InvokeAI/invokeai/app/api/routers/utilities.py
psychedelicious c238a7f18b feat(api): chore: pydantic & fastapi upgrade
Upgrade pydantic and fastapi to latest.

- pydantic~=2.4.2
- fastapi~=103.2
- fastapi-events~=0.9.1

**Big Changes**

There are a number of logic changes needed to support pydantic v2. Most changes are very simple, like using the new methods to serialized and deserialize models, but there are a few more complex changes.

**Invocations**

The biggest change relates to invocation creation, instantiation and validation.

Because pydantic v2 moves all validation logic into the rust pydantic-core, we may no longer directly stick our fingers into the validation pie.

Previously, we (ab)used models and fields to allow invocation fields to be optional at instantiation, but required when `invoke()` is called. We directly manipulated the fields and invocation models when calling `invoke()`.

With pydantic v2, this is much more involved. Changes to the python wrapper do not propagate down to the rust validation logic - you have to rebuild the model. This causes problem with concurrent access to the invocation classes and is not a free operation.

This logic has been totally refactored and we do not need to change the model any more. The details are in `baseinvocation.py`, in the `InputField` function and `BaseInvocation.invoke_internal()` method.

In the end, this implementation is cleaner.

**Invocation Fields**

In pydantic v2, you can no longer directly add or remove fields from a model.

Previously, we did this to add the `type` field to invocations.

**Invocation Decorators**

With pydantic v2, we instead use the imperative `create_model()` API to create a new model with the additional field. This is done in `baseinvocation.py` in the `invocation()` wrapper.

A similar technique is used for `invocation_output()`.

**Minor Changes**

There are a number of minor changes around the pydantic v2 models API.

**Protected `model_` Namespace**

All models' pydantic-provided methods and attributes are prefixed with `model_` and this is considered a protected namespace. This causes some conflict, because "model" means something to us, and we have a ton of pydantic models with attributes starting with "model_".

Forunately, there are no direct conflicts. However, in any pydantic model where we define an attribute or method that starts with "model_", we must tell set the protected namespaces to an empty tuple.

```py
class IPAdapterModelField(BaseModel):
    model_name: str = Field(description="Name of the IP-Adapter model")
    base_model: BaseModelType = Field(description="Base model")

    model_config = ConfigDict(protected_namespaces=())
```

**Model Serialization**

Pydantic models no longer have `Model.dict()` or `Model.json()`.

Instead, we use `Model.model_dump()` or `Model.model_dump_json()`.

**Model Deserialization**

Pydantic models no longer have `Model.parse_obj()` or `Model.parse_raw()`, and there are no `parse_raw_as()` or `parse_obj_as()` functions.

Instead, you need to create a `TypeAdapter` object to parse python objects or JSON into a model.

```py
adapter_graph = TypeAdapter(Graph)
deserialized_graph_from_json = adapter_graph.validate_json(graph_json)
deserialized_graph_from_dict = adapter_graph.validate_python(graph_dict)
```

**Field Customisation**

Pydantic `Field`s no longer accept arbitrary args.

Now, you must put all additional arbitrary args in a `json_schema_extra` arg on the field.

**Schema Customisation**

FastAPI and pydantic schema generation now follows the OpenAPI version 3.1 spec.

This necessitates two changes:
- Our schema customization logic has been revised
- Schema parsing to build node templates has been revised

The specific aren't important, but this does present additional surface area for bugs.

**Performance Improvements**

Pydantic v2 is a full rewrite with a rust backend. This offers a substantial performance improvement (pydantic claims 5x to 50x depending on the task). We'll notice this the most during serialization and deserialization of sessions/graphs, which happens very very often - a couple times per node.

I haven't done any benchmarks, but anecdotally, graph execution is much faster. Also, very larges graphs - like with massive iterators - are much, much faster.
2023-10-17 14:59:25 +11:00

43 lines
1.5 KiB
Python

from typing import Optional, Union
from dynamicprompts.generators import CombinatorialPromptGenerator, RandomPromptGenerator
from fastapi import Body
from fastapi.routing import APIRouter
from pydantic import BaseModel
from pyparsing import ParseException
utilities_router = APIRouter(prefix="/v1/utilities", tags=["utilities"])
class DynamicPromptsResponse(BaseModel):
prompts: list[str]
error: Optional[str] = None
@utilities_router.post(
"/dynamicprompts",
operation_id="parse_dynamicprompts",
responses={
200: {"model": DynamicPromptsResponse},
},
)
async def parse_dynamicprompts(
prompt: str = Body(description="The prompt to parse with dynamicprompts"),
max_prompts: int = Body(default=1000, description="The max number of prompts to generate"),
combinatorial: bool = Body(default=True, description="Whether to use the combinatorial generator"),
) -> DynamicPromptsResponse:
"""Creates a batch process"""
generator: Union[RandomPromptGenerator, CombinatorialPromptGenerator]
try:
error: Optional[str] = None
if combinatorial:
generator = CombinatorialPromptGenerator()
prompts = generator.generate(prompt, max_prompts=max_prompts)
else:
generator = RandomPromptGenerator()
prompts = generator.generate(prompt, num_images=max_prompts)
except ParseException as e:
prompts = [prompt]
error = str(e)
return DynamicPromptsResponse(prompts=prompts if prompts else [""], error=error)