LGCVNov 12, 2025

FSampler: Training Free Acceleration of Diffusion Sampling via Epsilon Extrapolation

arXiv:2511.09180v1
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This provides a practical speedup for diffusion model users without requiring retraining, though it is an incremental improvement on existing sampling methods.

The paper tackles the problem of slow diffusion sampling by introducing FSampler, a training-free execution layer that accelerates sampling by reducing function evaluations through epsilon extrapolation, achieving 8-22% time reduction and 15-25% fewer model calls while maintaining high fidelity.

FSampler is a training free, sampler agnostic execution layer that accelerates diffusion sampling by reducing the number of function evaluations (NFE). FSampler maintains a short history of denoising signals (epsilon) from recent real model calls and extrapolates the next epsilon using finite difference predictors at second order, third order, or fourth order, falling back to lower order when history is insufficient. On selected steps the predicted epsilon substitutes the model call while keeping each sampler's update rule unchanged. Predicted epsilons are validated for finiteness and magnitude; a learning stabilizer rescales predictions on skipped steps to correct drift, and an optional gradient estimation stabilizer compensates local curvature. Protected windows, periodic anchors, and a cap on consecutive skips bound deviation over the trajectory. Operating at the sampler level, FSampler integrates with Euler/DDIM, DPM++ 2M/2S, LMS/AB2, and RES family exponential multistep methods and drops into standard workflows. FLUX.1 dev, Qwen Image, and Wan 2.2, FSampler reduces time by 8 to 22% and model calls by 15 to 25% at high fidelity (Structural Similarity Index (SSIM) 0.95 to 0.99), without altering sampler formulas. With an aggressive adaptive gate, reductions can reach 45 to 50% fewer model calls at lower fidelity (SSIM 0.73 to 0.74).

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