nvtop
piper
nvtop | piper | |
---|---|---|
43 | 45 | |
7,556 | 4,490 | |
- | 9.2% | |
7.8 | 8.6 | |
7 days ago | 6 days ago | |
C | C++ | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | MIT License |
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.
nvtop
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Nvtop: Htop for GPUs
> NVTOP stands for Neat Videocard TOP, a (h)top like task monitor for GPUs and accelerators.
I have been using this on AMD for a long time now.
[0]: https://github.com/Syllo/nvtop
- Nvtop: Linux Task Monitor for Nvidia, AMD and Intel GPUs
- NVTOP Release 3.0.2 is Out
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Power State management best practices?
If you're certain your GPU has deeper power saving states than P8, I would start by checking why it's not using them. Maybe tlp, powertop or nvtop (or their documentation) can help.
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MAXn power mode in production?
Did you run any of the "dashboards" while executing the test? Like [NvTop](https://github.com/Syllo/nvtop)
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Will Pop!_OS Cosmic have well integrated app suite like Elementary OS
If you plan on making a system monitor/task manager, could you please make it display actual useful information and not just extremely basic stats like most do now. GNOME and KDE both have overly simple applications for this, that just show the CPU and memory utilisation, and it makes finding information like the processor frequency and temperature so much more difficult. On Windows, for example, the task manager performance tab shows a much greater amount of information for each system component, not just total utilisation. GPU usage is also never shown in any of the popular system monitors, something that's probably important for a lot of users. It's not even necessarily impossible since projects such as nvtop are able to. I do hope we'll eventually get a much better GUI program for monitoring our system in Linux.
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If you dont complain you get nothing! What features/bug fixes you want to see in future Linux
Can't nvtop do that?
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Looking for a GPU monitoring tool on windows like nvtop to purge VRAM
I'm looking for an alternative to nvtop. It's a Ncidia monitoring tool for Linux. You can easily monitor or kill processes via terminal. I used the nvidia-smi command on windows commanline, but it gives very little information.
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[question]Training and embedding problem
Try monitoring your VRAM using nvtop (or something), then run training, if the VRAM maxed, training stopped, then VRAM dropped, then it's 100% not enough VRAM.
piper
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Ask HN: Open-source, local Text-to-Speech (TTS) generators
Mozilla's browser tts is kind of not bad, just parse and buffer one sentence at a time and it does all right.
For the backend, I've experimented with piper, which has a lot of voices and accents, though it's tricky to buffer and sync long texts.
https://github.com/rhasspy/piper
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ESpeak-ng: speech synthesizer with more than one hundred languages and accents
After some brief research it seems the issue you're seeing may be a known bug in at least some versions/release of espeak-ng.
Here's some potentially related links if you'd like to dig deeper:
* "questions about mandarin data packet #1044": https://github.com/espeak-ng/espeak-ng/issues/1044
* "ESpeak NJ-1.51βs Mandarin pronunciation is corrupted #12952": https://github.com/nvaccess/nvda/issues/12952
* "The pronunciation of Mandarin Chinese using ESpeak NJ in NVDA is not normal #1028": https://github.com/espeak-ng/espeak-ng/issues/1028
* "When espeak-ng translates Chinese (cmn), IPA tone symbols are not output correctly #305": https://github.com/rhasspy/piper/issues/305
* "Please default ESpeak NG's voice role to 'Chinese (Mandarin, latin as Pinyin)' for Chinese to fix #12952 #13572": https://github.com/nvaccess/nvda/issues/13572
* "Cmn voice not correctly translated #1370": https://github.com/espeak-ng/espeak-ng/issues/1370
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WhisperSpeech β An Open Source text-to-speech system built by inverting Whisper
If you're not already aware, the primary developer of Mimic 3 (and its non-Mimic predecessor Larynx) continued TTS-related development with Larynx and the renamed project Piper: https://github.com/rhasspy/piper
Last year Piper development was supported by Nabu Casa for their "Year of Voice" project for Home Assistant and it sounds like Mike Hansen is going to continue on it with their support this year.
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Coqui.ai Is Shutting Down
Coqui-ai was a commercial continuation of Mozilla TTS and STT (https://github.com/mozilla/TTS).
At the time (2018-ish), it was really impressive for on-device voice synthesis (with a quality approaching the Google and Azure cloud-based voice synthesis options) and open source, so a lot of people in the FOSS community were hoping it could be used for a privacy-respecting home assistant, Linux speech synthesis that doesn't suck, etc.
After Mozilla abandoned the project, Coqui continued development and had some really impressive one-shot voice cloning, but pivoted to marketing speech synthesis for game developers. They were probably having trouble monetizing it, and it doesn't surprise me that they shut down.
An equivalent project that's still in active development and doing really well is Piper TTS (https://github.com/rhasspy/piper).
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OpenVoice: Versatile Instant Voice Cloning
There isn't an ElevenLabs app like that, but I think that's the most expedient method, by far.
(details and warning: in-depth, opinionated take, written almost for my own benefit, I've done a lot of work near here recently but haven't had to organize my thoughts until now)
Why? Local inference is hard. You need two things: the clips to voice model (which we have here, but bleeding edge), and text + voice -> speech model.
Text to voice to speech, locally, has excellent prior art for me, in the form of a Raspberry Pi-based ONNX inference library called [Piper](https://github.com/rhasspy/piper). I should just be able to copy that, about an afternoon of work!
Except...when these models are trained, they encode plaintext to model input using a library called eSpeak. eSpeak is basically f(plaintext) => ints representing phonemes. eSpeak is a C library and written in a style I haven't seen in a while and depends on other C libraries. So I end up needing to port like 20K lines of C to Dart...or I could use WASM, but over the last year, I lost the ability to be able to reason through how to get WASM running in Dart, both native and web.
It's a really annoying technical problem: the speech models all use this eSpeak C library to turn plaintext => model input (tokenized phonemes).
Re: ElevenLabs
I had looked into the API months ago and vaguely remembered it was _very_ complete.
I spent the last hour or two playing with it, and reconfirmed that. They have enough API surface that you could build an API that took voice recordings, created a voice, and then did POSTs / socket connection to get audio data from that voice at will.
Only issue is pricing IMHO, $0.18 for 1000 characters. :/ But this is something I feel very comfortable saying wouldn't be _that_ much work to build and open source with a "bring your own API key" type thing. I had forgotten about Eleven Labs till your post, which made me realize there was an actually meaningful and quite moving use case for it.
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Hello guys, any selfhosted alternative to eleven labs?
piper (https://github.com/rhasspy/piper)
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[D] What offline TTS Model is good enough for a realistic real-time task?
I have been using piper-tts and it is GREAT and super lightweight / easy to use. On a 2080 I'm sure you can use the HQ models no worries!
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Easy implement TTS libary for cpp
So i found some library and one which is from github and have read.me or good documentation called piper (https://github.com/rhasspy/piper) so apparently this library is for rasbery pi and yes there is TXT function and i need to modify again to make it more simple but my simple project don't need this kind of big complex libary and all i need is what i said before just a function that can output sound from computer using c++ libary.
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Piper-whistle β Tool for piper TTS voice model management
piper-whistle is a tool to manage voices used with the piper (https://github.com/rhasspy/piper) speech synthesizer. Main motivation was to download and reference models in a structured way. You may browse the docs online at https://think-biq.gitlab.io/piper-whistle/
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StyleTTS2 β open-source Eleven Labs quality Text To Speech
You may want to try Piper for this case (RPi 4): https://github.com/rhasspy/piper
What are some alternatives?
btop - A monitor of resources
tortoise-tts - A multi-voice TTS system trained with an emphasis on quality
gpu_monitor - Monitor your GPUs whether they are on a single computer or in a cluster
TTS - πΈπ¬ - a deep learning toolkit for Text-to-Speech, battle-tested in research and production
gpustat - π A simple command-line utility for querying and monitoring GPU status
espeak-ng - eSpeak NG is an open source speech synthesizer that supports more than hundred languages and accents.
radeontop
silero-models - Silero Models: pre-trained speech-to-text, text-to-speech and text-enhancement models made embarrassingly simple
permon - A tool to monitor everything you want. Clean, simple, extensible and in one place.
mimic3 - A fast local neural text to speech engine for Mycroft
ksysguard-gpu - add gpu visualization for ksysguard
willow - Open source, local, and self-hosted Amazon Echo/Google Home competitive Voice Assistant alternative