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Manual Installation |
!!! warning "This is for advanced Users"
who are already expirienced with using conda or pip
Introduction
You have two choices for manual installation, the first one
based on the Anaconda3 package manager (conda
), and
a second one which uses basic Python virtual environment (venv
)
commands and the PIP package manager. Both methods require you to enter commands
on the terminal, also known as the "console".
On Windows systems you are encouraged to install and use the Powershell, which provides compatibility with Linux and Mac shells and nice features such as command-line completion.
Conda method
-
Check that your system meets the hardware requirements and has the appropriate GPU drivers installed. In particular, if you are a Linux user with an AMD GPU installed, you may need to install the ROCm driver.
InvokeAI does not yet support Windows machines with AMD GPUs due to the lack of ROCm driver support on this platform.
To confirm that the appropriate drivers are installed, run
nvidia-smi
on NVIDIA/CUDA systems, androcm-smi
on AMD systems. These should return information about the installed video card.Macintosh users with MPS acceleration, or anybody with a CPU-only system, can skip this step.
-
You will need to install Anaconda3 and Git if they are not already available. Use your operating system's preferred package manager, or download the installers manually. You can find them here:
-
Clone the InvokeAI source code from GitHub:
git clone https://github.com/invoke-ai/InvokeAI.git
This will create InvokeAI folder where you will follow the rest of the steps.
-
Enter the newly-created InvokeAI folder:
cd InvokeAI
From this step forward make sure that you are working in the InvokeAI directory!
-
Select the appropriate environment file:
We have created a series of environment files suited for different operating systems and GPU hardware. They are located in the
environments-and-requirements
directory:filename OS environment-lin-amd.yml Linux with an AMD (ROCm) GPU environment-lin-cuda.yml Linux with an NVIDIA CUDA GPU environment-mac.yml Macintosh environment-win-cuda.yml Windows with an NVIDA CUDA GPU Choose the appropriate environment file for your system and link or copy it to
environment.yml
in InvokeAI's top-level directory. To do so, run following command from the repository-root:!!! Example ""
=== "Macintosh and Linux" !!! todo "Replace `xxx` and `yyy` with the appropriate OS and GPU codes as seen in the table above" ```bash ln -sf environments-and-requirements/environment-xxx-yyy.yml environment.yml ``` When this is done, confirm that a file `environment.yml` has been linked in the InvokeAI root directory and that it points to the correct file in the `environments-and-requirements`. ```bash ls -la ``` === "Windows" !!! todo " Since it requires admin privileges to create links, we will use the copy command to create your `environment.yml`" ```cmd copy environments-and-requirements\environment-win-cuda.yml environment.yml ``` Afterwards verify that the file `environment.yml` has been created, either via the explorer or by using the command `dir` from the terminal ```cmd dir ```
!!! warning "Do not try to run conda on directly on the subdirectory environments file. This won't work. Instead, copy or link it to the top-level directory as shown."
-
Create the conda environment:
conda env update
This will create a new environment named
invokeai
and install all InvokeAI dependencies into it. If something goes wrong you should take a look at troubleshooting. -
Activate the
invokeai
environment:In order to use the newly created environment you will first need to activate it
conda activate invokeai
Your command-line prompt should change to indicate that
invokeai
is active by prepending(invokeai)
. -
Pre-Load the model weights files:
!!! tip
If you have already downloaded the weights file(s) for another Stable Diffusion distribution, you may skip this step (by selecting "skip" when prompted) and configure InvokeAI to use the previously-downloaded files. The process for this is described in [here](INSTALLING_MODELS.md).
python scripts/configure_invokeai.py
The script
configure_invokeai.py
will interactively guide you through the process of downloading and installing the weights files needed for InvokeAI. Note that the main Stable Diffusion weights file is protected by a license agreement that you have to agree to. The script will list the steps you need to take to create an account on the site that hosts the weights files, accept the agreement, and provide an access token that allows InvokeAI to legally download and install the weights files.If you get an error message about a module not being installed, check that the
invokeai
environment is active and if not, repeat step 5. -
Run the command-line- or the web- interface:
!!! example ""
!!! warning "Make sure that the conda environment is activated, which should create `(invokeai)` in front of your prompt!" === "CLI" ```bash python scripts/invoke.py ``` === "local Webserver" ```bash python scripts/invoke.py --web ``` === "Public Webserver" ```bash python scripts/invoke.py --web --host 0.0.0.0 ``` If you choose the run the web interface, point your browser at http://localhost:9090 in order to load the GUI.
-
Render away!
Browse the features section to learn about all the things you can do with InvokeAI.
Note that some GPUs are slow to warm up. In particular, when using an AMD card with the ROCm driver, you may have to wait for over a minute the first time you try to generate an image. Fortunately, after the warm up period rendering will be fast.
-
Subsequently, to relaunch the script, be sure to run "conda activate invokeai", enter the
InvokeAI
directory, and then launch the invoke script. If you forget to activate the 'invokeai' environment, the script will fail with multipleModuleNotFound
errors.
Updating to newer versions of the script
This distribution is changing rapidly. If you used the git clone
method
(step 5) to download the InvokeAI directory, then to update to the latest and
greatest version, launch the Anaconda window, enter InvokeAI
and type:
git pull
conda env update
python scripts/configure_invokeai.py --no-interactive #optional
This will bring your local copy into sync with the remote one. The last step may
be needed to take advantage of new features or released models. The
--no-interactive
flag will prevent the script from prompting you to download
the big Stable Diffusion weights files.
pip Install
To install InvokeAI with only the PIP package manager, please follow these steps:
-
Make sure you are using Python 3.9 or higher. The rest of the install procedure depends on this:
python -V
-
Install the
virtualenv
tool if you don't have it already:pip install virtualenv
-
From within the InvokeAI top-level directory, create and activate a virtual environment named
invokeai
:virtualenv invokeai source invokeai/bin/activate
-
Pick the correct
requirements*.txt
file for your hardware and operating system.We have created a series of environment files suited for different operating systems and GPU hardware. They are located in the
environments-and-requirements
directory:filename OS requirements-lin-amd.txt Linux with an AMD (ROCm) GPU requirements-lin-arm64.txt Linux running on arm64 systems requirements-lin-cuda.txt Linux with an NVIDIA (CUDA) GPU requirements-mac-mps-cpu.txt Macintoshes with MPS acceleration requirements-lin-win-colab-cuda.txt Windows with an NVIDA (CUDA) GPU
(supports Google Colab too)Select the appropriate requirements file, and make a link to it from
requirements.txt
in the top-level InvokeAI directory. The command to do this from the top-level directory is:!!! example ""
=== "Macintosh and Linux" !!! info "Replace `xxx` and `yyy` with the appropriate OS and GPU codes." ```bash ln -sf environments-and-requirements/requirements-xxx-yyy.txt requirements.txt ``` === "Windows" !!! info "on Windows, admin privileges are required to make links, so we use the copy command instead" ```cmd copy environments-and-requirements\requirements-lin-win-colab-cuda.txt requirements.txt ``` !!! warning Please do not link or copy `environments-and-requirements/requirements-base.txt`. This is a base requirements file that does not have the platform-specific libraries. Also, be sure to link or copy the platform-specific file to a top-level file named `requirements.txt` as shown here. Running pip on a requirements file in a subdirectory will not work as expected.
When this is done, confirm that a file named
requirements.txt
has been created in the InvokeAI root directory and that it points to the correct file inenvironments-and-requirements
. -
Run PIP
Be sure that the
invokeai
environment is active before doing this:pip install --prefer-binary -r requirements.txt
Troubleshooting
Here are some common issues and their suggested solutions.
Conda
Conda fails before completing conda update
The usual source of these errors is a package incompatibility. While we have tried to minimize these, over time packages get updated and sometimes introduce incompatibilities.
We suggest that you search Issues or the "bugs-and-support" channel of the InvokeAI Discord.
You may also try to install the broken packages manually using PIP. To do this,
activate the invokeai
environment, and run pip install
with the name and
version of the package that is causing the incompatibility. For example:
pip install test-tube==0.7.5
You can keep doing this until all requirements are satisfied and the invoke.py
script runs without errors. Please report to
Issues what you were able to do
to work around the problem so that others can benefit from your investigation.
Create Conda Environment fails on MacOS
If conda create environment fails with lmdb error, this is most likely caused by Clang. Run brew config to see which Clang is installed on your Mac. If Clang isn't installed, that's causing the error. Start by installing additional XCode command line tools, followed by brew install llvm.
xcode-select --install
brew install llvm
If brew config has Clang installed, update to the latest llvm and try creating the environment again.
configure_invokeai.py
or invoke.py
crashes at an early stage
This is usually due to an incomplete or corrupted Conda install. Make sure you
have linked to the correct environment file and run conda update
again.
If the problem persists, a more extreme measure is to clear Conda's caches and
remove the invokeai
environment:
conda deactivate
conda env remove -n invokeai
conda clean -a
conda update
This removes all cached library files, including ones that may have been corrupted somehow. (This is not supposed to happen, but does anyway).
invoke.py
crashes at a later stage
If the CLI or web site had been working ok, but something unexpected happens later on during the session, you've encountered a code bug that is probably unrelated to an install issue. Please search Issues, file a bug report, or ask for help on Discord
My renders are running very slowly
You may have installed the wrong torch (machine learning) package, and the
system is running on CPU rather than the GPU. To check, look at the log messages
that appear when invoke.py
is first starting up. One of the earlier lines
should say Using device type cuda
. On AMD systems, it will also say "cuda",
and on Macintoshes, it should say "mps". If instead the message says it is
running on "cpu", then you may need to install the correct torch library.
You may be able to fix this by installing a different torch library. Here are the magic incantations for Conda and PIP.
!!! todo "For CUDA systems"
- conda
```bash
conda install pytorch torchvision torchaudio pytorch-cuda=11.6 -c pytorch -c nvidia
```
- pip
```bash
pip3 install torch torchvision torchaudio --extra-index-url https://download.pytorch.org/whl/cu116
```
!!! todo "For AMD systems"
- conda
```bash
conda activate invokeai
pip3 install torch torchvision torchaudio --extra-index-url https://download.pytorch.org/whl/rocm5.2/
```
- pip
```bash
pip3 install torch torchvision torchaudio --extra-index-url https://download.pytorch.org/whl/rocm5.2/
```
More information and troubleshooting tips can be found at https://pytorch.org.