dreambooth / README_sdxl.md
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# DreamBooth training example for Stable Diffusion XL (SDXL)
[DreamBooth](https://arxiv.org/abs/2208.12242) is a method to personalize text2image models like stable diffusion given just a few (3~5) images of a subject.
The `train_dreambooth_lora_sdxl.py` script shows how to implement the training procedure and adapt it for [Stable Diffusion XL](https://huggingface.co/papers/2307.01952).
> 💡 **Note**: For now, we only allow DreamBooth fine-tuning of the SDXL UNet via LoRA. LoRA is a parameter-efficient fine-tuning technique introduced in [LoRA: Low-Rank Adaptation of Large Language Models](https://arxiv.org/abs/2106.09685) by *Edward J. Hu, Yelong Shen, Phillip Wallis, Zeyuan Allen-Zhu, Yuanzhi Li, Shean Wang, Lu Wang, Weizhu Chen*.
## Running locally with PyTorch
### Installing the dependencies
Before running the scripts, make sure to install the library's training dependencies:
**Important**
To make sure you can successfully run the latest versions of the example scripts, we highly recommend **installing from source** and keeping the install up to date as we update the example scripts frequently and install some example-specific requirements. To do this, execute the following steps in a new virtual environment:
```bash
git clone https://github.com/huggingface/diffusers
cd diffusers
pip install -e .
```
Then cd in the `examples/dreambooth` folder and run
```bash
pip install -r requirements_sdxl.txt
```
And initialize an [🤗Accelerate](https://github.com/huggingface/accelerate/) environment with:
```bash
accelerate config
```
Or for a default accelerate configuration without answering questions about your environment
```bash
accelerate config default
```
Or if your environment doesn't support an interactive shell (e.g., a notebook)
```python
from accelerate.utils import write_basic_config
write_basic_config()
```
When running `accelerate config`, if we specify torch compile mode to True there can be dramatic speedups.
### Dog toy example
Now let's get our dataset. For this example we will use some dog images: https://huggingface.co/datasets/diffusers/dog-example.
Let's first download it locally:
```python
from huggingface_hub import snapshot_download
local_dir = "./dog"
snapshot_download(
"diffusers/dog-example",
local_dir=local_dir, repo_type="dataset",
ignore_patterns=".gitattributes",
)
```
This will also allow us to push the trained LoRA parameters to the Hugging Face Hub platform.
Now, we can launch training using:
```bash
export MODEL_NAME="stabilityai/stable-diffusion-xl-base-1.0"
export INSTANCE_DIR="dog"
export OUTPUT_DIR="lora-trained-xl"
accelerate launch train_dreambooth_lora_sdxl.py \
--pretrained_model_name_or_path=$MODEL_NAME \
--instance_data_dir=$INSTANCE_DIR \
--output_dir=$OUTPUT_DIR \
--mixed_precision="fp16" \
--instance_prompt="a photo of sks dog" \
--resolution=1024 \
--train_batch_size=1 \
--gradient_accumulation_steps=4 \
--learning_rate=1e-4 \
--report_to="wandb" \
--lr_scheduler="constant" \
--lr_warmup_steps=0 \
--max_train_steps=500 \
--validation_prompt="A photo of sks dog in a bucket" \
--validation_epochs=25 \
--seed="0" \
--push_to_hub
```
To better track our training experiments, we're using the following flags in the command above:
* `report_to="wandb` will ensure the training runs are tracked on Weights and Biases. To use it, be sure to install `wandb` with `pip install wandb`.
* `validation_prompt` and `validation_epochs` to allow the script to do a few validation inference runs. This allows us to qualitatively check if the training is progressing as expected.
Our experiments were conducted on a single 40GB A100 GPU.
### Dog toy example with < 16GB VRAM
By making use of [`gradient_checkpointing`](https://pytorch.org/docs/stable/checkpoint.html) (which is natively supported in Diffusers), [`xformers`](https://github.com/facebookresearch/xformers), and [`bitsandbytes`](https://github.com/TimDettmers/bitsandbytes) libraries, you can train SDXL LoRAs with less than 16GB of VRAM by adding the following flags to your accelerate launch command:
```diff
+ --enable_xformers_memory_efficient_attention \
+ --gradient_checkpointing \
+ --use_8bit_adam \
+ --mixed_precision="fp16" \
```
and making sure that you have the following libraries installed:
```
bitsandbytes>=0.40.0
xformers>=0.0.20
```
### Inference
Once training is done, we can perform inference like so:
```python
from huggingface_hub.repocard import RepoCard
from diffusers import DiffusionPipeline
import torch
lora_model_id = <"lora-sdxl-dreambooth-id">
card = RepoCard.load(lora_model_id)
base_model_id = card.data.to_dict()["base_model"]
pipe = DiffusionPipeline.from_pretrained(base_model_id, torch_dtype=torch.float16)
pipe = pipe.to("cuda")
pipe.load_lora_weights(lora_model_id)
image = pipe("A picture of a sks dog in a bucket", num_inference_steps=25).images[0]
image.save("sks_dog.png")
```
We can further refine the outputs with the [Refiner](https://huggingface.co/stabilityai/stable-diffusion-xl-refiner-1.0):
```python
from huggingface_hub.repocard import RepoCard
from diffusers import DiffusionPipeline, StableDiffusionXLImg2ImgPipeline
import torch
lora_model_id = <"lora-sdxl-dreambooth-id">
card = RepoCard.load(lora_model_id)
base_model_id = card.data.to_dict()["base_model"]
# Load the base pipeline and load the LoRA parameters into it.
pipe = DiffusionPipeline.from_pretrained(base_model_id, torch_dtype=torch.float16)
pipe = pipe.to("cuda")
pipe.load_lora_weights(lora_model_id)
# Load the refiner.
refiner = StableDiffusionXLImg2ImgPipeline.from_pretrained(
"stabilityai/stable-diffusion-xl-refiner-1.0", torch_dtype=torch.float16, use_safetensors=True, variant="fp16"
)
refiner.to("cuda")
prompt = "A picture of a sks dog in a bucket"
generator = torch.Generator("cuda").manual_seed(0)
# Run inference.
image = pipe(prompt=prompt, output_type="latent", generator=generator).images[0]
image = refiner(prompt=prompt, image=image[None, :], generator=generator).images[0]
image.save("refined_sks_dog.png")
```
Here's a side-by-side comparison of the with and without Refiner pipeline outputs:
| Without Refiner | With Refiner |
|---|---|
| ![](https://huggingface.co/datasets/diffusers/docs-images/resolve/main/sd_xl/sks_dog.png) | ![](https://huggingface.co/datasets/diffusers/docs-images/resolve/main/sd_xl/refined_sks_dog.png) |
### Training with text encoder(s)
Alongside the UNet, LoRA fine-tuning of the text encoders is also supported. To do so, just specify `--train_text_encoder` while launching training. Please keep the following points in mind:
* SDXL has two text encoders. So, we fine-tune both using LoRA.
* When not fine-tuning the text encoders, we ALWAYS precompute the text embeddings to save memory.
### Specifying a better VAE
SDXL's VAE is known to suffer from numerical instability issues. This is why we also expose a CLI argument namely `--pretrained_vae_model_name_or_path` that lets you specify the location of a better VAE (such as [this one](https://huggingface.co/madebyollin/sdxl-vae-fp16-fix)).
## Notes
In our experiments, we found that SDXL yields good initial results without extensive hyperparameter tuning. For example, without fine-tuning the text encoders and without using prior-preservation, we observed decent results. We didn't explore further hyper-parameter tuning experiments, but we do encourage the community to explore this avenue further and share their results with us 🤗
## Results
You can explore the results from a couple of our internal experiments by checking out this link: [https://wandb.ai/sayakpaul/dreambooth-lora-sd-xl](https://wandb.ai/sayakpaul/dreambooth-lora-sd-xl). Specifically, we used the same script with the exact same hyperparameters on the following datasets:
* [Dogs](https://huggingface.co/datasets/diffusers/dog-example)
* [Starbucks logo](https://huggingface.co/datasets/diffusers/starbucks-example)
* [Mr. Potato Head](https://huggingface.co/datasets/diffusers/potato-head-example)
* [Keramer face](https://huggingface.co/datasets/diffusers/keramer-face-example)