A plugin for OBS Studio that allows you to replace the background in portrait images and video, as well as enhance low-light scenes.
For other AI plugins from us check out locaal AI.
OBS.Background.Removal.Plugin.Tutorial-veqNEsMqEE0.mp4
Check out the usage guide page for usage walkthrough and recommendations.
Additional tutorial videos:
- Usage tutorial: https://youtu.be/veqNEsMqEE0
- Depth of Field effect: https://youtu.be/jC3EKSpNjQk
- Low-light enhancement: https://youtu.be/WSBLYWFrn2Q
- Remove background from ANY object (not just human): https://youtu.be/N74VCDCToX8
Check out the guide page for downloads and install instructions for Windows and MacOS.
On Ubuntu, there are two ways to install OBS and you have to use the corresponding method to install this plugin.
- If you installed OBS via the official PPA, download the deb package from the releases page and install it directly.
- If you installed OBS via FlatHub, run the following command:
flatpak install com.obsproject.Studio.Plugin.BackgroundRemoval
The pre-built binary of this plugin can run Ubuntu 22.04 or later.
On openSUSE, please see docs/BUILDING-OPENSUSE.md
.
On Debian, you cannot use our deb package and we only support FlatHub installation.
On other Linux distros, use the FlatHub installation of both OBS and this plugin.
flatpak remote-add --if-not-exists flathub https://flathub.org/repo/flathub.flatpakrepo
flatpak install flathub com.obsproject.Studio
flatpak install flathub com.obsproject.Studio.Plugin.BackgroundRemoval
If you install OBS in a way other than FlatHub, you have to build this plugin by yourself (see instructions for building below).
- OBS version 29+ (download) for the latest version of this plugin, e.g. 1.1.x and above.
- OBS version 28+ for this plugin's version between 0.5.x and 1.0.x.
- OBS version 27+ for this plugin's version 0.4.x and below.
This plugin is meant to make it easy to replace the background in portrait images and video. It is using a neural network to predict the mask of the portrait and remove the background pixels. It's easily composable with other OBS plugins to replace the background with e.g. an image or a transparent color.
If you like this work, which is given to you completely free of charge, please consider supporting it by sponsoring us on GitHub:
Reach out to us on Discord or the OBS Plugins forum for online / immediate help.
If you found a bug or want to suggest a feature or improvement please open an issue.
If you are looking for hands-on help or private consultation please select a sponsorship tier.
GPU support:
- Currently on Windows we support DirectML, which should reduce CPU usage by 95% and effectively use the systems accelerators (GPUs if available).
- On Mac we support CoreML for acceleration, which is available on M1 and M2 (not Intel, sorry).
- CUDA is supported in this plugin through TensorRT, however it is supported only on Linux.
- The goal of this plugin is to be available for everyone on every system, even if they don't own a GPU.
Number of CPU threads is controllable through the UI settings. A 2-thread setting works best.
The pretrained model weights used for portrait foreground segmentation are taken from:
- https://github.com/anilsathyan7/Portrait-Segmentation/tree/master/SINet
- https://github.com/PaddlePaddle/PaddleSeg/tree/release/2.7/contrib/PP-HumanSeg
- https://github.com/PINTO0309/PINTO_model_zoo/tree/main/082_MediaPipe_Meet_Segmentation
- https://github.com/PeterL1n/RobustVideoMatting
- https://github.com/PINTO0309/PINTO_model_zoo/tree/main/384_TCMonoDepth and https://github.com/yu-li/TCMonoDepth
- https://huggingface.co/briaai/RMBG-1.4
Image enhancement (low light) models are taken from:
- https://github.com/PINTO0309/PINTO_model_zoo/tree/main/213_TBEFN
- https://github.com/PINTO0309/PINTO_model_zoo/tree/main/372_URetinex-Net
- https://github.com/PINTO0309/PINTO_model_zoo/tree/main/370_Semantic-Guided-Low-Light-Image-Enhancement
- https://github.com/PINTO0309/PINTO_model_zoo/tree/main/243_Zero-DCE-improved
Some more information about how I built it: https://www.morethantechnical.com/2021/04/15/obs-plugin-for-portrait-background-removal-with-onnx-sinet-model/ and https://www.morethantechnical.com/2023/05/20/building-an-obs-background-removal-plugin-a-walkthrough/
This video on YouTube will take you through the major parts of the code and explain them.
The plugin was built and tested on Mac OSX (Intel & Apple silicon), Windows and several Linux disros (e.g. Ubuntu/Debian-ish, Fedora, and more). Help is appreciated in building on other OSs and packages.
The building pipelines in CI take care of the heavy lifting. Use them in order to build the plugin locally. We attempt to use external OpenCV, libcurl and ONNX Runtime to reduce build times.
Start by cloning this repo to a directory of your choice.
Using the CI pipeline scripts, locally you would just call the zsh script. By default this builds a universal binary for both Intel and Apple Silicon. To build for a specific architecture please see .github/scripts/.build.zsh
for the -arch
options.
$ ./.github/scripts/build-macos -c Release
The above script should succeed and the plugin files (e.g. obs-backgroundremoval.plugin
) will reside in the ./release/Release
folder off of the root. Copy the .plugin
file to the OBS directory e.g. ~/Library/Application Support/obs-studio/plugins
.
To get .pkg
installer file, run for example
$ ./.github/scripts/package-macos -c Release
(Note that maybe the outputs will be in the Release
folder and not the install
folder like pakage-macos
expects, so you will need to rename the folder from build_x86_64/Release
to build_x86_64/install
)
Use the CI scripts again
$ ./.github/scripts/build-linux.sh
The community maintains AUR packages: https://aur.archlinux.org/packages/obs-backgroundremoval
To compile on Fedora, you need to manage the dependencies manually. See docs/BUILDING-FEDORA.md for more information.
The plugin is available on FlatHub: https://github.com/flathub/com.obsproject.Studio.Plugin.BackgroundRemoval
$ flatpak install com.obsproject.Studio.Plugin.BackgroundRemoval
Use the CI scripts again, for example:
> .github/scripts/Build-Windows.ps1 -Target x64 -CMakeGenerator "Visual Studio 17 2022"
The build should exist in the ./release
folder off the root. You can manually install the files in the OBS directory.