Skip to content

Recommended usage

Refiners is still a young project and development is active, so to use the latest and greatest version of the framework we recommend you use the main branch from our development repository.

Moreover, we recommend using Rye which simplifies several things related to Python package management, so start by following the instructions to install it on your system.

Installing

To try Refiners, clone the GitHub repository and install it with all optional features:

git clone git@github.com:finegrain-ai/refiners.git
cd refiners
rye sync --all-features

Converting weights

The format of state dicts used by Refiners is custom, so to use pretrained models you will need to convert weights. We provide conversion tools and pre-converted weights on our HuggingFace organization for popular models.

For instance, to use the autoencoder from Stable Diffusion 1.5:

Use pre-converted weights

from huggingface_hub import hf_hub_download
from refiners.foundationals.latent_diffusion.stable_diffusion_1.model import SD1Autoencoder

# download the pre-converted weights from the hub
safetensors_path = hf_hub_download(
    repo_id="refiners/sd15.autoencoder",
    filename="model.safetensors",
    revision="9ce6af42e21fce64d74b1cab57a65aea82fd40ea",  # optional
)

# initialize the model
model = SD1Autoencoder()

# load the pre-converted weights
model.load_from_safetensors(safetensors_path)

Convert the weights yourself

If you want to convert the weights yourself, you can use the conversion tools we provide.

from refiners.conversion import autoencoder_sd15

# This function will:
#   - download the original weights from the internet, and save them to disk at a known location
#     (e.g. tests/weights/stable-diffusion-v1-5/stable-diffusion-v1-5/vae/diffusion_pytorch_model.safetensors)
#   - convert them to the refiners format, and save them to disk at a known location
#     (e.g. tests/weights/refiners/sd15.autoencoder/model.safetensors)
autoencoder_sd15.runwayml.convert()

# get the path to the converted weights
safetensors_path = autoencoder_sd15.runwayml.converted.local_path

# initialize the model
model = SD1Autoencoder()

# load the converted weights
model.load_from_safetensors(safetensors_path)

Note

If you need to convert more model weights or all of them, check out the refiners.conversion module.

Warning

Converting all the weights requires a lot of disk space and CPU time, so be prepared. Currently downloading all the original weights takes around ~100GB of disk space, and converting them all takes around ~70GB of disk space.

Warning

Some conversion scripts may also require quite a bit of RAM, since they load the entire weights in memory, ~16GB of RAM should be enough for most models, but some models may require more.

Testing the conversion

To quickly check that the weights you got from the hub or converted yourself are correct, you can run the following snippet:

from PIL import Image
from refiners.fluxion.utils import no_grad

image = Image.open("input.png")

with no_grad():
    latents = model.image_to_latents(image)
    decoded = model.latents_to_image(latents)

decoded.save("output.png")

Inspect output.png, if the converted weights are correct, it should be similar to input.png (but have a few differences).

Using Refiners in your own project

So far you used Refiners as a standalone package, but if you want to create your own project using it as a dependency here is how you can proceed:

rye init --py "3.11" myproject
cd myproject
rye add refiners@git+https://github.com/finegrain-ai/refiners
rye sync

If you intend to use Refiners for training, you can install the training feature:

rye add refiners[training]@git+https://github.com/finegrain-ai/refiners

Similarly, if you need to use the conversion tools we provide, you install the conversion feature:

rye add refiners[conversion]@git+https://github.com/finegrain-ai/refiners

Note

You can install multiple features at once by separating them with a comma:

rye add refiners[training,conversion]@git+https://github.com/finegrain-ai/refiners

What's next?

We suggest you check out the guides section to dive into the usage of Refiners, of the Key Concepts section for a better understanding of how the framework works.