Diffusers documentation

Scheduler features

You are viewing v0.32.0 version. A newer version v0.32.1 is available.
Hugging Face's logo
Join the Hugging Face community

and get access to the augmented documentation experience

to get started

Scheduler features

The scheduler is an important component of any diffusion model because it controls the entire denoising (or sampling) process. There are many types of schedulers, some are optimized for speed and some for quality. With Diffusers, you can modify the scheduler configuration to use custom noise schedules, sigmas, and rescale the noise schedule. Changing these parameters can have profound effects on inference quality and speed.

This guide will demonstrate how to use these features to improve inference quality.

Diffusers currently only supports the timesteps and sigmas parameters for a select list of schedulers and pipelines. Feel free to open a feature request if you want to extend these parameters to a scheduler and pipeline that does not currently support it!

Timestep schedules

The timestep or noise schedule determines the amount of noise at each sampling step. The scheduler uses this to generate an image with the corresponding amount of noise at each step. The timestep schedule is generated from the scheduler’s default configuration, but you can customize the scheduler to use new and optimized sampling schedules that aren’t in Diffusers yet.

For example, Align Your Steps (AYS) is a method for optimizing a sampling schedule to generate a high-quality image in as little as 10 steps. The optimal 10-step schedule for Stable Diffusion XL is:

from diffusers.schedulers import AysSchedules

sampling_schedule = AysSchedules["StableDiffusionXLTimesteps"]
print(sampling_schedule)
"[999, 845, 730, 587, 443, 310, 193, 116, 53, 13]"

You can use the AYS sampling schedule in a pipeline by passing it to the timesteps parameter.

pipeline = StableDiffusionXLPipeline.from_pretrained(
    "SG161222/RealVisXL_V4.0",
    torch_dtype=torch.float16,
    variant="fp16",
).to("cuda")
pipeline.scheduler = DPMSolverMultistepScheduler.from_config(pipeline.scheduler.config, algorithm_type="sde-dpmsolver++")

prompt = "A cinematic shot of a cute little rabbit wearing a jacket and doing a thumbs up"
generator = torch.Generator(device="cpu").manual_seed(2487854446)
image = pipeline(
    prompt=prompt,
    negative_prompt="",
    generator=generator,
    timesteps=sampling_schedule,
).images[0]
AYS timestep schedule 10 steps
Linearly-spaced timestep schedule 10 steps
Linearly-spaced timestep schedule 25 steps

Timestep spacing

The way sample steps are selected in the schedule can affect the quality of the generated image, especially with respect to rescaling the noise schedule, which can enable a model to generate much brighter or darker images. Diffusers provides three timestep spacing methods:

  • leading creates evenly spaced steps
  • linspace includes the first and last steps and evenly selects the remaining intermediate steps
  • trailing only includes the last step and evenly selects the remaining intermediate steps starting from the end

It is recommended to use the trailing spacing method because it generates higher quality images with more details when there are fewer sample steps. But the difference in quality is not as obvious for more standard sample step values.

import torch
from diffusers import StableDiffusionXLPipeline, DPMSolverMultistepScheduler

pipeline = StableDiffusionXLPipeline.from_pretrained(
    "SG161222/RealVisXL_V4.0",
    torch_dtype=torch.float16,
    variant="fp16",
).to("cuda")
pipeline.scheduler = DPMSolverMultistepScheduler.from_config(pipeline.scheduler.config, timestep_spacing="trailing")

prompt = "A cinematic shot of a cute little black cat sitting on a pumpkin at night"
generator = torch.Generator(device="cpu").manual_seed(2487854446)
image = pipeline(
    prompt=prompt,
    negative_prompt="",
    generator=generator,
    num_inference_steps=5,
).images[0]
image
trailing spacing after 5 steps
leading spacing after 5 steps

Sigmas

The sigmas parameter is the amount of noise added at each timestep according to the timestep schedule. Like the timesteps parameter, you can customize the sigmas parameter to control how much noise is added at each step. When you use a custom sigmas value, the timesteps are calculated from the custom sigmas value and the default scheduler configuration is ignored.

For example, you can manually pass the sigmas for something like the 10-step AYS schedule from before to the pipeline.

import torch

from diffusers import DiffusionPipeline, EulerDiscreteScheduler

model_id = "stabilityai/stable-diffusion-xl-base-1.0"
pipeline = DiffusionPipeline.from_pretrained(
  "stabilityai/stable-diffusion-xl-base-1.0",
  torch_dtype=torch.float16,
  variant="fp16",
).to("cuda")
pipeline.scheduler = EulerDiscreteScheduler.from_config(pipeline.scheduler.config)

sigmas = [14.615, 6.315, 3.771, 2.181, 1.342, 0.862, 0.555, 0.380, 0.234, 0.113, 0.0]
prompt = "anthropomorphic capybara wearing a suit and working with a computer"
generator = torch.Generator(device='cuda').manual_seed(123)
image = pipeline(
    prompt=prompt,
    num_inference_steps=10,
    sigmas=sigmas,
    generator=generator
).images[0]

When you take a look at the scheduler’s timesteps parameter, you’ll see that it is the same as the AYS timestep schedule because the timestep schedule is calculated from the sigmas.

print(f" timesteps: {pipe.scheduler.timesteps}")
"timesteps: tensor([999., 845., 730., 587., 443., 310., 193., 116.,  53.,  13.], device='cuda:0')"

Karras sigmas

Refer to the scheduler API overview for a list of schedulers that support Karras sigmas.

Karras sigmas should not be used for models that weren’t trained with them. For example, the base Stable Diffusion XL model shouldn’t use Karras sigmas but the DreamShaperXL model can since they are trained with Karras sigmas.

Karras scheduler’s use the timestep schedule and sigmas from the Elucidating the Design Space of Diffusion-Based Generative Models paper. This scheduler variant applies a smaller amount of noise per step as it approaches the end of the sampling process compared to other schedulers, and can increase the level of details in the generated image.

Enable Karras sigmas by setting use_karras_sigmas=True in the scheduler.

import torch
from diffusers import StableDiffusionXLPipeline, DPMSolverMultistepScheduler

pipeline = StableDiffusionXLPipeline.from_pretrained(
    "SG161222/RealVisXL_V4.0",
    torch_dtype=torch.float16,
    variant="fp16",
).to("cuda")
pipeline.scheduler = DPMSolverMultistepScheduler.from_config(pipeline.scheduler.config, algorithm_type="sde-dpmsolver++", use_karras_sigmas=True)

prompt = "A cinematic shot of a cute little rabbit wearing a jacket and doing a thumbs up"
generator = torch.Generator(device="cpu").manual_seed(2487854446)
image = pipeline(
    prompt=prompt,
    negative_prompt="",
    generator=generator,
).images[0]
Karras sigmas enabled
Karras sigmas disabled

Rescale noise schedule

In the Common Diffusion Noise Schedules and Sample Steps are Flawed paper, the authors discovered that common noise schedules allowed some signal to leak into the last timestep. This signal leakage at inference can cause models to only generate images with medium brightness. By enforcing a zero signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) for the timstep schedule and sampling from the last timestep, the model can be improved to generate very bright or dark images.

For inference, you need a model that has been trained with v_prediction. To train your own model with v_prediction, add the following flag to the train_text_to_image.py or train_text_to_image_lora.py scripts.

--prediction_type="v_prediction"

For example, load the ptx0/pseudo-journey-v2 checkpoint which was trained with v_prediction and the DDIMScheduler. Configure the following parameters in the DDIMScheduler:

  • rescale_betas_zero_snr=True to rescale the noise schedule to zero SNR
  • timestep_spacing="trailing" to start sampling from the last timestep

Set guidance_rescale in the pipeline to prevent over-exposure. A lower value increases brightness but some of the details may appear washed out.

from diffusers import DiffusionPipeline, DDIMScheduler

pipeline = DiffusionPipeline.from_pretrained("ptx0/pseudo-journey-v2", use_safetensors=True)

pipeline.scheduler = DDIMScheduler.from_config(
    pipeline.scheduler.config, rescale_betas_zero_snr=True, timestep_spacing="trailing"
)
pipeline.to("cuda")
prompt = "cinematic photo of a snowy mountain at night with the northern lights aurora borealis overhead, 35mm photograph, film, professional, 4k, highly detailed"
generator = torch.Generator(device="cpu").manual_seed(23)
image = pipeline(prompt, guidance_rescale=0.7, generator=generator).images[0]
image
default Stable Diffusion v2-1 image
image with zero SNR and trailing timestep spacing enabled
< > Update on GitHub