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# Humble FAQ | |
We tried to collect common issues and questions we receive about πΈTTS. It is worth checking before going deeper. | |
## Errors with a pre-trained model. How can I resolve this? | |
- Make sure you use the right commit version of πΈTTS. Each pre-trained model has its corresponding version that needs to be used. It is defined on the model table. | |
- If it is still problematic, post your problem on [Discussions](https://github.com/coqui-ai/TTS/discussions). Please give as many details as possible (error message, your TTS version, your TTS model and config.json etc.) | |
- If you feel like it's a bug to be fixed, then prefer Github issues with the same level of scrutiny. | |
## What are the requirements of a good πΈTTS dataset? | |
* {ref}`See this page <what_makes_a_good_dataset>` | |
## How should I choose the right model? | |
- First, train Tacotron. It is smaller and faster to experiment with. If it performs poorly, try Tacotron2. | |
- Tacotron models produce the most natural voice if your dataset is not too noisy. | |
- If both models do not perform well and especially the attention does not align, then try AlignTTS or GlowTTS. | |
- If you need faster models, consider SpeedySpeech, GlowTTS or AlignTTS. Keep in mind that SpeedySpeech requires a pre-trained Tacotron or Tacotron2 model to compute text-to-speech alignments. | |
## How can I train my own `tts` model? | |
0. Check your dataset with notebooks in [dataset_analysis](https://github.com/coqui-ai/TTS/tree/master/notebooks/dataset_analysis) folder. Use [this notebook](https://github.com/coqui-ai/TTS/blob/master/notebooks/dataset_analysis/CheckSpectrograms.ipynb) to find the right audio processing parameters. A better set of parameters results in a better audio synthesis. | |
1. Write your own dataset `formatter` in `datasets/formatters.py` or format your dataset as one of the supported datasets, like LJSpeech. | |
A `formatter` parses the metadata file and converts a list of training samples. | |
2. If you have a dataset with a different alphabet than English, you need to set your own character list in the ```config.json```. | |
- If you use phonemes for training and your language is supported [here](https://github.com/rhasspy/gruut#supported-languages), you don't need to set your character list. | |
- You can use `TTS/bin/find_unique_chars.py` to get characters used in your dataset. | |
3. Write your own text cleaner in ```utils.text.cleaners```. It is not always necessary, except when you have a different alphabet or language-specific requirements. | |
- A `cleaner` performs number and abbreviation expansion and text normalization. Basically, it converts the written text to its spoken format. | |
- If you go lazy, you can try using ```basic_cleaners```. | |
4. Fill in a ```config.json```. Go over each parameter one by one and consider it regarding the appended explanation. | |
- Check the `Coqpit` class created for your target model. Coqpit classes for `tts` models are under `TTS/tts/configs/`. | |
- You just need to define fields you need/want to change in your `config.json`. For the rest, their default values are used. | |
- 'sample_rate', 'phoneme_language' (if phoneme enabled), 'output_path', 'datasets', 'text_cleaner' are the fields you need to edit in most of the cases. | |
- Here is a sample `config.json` for training a `GlowTTS` network. | |
```json | |
{ | |
"model": "glow_tts", | |
"batch_size": 32, | |
"eval_batch_size": 16, | |
"num_loader_workers": 4, | |
"num_eval_loader_workers": 4, | |
"run_eval": true, | |
"test_delay_epochs": -1, | |
"epochs": 1000, | |
"text_cleaner": "english_cleaners", | |
"use_phonemes": false, | |
"phoneme_language": "en-us", | |
"phoneme_cache_path": "phoneme_cache", | |
"print_step": 25, | |
"print_eval": true, | |
"mixed_precision": false, | |
"output_path": "recipes/ljspeech/glow_tts/", | |
"test_sentences": ["Test this sentence.", "This test sentence.", "Sentence this test."], | |
"datasets":[{"formatter": "ljspeech", "meta_file_train":"metadata.csv", "path": "recipes/ljspeech/LJSpeech-1.1/"}] | |
} | |
``` | |
6. Train your model. | |
- SingleGPU training: ```CUDA_VISIBLE_DEVICES="0" python train_tts.py --config_path config.json``` | |
- MultiGPU training: ```python3 -m trainer.distribute --gpus "0,1" --script TTS/bin/train_tts.py --config_path config.json``` | |
**Note:** You can also train your model using pure π python. Check ```{eval-rst} :ref: 'tutorial_for_nervous_beginners'```. | |
## How can I train in a different language? | |
- Check steps 2, 3, 4, 5 above. | |
## How can I train multi-GPUs? | |
- Check step 5 above. | |
## How can I check model performance? | |
- You can inspect model training and performance using ```tensorboard```. It will show you loss, attention alignment, model output. Go with the order below to measure the model performance. | |
1. Check ground truth spectrograms. If they do not look as they are supposed to, then check audio processing parameters in ```config.json```. | |
2. Check train and eval losses and make sure that they all decrease smoothly in time. | |
3. Check model spectrograms. Especially, training outputs should look similar to ground truth spectrograms after ~10K iterations. | |
4. Your model would not work well at test time until the attention has a near diagonal alignment. This is the sublime art of TTS training. | |
- Attention should converge diagonally after ~50K iterations. | |
- If attention does not converge, the probabilities are; | |
- Your dataset is too noisy or small. | |
- Samples are too long. | |
- Batch size is too small (batch_size < 32 would be having a hard time converging) | |
- You can also try other attention algorithms like 'graves', 'bidirectional_decoder', 'forward_attn'. | |
- 'bidirectional_decoder' is your ultimate savior, but it trains 2x slower and demands 1.5x more GPU memory. | |
- You can also try the other models like AlignTTS or GlowTTS. | |
## How do I know when to stop training? | |
There is no single objective metric to decide the end of a training since the voice quality is a subjective matter. | |
In our model trainings, we follow these steps; | |
- Check test time audio outputs, if it does not improve more. | |
- Check test time attention maps, if they look clear and diagonal. | |
- Check validation loss, if it converged and smoothly went down or started to overfit going up. | |
- If the answer is YES for all of the above, then test the model with a set of complex sentences. For English, you can use the `TestAttention` notebook. | |
Keep in mind that the approach above only validates the model robustness. It is hard to estimate the voice quality without asking the actual people. | |
The best approach is to pick a set of promising models and run a Mean-Opinion-Score study asking actual people to score the models. | |
## My model does not learn. How can I debug? | |
- Go over the steps under "How can I check model performance?" | |
## Attention does not align. How can I make it work? | |
- Check the 4th step under "How can I check model performance?" | |
## How can I test a trained model? | |
- The best way is to use `tts` or `tts-server` commands. For details check {ref}`here <synthesizing_speech>`. | |
- If you need to code your own ```TTS.utils.synthesizer.Synthesizer``` class. | |
## My Tacotron model does not stop - I see "Decoder stopped with 'max_decoder_steps" - Stopnet does not work. | |
- In general, all of the above relates to the `stopnet`. It is the part of the model telling the `decoder` when to stop. | |
- In general, a poor `stopnet` relates to something else that is broken in your model or dataset. Especially the attention module. | |
- One common reason is the silent parts in the audio clips at the beginning and the ending. Check ```trim_db``` value in the config. You can find a better value for your dataset by using ```CheckSpectrogram``` notebook. If this value is too small, too much of the audio will be trimmed. If too big, then too much silence will remain. Both will curtail the `stopnet` performance. | |