We introduce InstanceDiffusion that adds precise instance-level control to text-to-image diffusion models. InstanceDiffusion supports free-form language conditions per instance and allows flexible ways to specify instance locations such as simple single points, scribbles, bounding boxes or intricate instance segmentation masks, and combinations thereof. Compared to the previous SOTA, InstanceDiffusion achieves 2.0 times higher AP50 for box inputs and 1.7 times higher IoU for mask inputs.
InstanceDiffusion: Instance-level Control for Image Generation
Xudong Wang, Trevor Darrell, Saketh Rambhatla, Rohit Girdhar, Ishan Misra
GenAI, Meta; BAIR, UC Berkeley
CVPR 2024
[project page
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]
This repository represents a re-implementation of InstanceDiffusion conducted by the first author during his time at UC Berkeley. Minor performance discrepancies may exist compared to the results reported in the original paper. The goal of this repository is to replicate the original paper's findings and insights, primarily for academic and research purposes.
conda create --name instdiff python=3.8 -y
conda activate instdiff
pip install -r requirements.txt
See Preparing Datasets for InstanceDiffusion.
InstanceDiffusion enhances text-to-image models by providing additional instance-level control. In additon to a global text prompt, InstanceDiffusion allows for paired instance-level prompts and their locations (e.g. points, boxes, scribbles or instance masks) to be specified when generating images. We add our proposed learnable UniFusion blocks to handle the additional per-instance conditioning. UniFusion fuses the instance conditioning with the backbone and modulate its features to enable instance conditioned image generation. Additionally, we propose ScaleU blocks that improve the UNet’s ability to respect instance-conditioning by rescaling the skip-connection and backbone feature maps produced in the UNet. At inference, we propose Multi-instance Sampler which reduces information leakage across multiple instances.
Please check our paper and project page for more details.
If you want to run InstanceDiffusion demos locally, we provide inference.py
. Please download the pretrained InstanceDiffusion from Hugging Face or Google Drive and SD1.5, place them under pretrained
folder and then run it with:
python inference.py \
--num_images 8 \
--output OUTPUT/ \
--input_json demos/demo_cat_dog_robin.json \
--ckpt pretrained/instancediffusion_sd15.pth \
--test_config configs/test_box.yaml \
--guidance_scale 7.5 \
--alpha 0.8 \
--seed 0 \
--mis 0.36 \
--cascade_strength 0.4 \
The JSON file input_json
specifies text prompts and location conditions for generating images, with several demo JSON files available under the demos
directory.
The num_images
parameter indicates how many images to generate.
The mis
setting adjusts the proportion of timesteps utilizing multi-instance sampler, recommended to be below 0.4. A higher mis
value can decrease information leakage between instances and improve image quality, but may also slow the generation process.
Adjusting alpha
modifies the fraction of timesteps using instance-level conditions, where a higher alpha
ensures better adherence to location conditions at the potential cost of image quality, there is a trade-off.
The SDXL refiner is activated if the cascade_strength
is larger than 0. Note: The SDXL-Refiner was NOT employed for quantitative evaluations in the paper, but we recently found that it can improve the image generation quality.
Our implementation supports Flash/Math/MemEfficient attention, utilizing PyTorch's torch.backends.cuda.sdp_kernel
. To disable it, simply set efficient_attention: False
in the configuration .yaml
file.
The bounding box should follow the format [xmin, ymin, width, height]. The mask is expected in RLE (Run-Length Encoding) format. Scribbles should be specified as [x1, y1,..., x20, y20] and can have duplicated points, and a point is denoted by [x, y].
InstanceDiffusion supports image compositions with granularity spanning from entire instances to parts and subparts. The positioning of parts/subparts can implicitly alter the overall pose of the object.
python inference.py \
--num_images 8 \
--output OUTPUT/ \
--input_json demos/eagle_left.json \
--ckpt pretrained/instancediffusion_sd15.pth \
--test_config configs/test_box.yaml \
--guidance_scale 7.5 \
--alpha 0.8 \
--seed 0 \
--mis 0.2 \
--cascade_strength 0.4 \
InstanceDiffusion supports generating images using points (with one point each instance) and corresponding instance captions.
python inference.py \
--num_images 8 \
--output OUTPUT/ \
--input_json demos/demo_corgi_kitchen.json \
--ckpt pretrained/instancediffusion_sd15.pth \
--test_config configs/test_point.yaml \
--guidance_scale 7.5 \
--alpha 0.8 \
--seed 0 \
--mis 0.2 \
--cascade_strength 0.4 \
InstanceDiffusion can also support iterative image generation, with minimal changes to pre-generated instances and the overall scene. Using the identical initial noise and image caption, InstanceDiffusion can selectively introduce new instances, substitute one instance for another, reposition an instance, or adjust the size of an instance via modifying the bounding boxes.
python inference.py \
--num_images 8 \
--output OUTPUT/ \
--input_json demos/demo_iterative_r1.json \
--ckpt pretrained/instancediffusion_sd15.pth \
--test_config configs/test_box.yaml \
--guidance_scale 7.5 \
--alpha 0.8 \
--seed 0 \
--mis 0.2 \
--cascade_strength 0.4 \
--input_json
can be set to demo_iterative_r{k+1}.json
for generating images in subsequent rounds.
Our model has never been trained on images from MSCOCO, we perform the zero-shot evaluation on MSCOCO to demonstrate the generalizability of InstanceDiffusion.
Download the MSCOCO 2017 datasets and store them in the datasets
folder, ensuring the data is organized as follows:
coco/
annotations/
instances_val2017.json
images/
val2017/
000000000139.jpg
000000000285.jpg
...
Please download the customized instances_val2017.json, which resizes all images to 512x512 and adjusts the corresponding masks/boxes accordingly. Once you have organized the data, proceed with executing the following commands:
CUDA_VISIBLE_DEVICES=0 python eval_local.py \
--job_index 0 \
--num_jobs 1 \
--use_captions \
--save_dir "eval-cocoval17" \
--ckpt_path pretrained/instancediffusion_sd15.pth \
--test_config configs/test_mask.yaml \
--test_dataset cocoval17 \
--mis 0.36 \
--alpha 1.0
pip install ultralytics
mv datasets/coco/images/val2017 datasets/coco/images/val2017-official
ln -s generation_samples/eval-cocoval17 datasets/coco/images/val2017
yolo val segment model=yolov8m-seg.pt data=coco.yaml device=0
We divide all samples evenly across --num_jobs
splits, with each job (GPU) responsible for generating a portion of the validation dataset. The --job_index
parameter specifies the job index for each individual job.
test_attribute="colors" # colors, textures
CUDA_VISIBLE_DEVICES=0 python eval_local.py \
--job_index 0 \
--num_jobs 1 \
--use_captions \
--save_dir "eval-cocoval17-colors" \
--ckpt_path pretrained/instancediffusion_sd15.pth \
--test_config configs/test_mask.yaml \
--test_dataset cocoval17 \
--mis 0.36 \
--alpha 1.0
--add_random_${test_attribute}
# Eval instance-level CLIP score and attribute binding performance
python eval/eval_attribute_binding.py --folder eval-cocoval17-colors --test_random_colors
To assess InstanceDiffusion's performance in texture attribute binding, set test_attribute
to textures
and replace --test_random_colors
with --test_random_textures
.
python eval_local.py \
--job_index 0 \
--num_jobs 1 \
--use_captions \
--save_dir "eval-cocoval17-point" \
--ckpt_path pretrained/instancediffusion_sd15.pth \
--test_config configs/test_point.yaml \
--test_dataset cocoval17 \
--mis 0.36 \
--alpha 1.0
pip install ultralytics
mv datasets/coco/images/val2017 datasets/coco/images/val2017-official
ln -s generation_samples/eval-cocoval17-point datasets/coco/images/val2017
yolo val segment model=yolov8m-seg.pt data=coco.yaml device=0
# Please indicate the file path for predictions.json generated in the previous step
python eval/eval_pim.py --pred_json /path/to/predictions.json
To evaluate PiM for scribble-based image generation, change --test_config
to configs/test_scribble.yaml
when executing python eval_local.py
. Additionally, include --test_scribble
when running python eval/eval_pim.py
.
We divide all samples evenly across --num_jobs
splits, with each job (GPU) responsible for generating a portion of the validation dataset. The --job_index
parameter specifies the job index for each individual job.
To train InstanceDiffusion with submitit, start by setting up the conda environment according to the instructions in INSTALL. Then, prepare the training data by following the guidelines at this link. Next, download SD1.5 to the pretrained
folder. Finally, run the commands below:
run_name="instancediffusion"
python run_with_submitit.py \
--workers 8 \
--ngpus 8 \
--nodes 8 \
--batch_size 8 \
--base_learning_rate 0.00005 \
--timeout 20000 \
--warmup_steps 5000 \
--partition learn \
--name=${run_name} \
--wandb_name ${run_name} \
--yaml_file="configs/train_sd15.yaml" \
--official_ckpt_name='pretrained/v1-5-pruned-emaonly.ckpt' \
--train_file="train.txt" \
--random_blip 0.5 \
--count_dup true \
--add_inst_cap_2_global false \
--enable_ema true \
--re_init_opt true \
For more options, see python run_with_submitit.py -h
.
ComfyUI-InstanceDiffusion: Tucker Darby helps to port InstanceDiffusion into ComfyUI. Followings are a few videos demos created by Tucker (videos are made with a ComfyUI workflow that uses AnimateDiff with AnimateLCM as the method of consistency):
Demo1 | Demo2 |
---|---|
The majority of InstanceDiffusion is licensed under the Apache License, however portions of the project are available under separate license terms: CLIP, BLIP, Stable Diffusion and GLIGEN are licensed under their own licenses; If you later add other third party code, please keep this license info updated, and please let us know if that component is licensed under something other than Apache, CC-BY-NC, MIT, or CC0.
InstanceDiffusion's wide range of image generation capabilities may introduce similar challenges to many other text-to-image generation methods.
If you have any general questions, feel free to email us at XuDong Wang. If you have code or implementation-related questions, please feel free to send emails to us or open an issue in this codebase (We recommend that you open an issue in this codebase, because your questions may help others).
If you find our work inspiring or use our codebase in your research, please consider giving a star ⭐ and a citation.
@misc{wang2024instancediffusion,
title={InstanceDiffusion: Instance-level Control for Image Generation},
author={Xudong Wang and Trevor Darrell and Sai Saketh Rambhatla and Rohit Girdhar and Ishan Misra},
year={2024},
eprint={2402.03290},
archivePrefix={arXiv},
primaryClass={cs.CV}
}