[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_colossalai.py` script shows how to implement the training procedure and adapt it for stable diffusion.
By accommodating model data in CPU and GPU and moving the data to the computing device when necessary, [Gemini](https://www.colossalai.org/docs/advanced_tutorials/meet_gemini), the Heterogeneous Memory Manager of [Colossal-AI](https://github.com/hpcaitech/ColossalAI) can breakthrough the GPU memory wall by using GPU and CPU memory (composed of CPU DRAM or nvme SSD memory) together at the same time. Moreover, the model scale can be further improved by combining heterogeneous training with the other parallel approaches, such as data parallel, tensor parallel and pipeline parallel.
Dataset used to train [Teyvat characters text to image model](https://github.com/hpcaitech/ColossalAI/tree/main/examples/images/diffusion).
BLIP generated captions for characters images from [genshin-impact fandom wiki](https://genshin-impact.fandom.com/wiki/Character#Playable_Characters)and [biligame wiki for genshin impact](https://wiki.biligame.com/ys/%E8%A7%92%E8%89%B2).
For each row the dataset contains `image` and `text` keys. `image` is a varying size PIL png, and `text` is the accompanying text caption. Only a train split is provided.
The `text` include the tag `Teyvat`, `Name`,`Element`, `Weapon`, `Region`, `Model type`, and `Description`, the `Description` is captioned with the [pre-trained BLIP model](https://github.com/salesforce/BLIP).
The arguement `placement` can be `cpu`, `auto`, `cuda`, with `cpu` the GPU RAM required can be minimized to 4GB but will deceleration, with `cuda` you can also reduce GPU memory by half but accelerated training, with `auto` a more balanced solution for speed and memory can be obtained。
**___Note: Change the `resolution` to 768 if you are using the [stable-diffusion-2](https://huggingface.co/stabilityai/stable-diffusion-2) 768x768 model.___**
Prior-preservation is used to avoid overfitting and language-drift. Refer to the paper to learn more about it. For prior-preservation we first generate images using the model with a class prompt and then use those during training along with our data.
According to the paper, it's recommended to generate `num_epochs * num_samples` images for prior-preservation. 200-300 works well for most cases. The `num_class_images` flag sets the number of images to generate with the class prompt. You can place existing images in `class_data_dir`, and the training script will generate any additional images so that `num_class_images` are present in `class_data_dir` during training time.
Once you have trained a model using above command, the inference can be done simply using the `StableDiffusionPipeline`. Make sure to include the `identifier`(e.g. sks in above example) in your prompt.