Text-to-Image Generation with Stable Diffusion v2 and OpenVINO™¶
This Jupyter notebook can be launched after a local installation only.
Stable Diffusion v2 is the next generation of Stable Diffusion model a Text-to-Image latent diffusion model created by the researchers and engineers from Stability AI and LAION.
General diffusion models are machine learning systems that are trained to denoise random gaussian noise step by step, to get to a sample of interest, such as an image. Diffusion models have shown to achieve state-of-the-art results for generating image data. But one downside of diffusion models is that the reverse denoising process is slow. In addition, these models consume a lot of memory because they operate in pixel space, which becomes unreasonably expensive when generating high-resolution images. Therefore, it is challenging to train these models and also use them for inference. OpenVINO brings capabilities to run model inference on Intel hardware and opens the door to the fantastic world of diffusion models for everyone!
In previous notebooks, we already discussed how to run Text-to-Image generation and Image-to-Image generation using Stable Diffusion v1 and controlling its generation process using ControlNet. Now is turn of Stable Diffusion v2.
Stable Diffusion v2: What’s new?¶
The new stable diffusion model offers a bunch of new features inspired by the other models that have emerged since the introduction of the first iteration. Some of the features that can be found in the new model are:
The model comes with a new robust encoder, OpenCLIP, created by LAION and aided by Stability AI; this version v2 significantly enhances the produced photos over the V1 versions.
The model can now generate images in a 768x768 resolution, offering more information to be shown in the generated images.
The model finetuned with v-objective. The v-parameterization is particularly useful for numerical stability throughout the diffusion process to enable progressive distillation for models. For models that operate at higher resolution, it is also discovered that the v-parameterization avoids color shifting artifacts that are known to affect high resolution diffusion models, and in the video setting it avoids temporal color shifting that sometimes appears with epsilon-prediction used in Stable Diffusion v1.
The model also comes with a new diffusion model capable of running upscaling on the images generated. Upscaled images can be adjusted up to 4 times the original image. Provided as separated model, for more details please check stable-diffusion-x4-upscaler
The model comes with a new refined depth architecture capable of preserving context from prior generation layers in an image-to-image setting. This structure preservation helps generate images that preserving forms and shadow of objects, but with different content.
The model comes with an updated inpainting module built upon the previous model. This text-guided inpainting makes switching out parts in the image easier than before.
This notebook demonstrates how to convert and run Stable Diffusion v2 model using OpenVINO.
Notebook contains the following steps:
Create PyTorch models pipeline using Diffusers library.
Convert PyTorch models to OpenVINO IR format, using model conversion API.
Run Stable Diffusion v2 Text-to-Image pipeline with OpenVINO.
Note: This is the full version of the Stable Diffusion text-to-image implementation. If you would like to get started and run the notebook quickly, check out 236-stable-diffusion-v2-text-to-image-demo notebook.
Prerequisites¶
install required packages
%pip install -q "diffusers>=0.14.0" "openvino>=2023.1.0" "transformers>=4.25.1" gradio --extra-index-url https://download.pytorch.org/whl/cpu
Stable Diffusion v2 for Text-to-Image Generation¶
To start, let’s look on Text-to-Image process for Stable Diffusion v2. We will use Stable Diffusion v2-1 model for these purposes. The main difference from Stable Diffusion v2 and Stable Diffusion v2.1 is usage of more data, more training, and less restrictive filtering of the dataset, that gives promising results for selecting wide range of input text prompts. More details about model can be found in Stability AI blog post and original model repository.
To work with Stable Diffusion
v2, we will use Hugging Face
Diffusers library. To
experiment with Stable Diffusion models, Diffusers exposes the
StableDiffusionPipeline
similar to the other Diffusers
pipelines.
The code below demonstrates how to create StableDiffusionPipeline
using stable-diffusion-2-1
:
from diffusers import StableDiffusionPipeline
pipe = StableDiffusionPipeline.from_pretrained("stabilityai/stable-diffusion-2-1-base").to("cpu")
# for reducing memory consumption get all components from pipeline independently
text_encoder = pipe.text_encoder
text_encoder.eval()
unet = pipe.unet
unet.eval()
vae = pipe.vae
vae.eval()
conf = pipe.scheduler.config
del pipe
2023-08-29 22:18:10.107478: I tensorflow/core/util/port.cc:110] oneDNN custom operations are on. You may see slightly different numerical results due to floating-point round-off errors from different computation orders. To turn them off, set the environment variable TF_ENABLE_ONEDNN_OPTS=0. 2023-08-29 22:18:10.146633: I tensorflow/core/platform/cpu_feature_guard.cc:182] This TensorFlow binary is optimized to use available CPU instructions in performance-critical operations. To enable the following instructions: AVX2 AVX512F AVX512_VNNI FMA, in other operations, rebuild TensorFlow with the appropriate compiler flags. 2023-08-29 22:18:10.895453: W tensorflow/compiler/tf2tensorrt/utils/py_utils.cc:38] TF-TRT Warning: Could not find TensorRT
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Starting from 2023.0 release, OpenVINO supports PyTorch models directly
via Model Conversion API. ov.convert_model
function accepts instance
of PyTorch model and example inputs for tracing and returns object of
ov.Model
class, ready to use or save on disk using ov.save_model
function.
The pipeline consists of three important parts:
Text Encoder to create condition to generate an image from a text prompt.
U-Net for step-by-step denoising latent image representation.
Autoencoder (VAE) for decoding latent space to image.
Let us convert each part:
The text-encoder is responsible for transforming the input prompt, for example, “a photo of an astronaut riding a horse” into an embedding space that can be understood by the U-Net. It is usually a simple transformer-based encoder that maps a sequence of input tokens to a sequence of latent text embeddings.
The input of the text encoder is tensor input_ids
, which contains
indexes of tokens from text processed by the tokenizer and padded to the
maximum length accepted by the model. Model outputs are two tensors:
last_hidden_state
- hidden state from the last MultiHeadAttention
layer in the model and pooler_out
- pooled output for whole model
hidden states.
from pathlib import Path
sd2_1_model_dir = Path("sd2.1")
sd2_1_model_dir.mkdir(exist_ok=True)
import gc
import torch
import openvino as ov
TEXT_ENCODER_OV_PATH = sd2_1_model_dir / 'text_encoder.xml'
def cleanup_torchscript_cache():
"""
Helper for removing cached model representation
"""
torch._C._jit_clear_class_registry()
torch.jit._recursive.concrete_type_store = torch.jit._recursive.ConcreteTypeStore()
torch.jit._state._clear_class_state()
def convert_encoder(text_encoder: torch.nn.Module, ir_path:Path):
"""
Convert Text Encoder model to IR.
Function accepts pipeline, prepares example inputs for conversion
Parameters:
text_encoder (torch.nn.Module): text encoder PyTorch model
ir_path (Path): File for storing model
Returns:
None
"""
if not ir_path.exists():
input_ids = torch.ones((1, 77), dtype=torch.long)
# switch model to inference mode
text_encoder.eval()
# disable gradients calculation for reducing memory consumption
with torch.no_grad():
# export model
ov_model = ov.convert_model(
text_encoder, # model instance
example_input=input_ids, # example inputs for model tracing
input=([1,77],) # input shape for conversion
)
ov.save_model(ov_model, ir_path)
del ov_model
cleanup_torchscript_cache()
print('Text Encoder successfully converted to IR')
if not TEXT_ENCODER_OV_PATH.exists():
convert_encoder(text_encoder, TEXT_ENCODER_OV_PATH)
else:
print(f"Text encoder will be loaded from {TEXT_ENCODER_OV_PATH}")
del text_encoder
gc.collect();
Text encoder will be loaded from sd2.1/text_encoder.xml
U-Net model gradually denoises latent image representation guided by text encoder hidden state.
U-Net model has three inputs:
sample
- latent image sample from previous step. Generation process has not been started yet, so you will use random noise.timestep
- current scheduler step.encoder_hidden_state
- hidden state of text encoder.
Model predicts the sample
state for the next step.
Generally, U-Net model conversion process remain the same like in Stable Diffusion v1, expect small changes in input sample size. Our model was pretrained to generate images with resolution 768x768, initial latent sample size for this case is 96x96. Besides that, for different use cases like inpainting and depth to image generation model also can accept additional image information: depth map or mask as channel-wise concatenation with initial latent sample. For converting U-Net model for such use cases required to modify number of input channels.
import numpy as np
UNET_OV_PATH = sd2_1_model_dir / 'unet.xml'
def convert_unet(unet:torch.nn.Module, ir_path:Path, num_channels:int = 4, width:int = 64, height:int = 64):
"""
Convert Unet model to IR format.
Function accepts pipeline, prepares example inputs for conversion
Parameters:
unet (torch.nn.Module): UNet PyTorch model
ir_path (Path): File for storing model
num_channels (int, optional, 4): number of input channels
width (int, optional, 64): input width
height (int, optional, 64): input height
Returns:
None
"""
dtype_mapping = {
torch.float32: ov.Type.f32,
torch.float64: ov.Type.f64
}
if not ir_path.exists():
# prepare inputs
encoder_hidden_state = torch.ones((2, 77, 1024))
latents_shape = (2, num_channels, width, height)
latents = torch.randn(latents_shape)
t = torch.from_numpy(np.array(1, dtype=np.float32))
unet.eval()
dummy_inputs = (latents, t, encoder_hidden_state)
input_info = []
for input_tensor in dummy_inputs:
shape = ov.PartialShape(tuple(input_tensor.shape))
element_type = dtype_mapping[input_tensor.dtype]
input_info.append((shape, element_type))
with torch.no_grad():
ov_model = ov.convert_model(
unet,
example_input=dummy_inputs,
input=input_info
)
ov.save_model(ov_model, ir_path)
del ov_model
cleanup_torchscript_cache()
print('U-Net successfully converted to IR')
if not UNET_OV_PATH.exists():
convert_unet(unet, UNET_OV_PATH, width=96, height=96)
del unet
gc.collect()
else:
del unet
gc.collect();
The VAE model has two parts, an encoder and a decoder. The encoder is used to convert the image into a low dimensional latent representation, which will serve as the input to the U-Net model. The decoder, conversely, transforms the latent representation back into an image.
During latent diffusion training, the encoder is used to get the latent representations (latents) of the images for the forward diffusion process, which applies more and more noise at each step. During inference, the denoised latents generated by the reverse diffusion process are converted back into images using the VAE decoder. When you run inference for Text-to-Image, there is no initial image as a starting point. You can skip this step and directly generate initial random noise.
When running Text-to-Image pipeline, we will see that we only need the VAE decoder, but preserve VAE encoder conversion, it will be useful in next chapter of our tutorial.
Note: This process will take a few minutes and use significant amount of RAM (recommended at least 32GB).
VAE_ENCODER_OV_PATH = sd2_1_model_dir / 'vae_encoder.xml'
def convert_vae_encoder(vae: torch.nn.Module, ir_path: Path, width:int = 512, height:int = 512):
"""
Convert VAE model to IR format.
VAE model, creates wrapper class for export only necessary for inference part,
prepares example inputs for onversion
Parameters:
vae (torch.nn.Module): VAE PyTorch model
ir_path (Path): File for storing model
width (int, optional, 512): input width
height (int, optional, 512): input height
Returns:
None
"""
class VAEEncoderWrapper(torch.nn.Module):
def __init__(self, vae):
super().__init__()
self.vae = vae
def forward(self, image):
return self.vae.encode(x=image)["latent_dist"].sample()
if not ir_path.exists():
vae_encoder = VAEEncoderWrapper(vae)
vae_encoder.eval()
image = torch.zeros((1, 3, width, height))
with torch.no_grad():
ov_model = ov.convert_model(vae_encoder, example_input=image, input=([1,3, width, height],))
ov.save_model(ov_model, ir_path)
del ov_model
cleanup_torchscript_cache()
print('VAE encoder successfully converted to IR')
def convert_vae_decoder(vae: torch.nn.Module, ir_path: Path, width:int = 64, height:int = 64):
"""
Convert VAE decoder model to IR format.
Function accepts VAE model, creates wrapper class for export only necessary for inference part,
prepares example inputs for conversion
Parameters:
vae (torch.nn.Module): VAE model
ir_path (Path): File for storing model
width (int, optional, 64): input width
height (int, optional, 64): input height
Returns:
None
"""
class VAEDecoderWrapper(torch.nn.Module):
def __init__(self, vae):
super().__init__()
self.vae = vae
def forward(self, latents):
return self.vae.decode(latents)
if not ir_path.exists():
vae_decoder = VAEDecoderWrapper(vae)
latents = torch.zeros((1, 4, width, height))
vae_decoder.eval()
with torch.no_grad():
ov_model = ov.convert_model(vae_decoder, example_input=latents, input=([1,4, width, height],))
ov.save_model(ov_model, ir_path)
del ov_model
cleanup_torchscript_cache()
print('VAE decoder successfully converted to IR')
if not VAE_ENCODER_OV_PATH.exists():
convert_vae_encoder(vae, VAE_ENCODER_OV_PATH, 768, 768)
else:
print(f"VAE encoder will be loaded from {VAE_ENCODER_OV_PATH}")
VAE_DECODER_OV_PATH = sd2_1_model_dir / 'vae_decoder.xml'
if not VAE_DECODER_OV_PATH.exists():
convert_vae_decoder(vae, VAE_DECODER_OV_PATH, 96, 96)
else:
print(f"VAE decoder will be loaded from {VAE_DECODER_OV_PATH}")
del vae
gc.collect();
VAE encoder will be loaded from sd2.1/vae_encoder.xml
VAE decoder will be loaded from sd2.1/vae_decoder.xml
Putting it all together, let us now take a closer look at how the model works in inference by illustrating the logical flow.
The stable diffusion model takes both a latent seed and a text prompt as input. The latent seed is then used to generate random latent image representations of size \(96 \times 96\) where as the text prompt is transformed to text embeddings of size \(77 \times 1024\) via OpenCLIP’s text encoder.
Next, the U-Net iteratively denoises the random latent image representations while being conditioned on the text embeddings. The output of the U-Net, being the noise residual, is used to compute a denoised latent image representation via a scheduler algorithm. Many different scheduler algorithms can be used for this computation, each having its pros and cons. For Stable Diffusion, it is recommended to use one of:
Theory on how the scheduler algorithm function works is out of scope for this notebook, but in short, you should remember that they compute the predicted denoised image representation from the previous noise representation and the predicted noise residual. For more information, it is recommended to look into Elucidating the Design Space of Diffusion-Based Generative Models.
The chart above looks very similar to Stable Diffusion V1 from notebook, but there is some small difference in details:
Changed input resolution for U-Net model.
Changed text encoder and as the result size of its hidden state embeddings.
Additionally, to improve image generation quality authors introduced negative prompting. Technically, positive prompt steers the diffusion toward the images associated with it, while negative prompt steers the diffusion away from it.In other words, negative prompt declares undesired concepts for generation image, e.g. if we want to have colorful and bright image, gray scale image will be result which we want to avoid, in this case gray scale can be treated as negative prompt. The positive and negative prompt are in equal footing. You can always use one with or without the other. More explanation of how it works can be found in this article.
import inspect
from typing import List, Optional, Union, Dict
import PIL
import cv2
import torch
from transformers import CLIPTokenizer
from diffusers import DiffusionPipeline
from diffusers.schedulers import DDIMScheduler, LMSDiscreteScheduler, PNDMScheduler
def scale_fit_to_window(dst_width:int, dst_height:int, image_width:int, image_height:int):
"""
Preprocessing helper function for calculating image size for resize with peserving original aspect ratio
and fitting image to specific window size
Parameters:
dst_width (int): destination window width
dst_height (int): destination window height
image_width (int): source image width
image_height (int): source image height
Returns:
result_width (int): calculated width for resize
result_height (int): calculated height for resize
"""
im_scale = min(dst_height / image_height, dst_width / image_width)
return int(im_scale * image_width), int(im_scale * image_height)
def preprocess(image: PIL.Image.Image):
"""
Image preprocessing function. Takes image in PIL.Image format, resizes it to keep aspect ration and fits to model input window 512x512,
then converts it to np.ndarray and adds padding with zeros on right or bottom side of image (depends from aspect ratio), after that
converts data to float32 data type and change range of values from [0, 255] to [-1, 1], finally, converts data layout from planar NHWC to NCHW.
The function returns preprocessed input tensor and padding size, which can be used in postprocessing.
Parameters:
image (PIL.Image.Image): input image
Returns:
image (np.ndarray): preprocessed image tensor
meta (Dict): dictionary with preprocessing metadata info
"""
src_width, src_height = image.size
dst_width, dst_height = scale_fit_to_window(
512, 512, src_width, src_height)
image = np.array(image.resize((dst_width, dst_height),
resample=PIL.Image.Resampling.LANCZOS))[None, :]
pad_width = 512 - dst_width
pad_height = 512 - dst_height
pad = ((0, 0), (0, pad_height), (0, pad_width), (0, 0))
image = np.pad(image, pad, mode="constant")
image = image.astype(np.float32) / 255.0
image = 2.0 * image - 1.0
image = image.transpose(0, 3, 1, 2)
return image, {"padding": pad, "src_width": src_width, "src_height": src_height}
class OVStableDiffusionPipeline(DiffusionPipeline):
def __init__(
self,
vae_decoder: ov.Model,
text_encoder: ov.Model,
tokenizer: CLIPTokenizer,
unet: ov.Model,
scheduler: Union[DDIMScheduler, PNDMScheduler, LMSDiscreteScheduler],
vae_encoder: ov.Model = None,
):
"""
Pipeline for text-to-image generation using Stable Diffusion.
Parameters:
vae_decoder (Model):
Variational Auto-Encoder (VAE) Model to decode images to and from latent representations.
text_encoder (Model):
Frozen text-encoder. Stable Diffusion uses the text portion of
[CLIP](https://huggingface.co/docs/transformers/model_doc/clip#transformers.CLIPTextModel), specifically
the clip-vit-large-patch14(https://huggingface.co/openai/clip-vit-large-patch14) variant.
tokenizer (CLIPTokenizer):
Tokenizer of class CLIPTokenizer(https://huggingface.co/docs/transformers/v4.21.0/en/model_doc/clip#transformers.CLIPTokenizer).
unet (Model): Conditional U-Net architecture to denoise the encoded image latents.
vae_encoder (Model):
Variational Auto-Encoder (VAE) Model to encode images to latent representation.
scheduler (SchedulerMixin):
A scheduler to be used in combination with unet to denoise the encoded image latents. Can be one of
DDIMScheduler, LMSDiscreteScheduler, or PNDMScheduler.
"""
super().__init__()
self.scheduler = scheduler
self.vae_decoder = vae_decoder
self.vae_encoder = vae_encoder
self.text_encoder = text_encoder
self.unet = unet
self._text_encoder_output = text_encoder.output(0)
self._unet_output = unet.output(0)
self._vae_d_output = vae_decoder.output(0)
self._vae_e_output = vae_encoder.output(0) if vae_encoder is not None else None
self.height = self.unet.input(0).shape[2] * 8
self.width = self.unet.input(0).shape[3] * 8
self.tokenizer = tokenizer
def __call__(
self,
prompt: Union[str, List[str]],
image: PIL.Image.Image = None,
negative_prompt: Union[str, List[str]] = None,
num_inference_steps: Optional[int] = 50,
guidance_scale: Optional[float] = 7.5,
eta: Optional[float] = 0.0,
output_type: Optional[str] = "pil",
seed: Optional[int] = None,
strength: float = 1.0,
):
"""
Function invoked when calling the pipeline for generation.
Parameters:
prompt (str or List[str]):
The prompt or prompts to guide the image generation.
image (PIL.Image.Image, *optional*, None):
Intinal image for generation.
negative_prompt (str or List[str]):
The negative prompt or prompts to guide the image generation.
num_inference_steps (int, *optional*, defaults to 50):
The number of denoising steps. More denoising steps usually lead to a higher quality image at the
expense of slower inference.
guidance_scale (float, *optional*, defaults to 7.5):
Guidance scale as defined in Classifier-Free Diffusion Guidance(https://arxiv.org/abs/2207.12598).
guidance_scale is defined as `w` of equation 2.
Higher guidance scale encourages to generate images that are closely linked to the text prompt,
usually at the expense of lower image quality.
eta (float, *optional*, defaults to 0.0):
Corresponds to parameter eta (η) in the DDIM paper: https://arxiv.org/abs/2010.02502. Only applies to
[DDIMScheduler], will be ignored for others.
output_type (`str`, *optional*, defaults to "pil"):
The output format of the generate image. Choose between
[PIL](https://pillow.readthedocs.io/en/stable/): PIL.Image.Image or np.array.
seed (int, *optional*, None):
Seed for random generator state initialization.
strength (int, *optional*, 1.0):
strength between initial image and generated in Image-to-Image pipeline, do not used in Text-to-Image
Returns:
Dictionary with keys:
sample - the last generated image PIL.Image.Image or np.array
"""
if seed is not None:
np.random.seed(seed)
# here `guidance_scale` is defined analog to the guidance weight `w` of equation (2)
# of the Imagen paper: https://arxiv.org/pdf/2205.11487.pdf . `guidance_scale = 1`
# corresponds to doing no classifier free guidance.
do_classifier_free_guidance = guidance_scale > 1.0
# get prompt text embeddings
text_embeddings = self._encode_prompt(prompt, do_classifier_free_guidance=do_classifier_free_guidance, negative_prompt=negative_prompt)
# set timesteps
accepts_offset = "offset" in set(inspect.signature(self.scheduler.set_timesteps).parameters.keys())
extra_set_kwargs = {}
if accepts_offset:
extra_set_kwargs["offset"] = 1
self.scheduler.set_timesteps(num_inference_steps, **extra_set_kwargs)
timesteps, num_inference_steps = self.get_timesteps(num_inference_steps, strength)
latent_timestep = timesteps[:1]
# get the initial random noise unless the user supplied it
latents, meta = self.prepare_latents(image, latent_timestep)
# prepare extra kwargs for the scheduler step, since not all schedulers have the same signature
# eta (η) is only used with the DDIMScheduler, it will be ignored for other schedulers.
# eta corresponds to η in DDIM paper: https://arxiv.org/abs/2010.02502
# and should be between [0, 1]
accepts_eta = "eta" in set(inspect.signature(self.scheduler.step).parameters.keys())
extra_step_kwargs = {}
if accepts_eta:
extra_step_kwargs["eta"] = eta
for t in self.progress_bar(timesteps):
# expand the latents if we are doing classifier free guidance
latent_model_input = np.concatenate([latents] * 2) if do_classifier_free_guidance else latents
latent_model_input = self.scheduler.scale_model_input(latent_model_input, t)
# predict the noise residual
noise_pred = self.unet([latent_model_input, np.array(t, dtype=np.float32), text_embeddings])[self._unet_output]
# perform guidance
if do_classifier_free_guidance:
noise_pred_uncond, noise_pred_text = noise_pred[0], noise_pred[1]
noise_pred = noise_pred_uncond + guidance_scale * (noise_pred_text - noise_pred_uncond)
# compute the previous noisy sample x_t -> x_t-1
latents = self.scheduler.step(torch.from_numpy(noise_pred), t, torch.from_numpy(latents), **extra_step_kwargs)["prev_sample"].numpy()
# scale and decode the image latents with vae
image = self.vae_decoder(latents * (1 / 0.18215))[self._vae_d_output]
image = self.postprocess_image(image, meta, output_type)
return {"sample": image}
def _encode_prompt(self, prompt:Union[str, List[str]], num_images_per_prompt:int = 1, do_classifier_free_guidance:bool = True, negative_prompt:Union[str, List[str]] = None):
"""
Encodes the prompt into text encoder hidden states.
Parameters:
prompt (str or list(str)): prompt to be encoded
num_images_per_prompt (int): number of images that should be generated per prompt
do_classifier_free_guidance (bool): whether to use classifier free guidance or not
negative_prompt (str or list(str)): negative prompt to be encoded
Returns:
text_embeddings (np.ndarray): text encoder hidden states
"""
batch_size = len(prompt) if isinstance(prompt, list) else 1
# tokenize input prompts
text_inputs = self.tokenizer(
prompt,
padding="max_length",
max_length=self.tokenizer.model_max_length,
truncation=True,
return_tensors="np",
)
text_input_ids = text_inputs.input_ids
text_embeddings = self.text_encoder(
text_input_ids)[self._text_encoder_output]
# duplicate text embeddings for each generation per prompt
if num_images_per_prompt != 1:
bs_embed, seq_len, _ = text_embeddings.shape
text_embeddings = np.tile(
text_embeddings, (1, num_images_per_prompt, 1))
text_embeddings = np.reshape(
text_embeddings, (bs_embed * num_images_per_prompt, seq_len, -1))
# get unconditional embeddings for classifier free guidance
if do_classifier_free_guidance:
uncond_tokens: List[str]
max_length = text_input_ids.shape[-1]
if negative_prompt is None:
uncond_tokens = [""] * batch_size
elif isinstance(negative_prompt, str):
uncond_tokens = [negative_prompt]
else:
uncond_tokens = negative_prompt
uncond_input = self.tokenizer(
uncond_tokens,
padding="max_length",
max_length=max_length,
truncation=True,
return_tensors="np",
)
uncond_embeddings = self.text_encoder(uncond_input.input_ids)[self._text_encoder_output]
# duplicate unconditional embeddings for each generation per prompt, using mps friendly method
seq_len = uncond_embeddings.shape[1]
uncond_embeddings = np.tile(uncond_embeddings, (1, num_images_per_prompt, 1))
uncond_embeddings = np.reshape(uncond_embeddings, (batch_size * num_images_per_prompt, seq_len, -1))
# For classifier free guidance, we need to do two forward passes.
# Here we concatenate the unconditional and text embeddings into a single batch
# to avoid doing two forward passes
text_embeddings = np.concatenate([uncond_embeddings, text_embeddings])
return text_embeddings
def prepare_latents(self, image:PIL.Image.Image = None, latent_timestep:torch.Tensor = None):
"""
Function for getting initial latents for starting generation
Parameters:
image (PIL.Image.Image, *optional*, None):
Input image for generation, if not provided randon noise will be used as starting point
latent_timestep (torch.Tensor, *optional*, None):
Predicted by scheduler initial step for image generation, required for latent image mixing with nosie
Returns:
latents (np.ndarray):
Image encoded in latent space
"""
latents_shape = (1, 4, self.height // 8, self.width // 8)
noise = np.random.randn(*latents_shape).astype(np.float32)
if image is None:
# if we use LMSDiscreteScheduler, let's make sure latents are mulitplied by sigmas
if isinstance(self.scheduler, LMSDiscreteScheduler):
noise = noise * self.scheduler.sigmas[0].numpy()
return noise, {}
input_image, meta = preprocess(image)
latents = self.vae_encoder(input_image)[self._vae_e_output]
latents = latents * 0.18215
latents = self.scheduler.add_noise(torch.from_numpy(latents), torch.from_numpy(noise), latent_timestep).numpy()
return latents, meta
def postprocess_image(self, image:np.ndarray, meta:Dict, output_type:str = "pil"):
"""
Postprocessing for decoded image. Takes generated image decoded by VAE decoder, unpad it to initila image size (if required),
normalize and convert to [0, 255] pixels range. Optionally, convertes it from np.ndarray to PIL.Image format
Parameters:
image (np.ndarray):
Generated image
meta (Dict):
Metadata obtained on latents preparing step, can be empty
output_type (str, *optional*, pil):
Output format for result, can be pil or numpy
Returns:
image (List of np.ndarray or PIL.Image.Image):
Postprocessed images
"""
if "padding" in meta:
pad = meta["padding"]
(_, end_h), (_, end_w) = pad[1:3]
h, w = image.shape[2:]
unpad_h = h - end_h
unpad_w = w - end_w
image = image[:, :, :unpad_h, :unpad_w]
image = np.clip(image / 2 + 0.5, 0, 1)
image = np.transpose(image, (0, 2, 3, 1))
# 9. Convert to PIL
if output_type == "pil":
image = self.numpy_to_pil(image)
if "src_height" in meta:
orig_height, orig_width = meta["src_height"], meta["src_width"]
image = [img.resize((orig_width, orig_height),
PIL.Image.Resampling.LANCZOS) for img in image]
else:
if "src_height" in meta:
orig_height, orig_width = meta["src_height"], meta["src_width"]
image = [cv2.resize(img, (orig_width, orig_width))
for img in image]
return image
def get_timesteps(self, num_inference_steps:int, strength:float):
"""
Helper function for getting scheduler timesteps for generation
In case of image-to-image generation, it updates number of steps according to strength
Parameters:
num_inference_steps (int):
number of inference steps for generation
strength (float):
value between 0.0 and 1.0, that controls the amount of noise that is added to the input image.
Values that approach 1.0 allow for lots of variations but will also produce images that are not semantically consistent with the input.
"""
# get the original timestep using init_timestep
init_timestep = min(int(num_inference_steps * strength), num_inference_steps)
t_start = max(num_inference_steps - init_timestep, 0)
timesteps = self.scheduler.timesteps[t_start:]
return timesteps, num_inference_steps - t_start
First, you should create instances of OpenVINO Model.
import ipywidgets as widgets
core = ov.Core()
device = widgets.Dropdown(
options=core.available_devices + ["AUTO"],
value='AUTO',
description='Device:',
disabled=False,
)
device
Dropdown(description='Device:', index=2, options=('CPU', 'GNA', 'AUTO'), value='AUTO')
ov_config = {"INFERENCE_PRECISION_HINT": "f32"} if device.value != "CPU" else {}
text_enc = core.compile_model(TEXT_ENCODER_OV_PATH, device.value)
unet_model = core.compile_model(UNET_OV_PATH, device.value)
vae_decoder = core.compile_model(VAE_DECODER_OV_PATH, device.value, ov_config)
vae_encoder = core.compile_model(VAE_ENCODER_OV_PATH, device.value, ov_config)
Model tokenizer and scheduler are also important parts of the pipeline. Let us define them and put all components together.
from transformers import CLIPTokenizer
scheduler = LMSDiscreteScheduler.from_config(conf)
tokenizer = CLIPTokenizer.from_pretrained('openai/clip-vit-large-patch14')
ov_pipe = OVStableDiffusionPipeline(
tokenizer=tokenizer,
text_encoder=text_enc,
unet=unet_model,
vae_encoder=vae_encoder,
vae_decoder=vae_decoder,
scheduler=scheduler
)
Now, you can define a text prompts for image generation and run inference pipeline. Optionally, you can also change the random generator seed for latent state initialization and number of steps.
NOTE: Consider increasing
steps
to get more precise results. A suggested value is50
, but it will take longer time to process.
import gradio as gr
def generate(prompt, negative_prompt, seed, num_steps, _=gr.Progress(track_tqdm=True)):
result = ov_pipe(
prompt,
negative_prompt=negative_prompt,
num_inference_steps=num_steps,
seed=seed,
)
return result["sample"][0]
gr.close_all()
demo = gr.Interface(
generate,
[
gr.Textbox(
"valley in the Alps at sunset, epic vista, beautiful landscape, 4k, 8k",
label="Prompt",
),
gr.Textbox(
"frames, borderline, text, charachter, duplicate, error, out of frame, watermark, low quality, ugly, deformed, blur",
label="Negative prompt",
),
gr.Slider(value=42, label="Seed", maximum=10000000),
gr.Slider(value=25, label="Steps", minimum=1, maximum=50),
],
"image",
)
try:
demo.queue().launch()
except Exception:
demo.queue().launch(share=True)
Running on local URL: http://127.0.0.1:7861 To create a public link, set share=True in launch().