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SAM2 Video

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This model was released on 2024-07-29 and added to Hugging Face Transformers on 2025-08-14.

SAM2 Video

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Overview

SAM2 (Segment Anything Model 2) was proposed in Segment Anything in Images and Videos by Nikhila Ravi, Valentin Gabeur, Yuan-Ting Hu, Ronghang Hu, Chaitanya Ryali, Tengyu Ma, Haitham Khedr, Roman Rädle, Chloe Rolland, Laura Gustafson, Eric Mintun, Junting Pan, Kalyan Vasudev Alwala, Nicolas Carion, Chao-Yuan Wu, Ross Girshick, Piotr Dollár, Christoph Feichtenhofer.

The model can be used to predict segmentation masks of any object of interest given an input image or video, and input points or bounding boxes.

The abstract from the paper is the following:

We present Segment Anything Model 2 (SAM 2), a foundation model towards solving promptable visual segmentation in images and videos. We build a data engine, which improves model and data via user interaction, to collect the largest video segmentation dataset to date. Our model is a simple transformer architecture with streaming memory for real-time video processing. SAM 2 trained on our data provides strong performance across a wide range of tasks. In video segmentation, we observe better accuracy, using 3x fewer interactions than prior approaches. In image segmentation, our model is more accurate and 6x faster than the Segment Anything Model (SAM). We believe that our data, model, and insights will serve as a significant milestone for video segmentation and related perception tasks. We are releasing a version of our model, the dataset and an interactive demo.

Tips:

  • Batch & Video Support: SAM2 natively supports batch processing and seamless video segmentation, while original SAM is designed for static images and simpler one-image-at-a-time workflows.
  • Accuracy & Generalization: SAM2 shows improved segmentation quality, robustness, and zero-shot generalization to new domains compared to the original SAM, especially with mixed prompts.

This model was contributed by sangbumchoi and yonigozlan. The original code can be found here.

Usage example

Video Segmentation and Tracking

SAM2's key strength is its ability to track objects across video frames. Here's how to use it for video segmentation:

Basic Video Tracking

python
from transformers import Sam2VideoModel, Sam2VideoProcessor
import torch

model = Sam2VideoModel.from_pretrained("facebook/sam2.1-hiera-tiny", device_map="auto")
processor = Sam2VideoProcessor.from_pretrained("facebook/sam2.1-hiera-tiny")

# Load video frames (example assumes you have a list of PIL Images)
# video_frames = [Image.open(f"frame_{i:05d}.jpg") for i in range(num_frames)]

# For this example, we'll use the video loading utility
from transformers.video_utils import load_video
video_url = "https://huggingface.co/datasets/hf-internal-testing/sam2-fixtures/resolve/main/bedroom.mp4"
video_frames, _ = load_video(video_url)

# Initialize video inference session
inference_session = processor.init_video_session(
    video=video_frames,
    inference_device=device,
)

# Add click on first frame to select object
ann_frame_idx = 0
ann_obj_id = 1
points = [[[[210, 350]]]]
labels = [[[1]]]

processor.add_inputs_to_inference_session(
    inference_session=inference_session,
    frame_idx=ann_frame_idx,
    obj_ids=ann_obj_id,
    input_points=points,
    input_labels=labels,
)

# Segment the object on the first frame
outputs = model(
    inference_session=inference_session,
    frame_idx=ann_frame_idx,
)
video_res_masks = processor.post_process_masks(
    [outputs.pred_masks], original_sizes=[[inference_session.video_height, inference_session.video_width]], binarize=False
)[0]
print(f"Segmentation shape: {video_res_masks.shape}")
Segmentation shape: torch.Size([1, 1, 480, 854])

# Propagate through the entire video
video_segments = {}
for sam2_video_output in model.propagate_in_video_iterator(inference_session):
    video_res_masks = processor.post_process_masks(
        [sam2_video_output.pred_masks], original_sizes=[[inference_session.video_height, inference_session.video_width]], binarize=False
    )[0]
    video_segments[sam2_video_output.frame_idx] = video_res_masks

print(f"Tracked object through {len(video_segments)} frames")
Tracked object through 180 frames

Multi-Object Video Tracking

Track multiple objects simultaneously across video frames:

python
# Reset for new tracking session
inference_session.reset_inference_session()

# Add multiple objects on the first frame
ann_frame_idx = 0
obj_ids = [2, 3]
input_points = [[[[200, 300]], [[400, 150]]]]  # Points for two objects (batched)
input_labels = [[[1], [1]]]

processor.add_inputs_to_inference_session(
    inference_session=inference_session,
    frame_idx=ann_frame_idx,
    obj_ids=obj_ids,
    input_points=input_points,
    input_labels=input_labels,
)

# Get masks for both objects on first frame
outputs = model(
    inference_session=inference_session,
    frame_idx=ann_frame_idx,
)

# Propagate both objects through video
video_segments = {}
for sam2_video_output in model.propagate_in_video_iterator(inference_session):
    video_res_masks = processor.post_process_masks(
        [sam2_video_output.pred_masks], original_sizes=[[inference_session.video_height, inference_session.video_width]], binarize=False
    )[0]
    video_segments[sam2_video_output.frame_idx] = {
        obj_id: video_res_masks[i]
        for i, obj_id in enumerate(inference_session.obj_ids)
    }

print(f"Tracked {len(inference_session.obj_ids)} objects through {len(video_segments)} frames")
Tracked 2 objects through 180 frames

Refining Video Segmentation

You can add additional clicks on any frame to refine the tracking:

python
# Add refinement click on a later frame
refine_frame_idx = 50
ann_obj_id = 2  # Refining first object
points = [[[[220, 280]]]]  # Additional point
labels = [[[1]]]  # Positive click

processor.add_inputs_to_inference_session(
    inference_session=inference_session,
    frame_idx=refine_frame_idx,
    obj_ids=ann_obj_id,
    input_points=points,
    input_labels=labels,
)

# Re-propagate with the additional information
video_segments = {}
for sam2_video_output in model.propagate_in_video_iterator(inference_session):
    video_res_masks = processor.post_process_masks(
        [sam2_video_output.pred_masks], original_sizes=[[inference_session.video_height, inference_session.video_width]], binarize=False
    )[0]
    video_segments[sam2_video_output.frame_idx] = video_res_masks

Streaming Video Inference

For real-time applications, SAM2 supports processing video frames as they arrive:

python
# Initialize session for streaming
inference_session = processor.init_video_session(
    inference_device=device,
)

# Process frames one by one
for frame_idx, frame in enumerate(video_frames[:10]):  # Process first 10 frames
    inputs = processor(images=frame, device=device, return_tensors="pt").to(model.device)
...
    if frame_idx == 0:
        # Add point input on first frame
        processor.add_inputs_to_inference_session(
            inference_session=inference_session,
            frame_idx=0,
            obj_ids=1,
            input_points=[[[[210, 350], [250, 220]]]],
            input_labels=[[[1, 1]]],
            original_size=inputs.original_sizes[0], # need to be provided when using streaming video inference
        )
...
    # Process current frame
    sam2_video_output = model(inference_session=inference_session, frame=inputs.pixel_values[0])
...
    video_res_masks = processor.post_process_masks(
        [sam2_video_output.pred_masks], original_sizes=inputs.original_sizes, binarize=False
    )[0]
    print(f"Frame {frame_idx}: mask shape {video_res_masks.shape}")

Video Batch Processing for Multiple Objects

Track multiple objects simultaneously in video by adding them all at once:

python
# Initialize video session
inference_session = processor.init_video_session(
    video=video_frames,
    inference_device=device,
)

# Add multiple objects on the first frame using batch processing
ann_frame_idx = 0
obj_ids = [2, 3]  # Track two different objects
input_points = [
    [[[200, 300], [230, 250], [275, 175]], [[400, 150]]]
]  # Object 2: 3 points (2 positive, 1 negative); Object 3: 1 point
input_labels = [
    [[1, 1, 0], [1]]
]  # Object 2: positive, positive, negative; Object 3: positive

processor.add_inputs_to_inference_session(
    inference_session=inference_session,
    frame_idx=ann_frame_idx,
    obj_ids=obj_ids,
    input_points=input_points,
    input_labels=input_labels,
)

# Get masks for all objects on the first frame
outputs = model(
    inference_session=inference_session,
    frame_idx=ann_frame_idx,
)
video_res_masks = processor.post_process_masks(
    [outputs.pred_masks], original_sizes=[[inference_session.video_height, inference_session.video_width]], binarize=False
)[0]
print(f"Generated masks for {video_res_masks.shape[0]} objects")
Generated masks for 2 objects

# Propagate all objects through the video
video_segments = {}
for sam2_video_output in model.propagate_in_video_iterator(inference_session):
    video_res_masks = processor.post_process_masks(
        [sam2_video_output.pred_masks], original_sizes=[[inference_session.video_height, inference_session.video_width]], binarize=False
    )[0]
    video_segments[sam2_video_output.frame_idx] = {
        obj_id: video_res_masks[i]
        for i, obj_id in enumerate(inference_session.obj_ids)
    }

print(f"Tracked {len(inference_session.obj_ids)} objects through {len(video_segments)} frames")
Tracked 2 objects through 180 frames
<!-- TODO replace with sam2 resources -->

Resources

A list of official Hugging Face and community (indicated by 🌎) resources to help you get started with SAM.

Sam2VideoConfig

[[autodoc]] Sam2VideoConfig

Sam2VideoMaskDecoderConfig

[[autodoc]] Sam2VideoMaskDecoderConfig

Sam2VideoPromptEncoderConfig

[[autodoc]] Sam2VideoPromptEncoderConfig

Sam2VideoProcessor

[[autodoc]] Sam2VideoProcessor - call - post_process_masks - init_video_session - add_inputs_to_inference_session

Sam2VideoVideoProcessor

[[autodoc]] Sam2VideoVideoProcessor

Sam2VideoInferenceSession

[[autodoc]] Sam2VideoInferenceSession

Sam2VideoModel

[[autodoc]] Sam2VideoModel - forward - propagate_in_video_iterator - get_image_features