A PyTorch re-implementation of Neural Radiance Fields

Overview

nerf-pytorch

A PyTorch re-implementation

Project | Video | Paper

Open Tiny-NeRF in Colab

NeRF: Representing Scenes as Neural Radiance Fields for View Synthesis
Ben Mildenhall*1, Pratul P. Srinivasan*1, Matthew Tancik*1, Jonathan T. Barron2, Ravi Ramamoorthi3, Ren Ng1
1UC Berkeley, 2Google Research, 3UC San Diego
*denotes equal contribution

A PyTorch re-implementation of Neural Radiance Fields.

Speed matters!

The current implementation is blazing fast! (~5-9x faster than the original release, ~2-4x faster than this concurrent pytorch implementation)

What's the secret sauce behind this speedup?

Multiple aspects. Besides obvious enhancements such as data caching, effective memory management, etc. I drilled down through the entire NeRF codebase, and reduced data transfer b/w CPU and GPU, vectorized code where possible, and used efficient variants of pytorch ops (wrote some where unavailable). But for these changes, everything else is a faithful reproduction of the NeRF technique we all admire :)

Sample results from the repo

On synthetic data

On real data

Tiny-NeRF on Google Colab

The NeRF code release has an accompanying Colab notebook, that showcases training a feature-limited version of NeRF on a "tiny" scene. It's equivalent PyTorch notebook can be found at the following URL:

https://colab.research.google.com/drive/1rO8xo0TemN67d4mTpakrKrLp03b9bgCX

What is a NeRF?

A neural radiance field is a simple fully connected network (weights are ~5MB) trained to reproduce input views of a single scene using a rendering loss. The network directly maps from spatial location and viewing direction (5D input) to color and opacity (4D output), acting as the "volume" so we can use volume rendering to differentiably render new views.

Optimizing a NeRF takes between a few hours and a day or two (depending on resolution) and only requires a single GPU. Rendering an image from an optimized NeRF takes somewhere between less than a second and ~30 seconds, again depending on resolution.

How to train your NeRF super-quickly!

To train a "full" NeRF model (i.e., using 3D coordinates as well as ray directions, and the hierarchical sampling procedure), first setup dependencies.

Option 1: Using pip

In a new conda or virtualenv environment, run

pip install -r requirements.txt

Option 2: Using conda

Use the provided environment.yml file to install the dependencies into an environment named nerf (edit the environment.yml if you wish to change the name of the conda environment).

conda env create
conda activate nerf

Run training!

Once everything is setup, to run experiments, first edit config/lego.yml to specify your own parameters.

The training script can be invoked by running

python train_nerf.py --config config/lego.yml

Optional: Resume training from a checkpoint

Optionally, if resuming training from a previous checkpoint, run

python train_nerf.py --config config/lego.yml --load-checkpoint path/to/checkpoint.ckpt

Optional: Cache rays from the dataset

An optional, yet simple preprocessing step of caching rays from the dataset results in substantial compute time savings (reduced carbon footprint, yay!), especially when running multiple experiments. It's super-simple: run

python cache_dataset.py --datapath cache/nerf_synthetic/lego/ --halfres False --savedir cache/legocache/legofull --num-random-rays 8192 --num-variations 50

This samples 8192 rays per image from the lego dataset. Each image is 800 x 800 (since halfres is set to False), and 500 such random samples (8192 rays each) are drawn per image. The script takes about 10 minutes to run, but the good thing is, this needs to be run only once per dataset.

NOTE: Do NOT forget to update the cachedir option (under dataset) in your config (.yml) file!

(Full) NeRF on Google Colab

A Colab notebook for the full NeRF model (albeit on low-resolution data) can be accessed here.

Render fun videos (from a pretrained model)

Once you've trained your NeRF, it's time to use that to render the scene. Use the eval_nerf.py script to do that. For the lego-lowres example, this would be

python eval_nerf.py --config pretrained/lego-lowres/config.yml --checkpoint pretrained/lego-lowres/checkpoint199999.ckpt --savedir cache/rendered/lego-lowres

You can create a gif out of the saved images, for instance, by using Imagemagick.

convert cache/rendered/lego-lowres/*.png cache/rendered/lego-lowres.gif

This should give you a gif like this.

A note on reproducibility

All said, this is not an official code release, and is instead a reproduction from the original code (released by the authors here).

The code is thoroughly tested (to the best of my abilities) to match the original implementation (and be much faster)! In particular, I have ensured that

  • Every individual module exactly (numerically) matches that of the TensorFlow implementation. This Colab notebook has all the tests, matching op for op (but is very scratchy to look at)!
  • Training works as expected (for Lego and LLFF scenes).

The organization of code WILL change around a lot, because I'm actively experimenting with this.

Pretrained models: Pretrained models for the following scenes are available in the pretrained directory (all of them are currently lowres). I will continue adding models herein.

# Synthetic (Blender) scenes
chair
drums
hotdog
lego
materials
ship

# Real (LLFF) scenes
fern

Contributing / Issues?

Feel free to raise GitHub issues if you find anything concerning. Pull requests adding additional features are welcome too.

LICENSE

nerf-pytorch is available under the MIT License. For more details see: LICENSE and ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS.

Misc

Also, a shoutout to yenchenlin for his cool PyTorch implementation, whose volume rendering function replaced mine (my initial impl was inefficient in comparison).

Owner
Krishna Murthy
PhD candidate @mila-udem @montrealrobotics. Blending robotics and computer vision with deep learning.
Krishna Murthy
[ICCV 2021] Code release for "Sub-bit Neural Networks: Learning to Compress and Accelerate Binary Neural Networks"

Sub-bit Neural Networks: Learning to Compress and Accelerate Binary Neural Networks By Yikai Wang, Yi Yang, Fuchun Sun, Anbang Yao. This is the pytorc

Yikai Wang 26 Nov 20, 2022
Pretrained models for Jax/Haiku; MobileNet, ResNet, VGG, Xception.

Pre-trained image classification models for Jax/Haiku Jax/Haiku Applications are deep learning models that are made available alongside pre-trained we

Alper Baris CELIK 14 Dec 20, 2022
Code to replicate the key results from Exploring the Limits of Out-of-Distribution Detection

Exploring the Limits of Out-of-Distribution Detection In this repository we're collecting replications for the key experiments in the Exploring the Li

Stanislav Fort 35 Jan 03, 2023
A object detecting neural network powered by the yolo architecture and leveraging the PyTorch framework and associated libraries.

Yolo-Powered-Detector A object detecting neural network powered by the yolo architecture and leveraging the PyTorch framework and associated libraries

Luke Wilson 1 Dec 03, 2021
这个开源项目主要是对经典的时间序列预测算法论文进行复现,模型主要参考自GluonTS,框架主要参考自Informer

Time Series Research with Torch 这个开源项目主要是对经典的时间序列预测算法论文进行复现,模型主要参考自GluonTS,框架主要参考自Informer。 建立原因 相较于mxnet和TF,Torch框架中的神经网络层需要提前指定输入维度: # 建立线性层 TensorF

Chi Zhang 85 Dec 29, 2022
Creating predictive checklists from data using integer programming.

Learning Optimal Predictive Checklists A Python package to learn simple predictive checklists from data subject to customizable constraints. For more

Healthy ML 5 Apr 19, 2022
An open-source outlier detection package by Getcontact Data Team

pyfbad The pyfbad library supports anomaly detection projects. An end-to-end anomaly detection application can be written using the source codes of th

Teknasyon Tech 41 Dec 27, 2022
MMdet2-based reposity about lightweight detection model: Nanodet, PicoDet.

Lightweight-Detection-and-KD MMdet2-based reposity about lightweight detection model: Nanodet, PicoDet. This repo also includes detection knowledge di

Egqawkq 12 Jan 05, 2023
Research using Cirq!

ReCirq Research using Cirq! This project contains modules for running quantum computing applications and experiments through Cirq and Quantum Engine.

quantumlib 230 Dec 29, 2022
Character Controllers using Motion VAEs

Character Controllers using Motion VAEs This repo is the codebase for the SIGGRAPH 2020 paper with the title above. Please find the paper and demo at

Electronic Arts 165 Jan 03, 2023
Evaluation toolkit of the informative tracking benchmark comprising 9 scenarios, 180 diverse videos, and new challenges.

Informative-tracking-benchmark Informative tracking benchmark (ITB) higher diversity. It contains 9 representative scenarios and 180 diverse videos. m

Xin Li 15 Nov 26, 2022
Ensembling Off-the-shelf Models for GAN Training

Data-Efficient GANs with DiffAugment project | paper | datasets | video | slides Generated using only 100 images of Obama, grumpy cats, pandas, the Br

MIT HAN Lab 1.2k Dec 26, 2022
PyTorch Implementation of VAENAR-TTS: Variational Auto-Encoder based Non-AutoRegressive Text-to-Speech Synthesis.

VAENAR-TTS - PyTorch Implementation PyTorch Implementation of VAENAR-TTS: Variational Auto-Encoder based Non-AutoRegressive Text-to-Speech Synthesis.

Keon Lee 67 Nov 14, 2022
A machine learning library for spiking neural networks. Supports training with both torch and jax pipelines, and deployment to neuromorphic hardware.

Rockpool Rockpool is a Python package for developing signal processing applications with spiking neural networks. Rockpool allows you to build network

SynSense 21 Dec 14, 2022
Face Detection & Age Gender & Expression & Recognition

Face Detection & Age Gender & Expression & Recognition

Sajjad Ayobi 188 Dec 28, 2022
The code for SAG-DTA: Prediction of Drug–Target Affinity Using Self-Attention Graph Network.

SAG-DTA The code is the implementation for the paper 'SAG-DTA: Prediction of Drug–Target Affinity Using Self-Attention Graph Network'. Requirements py

Shugang Zhang 7 Aug 02, 2022
GT4SD, an open-source library to accelerate hypothesis generation in the scientific discovery process.

The GT4SD (Generative Toolkit for Scientific Discovery) is an open-source platform to accelerate hypothesis generation in the scientific discovery process. It provides a library for making state-of-t

Generative Toolkit 4 Scientific Discovery 142 Dec 24, 2022
Official implementation for: Blended Diffusion for Text-driven Editing of Natural Images.

Blended Diffusion for Text-driven Editing of Natural Images Blended Diffusion for Text-driven Editing of Natural Images Omri Avrahami, Dani Lischinski

328 Dec 30, 2022
Optimus: the first large-scale pre-trained VAE language model

Optimus: the first pre-trained Big VAE language model This repository contains source code necessary to reproduce the results presented in the EMNLP 2

314 Dec 19, 2022
Companion code for the paper "An Infinite-Feature Extension for Bayesian ReLU Nets That Fixes Their Asymptotic Overconfidence" (NeurIPS 2021)

ReLU-GP Residual (RGPR) This repository contains code for reproducing the following NeurIPS 2021 paper: @inproceedings{kristiadi2021infinite, title=

Agustinus Kristiadi 4 Dec 26, 2021