Community pipelines
For more information about community pipelines, please have a look at this issue.
Community examples consist of both inference and training examples that have been added by the community. Please have a look at the following table to get an overview of all community examples. Click on the Code Example to get a copy-and-paste ready code example that you can try out. If a community doesn’t work as expected, please open an issue and ping the author on it.
Example | Description | Code Example | Colab | Author |
---|---|---|---|---|
CLIP Guided Stable Diffusion | Doing CLIP guidance for text to image generation with Stable Diffusion | CLIP Guided Stable Diffusion | Suraj Patil | |
One Step U-Net (Dummy) | Example showcasing of how to use Community Pipelines (see https://github.com/huggingface/diffusers/issues/841) | One Step U-Net | - | Patrick von Platen |
Stable Diffusion Interpolation | Interpolate the latent space of Stable Diffusion between different prompts/seeds | Stable Diffusion Interpolation | - | Nate Raw |
Stable Diffusion Mega | One Stable Diffusion Pipeline with all functionalities of Text2Image, Image2Image and Inpainting | Stable Diffusion Mega | - | Patrick von Platen |
Long Prompt Weighting Stable Diffusion | One Stable Diffusion Pipeline without tokens length limit, and support parsing weighting in prompt. | Long Prompt Weighting Stable Diffusion | - | SkyTNT |
Speech to Image | Using automatic-speech-recognition to transcribe text and Stable Diffusion to generate images | Speech to Image | - | Mikail Duzenli |
To load a custom pipeline you just need to pass the custom_pipeline
argument to DiffusionPipeline
, as one of the files in diffusers/examples/community
. Feel free to send a PR with your own pipelines, we will merge them quickly.
pipe = DiffusionPipeline.from_pretrained(
"CompVis/stable-diffusion-v1-4", custom_pipeline="filename_in_the_community_folder"
)
Example usages
CLIP Guided Stable Diffusion
CLIP guided stable diffusion can help to generate more realistic images by guiding stable diffusion at every denoising step with an additional CLIP model.
The following code requires roughly 12GB of GPU RAM.
from diffusers import DiffusionPipeline
from transformers import CLIPImageProcessor, CLIPModel
import torch
feature_extractor = CLIPImageProcessor.from_pretrained("laion/CLIP-ViT-B-32-laion2B-s34B-b79K")
clip_model = CLIPModel.from_pretrained("laion/CLIP-ViT-B-32-laion2B-s34B-b79K", torch_dtype=torch.float16)
guided_pipeline = DiffusionPipeline.from_pretrained(
"CompVis/stable-diffusion-v1-4",
custom_pipeline="clip_guided_stable_diffusion",
clip_model=clip_model,
feature_extractor=feature_extractor,
torch_dtype=torch.float16,
)
guided_pipeline.enable_attention_slicing()
guided_pipeline = guided_pipeline.to("cuda")
prompt = "fantasy book cover, full moon, fantasy forest landscape, golden vector elements, fantasy magic, dark light night, intricate, elegant, sharp focus, illustration, highly detailed, digital painting, concept art, matte, art by WLOP and Artgerm and Albert Bierstadt, masterpiece"
generator = torch.Generator(device="cuda").manual_seed(0)
images = []
for i in range(4):
image = guided_pipeline(
prompt,
num_inference_steps=50,
guidance_scale=7.5,
clip_guidance_scale=100,
num_cutouts=4,
use_cutouts=False,
generator=generator,
).images[0]
images.append(image)
# save images locally
for i, img in enumerate(images):
img.save(f"./clip_guided_sd/image_{i}.png")
The images
list contains a list of PIL images that can be saved locally or displayed directly in a google colab.
Generated images tend to be of higher qualtiy than natively using stable diffusion. E.g. the above script generates the following images:
.
One Step Unet
The dummy “one-step-unet” can be run as follows:
from diffusers import DiffusionPipeline
pipe = DiffusionPipeline.from_pretrained("google/ddpm-cifar10-32", custom_pipeline="one_step_unet")
pipe()
Note: This community pipeline is not useful as a feature, but rather just serves as an example of how community pipelines can be added (see https://github.com/huggingface/diffusers/issues/841).
Stable Diffusion Interpolation
The following code can be run on a GPU of at least 8GB VRAM and should take approximately 5 minutes.
from diffusers import DiffusionPipeline
import torch
pipe = DiffusionPipeline.from_pretrained(
"CompVis/stable-diffusion-v1-4",
torch_dtype=torch.float16,
safety_checker=None, # Very important for videos...lots of false positives while interpolating
custom_pipeline="interpolate_stable_diffusion",
).to("cuda")
pipe.enable_attention_slicing()
frame_filepaths = pipe.walk(
prompts=["a dog", "a cat", "a horse"],
seeds=[42, 1337, 1234],
num_interpolation_steps=16,
output_dir="./dreams",
batch_size=4,
height=512,
width=512,
guidance_scale=8.5,
num_inference_steps=50,
)
The output of the walk(...)
function returns a list of images saved under the folder as defined in output_dir
. You can use these images to create videos of stable diffusion.
Please have a look at https://github.com/nateraw/stable-diffusion-videos for more in-detail information on how to create videos using stable diffusion as well as more feature-complete functionality.
Stable Diffusion Mega
The Stable Diffusion Mega Pipeline lets you use the main use cases of the stable diffusion pipeline in a single class.
#!/usr/bin/env python3
from diffusers import DiffusionPipeline
import PIL
import requests
from io import BytesIO
import torch
def download_image(url):
response = requests.get(url)
return PIL.Image.open(BytesIO(response.content)).convert("RGB")
pipe = DiffusionPipeline.from_pretrained(
"CompVis/stable-diffusion-v1-4",
custom_pipeline="stable_diffusion_mega",
torch_dtype=torch.float16,
)
pipe.to("cuda")
pipe.enable_attention_slicing()
### Text-to-Image
images = pipe.text2img("An astronaut riding a horse").images
### Image-to-Image
init_image = download_image(
"https://raw.githubusercontent.com/CompVis/stable-diffusion/main/assets/stable-samples/img2img/sketch-mountains-input.jpg"
)
prompt = "A fantasy landscape, trending on artstation"
images = pipe.img2img(prompt=prompt, image=init_image, strength=0.75, guidance_scale=7.5).images
### Inpainting
img_url = "https://raw.githubusercontent.com/CompVis/latent-diffusion/main/data/inpainting_examples/overture-creations-5sI6fQgYIuo.png"
mask_url = "https://raw.githubusercontent.com/CompVis/latent-diffusion/main/data/inpainting_examples/overture-creations-5sI6fQgYIuo_mask.png"
init_image = download_image(img_url).resize((512, 512))
mask_image = download_image(mask_url).resize((512, 512))
prompt = "a cat sitting on a bench"
images = pipe.inpaint(prompt=prompt, image=init_image, mask_image=mask_image, strength=0.75).images
As shown above this one pipeline can run all both “text-to-image”, “image-to-image”, and “inpainting” in one pipeline.
Long Prompt Weighting Stable Diffusion
The Pipeline lets you input prompt without 77 token length limit. And you can increase words weighting by using ”()” or decrease words weighting by using ”[]” The Pipeline also lets you use the main use cases of the stable diffusion pipeline in a single class.
pytorch
from diffusers import DiffusionPipeline
import torch
pipe = DiffusionPipeline.from_pretrained(
"hakurei/waifu-diffusion", custom_pipeline="lpw_stable_diffusion", torch_dtype=torch.float16
)
pipe = pipe.to("cuda")
prompt = "best_quality (1girl:1.3) bow bride brown_hair closed_mouth frilled_bow frilled_hair_tubes frills (full_body:1.3) fox_ear hair_bow hair_tubes happy hood japanese_clothes kimono long_sleeves red_bow smile solo tabi uchikake white_kimono wide_sleeves cherry_blossoms"
neg_prompt = "lowres, bad_anatomy, error_body, error_hair, error_arm, error_hands, bad_hands, error_fingers, bad_fingers, missing_fingers, error_legs, bad_legs, multiple_legs, missing_legs, error_lighting, error_shadow, error_reflection, text, error, extra_digit, fewer_digits, cropped, worst_quality, low_quality, normal_quality, jpeg_artifacts, signature, watermark, username, blurry"
pipe.text2img(prompt, negative_prompt=neg_prompt, width=512, height=512, max_embeddings_multiples=3).images[0]
onnxruntime
from diffusers import DiffusionPipeline
import torch
pipe = DiffusionPipeline.from_pretrained(
"CompVis/stable-diffusion-v1-4",
custom_pipeline="lpw_stable_diffusion_onnx",
revision="onnx",
provider="CUDAExecutionProvider",
)
prompt = "a photo of an astronaut riding a horse on mars, best quality"
neg_prompt = "lowres, bad anatomy, error body, error hair, error arm, error hands, bad hands, error fingers, bad fingers, missing fingers, error legs, bad legs, multiple legs, missing legs, error lighting, error shadow, error reflection, text, error, extra digit, fewer digits, cropped, worst quality, low quality, normal quality, jpeg artifacts, signature, watermark, username, blurry"
pipe.text2img(prompt, negative_prompt=neg_prompt, width=512, height=512, max_embeddings_multiples=3).images[0]
if you see Token indices sequence length is longer than the specified maximum sequence length for this model ( *** > 77 ) . Running this sequence through the model will result in indexing errors
. Do not worry, it is normal.
Speech to Image
The following code can generate an image from an audio sample using pre-trained OpenAI whisper-small and Stable Diffusion.
import torch
import matplotlib.pyplot as plt
from datasets import load_dataset
from diffusers import DiffusionPipeline
from transformers import (
WhisperForConditionalGeneration,
WhisperProcessor,
)
device = "cuda" if torch.cuda.is_available() else "cpu"
ds = load_dataset("hf-internal-testing/librispeech_asr_dummy", "clean", split="validation")
audio_sample = ds[3]
text = audio_sample["text"].lower()
speech_data = audio_sample["audio"]["array"]
model = WhisperForConditionalGeneration.from_pretrained("openai/whisper-small").to(device)
processor = WhisperProcessor.from_pretrained("openai/whisper-small")
diffuser_pipeline = DiffusionPipeline.from_pretrained(
"CompVis/stable-diffusion-v1-4",
custom_pipeline="speech_to_image_diffusion",
speech_model=model,
speech_processor=processor,
torch_dtype=torch.float16,
)
diffuser_pipeline.enable_attention_slicing()
diffuser_pipeline = diffuser_pipeline.to(device)
output = diffuser_pipeline(speech_data)
plt.imshow(output.images[0])
This example produces the following image: