scorecard
InvokeAI
scorecard | InvokeAI | |
---|---|---|
25 | 239 | |
4,147 | 21,337 | |
2.6% | 1.1% | |
9.7 | 10.0 | |
6 days ago | 1 day ago | |
Go | TypeScript | |
Apache License 2.0 | Apache License 2.0 |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
scorecard
-
Can some expert analyze a github repo and tell us if it's really safe or not?
For general open source hygiene, I'd recommend running OpenSSF scorecards on your github repo and following-up on anything it suggests. https://github.com/ossf/scorecard.
-
Securizing your GitHub org
The OSSF scorecard initiative is really good to assess your project against security best practices. I am not the first to write about this.
- OpenSSF Scorecard – Build better security habits, one test at a time
-
You should use the OpenSSF Scorecard
Each area has its own associated risk, so the overall score is the average of the five areas. Here, you can check the details of each by consulting the documentation in detail.
-
Software Supply Chain and Data Infrastructure Security - 5 lessons from AllDayDevOps 2022
Mitigation, according to Sean, is a combination of appropriate (network) access control, SCA (Software Composition Analysis) tooling to manage your policies around CVEs, and purging “all the things”. He also thinks MFA (multi-factor authentication) for authors of (critical) packages should be required. Sean gets his vulnerability insights from deps.dev, ossindex.sonatype, and cvedetails.com, and closely monitors interesting initiatives such as the OpenSSF Security Scorecards - a tool to assess open source projects for security risks through a series of automated checks.
- Boost Your Enterprise Security with GitHub Actions and the OSSF Score Card
- How does your company manage open-source dependencies?
-
Washington, DC, and open—for maintainers
Give feedback on new security standards: The various security standards like OpenSSF Scorecard and SLSA.dev can be a lot to digest, but they are likely going to be very influential in developing government standards. Take a peek at them, and if you have concerns or questions, file issues. The people behind them want to hear from a broad range of maintainers, so your feedback really does matter. (If you're a Tidelift maintainer partner, you can also bring the feedback to us—we are participating in these discussions, and may be able to either point to existing discussions, explain them more deeply, or bring your feedback to the appropriate places.)
-
Episode 102: myNewsWrap – SAP and Microsoft
Security Scorecards
-
Best practices for managing Java dependencies
I recommend using https://deps.dev to get a feeling for what you are bringing into your project. It also integrates with OSSF Scorecards, which gives a good overview over how healthy the project is, and whether it employs industry best practices.
InvokeAI
-
Stable Diffusion 3
Probably not, since I have no idea what you're talking about. I've just been using the models that InvokeAI (2.3, I only just now saw there's a 3.0) downloads for me [0]. The SD1.5 one is as good as ever, but the SD2 model introduces artifacts on (many, but not all) faces and copyrighted characters.
[0] https://github.com/invoke-ai/InvokeAI
-
AMD Funded a Drop-In CUDA Implementation Built on ROCm: It's Open-Source
I actually used the rocm/pytorch image you also linked.
I'm not sure what you're pointing to with your reference to the Fedora-based images. I'm quite happy with my NixOS install and really don't want to switch to anything else. And as long as I have the correct kernel module, my host OS really shouldn't matter to run any of the images.
And I'm sure it can be made to work with many base images, my point was just that the dependency management around pytorch was in a bad state, where it is extremely easy to break.
> Anyways, hopefully this PR fixes the immediate issue: https://github.com/invoke-ai/InvokeAI/pull/5714/files
It does! At least for me. It is my PR after all ;)
-
Can some expert analyze a github repo and tell us if it's really safe or not?
The data being flagged is not in that github repo, it's fetched from elsewhere and I don't fancy spending time looking for it. The alert is for 'Sirefef!cfg' which has been reported as a false positive with a bunch of other stable diffusion projects (https://www.reddit.com/r/StableDiffusion/comments/101zjec/trojanwin32sirefefcfg_an_apparently_common_false/, https://www.reddit.com/r/StableDiffusion/comments/xmhukb/trojan_in_waifudiffusion_model_file/, https://github.com/invoke-ai/InvokeAI/issues/2773 )
-
What is the most effcient port of SD to mac?
I haven’t tried it recently, but InvokeAI runs on Mac. Invoke. I used to run on my MacBook, but have since gotten a Win laptop.
-
Easy Stable Diffusion XL in your device, offline
There are already a number of local, inference options that are (crucially) open-source, with more robust feature sets.
And if the defense here is "but Auto1111 and Comfy don't have as user-friendly a UI", that's also already covered. https://github.com/invoke-ai/InvokeAI
-
Ask HN: Selfhosted ChatGPT and Stable-diffusion like alternatives?
https://github.com/invoke-ai/InvokeAI should work on your machine. For LLM models, the smaller ones should run using llama.cpp, but I don't think you'll be happy comparing them to ChatGPT.
- 🚀 InvokeAI 3.4 now supports LCM & LCM-LoRAs and much more!
-
Best ai image generator without a nsfw filter?
Stable Diffusion. /r/stablediffusion There are many tutorials on how to set it up locally and use it. InvokeAI is the easiest way to set it up. https://github.com/invoke-ai/InvokeAI
-
What's the best stable diffusion client for base m1 MacBook air?
InvokeAI
- invoke-ai/InvokeAI
What are some alternatives?
in-toto - in-toto is a framework to protect supply chain integrity.
stable-diffusion-webui - Stable Diffusion web UI
snyk - Snyk CLI scans and monitors your projects for security vulnerabilities. [Moved to: https://github.com/snyk/cli]
stable-diffusion
openRiskScore - A python framework for risk scoring
ControlNet - Let us control diffusion models!
cli - Snyk CLI scans and monitors your projects for security vulnerabilities.
ComfyUI - The most powerful and modular stable diffusion GUI, api and backend with a graph/nodes interface.
harden-runner - Network egress filtering and runtime security for GitHub-hosted and self-hosted runners
dreambooth-gui
slsa - Supply-chain Levels for Software Artifacts
stable-diffusion - Optimized Stable Diffusion modified to run on lower GPU VRAM