
type: Literal['draw_xgraph'] = 'draw_xgraph'
def run(self, context: CliContext) -> None:
session: GraphExecutionState = context.invoker.services.graph_execution_manager.get(context.session.id)
nxgraph = session.execution_graph.nx_graph_flat()
# Draw the networkx graph
plt.figure(figsize=(20, 20))
pos = nx.spectral_layout(nxgraph)
nx.draw_networkx_nodes(nxgraph, pos, node_size=1000)
nx.draw_networkx_edges(nxgraph, pos, width=2)
nx.draw_networkx_labels(nxgraph, pos, font_size=20, font_family="sans-serif")
plt.axis("off")
plt.show()
class SortedHelpFormatter(argparse.HelpFormatter):
def _iter_indented_subactions(self, action):
try:
get_subactions = action._get_subactions
except AttributeError:
pass
else:
self._indent()
if isinstance(action, argparse._SubParsersAction):
for subaction in sorted(get_subactions(), key=lambda x: x.dest):
yield subaction
else:
for subaction in get_subactions():
yield subaction
self._dedent()

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@ -1,169 +0,0 @@
"""
Readline helper functions for cli_app.py
You may import the global singleton `completer` to get access to the
completer object.
"""
import atexit
import readline
import shlex
from pathlib import Path
from typing import List, Dict, Literal, get_args, get_type_hints, get_origin
import invokeai.backend.util.logging as logger
from ...backend import ModelManager
from ..invocations.baseinvocation import BaseInvocation
from .commands import BaseCommand
from ..services.invocation_services import InvocationServices
# singleton object, class variable
completer = None
class Completer(object):
def __init__(self, model_manager: ModelManager):
self.commands = self.get_commands()
self.matches = None
self.linebuffer = None
self.manager = model_manager
return
def complete(self, text, state):
"""
Complete commands and switches fromm the node CLI command line.
Switches are determined in a context-specific manner.
"""
buffer = readline.get_line_buffer()
if state == 0:
options = None
try:
current_command, current_switch = self.get_current_command(buffer)
options = self.get_command_options(current_command, current_switch)
except IndexError:
pass
options = options or list(self.parse_commands().keys())
if not text: # first time
self.matches = options
else:
self.matches = [s for s in options if s and s.startswith(text)]
try:
match = self.matches[state]
except IndexError:
match = None
return match
@classmethod
def get_commands(self)->List[object]:
"""
Return a list of all the client commands and invocations.
"""
return BaseCommand.get_commands() + BaseInvocation.get_invocations()
def get_current_command(self, buffer: str)->tuple[str, str]:
"""
Parse the readline buffer to find the most recent command and its switch.
"""
if len(buffer)==0:
return None, None
tokens = shlex.split(buffer)
command = None
switch = None
for t in tokens:
if t[0].isalpha():
if switch is None:
command = t
else:
switch = t
# don't try to autocomplete switches that are already complete
if switch and buffer.endswith(' '):
switch=None
return command or '', switch or ''
def parse_commands(self)->Dict[str, List[str]]:
"""
Return a dict in which the keys are the command name
and the values are the parameters the command takes.
"""
result = dict()
for command in self.commands:
hints = get_type_hints(command)
name = get_args(hints['type'])[0]
result.update({name:hints})
return result
def get_command_options(self, command: str, switch: str)->List[str]:
"""
Return all the parameters that can be passed to the command as
command-line switches. Returns None if the command is unrecognized.
"""
parsed_commands = self.parse_commands()
if command not in parsed_commands:
return None
# handle switches in the format "-foo=bar"
argument = None
if switch and '=' in switch:
switch, argument = switch.split('=')
parameter = switch.strip('-')
if parameter in parsed_commands[command]:
if argument is None:
return self.get_parameter_options(parameter, parsed_commands[command][parameter])
else:
return [f"--{parameter}={x}" for x in self.get_parameter_options(parameter, parsed_commands[command][parameter])]
else:
return [f"--{x}" for x in parsed_commands[command].keys()]
def get_parameter_options(self, parameter: str, typehint)->List[str]:
"""
Given a parameter type (such as Literal), offers autocompletions.
"""
if get_origin(typehint) == Literal:
return get_args(typehint)
if parameter == 'model':
return self.manager.model_names()
def _pre_input_hook(self):
if self.linebuffer:
readline.insert_text(self.linebuffer)
readline.redisplay()
self.linebuffer = None
def set_autocompleter(services: InvocationServices) -> Completer:
global completer
if completer:
return completer
completer = Completer(services.model_manager)
readline.set_completer(completer.complete)
# pyreadline3 does not have a set_auto_history() method
try:
readline.set_auto_history(True)
except:
pass
readline.set_pre_input_hook(completer._pre_input_hook)
readline.set_completer_delims(" ")
readline.parse_and_bind("tab: complete")
readline.parse_and_bind("set print-completions-horizontally off")
readline.parse_and_bind("set page-completions on")
readline.parse_and_bind("set skip-completed-text on")
readline.parse_and_bind("set show-all-if-ambiguous on")
histfile = Path(services.configuration.root_dir / ".invoke_history")
try:
readline.read_history_file(histfile)
readline.set_history_length(1000)
except FileNotFoundError:
pass
except OSError: # file likely corrupted
newname = f"{histfile}.old"
logger.error(
f"Your history file {histfile} couldn't be loaded and may be corrupted. Renaming it to {newname}"
)
histfile.replace(Path(newname))
atexit.register(readline.write_history_file, histfile)

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@ -1,470 +0,0 @@
# Copyright (c) 2022 Kyle Schouviller (https://github.com/kyle0654)
import argparse
import re
import shlex
import sys
import time
from typing import Union, get_type_hints, Optional
from pydantic import BaseModel, ValidationError
from pydantic.fields import Field
# This should come early so that the logger can pick up its configuration options
from .services.config import InvokeAIAppConfig
from invokeai.backend.util.logging import InvokeAILogger
config = InvokeAIAppConfig.get_config()
config.parse_args()
logger = InvokeAILogger().getLogger(config=config)
from invokeai.version.invokeai_version import __version__
# we call this early so that the message appears before other invokeai initialization messages
if config.version:
print(f'InvokeAI version {__version__}')
sys.exit(0)
from invokeai.app.services.board_image_record_storage import (
SqliteBoardImageRecordStorage,
)
from invokeai.app.services.board_images import (
BoardImagesService,
BoardImagesServiceDependencies,
)
from invokeai.app.services.board_record_storage import SqliteBoardRecordStorage
from invokeai.app.services.boards import BoardService, BoardServiceDependencies
from invokeai.app.services.image_record_storage import SqliteImageRecordStorage
from invokeai.app.services.images import ImageService, ImageServiceDependencies
from invokeai.app.services.resource_name import SimpleNameService
from invokeai.app.services.urls import LocalUrlService
from .services.default_graphs import (default_text_to_image_graph_id,
create_system_graphs)
from .services.latent_storage import DiskLatentsStorage, ForwardCacheLatentsStorage
from .cli.commands import (BaseCommand, CliContext, ExitCli,
SortedHelpFormatter, add_graph_parsers, add_parsers)
from .cli.completer import set_autocompleter
from .invocations.baseinvocation import BaseInvocation
from .services.events import EventServiceBase
from .services.graph import (Edge, EdgeConnection, GraphExecutionState,
GraphInvocation, LibraryGraph,
are_connection_types_compatible)
from .services.image_file_storage import DiskImageFileStorage
from .services.invocation_queue import MemoryInvocationQueue
from .services.invocation_services import InvocationServices
from .services.invoker import Invoker
from .services.model_manager_service import ModelManagerService
from .services.processor import DefaultInvocationProcessor
from .services.sqlite import SqliteItemStorage
import torch
import invokeai.backend.util.hotfixes
if torch.backends.mps.is_available():
import invokeai.backend.util.mps_fixes
class CliCommand(BaseModel):
command: Union[BaseCommand.get_commands() + BaseInvocation.get_invocations()] = Field(discriminator="type") # type: ignore
class InvalidArgs(Exception):
pass
def add_invocation_args(command_parser):
# Add linking capability
command_parser.add_argument(
"--link",
"-l",
action="append",
nargs=3,
help="A link in the format 'source_node source_field dest_field'. source_node can be relative to history (e.g. -1)",
)
command_parser.add_argument(
"--link_node",
"-ln",
action="append",
help="A link from all fields in the specified node. Node can be relative to history (e.g. -1)",
)
def get_command_parser(services: InvocationServices) -> argparse.ArgumentParser:
# Create invocation parser
parser = argparse.ArgumentParser(formatter_class=SortedHelpFormatter)
def exit(*args, **kwargs):
raise InvalidArgs
parser.exit = exit
subparsers = parser.add_subparsers(dest="type")
# Create subparsers for each invocation
invocations = BaseInvocation.get_all_subclasses()
add_parsers(subparsers, invocations, add_arguments=add_invocation_args)
# Create subparsers for each command
commands = BaseCommand.get_all_subclasses()
add_parsers(subparsers, commands, exclude_fields=["type"])
# Create subparsers for exposed CLI graphs
# TODO: add a way to identify these graphs
text_to_image = services.graph_library.get(default_text_to_image_graph_id)
add_graph_parsers(subparsers, [text_to_image], add_arguments=add_invocation_args)
return parser
class NodeField():
alias: str
node_path: str
field: str
field_type: type
def __init__(self, alias: str, node_path: str, field: str, field_type: type):
self.alias = alias
self.node_path = node_path
self.field = field
self.field_type = field_type
def fields_from_type_hints(hints: dict[str, type], node_path: str) -> dict[str,NodeField]:
return {k:NodeField(alias=k, node_path=node_path, field=k, field_type=v) for k, v in hints.items()}
def get_node_input_field(graph: LibraryGraph, field_alias: str, node_id: str) -> NodeField:
"""Gets the node field for the specified field alias"""
exposed_input = next(e for e in graph.exposed_inputs if e.alias == field_alias)
node_type = type(graph.graph.get_node(exposed_input.node_path))
return NodeField(alias=exposed_input.alias, node_path=f'{node_id}.{exposed_input.node_path}', field=exposed_input.field, field_type=get_type_hints(node_type)[exposed_input.field])
def get_node_output_field(graph: LibraryGraph, field_alias: str, node_id: str) -> NodeField:
"""Gets the node field for the specified field alias"""
exposed_output = next(e for e in graph.exposed_outputs if e.alias == field_alias)
node_type = type(graph.graph.get_node(exposed_output.node_path))
node_output_type = node_type.get_output_type()
return NodeField(alias=exposed_output.alias, node_path=f'{node_id}.{exposed_output.node_path}', field=exposed_output.field, field_type=get_type_hints(node_output_type)[exposed_output.field])
def get_node_inputs(invocation: BaseInvocation, context: CliContext) -> dict[str, NodeField]:
"""Gets the inputs for the specified invocation from the context"""
node_type = type(invocation)
if node_type is not GraphInvocation:
return fields_from_type_hints(get_type_hints(node_type), invocation.id)
else:
graph: LibraryGraph = context.invoker.services.graph_library.get(context.graph_nodes[invocation.id])
return {e.alias: get_node_input_field(graph, e.alias, invocation.id) for e in graph.exposed_inputs}
def get_node_outputs(invocation: BaseInvocation, context: CliContext) -> dict[str, NodeField]:
"""Gets the outputs for the specified invocation from the context"""
node_type = type(invocation)
if node_type is not GraphInvocation:
return fields_from_type_hints(get_type_hints(node_type.get_output_type()), invocation.id)
else:
graph: LibraryGraph = context.invoker.services.graph_library.get(context.graph_nodes[invocation.id])
return {e.alias: get_node_output_field(graph, e.alias, invocation.id) for e in graph.exposed_outputs}
def generate_matching_edges(
a: BaseInvocation, b: BaseInvocation, context: CliContext
) -> list[Edge]:
"""Generates all possible edges between two invocations"""
afields = get_node_outputs(a, context)
bfields = get_node_inputs(b, context)
matching_fields = set(afields.keys()).intersection(bfields.keys())
# Remove invalid fields
invalid_fields = set(["type", "id"])
matching_fields = matching_fields.difference(invalid_fields)
# Validate types
matching_fields = [f for f in matching_fields if are_connection_types_compatible(afields[f].field_type, bfields[f].field_type)]
edges = [
Edge(
source=EdgeConnection(node_id=afields[alias].node_path, field=afields[alias].field),
destination=EdgeConnection(node_id=bfields[alias].node_path, field=bfields[alias].field)
)
for alias in matching_fields
]
return edges
class SessionError(Exception):
"""Raised when a session error has occurred"""
pass
def invoke_all(context: CliContext):
"""Runs all invocations in the specified session"""
context.invoker.invoke(context.session, invoke_all=True)
while not context.get_session().is_complete():
# Wait some time
time.sleep(0.1)
# Print any errors
if context.session.has_error():
for n in context.session.errors:
context.invoker.services.logger.error(
f"Error in node {n} (source node {context.session.prepared_source_mapping[n]}): {context.session.errors[n]}"
)
raise SessionError()
def invoke_cli():
logger.info(f'InvokeAI version {__version__}')
# get the optional list of invocations to execute on the command line
parser = config.get_parser()
parser.add_argument('commands',nargs='*')
invocation_commands = parser.parse_args().commands
# get the optional file to read commands from.
# Simplest is to use it for STDIN
if infile := config.from_file:
sys.stdin = open(infile,"r")
model_manager = ModelManagerService(config,logger)
events = EventServiceBase()
output_folder = config.output_path
# TODO: build a file/path manager?
if config.use_memory_db:
db_location = ":memory:"
else:
db_location = config.db_path
db_location.parent.mkdir(parents=True,exist_ok=True)
logger.info(f'InvokeAI database location is "{db_location}"')
graph_execution_manager = SqliteItemStorage[GraphExecutionState](
filename=db_location, table_name="graph_executions"
)
urls = LocalUrlService()
image_record_storage = SqliteImageRecordStorage(db_location)
image_file_storage = DiskImageFileStorage(f"{output_folder}/images")
names = SimpleNameService()
board_record_storage = SqliteBoardRecordStorage(db_location)
board_image_record_storage = SqliteBoardImageRecordStorage(db_location)
boards = BoardService(
services=BoardServiceDependencies(
board_image_record_storage=board_image_record_storage,
board_record_storage=board_record_storage,
image_record_storage=image_record_storage,
url=urls,
logger=logger,
)
)
board_images = BoardImagesService(
services=BoardImagesServiceDependencies(
board_image_record_storage=board_image_record_storage,
board_record_storage=board_record_storage,
image_record_storage=image_record_storage,
url=urls,
logger=logger,
)
)
images = ImageService(
services=ImageServiceDependencies(
board_image_record_storage=board_image_record_storage,
image_record_storage=image_record_storage,
image_file_storage=image_file_storage,
url=urls,
logger=logger,
names=names,
graph_execution_manager=graph_execution_manager,
)
)
services = InvocationServices(
model_manager=model_manager,
events=events,
latents = ForwardCacheLatentsStorage(DiskLatentsStorage(f'{output_folder}/latents')),
images=images,
boards=boards,
board_images=board_images,
queue=MemoryInvocationQueue(),
graph_library=SqliteItemStorage[LibraryGraph](
filename=db_location, table_name="graphs"
),
graph_execution_manager=graph_execution_manager,
processor=DefaultInvocationProcessor(),
logger=logger,
configuration=config,
)
system_graphs = create_system_graphs(services.graph_library)
system_graph_names = set([g.name for g in system_graphs])
set_autocompleter(services)
invoker = Invoker(services)
session: GraphExecutionState = invoker.create_execution_state()
parser = get_command_parser(services)
re_negid = re.compile('^-[0-9]+$')
# Uncomment to print out previous sessions at startup
# print(services.session_manager.list())
context = CliContext(invoker, session, parser)
set_autocompleter(services)
command_line_args_exist = len(invocation_commands) > 0
done = False
while not done:
try:
if command_line_args_exist:
cmd_input = invocation_commands.pop(0)
done = len(invocation_commands) == 0
else:
cmd_input = input("invoke> ")
except (KeyboardInterrupt, EOFError):
# Ctrl-c exits
break
try:
# Refresh the state of the session
#history = list(get_graph_execution_history(context.session))
history = list(reversed(context.nodes_added))
# Split the command for piping
cmds = cmd_input.split("|")
start_id = len(context.nodes_added)
current_id = start_id
new_invocations = list()
for cmd in cmds:
if cmd is None or cmd.strip() == "":
raise InvalidArgs("Empty command")
# Parse args to create invocation
args = vars(context.parser.parse_args(shlex.split(cmd.strip())))
# Override defaults
for field_name, field_default in context.defaults.items():
if field_name in args:
args[field_name] = field_default
# Parse invocation
command: CliCommand = None # type:ignore
system_graph: Optional[LibraryGraph] = None
if args['type'] in system_graph_names:
system_graph = next(filter(lambda g: g.name == args['type'], system_graphs))
invocation = GraphInvocation(graph=system_graph.graph, id=str(current_id))
for exposed_input in system_graph.exposed_inputs:
if exposed_input.alias in args:
node = invocation.graph.get_node(exposed_input.node_path)
field = exposed_input.field
setattr(node, field, args[exposed_input.alias])
command = CliCommand(command = invocation)
context.graph_nodes[invocation.id] = system_graph.id
else:
args["id"] = current_id
command = CliCommand(command=args)
if command is None:
continue
# Run any CLI commands immediately
if isinstance(command.command, BaseCommand):
# Invoke all current nodes to preserve operation order
invoke_all(context)
# Run the command
command.command.run(context)
continue
# TODO: handle linking with library graphs
# Pipe previous command output (if there was a previous command)
edges: list[Edge] = list()
if len(history) > 0 or current_id != start_id:
from_id = (
history[0] if current_id == start_id else str(current_id - 1)
)
from_node = (
next(filter(lambda n: n[0].id == from_id, new_invocations))[0]
if current_id != start_id
else context.session.graph.get_node(from_id)
)
matching_edges = generate_matching_edges(
from_node, command.command, context
)
edges.extend(matching_edges)
# Parse provided links
if "link_node" in args and args["link_node"]:
for link in args["link_node"]:
node_id = link
if re_negid.match(node_id):
node_id = str(current_id + int(node_id))
link_node = context.session.graph.get_node(node_id)
matching_edges = generate_matching_edges(
link_node, command.command, context
)
matching_destinations = [e.destination for e in matching_edges]
edges = [e for e in edges if e.destination not in matching_destinations]
edges.extend(matching_edges)
if "link" in args and args["link"]:
for link in args["link"]:
edges = [e for e in edges if e.destination.node_id != command.command.id or e.destination.field != link[2]]
node_id = link[0]
if re_negid.match(node_id):
node_id = str(current_id + int(node_id))
# TODO: handle missing input/output
node_output = get_node_outputs(context.session.graph.get_node(node_id), context)[link[1]]
node_input = get_node_inputs(command.command, context)[link[2]]
edges.append(
Edge(
source=EdgeConnection(node_id=node_output.node_path, field=node_output.field),
destination=EdgeConnection(node_id=node_input.node_path, field=node_input.field)
)
)
new_invocations.append((command.command, edges))
current_id = current_id + 1
# Add the node to the session
context.add_node(command.command)
for edge in edges:
print(edge)
context.add_edge(edge)
# Execute all remaining nodes
invoke_all(context)
except InvalidArgs:
invoker.services.logger.warning('Invalid command, use "help" to list commands')
continue
except ValidationError:
invoker.services.logger.warning('Invalid command arguments, run "<command> --help" for summary')
except SessionError:
# Start a new session
invoker.services.logger.warning("Session error: creating a new session")
context.reset()
except ExitCli:
break
except SystemExit:
continue
invoker.stop()
if __name__ == "__main__":
invoke_cli()

View File

@ -1,12 +0,0 @@
import os
__all__ = []
dirname = os.path.dirname(os.path.abspath(__file__))
for f in os.listdir(dirname):
if (
f != "__init__.py"
and os.path.isfile("%s/%s" % (dirname, f))
and f[-3:] == ".py"
):
__all__.append(f[:-3])

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