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This README will eventually be updated to correctly show how to run the following:

Note: There's an option to --compress the generated videos using ffmpeg-python. Remember to install it via pip3 install ffmpeg-python before running any of the previous scripts, otherwise this last part of compressing the video will fail (but you will still have the video). Likewise, for the moment, we are using scikit-video for opening videos in the visual reactive interpolation. Install it via pip3 install scikit-video.

TODO:

StyleGAN2-ADA — Official PyTorch implementation

Teaser image

Training Generative Adversarial Networks with Limited Data<br> Tero Karras, Miika Aittala, Janne Hellsten, Samuli Laine, Jaakko Lehtinen, Timo Aila<br> https://arxiv.org/abs/2006.06676<br>

Abstract: Training generative adversarial networks (GAN) using too little data typically leads to discriminator overfitting, causing training to diverge. We propose an adaptive discriminator augmentation mechanism that significantly stabilizes training in limited data regimes. The approach does not require changes to loss functions or network architectures, and is applicable both when training from scratch and when fine-tuning an existing GAN on another dataset. We demonstrate, on several datasets, that good results are now possible using only a few thousand training images, often matching StyleGAN2 results with an order of magnitude fewer images. We expect this to open up new application domains for GANs. We also find that the widely used CIFAR-10 is, in fact, a limited data benchmark, and improve the record FID from 5.59 to 2.42.

For business inquiries, please contact researchinquiries@nvidia.com<br> For press and other inquiries, please contact Hector Marinez at hmarinez@nvidia.com<br>

Release notes

This repository is a faithful reimplementation of StyleGAN2-ADA in PyTorch, focusing on correctness, performance, and compatibility.

Correctness

Performance

Compatibility

Data repository

PathDescription
stylegan2-ada-pytorchMain directory hosted on Amazon S3
  ├  ada-paper.pdfPaper PDF
  ├  imagesCurated example images produced using the pre-trained models
  ├  videosCurated example interpolation videos
  └  pretrainedPre-trained models
    ├  ffhq.pklFFHQ at 1024x1024, trained using original StyleGAN2
    ├  metfaces.pklMetFaces at 1024x1024, transfer learning from FFHQ using ADA
    ├  afhqcat.pklAFHQ Cat at 512x512, trained from scratch using ADA
    ├  afhqdog.pklAFHQ Dog at 512x512, trained from scratch using ADA
    ├  afhqwild.pklAFHQ Wild at 512x512, trained from scratch using ADA
    ├  cifar10.pklClass-conditional CIFAR-10 at 32x32
    ├  brecahad.pklBreCaHAD at 512x512, trained from scratch using ADA
    ├  paper-fig7c-training-set-sweepsModels used in Fig.7c (sweep over training set size)
    ├  paper-fig11a-small-datasetsModels used in Fig.11a (small datasets & transfer learning)
    ├  paper-fig11b-cifar10Models used in Fig.11b (CIFAR-10)
    ├  transfer-learning-source-netsModels used as starting point for transfer learning
    └  metricsFeature detectors used by the quality metrics

Requirements

The code relies heavily on custom PyTorch extensions that are compiled on the fly using NVCC. On Windows, the compilation requires Microsoft Visual Studio. We recommend installing Visual Studio Community Edition and adding it into PATH using "C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft Visual Studio\<VERSION>\Community\VC\Auxiliary\Build\vcvars64.bat".

Getting started

Pre-trained networks are stored as *.pkl files that can be referenced using local filenames or URLs:

# Generate curated MetFaces images without truncation (Fig.10 left)
python generate.py --outdir=out --trunc=1 --seeds=85,265,297,849 \
    --network=https://nvlabs-fi-cdn.nvidia.com/stylegan2-ada-pytorch/pretrained/metfaces.pkl

# Generate uncurated MetFaces images with truncation (Fig.12 upper left)
python generate.py --outdir=out --trunc=0.7 --seeds=600-605 \
    --network=https://nvlabs-fi-cdn.nvidia.com/stylegan2-ada-pytorch/pretrained/metfaces.pkl

# Generate class conditional CIFAR-10 images (Fig.17 left, Car)
python generate.py --outdir=out --seeds=0-35 --class=1 \
    --network=https://nvlabs-fi-cdn.nvidia.com/stylegan2-ada-pytorch/pretrained/cifar10.pkl

# Style mixing example
python style_mixing.py --outdir=out --rows=85,100,75,458,1500 --cols=55,821,1789,293 \
    --network=https://nvlabs-fi-cdn.nvidia.com/stylegan2-ada-pytorch/pretrained/metfaces.pkl

Outputs from the above commands are placed under out/*.png, controlled by --outdir. Downloaded network pickles are cached under $HOME/.cache/dnnlib, which can be overridden by setting the DNNLIB_CACHE_DIR environment variable. The default PyTorch extension build directory is $HOME/.cache/torch_extensions, which can be overridden by setting TORCH_EXTENSIONS_DIR.

Docker: You can run the above curated image example using Docker as follows:

docker build --tag sg2ada:latest .
./docker_run.sh python3 generate.py --outdir=out --trunc=1 --seeds=85,265,297,849 \
    --network=https://nvlabs-fi-cdn.nvidia.com/stylegan2-ada-pytorch/pretrained/metfaces.pkl

Note: The Docker image requires NVIDIA driver release r455.23 or later.

Legacy networks: The above commands can load most of the network pickles created using the previous TensorFlow versions of StyleGAN2 and StyleGAN2-ADA. However, for future compatibility, we recommend converting such legacy pickles into the new format used by the PyTorch version:

python legacy.py \
    --source=https://nvlabs-fi-cdn.nvidia.com/stylegan2/networks/stylegan2-cat-config-f.pkl \
    --dest=stylegan2-cat-config-f.pkl

Projecting images to latent space

To find the matching latent vector for a given image file, run:

python projector.py --outdir=out --target=~/mytargetimg.png \
    --network=https://nvlabs-fi-cdn.nvidia.com/stylegan2-ada-pytorch/pretrained/ffhq.pkl

For optimal results, the target image should be cropped and aligned similar to the FFHQ dataset. The above command saves the projection target out/target.png, result out/proj.png, latent vector out/projected_w.npz, and progression video out/proj.mp4. You can render the resulting latent vector by specifying --projected_w for generate.py:

python generate.py --outdir=out --projected_w=out/projected_w.npz \
    --network=https://nvlabs-fi-cdn.nvidia.com/stylegan2-ada-pytorch/pretrained/ffhq.pkl

Using networks from Python

You can use pre-trained networks in your own Python code as follows:

with open('ffhq.pkl', 'rb') as f:
    G = pickle.load(f)['G_ema'].cuda()  # torch.nn.Module
z = torch.randn([1, G.z_dim]).cuda()    # latent codes
c = None                                # class labels (not used in this example)
img = G(z, c)                           # NCHW, float32, dynamic range [-1, +1]

The above code requires torch_utils and dnnlib to be accessible via PYTHONPATH. It does not need source code for the networks themselves — their class definitions are loaded from the pickle via torch_utils.persistence.

The pickle contains three networks. 'G' and 'D' are instantaneous snapshots taken during training, and 'G_ema' represents a moving average of the generator weights over several training steps. The networks are regular instances of torch.nn.Module, with all of their parameters and buffers placed on the CPU at import and gradient computation disabled by default.

The generator consists of two submodules, G.mapping and G.synthesis, that can be executed separately. They also support various additional options:

w = G.mapping(z, c, truncation_psi=0.5, truncation_cutoff=8)
img = G.synthesis(w, noise_mode='const', force_fp32=True)

Please refer to generate.py, style_mixing.py, and projector.py for further examples.

Preparing datasets

Datasets are stored as uncompressed ZIP archives containing uncompressed PNG files and a metadata file dataset.json for labels.

Custom datasets can be created from a folder containing images; see python dataset_tool.py --help for more information. Alternatively, the folder can also be used directly as a dataset, without running it through dataset_tool.py first, but doing so may lead to suboptimal performance.

Legacy TFRecords datasets are not supported — see below for instructions on how to convert them.

FFHQ:

Step 1: Download the Flickr-Faces-HQ dataset as TFRecords.

Step 2: Extract images from TFRecords using dataset_tool.py from the TensorFlow version of StyleGAN2-ADA:

# Using dataset_tool.py from TensorFlow version at
# https://github.com/NVlabs/stylegan2-ada/
python ../stylegan2-ada/dataset_tool.py unpack \
    --tfrecord_dir=~/ffhq-dataset/tfrecords/ffhq --output_dir=/tmp/ffhq-unpacked

Step 3: Create ZIP archive using dataset_tool.py from this repository:

# Original 1024x1024 resolution.
python dataset_tool.py --source=/tmp/ffhq-unpacked --dest=~/datasets/ffhq.zip

# Scaled down 256x256 resolution.
python dataset_tool.py --source=/tmp/ffhq-unpacked --dest=~/datasets/ffhq256x256.zip \
    --width=256 --height=256

MetFaces: Download the MetFaces dataset and create ZIP archive:

python dataset_tool.py --source=~/downloads/metfaces/images --dest=~/datasets/metfaces.zip

AFHQ: Download the AFHQ dataset and create ZIP archive:

python dataset_tool.py --source=~/downloads/afhq/train/cat --dest=~/datasets/afhqcat.zip
python dataset_tool.py --source=~/downloads/afhq/train/dog --dest=~/datasets/afhqdog.zip
python dataset_tool.py --source=~/downloads/afhq/train/wild --dest=~/datasets/afhqwild.zip

CIFAR-10: Download the CIFAR-10 python version and convert to ZIP archive:

python dataset_tool.py --source=~/downloads/cifar-10-python.tar.gz --dest=~/datasets/cifar10.zip

LSUN: Download the desired categories from the LSUN project page and convert to ZIP archive:

python dataset_tool.py --source=~/downloads/lsun/raw/cat_lmdb --dest=~/datasets/lsuncat200k.zip \
    --transform=center-crop --width=256 --height=256 --max_images=200000

python dataset_tool.py --source=~/downloads/lsun/raw/car_lmdb --dest=~/datasets/lsuncar200k.zip \
    --transform=center-crop-wide --width=512 --height=384 --max_images=200000

BreCaHAD:

Step 1: Download the BreCaHAD dataset.

Step 2: Extract 512x512 resolution crops using dataset_tool.py from the TensorFlow version of StyleGAN2-ADA:

# Using dataset_tool.py from TensorFlow version at
# https://github.com/NVlabs/stylegan2-ada/
python dataset_tool.py extract_brecahad_crops --cropsize=512 \
    --output_dir=/tmp/brecahad-crops --brecahad_dir=~/downloads/brecahad/images

Step 3: Create ZIP archive using dataset_tool.py from this repository:

python dataset_tool.py --source=/tmp/brecahad-crops --dest=~/datasets/brecahad.zip

Training new networks

In its most basic form, training new networks boils down to:

python train.py --outdir=~/training-runs --data=~/mydataset.zip --gpus=1 --dry-run
python train.py --outdir=~/training-runs --data=~/mydataset.zip --gpus=1

The first command is optional; it validates the arguments, prints out the training configuration, and exits. The second command kicks off the actual training.

In this example, the results are saved to a newly created directory ~/training-runs/<ID>-mydataset-auto1, controlled by --outdir. The training exports network pickles (network-snapshot-<INT>.pkl) and example images (fakes<INT>.png) at regular intervals (controlled by --snap). For each pickle, it also evaluates FID (controlled by --metrics) and logs the resulting scores in metric-fid50k_full.jsonl (as well as TFEvents if TensorBoard is installed).

The name of the output directory reflects the training configuration. For example, 00000-mydataset-auto1 indicates that the base configuration was auto1, meaning that the hyperparameters were selected automatically for training on one GPU. The base configuration is controlled by --cfg:

Base configDescription
auto (default)Automatically select reasonable defaults based on resolution and GPU count. Serves as a good starting point for new datasets but does not necessarily lead to optimal results.
stylegan2Reproduce results for StyleGAN2 config F at 1024x1024 using 1, 2, 4, or 8 GPUs.
paper256Reproduce results for FFHQ and LSUN Cat at 256x256 using 1, 2, 4, or 8 GPUs.
paper512Reproduce results for BreCaHAD and AFHQ at 512x512 using 1, 2, 4, or 8 GPUs.
paper1024Reproduce results for MetFaces at 1024x1024 using 1, 2, 4, or 8 GPUs.
cifarReproduce results for CIFAR-10 (tuned configuration) using 1 or 2 GPUs.

The training configuration can be further customized with additional command line options:

Please refer to python train.py --help for the full list.

Expected training time

The total training time depends heavily on resolution, number of GPUs, dataset, desired quality, and hyperparameters. The following table lists expected wallclock times to reach different points in the training, measured in thousands of real images shown to the discriminator ("kimg"):

ResolutionGPUs1000 kimg25000 kimgsec/kimgGPU memCPU mem
128x12814h 05m4d 06h12.8–13.77.2 GB3.9 GB
128x12822h 06m2d 04h6.5–6.87.4 GB7.9 GB
128x12841h 20m1d 09h4.1–4.64.2 GB16.3 GB
128x12881h 13m1d 06h3.9–4.92.6 GB31.9 GB
256x25616h 36m6d 21h21.6–24.25.0 GB4.5 GB
256x25623h 27m3d 14h11.2–11.85.2 GB9.0 GB
256x25641h 45m1d 20h5.6–5.95.2 GB17.8 GB
256x25681h 24m1d 11h4.4–5.53.2 GB34.7 GB
512x512121h 03m21d 22h72.5–74.97.6 GB5.0 GB
512x512210h 59m11d 10h37.7–40.07.8 GB9.8 GB
512x51245h 29m5d 17h18.7–19.17.9 GB17.7 GB
512x51282h 48m2d 22h9.5–9.77.8 GB38.2 GB
1024x102411d 20h46d 03h154.3–161.68.1 GB5.3 GB
1024x1024223h 09m24d 02h80.6–86.28.6 GB11.9 GB
1024x1024411h 36m12d 02h40.1–40.88.4 GB21.9 GB
1024x102485h 54m6d 03h20.2–20.68.3 GB44.7 GB

The above measurements were done using NVIDIA Tesla V100 GPUs with default settings (--cfg=auto --aug=ada --metrics=fid50k_full). "sec/kimg" shows the expected range of variation in raw training performance, as reported in log.txt. "GPU mem" and "CPU mem" show the highest observed memory consumption, excluding the peak at the beginning caused by torch.backends.cudnn.benchmark.

In typical cases, 25000 kimg or more is needed to reach convergence, but the results are already quite reasonable around 5000 kimg. 1000 kimg is often enough for transfer learning, which tends to converge significantly faster. The following figure shows example convergence curves for different datasets as a function of wallclock time, using the same settings as above:

Training curves

Note: --cfg=auto serves as a reasonable first guess for the hyperparameters but it does not necessarily lead to optimal results for a given dataset. For example, --cfg=stylegan2 yields considerably better FID for FFHQ-140k at 1024x1024 than illustrated above. We recommend trying out at least a few different values of --gamma for each new dataset.

Quality metrics

By default, train.py automatically computes FID for each network pickle exported during training. We recommend inspecting metric-fid50k_full.jsonl (or TensorBoard) at regular intervals to monitor the training progress. When desired, the automatic computation can be disabled with --metrics=none to speed up the training slightly (3%–9%).

Additional quality metrics can also be computed after the training:

# Previous training run: look up options automatically, save result to JSONL file.
python calc_metrics.py --metrics=pr50k3_full \
    --network=~/training-runs/00000-ffhq10k-res64-auto1/network-snapshot-000000.pkl

# Pre-trained network pickle: specify dataset explicitly, print result to stdout.
python calc_metrics.py --metrics=fid50k_full --data=~/datasets/ffhq.zip --mirror=1 \
    --network=https://nvlabs-fi-cdn.nvidia.com/stylegan2-ada-pytorch/pretrained/ffhq.pkl

The first example looks up the training configuration and performs the same operation as if --metrics=pr50k3_full had been specified during training. The second example downloads a pre-trained network pickle, in which case the values of --mirror and --data must be specified explicitly.

Note that many of the metrics have a significant one-off cost when calculating them for the first time for a new dataset (up to 30min). Also note that the evaluation is done using a different random seed each time, so the results will vary if the same metric is computed multiple times.

We employ the following metrics in the ADA paper. Execution time and GPU memory usage is reported for one NVIDIA Tesla V100 GPU at 1024x1024 resolution:

MetricTimeGPU memDescription
fid50k_full13 min1.8 GBFréchet inception distance<sup>[1]</sup> against the full dataset
kid50k_full13 min1.8 GBKernel inception distance<sup>[2]</sup> against the full dataset
pr50k3_full13 min4.1 GBPrecision and recall<sup>[3]</sup> againt the full dataset
is50k13 min1.8 GBInception score<sup>[4]</sup> for CIFAR-10

In addition, the following metrics from the StyleGAN and StyleGAN2 papers are also supported:

MetricTimeGPU memDescription
fid50k13 min1.8 GBFréchet inception distance against 50k real images
kid50k13 min1.8 GBKernel inception distance against 50k real images
pr50k313 min4.1 GBPrecision and recall against 50k real images
ppl2_wend36 min2.4 GBPerceptual path length<sup>[5]</sup> in W, endpoints, full image
ppl_zfull36 min2.4 GBPerceptual path length in Z, full paths, cropped image
ppl_wfull36 min2.4 GBPerceptual path length in W, full paths, cropped image
ppl_zend36 min2.4 GBPerceptual path length in Z, endpoints, cropped image
ppl_wend36 min2.4 GBPerceptual path length in W, endpoints, cropped image

References:

  1. GANs Trained by a Two Time-Scale Update Rule Converge to a Local Nash Equilibrium, Heusel et al. 2017
  2. Demystifying MMD GANs, Bińkowski et al. 2018
  3. Improved Precision and Recall Metric for Assessing Generative Models, Kynkäänniemi et al. 2019
  4. Improved Techniques for Training GANs, Salimans et al. 2016
  5. A Style-Based Generator Architecture for Generative Adversarial Networks, Karras et al. 2018

License

Copyright © 2021, NVIDIA Corporation. All rights reserved.

This work is made available under the Nvidia Source Code License.

Citation

@inproceedings{Karras2020ada,
  title     = {Training Generative Adversarial Networks with Limited Data},
  author    = {Tero Karras and Miika Aittala and Janne Hellsten and Samuli Laine and Jaakko Lehtinen and Timo Aila},
  booktitle = {Proc. NeurIPS},
  year      = {2020}
}

Development

This is a research reference implementation and is treated as a one-time code drop. As such, we do not accept outside code contributions in the form of pull requests.

Acknowledgements

We thank David Luebke for helpful comments; Tero Kuosmanen and Sabu Nadarajan for their support with compute infrastructure; and Edgar Schönfeld for guidance on setting up unconditional BigGAN.