This code works on python 3.10, i have not tested it on other versions. Some older versions will have issues.
It's possible now.
examples_biden_example.mov
For developers:
For everyone:
- audio-webui with bark and voice cloning
- online huggingface voice cloning space
- interactive python notebook
Make sure these things are NOT in your voice input: (in no particular order)
- Noise (You can use a noise remover before)
- Music (There are also music remover tools) (Unless you want music in the background)
- A cut-off at the end (This will cause it to try and continue on the generation)
- Under 1 second of training data (i personally suggest around 10 seconds for good potential, but i've had great results with 5 seconds as well.)
What makes for good prompt audio? (in no particular order)
- Clearly spoken
- No weird background noises
- Only one speaker
- Audio which ends after a sentence ends
- Regular/common voice (They usually have more success, it's still capable of cloning complex voices, but not as good at it)
- Around 10 seconds of data
Name | HuBERT Model | Quantizer Version | Epoch | Language | Dataset |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
quantifier_hubert_base_ls960.pth | HuBERT Base | 0 | 3 | ENG | GitMylo/bark-semantic-training |
quantifier_hubert_base_ls960_14.pth | HuBERT Base | 0 | 14 | ENG | GitMylo/bark-semantic-training |
quantifier_V1_hubert_base_ls960_23.pth | HuBERT Base | 1 | 23 | ENG | GitMylo/bark-semantic-training |
Author | Name | HuBERT Model | Quantizer Version | Epoch | Language | Dataset |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
HobisPL | polish-HuBERT-quantizer_8_epoch.pth | HuBERT Base | 1 | 8 | POL | Hobis/bark-polish-semantic-wav-training |
C0untFloyd | german-HuBERT-quantizer_14_epoch.pth | HuBERT Base | 1 | 14 | GER | CountFloyd/bark-german-semantic-wav-training |
- Simply copy the files from this directory into your project.
- The hubert manager contains methods to download HuBERT and the custom Quantizer model.
- Loading the CustomHuBERT should be pretty straightforward
- The notebook contains code to use on cuda or cpu. Instead of just cpu.
from hubert.pre_kmeans_hubert import CustomHubert
import torchaudio
# Load the HuBERT model,
# checkpoint_path should work fine with data/models/hubert/hubert.pt for the default config
hubert_model = CustomHubert(checkpoint_path='path/to/checkpoint')
# Run the model to extract semantic features from an audio file, where wav is your audio file
wav, sr = torchaudio.load('path/to/wav') # This is where you load your wav, with soundfile or torchaudio for example
if wav.shape[0] == 2: # Stereo to mono if needed
wav = wav.mean(0, keepdim=True)
semantic_vectors = hubert_model.forward(wav, input_sample_hz=sr)
- Loading and running the custom kmeans
import torch
from hubert.customtokenizer import CustomTokenizer
# Load the CustomTokenizer model from a checkpoint
# With default config, you can use the pretrained model from huggingface
# With the default setup from HuBERTManager, this will be in data/models/hubert/tokenizer.pth
tokenizer = CustomTokenizer.load_from_checkpoint('data/models/hubert/tokenizer.pth') # Automatically uses the right layers
# Process the semantic vectors from the previous HuBERT run (This works in batches, so you can send the entire HuBERT output)
semantic_tokens = tokenizer.get_token(semantic_vectors)
# Congratulations! You now have semantic tokens which can be used inside of a speaker prompt file.
Simply run the training commands.
A simple way to create semantic data and wavs for training, is with my script: bark-data-gen. But remember that the creation of the wavs will take around the same time if not longer than the creation of the semantics. This can take a while to generate because of that.
For example, if you have a dataset with zips containing audio files, one zip for semantics, and one for the wav files. Inside of a folder called "Literature"
You should run process.py --path Literature --mode prepare
for extracting all the data to one directory
You should run process.py --path Literature --mode prepare2
for creating HuBERT semantic vectors, ready for training
You should run process.py --path Literature --mode train
for training
And when your model has trained enough, you can run process.py --path Literature --mode test
to test the latest model.
I am not responsible for audio generated using semantics created by this model. Just don't use it for illegal purposes.