InvokeAI/ldm/modules/distributions/distributions.py

105 lines
3.0 KiB
Python

import torch
import numpy as np
class AbstractDistribution:
def sample(self):
raise NotImplementedError()
def mode(self):
raise NotImplementedError()
class DiracDistribution(AbstractDistribution):
def __init__(self, value):
self.value = value
def sample(self):
return self.value
def mode(self):
return self.value
class DiagonalGaussianDistribution(object):
def __init__(self, parameters, deterministic=False):
self.parameters = parameters
self.mean, self.logvar = torch.chunk(parameters, 2, dim=1)
self.logvar = torch.clamp(self.logvar, -30.0, 20.0)
self.deterministic = deterministic
self.std = torch.exp(0.5 * self.logvar)
self.var = torch.exp(self.logvar)
if self.deterministic:
self.var = self.std = torch.zeros_like(self.mean).to(
device=self.parameters.device
)
def sample(self):
x = self.mean + self.std * torch.randn(self.mean.shape).to(
device=self.parameters.device
)
return x
def kl(self, other=None):
if self.deterministic:
return torch.Tensor([0.0])
else:
if other is None:
return 0.5 * torch.sum(
torch.pow(self.mean, 2) + self.var - 1.0 - self.logvar,
dim=[1, 2, 3],
)
else:
return 0.5 * torch.sum(
torch.pow(self.mean - other.mean, 2) / other.var
+ self.var / other.var
- 1.0
- self.logvar
+ other.logvar,
dim=[1, 2, 3],
)
def nll(self, sample, dims=[1, 2, 3]):
if self.deterministic:
return torch.Tensor([0.0])
logtwopi = np.log(2.0 * np.pi)
return 0.5 * torch.sum(
logtwopi
+ self.logvar
+ torch.pow(sample - self.mean, 2) / self.var,
dim=dims,
)
def mode(self):
return self.mean
def normal_kl(mean1, logvar1, mean2, logvar2):
"""
source: https://github.com/openai/guided-diffusion/blob/27c20a8fab9cb472df5d6bdd6c8d11c8f430b924/guided_diffusion/losses.py#L12
Compute the KL divergence between two gaussians.
Shapes are automatically broadcasted, so batches can be compared to
scalars, among other use cases.
"""
tensor = None
for obj in (mean1, logvar1, mean2, logvar2):
if isinstance(obj, torch.Tensor):
tensor = obj
break
assert tensor is not None, 'at least one argument must be a Tensor'
# Force variances to be Tensors. Broadcasting helps convert scalars to
# Tensors, but it does not work for torch.exp().
logvar1, logvar2 = [
x if isinstance(x, torch.Tensor) else torch.tensor(x).to(tensor)
for x in (logvar1, logvar2)
]
return 0.5 * (
-1.0
+ logvar2
- logvar1
+ torch.exp(logvar1 - logvar2)
+ ((mean1 - mean2) ** 2) * torch.exp(-logvar2)
)