This is my attempt to add a few custom nodes on the main branch - https://github.com/fofr/cog-comfyui. The read-me you see below in from the main branch. I am keeping it here for learning purposes.
Thank you to fofr for this amazing work.
Run ComfyUI workflows on Replicate:
https://replicate.com/fofr/any-comfyui-workflow
We recommend:
- trying it with your favorite workflow and make sure it works
- writing code to customise the JSON you pass to the model, for example changing seeds or prompts
- using the Replicate API to run the workflow
TLDR: json blob -> img/mp4
We've tried to include many of the most popular model weights and custom nodes:
Raise an issue to request more custom nodes or models, or use this model as a template to roll your own.
See the commits on these repositories to see how to convert this repo into a new Replicate model:
- https://github.com/fofr/cog-face-to-many
- https://github.com/fofr/cog-video-morpher
- https://github.com/fofr/cog-stickers
- https://github.com/fofr/cog-material-transfer
Visit the train
tab on Replicate to create a version of this model with your own weights:
https://replicate.com/fofr/any-comfyui-workflow/train
Here you can give public or private URLs to weights on HuggingFace and CivitAI. If URLs are private or need authentication, make sure to include an API key or access token.
Check the training logs to see what filenames to use in your workflow JSON. For example:
Downloading from HuggingFace:
...
Size of the tar file: 217.88 MB
====================================
When using your new model, use these filenames in your JSON workflow:
araminta_k_midsommar_cartoon.safetensors
You’ll need the API version of your ComfyUI workflow. This is different to the commonly shared JSON version, it does not included visual information about nodes, etc.
To get your API JSON:
- Turn on the "Enable Dev mode Options" from the ComfyUI settings (via the settings icon)
- Load your workflow into ComfyUI
- Export your API JSON using the "Save (API format)" button
comfyui-save-workflow.mp4
If your model takes inputs, like images for img2img or controlnet, you have 3 options:
Modify your API JSON file to point at a URL:
- "image": "/your-path-to/image.jpg",
+ "image": "https://example.com/image.jpg",
You can also upload a single input file when running the model.
This file will be saved as input.[extension]
– for example input.jpg
. It'll be placed in the ComfyUI input
directory, so you can reference in your workflow with:
- "image": "/your-path-to/image.jpg",
+ "image": "image.jpg",
These will be downloaded and extracted to the input
directory. You can then reference them in your workflow based on their relative paths.
So a zip file containing:
- my_img.png
- references/my_reference_01.jpg
- references/my_reference_02.jpg
Might be used in the workflow like:
"image": "my_img.png",
...
"directory": "references",
With all your inputs updated, you can now run your workflow.
Some workflows save temporary files, for example pre-processed controlnet images. You can also return these by enabling the return_temp_files
option.
Clone this repository:
git clone --recurse-submodules https://github.com/fofr/cog-comfyui.git
Run the following script to install all the custom nodes:
./scripts/install_custom_nodes.py
You can view the list of nodes in custom_nodes.json
- GPU Machine: Start the Cog container and expose port 8188:
sudo cog run -p 8188 bash
Running this command starts up the Cog container and let's you access it
- Inside Cog Container: Now that we have access to the Cog container, we start the server, binding to all network interfaces:
cd ComfyUI/
python main.py --listen 0.0.0.0
- Local Machine: Access the server using the GPU machine's IP and the exposed port (8188):
http://<gpu-machines-ip>:8188
When you goto http://<gpu-machines-ip>:8188
you'll see the classic ComfyUI web form!