InvokeAI/docs/installation/010_INSTALL_AUTOMATED.md

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Installing with the Automated Installer

InvokeAI Automated Installation

Introduction

The automated installer is a shell script that attempts to automate every step needed to install and run InvokeAI on a stock computer running recent versions of Linux, MacOS or Windows. It will leave you with a version that runs a stable version of InvokeAI with the option to upgrade to experimental versions later.

Walk through

  1. Make sure 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.

    !!! info "Required Space"

    Installation requires roughly 18G of free disk space to load the libraries and
    recommended model weights files.
    
    Regardless of your destination disk, your *system drive* (`C:\` on Windows, `/` on macOS/Linux) requires at least 6GB of free disk space to download and cache python dependencies. NOTE for Linux users: if your temporary directory is mounted as a `tmpfs`, ensure it has sufficient space.
    
  2. Check that your system has an up-to-date Python installed. To do this, open up a command-line window ("Terminal" on Linux and Macintosh, "Command" or "Powershell" on Windows) and type python --version. If Python is installed, it will print out the version number. If it is version 3.9.1 or higher, you meet requirements.

    !!! warning "If you see an older version, or get a command not found error"

    Go to [Python Downloads](https://www.python.org/downloads/) and
    download the appropriate installer package for your platform. We recommend
    [Version 3.10.9](https://www.python.org/downloads/release/python-3109/),
    which has been extensively tested with InvokeAI.
    

    !!! warning "At this time we do not recommend Python 3.11"

    Please select your platform in the section below for platform-specific setup requirements.

    === "Windows users"

    - During the Python configuration process,
    look out for a checkbox to add Python to your PATH
    and select it. If the install script complains that it can't
    find python, then open the Python installer again and choose
    "Modify" existing installation.
    
    - Installation requires an up to date version of the Microsoft Visual C libraries. Please install the 2015-2022 libraries available here: https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/cpp/windows/deploying-native-desktop-applications-visual-cpp?view=msvc-170
    

    === "Mac users"

    - After installing Python, you may need to run the
    following command from the Terminal in order to install the Web
    certificates needed to download model data from https sites. If
    you see lots of CERTIFICATE ERRORS during the last part of the
    install, this is the problem, and you can fix it with this command:
    
        `/Applications/Python\ 3.10/Install\ Certificates.command`
    
    -  You may need to install the Xcode command line tools. These
    are a set of tools that are needed to run certain applications in a
    Terminal, including InvokeAI. This package is provided directly by Apple.
    
          - To install, open a terminal window and run `xcode-select
          --install`. You will get a macOS system popup guiding you through the
          install. If you already have them installed, you will instead see some
          output in the Terminal advising you that the tools are already installed.
    
          - More information can be found here:
            https://www.freecodecamp.org/news/install-xcode-command-line-tools/
    

    === "Linux users"

    For reasons that are not entirely clear, installing the correct version of Python can be a bit of a challenge on Ubuntu, Linux Mint, Pop!_OS, and other Debian-derived distributions.
    
    On Ubuntu 22.04 and higher, run the following:
    
    ```
    sudo apt update
    sudo apt install -y python3 python3-pip python3-venv
    sudo update-alternatives --install /usr/local/bin/python python /usr/bin/python3.10 3
    ```
    
    On Ubuntu 20.04, the process is slightly different:
    
    ```
    sudo apt update
    sudo apt install -y software-properties-common
    sudo add-apt-repository -y ppa:deadsnakes/ppa
    sudo apt install python3.10 python3-pip python3.10-venv
    sudo update-alternatives --install /usr/local/bin/python python /usr/bin/python3.10 3
    ```
    
    Both `python` and `python3` commands are now pointing at Python3.10. You can still access older versions of Python by calling `python2`, `python3.8`, etc.
    
    Linux systems require a couple of additional graphics libraries to be installed for proper functioning of `python3-opencv`. Please run the following:
    
    `sudo apt update && sudo apt install -y libglib2.0-0 libgl1-mesa-glx`
    
  3. The source installer is distributed in ZIP files. Go to the latest release, and look for a series of files named:

    Download the one that is appropriate for your operating system.

  4. Unpack the zip file into a convenient directory. This will create a new directory named "InvokeAI-Installer". This example shows how this would look using the unzip command-line tool, but you may use any graphical or command-line Zip extractor:

    C:\Documents\Linco> unzip InvokeAI-installer-2.2.4-windows.zip
    Archive:  C: \Linco\Downloads\InvokeAI-installer-2.2.4-windows.zip
    creating: InvokeAI-Installer\
    inflating: InvokeAI-Installer\install.bat
    inflating: InvokeAI-Installer\readme.txt
    ...
    

    After successful installation, you can delete the InvokeAI-Installer directory.

  5. Windows only Please double-click on the file WinLongPathsEnabled.reg and accept the dialog box that asks you if you wish to modify your registry. This activates long filename support on your system and will prevent mysterious errors during installation.

  6. If you are using a desktop GUI, double-click the installer file. It will be named install.bat on Windows systems and install.sh on Linux and Macintosh systems.

    On Windows systems you will probably get an "Untrusted Publisher" warning. Click on "More Info" and select "Run Anyway." You trust us, right?

  7. Alternatively, from the command line, run the shell script or .bat file:

    C:\Documents\Linco> cd InvokeAI-Installer
    C:\Documents\Linco\invokeAI> install.bat
    
  8. The script will ask you to choose where to install InvokeAI. Select a directory with at least 18G of free space for a full install. InvokeAI and all its support files will be installed into a new directory named invokeai located at the location you specify.

    • The default is to install the invokeai directory in your home directory, usually C:\Users\YourName\invokeai on Windows systems, /home/YourName/invokeai on Linux systems, and /Users/YourName/invokeai on Macintoshes, where "YourName" is your login name.

    • The script uses tab autocompletion to suggest directory path completions. Type part of the path (e.g. "C:\Users") and press ++tab++ repeatedly to suggest completions.

  9. Sit back and let the install script work. It will install the third-party libraries needed by InvokeAI, then download the current InvokeAI release and install it.

    Be aware that some of the library download and install steps take a long time. In particular, the pytorch package is quite large and often appears to get "stuck" at 99.9%. Have patience and the installation step will eventually resume. However, there are occasions when the library install does legitimately get stuck. If you have been waiting for more than ten minutes and nothing is happening, you can interrupt the script with ^C. You may restart it and it will pick up where it left off.

  10. After installation completes, the installer will launch a script called configure_invokeai.py, which will guide you through the first-time process of selecting one or more Stable Diffusion model weights files, downloading and configuring them. We provide a list of popular models that InvokeAI performs well with. However, you can add more weight files later on using the command-line client or the Web UI. See Installing Models for details.

    Note that the main Stable Diffusion weights file is protected by a license agreement that you must agree to in order to use. The script will list the steps you need to take to create an account on the official 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 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 Installing Models.

  11. The script will now exit and you'll be ready to generate some images. Look for the directory invokeai installed in the location you chose at the beginning of the install session. Look for a shell script named invoke.sh (Linux/Mac) or invoke.bat (Windows). Launch the script by double-clicking it or typing its name at the command-line:

    C:\Documents\Linco> cd invokeai
    C:\Documents\Linco\invokeAI> invoke.bat
    
    • The invoke.bat (invoke.sh) script will give you the choice of starting (1) the command-line interface, or (2) the web GUI. If you start the latter, you can load the user interface by pointing your browser at http://localhost:9090.

    • The script also offers you a third option labeled "open the developer console". If you choose this option, you will be dropped into a command-line interface in which you can run python commands directly, access developer tools, and launch InvokeAI with customized options.

  12. 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 select your favorite sampler. See the Command-Line Interface 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
    `invokeai\invokeai.init`. It contains a variety of examples that you can
    follow to add and modify launch options.
    

!!! warning "The invokeai directory contains the invoke application, its configuration files, the model weight files, and outputs of image generation. Once InvokeAI is installed, do not move or remove this directory."

Troubleshooting

Package dependency conflicts

If you have previously installed InvokeAI or another Stable Diffusion package, the installer may occasionally pick up outdated libraries and either the installer or invoke will fail with complaints about library conflicts. You can address this by entering the invokeai directory and running update.sh, which will bring InvokeAI up to date with the latest libraries.

ldm from pypi

!!! warning

Some users have tried to correct dependency problems by installing
the `ldm` package from PyPi.org. Unfortunately this is an unrelated package that
has nothing to do with the 'latent diffusion model' used by InvokeAI. Installing
ldm will make matters worse. If you've installed ldm, uninstall it with
`pip uninstall ldm`.

Corrupted configuration file

Everything seems to install ok, but invoke complains of a corrupted configuration file and goes back into the configuration process (asking you to download models, etc), but this doesn't fix the problem.

This issue is often caused by a misconfigured configuration directive in the invokeai\invokeai.init initialization file that contains startup settings. The easiest way to fix the problem is to move the file out of the way and re-run configure_invokeai.py. Enter the developer's console (option 3 of the launcher script) and run this command:

configure_invokeai.py --root=.

Note the dot (.) after --root. It is part of the command.

If none of these maneuvers fixes the problem then please report the problem to the InvokeAI Issues section, or visit our Discord Server for interactive assistance.

other problems

If you run into problems during or after installation, the InvokeAI team is available to help you. Either create an Issue at our GitHub site, or make a request for help on the "bugs-and-support" channel of our Discord server. We are a 100% volunteer organization, but typically somebody will be available to help you within 24 hours, and often much sooner.

Updating to newer versions

This distribution is changing rapidly, and we add new features on a daily basis. To update to the latest released version (recommended), run the update.sh (Linux/Mac) or update.bat (Windows) scripts. This will fetch the latest release and re-run the configure_invokeai script to download any updated models files that may be needed. You can also use this to add additional models that you did not select at installation time.

You can now close the developer console and run invoke as before. If you get complaints about missing models, then you may need to do the additional step of running configure_invokeai.py. This happens relatively infrequently. To do this, simply open up the developer's console again and type python scripts/configure_invokeai.py.

You may also use the update script to install any selected version of InvokeAI. From https://github.com/invoke-ai/InvokeAI, navigate to the zip file link of the version you wish to install. You can find the zip links by going to the one of the release pages and looking for the Assets section at the bottom. Alternatively, you can browse "branches" and "tags" at the top of the big code directory on the InvokeAI welcome page. When you find the version you want to install, go to the green "<> Code" button at the top, and copy the "Download ZIP" link.

Now run update.sh (or update.bat) with the URL of the desired InvokeAI version as its argument. For example, this will install the old 2.2.0 release.

update.sh https://github.com/invoke-ai/InvokeAI/archive/refs/tags/v2.2.0.zip