Fast, VRAM-light ComfyUI nodes to generate masks for specific body parts and clothes or fashion items. Runs on CPU and CUDA. Made with π by the CozyMantis squad.
Original | ATR | LIP | Pascal |
---|---|---|---|
- Clone this repository into your custom_nodes directory, then run
pip install -r requirements.txt
to install the required dependencies. - Copy the following models to the
models/schp
directory, depending on which parser you would like to use:- Model based on the LIP dataset: Google Drive
- Model based on the ATR dataset: Google Drive
- Model based on the Pascal dataset: Google Drive
Check below for Windows troubleshooting.
- LIP is the largest single person human parsing dataset with 50000+ images. This dataset focuses on complicated real scenarios.
- mIoU on LIP validation: 59.36 %
- The LIP parser can detect the following categories:
['Background', 'Hat', 'Hair', 'Glove', 'Sunglasses' 'Upper-clothes', 'Dress', 'Coat', 'Socks', 'Pants', 'Jumpsuits', 'Scarf', 'Skirt', 'Face', 'Left-arm', 'Right-arm', 'Left-leg', 'Right-leg', 'Left-shoe', 'Right-shoe']
- ATR is a large single person human parsing dataset with 17000+ images. This dataset focuses on fashion AI.
- mIoU on ATR test: 82.29%
- The ATR parser can detect the following categories:
['Background', 'Hat', 'Hair', 'Sunglasses', 'Upper-clothes', 'Skirt', 'Pants', 'Dress', 'Belt', 'Left-shoe', 'Right-shoe', 'Face', 'Left-leg', 'Right-leg', 'Left-arm', 'Right-arm', 'Bag', 'Scarf']
- Pascal Person Part is a tiny single person human parsing dataset with 3000+ images. This dataset focuses on body parts segmentation.
- mIoU on Pascal-Person-Part validation: 71.46 %
- The Pascal parser can detect the following categories:
['Background', 'Head', 'Torso', 'Upper Arms', 'Lower Arms', 'Upper Legs', 'Lower Legs']
Windows can't find the "ninja.exe" file. The file is probably getting downloaded/installed to something like X:\path\to\comfy\python_embeded\lib\site-packages\ninja\data\bin
, but it's not properly getting added to the system path, so the OS can't invoke it.
The solution is to:
-
locate the "ninja.exe" file;
-
add the full path to ninja.exe into the system PATH:
- see https://www.mathworks.com/matlabcentral/answers/94933-how-do-i-edit-my-system-path-in-windows
- remember, you need to enter the path to the folder containing the ninja.exe binary)
- see this issue for more details
Windows can't locate the python311.lib
library. You need to search for it on your system, then add the library's parent directory to the "LIB" environment variable.
-
see this SO article
-
also see this issue
Windows can't locate "cl.exe" which is the compiler/linker tool: https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/cpp/build/reference/compiler-options?view=msvc-170
You can start this tool only from a Visual Studio developer command prompt. You cannot start it from a system command prompt or from File Explorer. For more information, see Use the MSVC toolset from the command line.
First, make sure you've installed all of the things highlighted below:
Then, it looks like you'll need to start ComfyUI from the developer command prompt instead of the regular cmd. Here's docs on how to launch the dev command prompt: https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/visualstudio/ide/reference/command-prompt-powershell?view=vs-2022
You'll want to run something similar to:
cd X:\path\to\comfy
python main.py
Make sure you're running the "x64 Native Tools Command Prompt" instead of the x86 one. Type "x64" in the start menu to locate it.
Based on the excellent paper "Self-Correction for Human Parsing" by Li, Peike and Xu, Yunqiu and Wei, Yunchao and Yang, Yi, and their original code that we've updated to also run on CPUs.
@article{li2020self,
title={Self-Correction for Human Parsing},
author={Li, Peike and Xu, Yunqiu and Wei, Yunchao and Yang, Yi},
journal={IEEE Transactions on Pattern Analysis and Machine Intelligence},
year={2020},
doi={10.1109/TPAMI.2020.3048039}}