InvokeAI/docs/features/CLI.md
Lincoln Stein b159b2fe42 add support for safety checker (NSFW filter)
Now you can activate the Hugging Face `diffusers` library safety check
for NSFW and other potentially disturbing imagery.

To turn on the safety check, pass --safety_checker at the command
line. For developers, the flag is `safety_checker=True` passed to
ldm.generate.Generate(). Once the safety checker is turned on, it
cannot be turned off unless you reinitialize a new Generate object.

When the safety checker is active, suspect images will be blurred and
a warning icon is added. There is also a warning message printed in
the CLI, but it can be a little hard to see because of its positioning
in the output stream.

There is a slight but noticeable delay when the safety checker runs.

Note that invisible watermarking is *not* currently implemented. The
watermark code distributed by the CompViz distribution uses a library
that does not seem to be able to retrieve the watermarks it creates,
and it does not appear that Hugging Face `diffusers` or other SD
distributions are doing any watermarking.
2022-10-23 22:26:18 -04:00

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CLI
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:material-bash: CLI

Interactive Command Line Interface

The invoke.py script, located in scripts/, provides an interactive interface to image generation similar to the "invoke mothership" bot that Stable AI provided on its Discord server.

Unlike the txt2img.py and img2img.py scripts provided in the original CompVis/stable-diffusion source code repository, the time-consuming initialization of the AI model initialization only happens once. After that image generation from the command-line interface is very fast.

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.

In addition, as of version 1.02, it also writes the prompt into the PNG file's metadata where it can be retrieved using scripts/images2prompt.py

The script is confirmed to work on Linux, Windows and Mac systems.

!!! note

This script runs from the command-line or can be used as a Web application. The Web GUI is
currently rudimentary, but a much better replacement is on its way.
(invokeai) ~/stable-diffusion$ python3 ./scripts/invoke.py
* Initializing, be patient...
Loading model from models/ldm/text2img-large/model.ckpt
(...more initialization messages...)

* Initialization done! Awaiting your command...
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

# this shows how to retrieve the prompt stored in the saved image's metadata
(invokeai) ~/stable-diffusion$ python ./scripts/images2prompt.py outputs/img_samples/*.png
00009.png: "ashley judd riding a camel" -s150 -S 416354203
00010.png: "ashley judd riding a camel" -s150 -S 1362479620
00011.png: "there's a fly in my soup" -n6 -g -S 2685670268

invoke-py-demo

The invoke> prompt's arguments are pretty much identical to those used in the Discord bot, except you don't need to type !invoke (it doesn't hurt if you do). A significant change is that creation of individual images is now the default unless --grid (-g) is given. A full list is given in List of prompt arguments.

Arguments

The script itself also 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. Others

Argument Shortcut Default 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-1.4 Loads model specified in configs/models.yaml. Currently one of "stable-diffusion-1.4" or "laion400m"
--full_precision -F False Run in slower full-precision mode. Needed for Macintosh M1/M2 hardware and some older video 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
--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.
--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_dir src/gfpgan Path to where GFPGAN is installed.
--gfpgan_model_path experiments/pretrained_models/GFPGANv1.4.pth Path to GFPGAN model file, relative to --gfpgan_dir.
--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 deprecated

These arguments are deprecated but still work:

<div align="center" markdown>

| Argument           |  Shortcut  |  Default            |  Description |
|--------------------|------------|---------------------|--------------|
| `--weights <path>`   |            | `None`                | Pth 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`.

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), to embellish an existing image or sketch (img2img), or to selectively alter chosen regions of the image (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 Shortcut Default Description
"my prompt" Text prompt to use. The quotation marks are optional.
--width -W 512 Width of generated image
--height -H 512 Height of generated image
--iterations -n 1 How many images to generate from this prompt
--steps -s 50 How many steps of refinement to apply
--cfg_scale -C 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 -S None Set the random seed for the next series of images. This can be used to recreate an image generated previously.
--sampler -A k_lms Sampler to use. Use -h to get list of available samplers.
--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 -o 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
--upscale -U -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 -G -G0 Fix faces (defaults to using the GFPGAN algorithm); argument indicates how hard the algorithm should try (0.0-1.0)
--facetool -ft -ft gfpgan Select face restoration algorithm to use: gfpgan, codeformer
--codeformer_fidelity -cf 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 -v 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 and -n to generate a series a riffs on a starting image. See Variations.
--with_variations None Combine two or more variations. See Variations for now to use this.
--save_intermediates None Save the image from every nth step into an "intermediates" folder inside the output directory

Note that 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.

This is an example of img2img:

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 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 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.
--text_mask <prompt> [<float>] -tm <prompt> [<float>] Create a mask from a text prompt describing part of the image

--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:

invoke> a piece of cake -I /path/to/breakfast.png -tm bagel

The algorithm uses clipseg 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.

invoke> a piece of cake -I /path/to/breakfast.png -tm bagel 0.6

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.

!models

This prints out a list of the models defined in `config/models.yaml'. The active model is bold-faced

Example:

laion400m                 not loaded  
stable-diffusion-1.4          active  Stable Diffusion v1.4
waifu-diffusion           not loaded  Waifu Diffusion v1.3

!switch

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.

invoke> !models
laion400m                 not loaded  
stable-diffusion-1.4          cached  Stable Diffusion v1.4
waifu-diffusion               active  Waifu Diffusion v1.3

invoke> !switch waifu-diffusion
>> Caching model stable-diffusion-1.4 in system RAM
>> Loading waifu-diffusion from models/ldm/stable-diffusion-v1/model-epoch08-float16.ckpt
   | LatentDiffusion: Running in eps-prediction mode
   | DiffusionWrapper has 859.52 M params.
   | Making attention of type 'vanilla' with 512 in_channels
   | Working with z of shape (1, 4, 32, 32) = 4096 dimensions.
   | Making attention of type 'vanilla' with 512 in_channels
   | Using faster float16 precision
>> Model loaded in 18.24s
>> Max VRAM used to load the model: 2.17G 
>> Current VRAM usage:2.17G
>> Setting Sampler to k_lms

invoke> !models
laion400m                 not loaded  
stable-diffusion-1.4          cached  Stable Diffusion v1.4
waifu-diffusion               active  Waifu Diffusion v1.3

invoke> !switch stable-diffusion-1.4
>> Caching model waifu-diffusion in system RAM
>> Retrieving model stable-diffusion-1.4 from system RAM cache
>> Setting Sampler to k_lms

invoke> !models
laion400m                 not loaded  
stable-diffusion-1.4          active  Stable Diffusion v1.4
waifu-diffusion               cached  Waifu Diffusion v1.3

!import_model <path/to/model/weights>

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.

Example:

invoke> !import_model models/ldm/stable-diffusion-v1/	model-epoch08-float16.ckpt
>> Model import in process. Please enter the values needed to configure this model:

Name for this model: waifu-diffusion
Description of this model: Waifu Diffusion v1.3
Configuration file for this model: configs/stable-diffusion/v1-inference.yaml
Default image width: 512
Default image height: 512
>> New configuration:
waifu-diffusion:
  config: configs/stable-diffusion/v1-inference.yaml
  description: Waifu Diffusion v1.3
  height: 512
  weights: models/ldm/stable-diffusion-v1/model-epoch08-float16.ckpt
  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-epoch08-float16.ckpt
   | LatentDiffusion: Running in eps-prediction mode
   | DiffusionWrapper has 859.52 M params.
   | Making attention of type 'vanilla' with 512 in_channels
   | Working with z of shape (1, 4, 32, 32) = 4096 dimensions.
   | Making attention of type 'vanilla' with 512 in_channels
   | Using faster float16 precision
invoke> 

###!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:

invoke> !edit_model waifu-diffusion
>> Editing model waifu-diffusion from configuration file ./configs/models.yaml
description: Waifu diffusion v1.4beta
weights: models/ldm/stable-diffusion-v1/model-epoch10-float16.ckpt
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
...

======= invoke> !fix 000017.4829112.gfpgan-00.png --embiggen 3 ...lots of text... Outputs: [2] outputs/img-samples/000018.2273800735.embiggen-00.png: !fix "outputs/img-samples/000017.243781548.gfpgan-00.png" -s 50 -S 2273800735 -W 512 -H 512 -C 7.5 -A k_lms --embiggen 3.0 0.75 0.25 ```

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:

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.

This example loads the generation command for a single png file:

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

This one fetches the generation commands from a batch of files and stores them into selected.txt:

invoke> !fetch outputs\selected-imgs\*.png selected.txt

!replay

This command replays a text file generated by !fetch or created manually

invoke> !replay outputs\selected-imgs\selected.txt

Note that these commands may behave unexpectedly if given a PNG file that was not generated by InvokeAI.

!search

This is similar to !history but it only returns lines that contain search string. For example:

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:

> 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:

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.