torch-mlir/lib/Dialect/TCP/Transforms/Bufferize.cpp

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//===- Bufferize.cpp - Bufferization for TCP dialect -------------*- C++-*-===//
Totally rework RefE2E tensor to memref flow. (#42) This now gets the overall "RefE2E" compilation stack to a point that I'm fairly happy with. We simplify it by mostly embracing the "descriptor" view of the world. The overall flow is best understood by reading through the createE2ELoweringPipeline function in lib/E2E/E2E.cpp That function creates a pass pipeline that lowers from "TCF" (which is ~numpy level of abstraction) down to LLVM IR. A brief high-level summary of what happens there: 1. TCF to TCP conversion. This involves reifying error handling in the form of shape constraints. See test/Conversion/TCFToTCP/basic.mlir 2. Lowering shape constraints. This converts shape constraints into eager error-handling code. See test/E2E/lower-shape-constraints.mlir This pass will soon go upstream. Because this lowers to std.assert, some later passes like LowerToNpcomprtABI and LowerToLLVM are updated to properly plumb this through e2e. See test/npcomp-run-mlir/invalid-broadcast.mlir for an execution test that properly aborts in case of an error. 3. Lowering tensors to memrefs. This is done via a series of passes rather than an single mega conversion. Unlike the previous code that mixed in the npcomprt ABI stuff here, it's now a very clean "pure memref" conversion. See test/E2E/lower-*-to-memref.mlir and lib/E2E/TensorToMemref/ Most of the changes are concentrated here. 4. As part of the above, we use the upstream ConvertShapeToStandard for lowering shapes. 5. We lower linalg to loops and lower loops to CFG using upstream passes. 6. Rewrite the "ABI" boundaries of the program to npcomprt data structures (LowerToNpcomprtABI). This mainly affects ABI boundaries and how global tensor constants are represented. One of the major improvements in this commit is that now it's a very clean rewrite that just replaces memrefs on ABI boundaries with !npcomprt.tensor (before there was a get_extent function that is not needed). See test/E2E/lower-to-npcomprt-abi.mlir 7. Lower to LLVM with upstream mlir patterns + some patterns for the npcomprt lowerings. One aspect here that is still a remnant of a non-descriptor-based tensor to memref flow is the BypassShapes + LowerShapedResultsToMemref. BypassShapes wraps the "tensor compute" ops in a tcp.shaped_results (basically a "tie_shape" kind of op), and then LowerShapedResultsToMemref uses those annotations to allocate output buffers while lowering the "tensor compute ops". Note that there are very few "tensor compute" ops currently supported (tcp.add + tcp.broadcast_to), so we just hardcode them in both passes. Realistically, I expect this to go away as we fully embrace the descriptor-based approach for simplicity, so don't look too deep into it.
2020-09-17 08:31:40 +08:00
//
// This file is licensed under the Apache License v2.0 with LLVM Exceptions.
Totally rework RefE2E tensor to memref flow. (#42) This now gets the overall "RefE2E" compilation stack to a point that I'm fairly happy with. We simplify it by mostly embracing the "descriptor" view of the world. The overall flow is best understood by reading through the createE2ELoweringPipeline function in lib/E2E/E2E.cpp That function creates a pass pipeline that lowers from "TCF" (which is ~numpy level of abstraction) down to LLVM IR. A brief high-level summary of what happens there: 1. TCF to TCP conversion. This involves reifying error handling in the form of shape constraints. See test/Conversion/TCFToTCP/basic.mlir 2. Lowering shape constraints. This converts shape constraints into eager error-handling code. See test/E2E/lower-shape-constraints.mlir This pass will soon go upstream. Because this lowers to std.assert, some later passes like LowerToNpcomprtABI and LowerToLLVM are updated to properly plumb this through e2e. See test/npcomp-run-mlir/invalid-broadcast.mlir for an execution test that properly aborts in case of an error. 3. Lowering tensors to memrefs. This is done via a series of passes rather than an single mega conversion. Unlike the previous code that mixed in the npcomprt ABI stuff here, it's now a very clean "pure memref" conversion. See test/E2E/lower-*-to-memref.mlir and lib/E2E/TensorToMemref/ Most of the changes are concentrated here. 4. As part of the above, we use the upstream ConvertShapeToStandard for lowering shapes. 5. We lower linalg to loops and lower loops to CFG using upstream passes. 6. Rewrite the "ABI" boundaries of the program to npcomprt data structures (LowerToNpcomprtABI). This mainly affects ABI boundaries and how global tensor constants are represented. One of the major improvements in this commit is that now it's a very clean rewrite that just replaces memrefs on ABI boundaries with !npcomprt.tensor (before there was a get_extent function that is not needed). See test/E2E/lower-to-npcomprt-abi.mlir 7. Lower to LLVM with upstream mlir patterns + some patterns for the npcomprt lowerings. One aspect here that is still a remnant of a non-descriptor-based tensor to memref flow is the BypassShapes + LowerShapedResultsToMemref. BypassShapes wraps the "tensor compute" ops in a tcp.shaped_results (basically a "tie_shape" kind of op), and then LowerShapedResultsToMemref uses those annotations to allocate output buffers while lowering the "tensor compute ops". Note that there are very few "tensor compute" ops currently supported (tcp.add + tcp.broadcast_to), so we just hardcode them in both passes. Realistically, I expect this to go away as we fully embrace the descriptor-based approach for simplicity, so don't look too deep into it.
2020-09-17 08:31:40 +08:00
// See https://llvm.org/LICENSE.txt for license information.
// SPDX-License-Identifier: Apache-2.0 WITH LLVM-exception
//
//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
#include "PassDetail.h"
Totally rework RefE2E tensor to memref flow. (#42) This now gets the overall "RefE2E" compilation stack to a point that I'm fairly happy with. We simplify it by mostly embracing the "descriptor" view of the world. The overall flow is best understood by reading through the createE2ELoweringPipeline function in lib/E2E/E2E.cpp That function creates a pass pipeline that lowers from "TCF" (which is ~numpy level of abstraction) down to LLVM IR. A brief high-level summary of what happens there: 1. TCF to TCP conversion. This involves reifying error handling in the form of shape constraints. See test/Conversion/TCFToTCP/basic.mlir 2. Lowering shape constraints. This converts shape constraints into eager error-handling code. See test/E2E/lower-shape-constraints.mlir This pass will soon go upstream. Because this lowers to std.assert, some later passes like LowerToNpcomprtABI and LowerToLLVM are updated to properly plumb this through e2e. See test/npcomp-run-mlir/invalid-broadcast.mlir for an execution test that properly aborts in case of an error. 3. Lowering tensors to memrefs. This is done via a series of passes rather than an single mega conversion. Unlike the previous code that mixed in the npcomprt ABI stuff here, it's now a very clean "pure memref" conversion. See test/E2E/lower-*-to-memref.mlir and lib/E2E/TensorToMemref/ Most of the changes are concentrated here. 4. As part of the above, we use the upstream ConvertShapeToStandard for lowering shapes. 5. We lower linalg to loops and lower loops to CFG using upstream passes. 6. Rewrite the "ABI" boundaries of the program to npcomprt data structures (LowerToNpcomprtABI). This mainly affects ABI boundaries and how global tensor constants are represented. One of the major improvements in this commit is that now it's a very clean rewrite that just replaces memrefs on ABI boundaries with !npcomprt.tensor (before there was a get_extent function that is not needed). See test/E2E/lower-to-npcomprt-abi.mlir 7. Lower to LLVM with upstream mlir patterns + some patterns for the npcomprt lowerings. One aspect here that is still a remnant of a non-descriptor-based tensor to memref flow is the BypassShapes + LowerShapedResultsToMemref. BypassShapes wraps the "tensor compute" ops in a tcp.shaped_results (basically a "tie_shape" kind of op), and then LowerShapedResultsToMemref uses those annotations to allocate output buffers while lowering the "tensor compute ops". Note that there are very few "tensor compute" ops currently supported (tcp.add + tcp.broadcast_to), so we just hardcode them in both passes. Realistically, I expect this to go away as we fully embrace the descriptor-based approach for simplicity, so don't look too deep into it.
2020-09-17 08:31:40 +08:00
#include "mlir/Dialect/Linalg/IR/LinalgOps.h"
#include "mlir/Dialect/SCF/SCF.h"
#include "mlir/Dialect/StandardOps/IR/Ops.h"
#include "mlir/Dialect/Tensor/IR/Tensor.h"
#include "mlir/IR/Builders.h"
#include "mlir/IR/BuiltinOps.h"
#include "mlir/Transforms/Bufferize.h"
Totally rework RefE2E tensor to memref flow. (#42) This now gets the overall "RefE2E" compilation stack to a point that I'm fairly happy with. We simplify it by mostly embracing the "descriptor" view of the world. The overall flow is best understood by reading through the createE2ELoweringPipeline function in lib/E2E/E2E.cpp That function creates a pass pipeline that lowers from "TCF" (which is ~numpy level of abstraction) down to LLVM IR. A brief high-level summary of what happens there: 1. TCF to TCP conversion. This involves reifying error handling in the form of shape constraints. See test/Conversion/TCFToTCP/basic.mlir 2. Lowering shape constraints. This converts shape constraints into eager error-handling code. See test/E2E/lower-shape-constraints.mlir This pass will soon go upstream. Because this lowers to std.assert, some later passes like LowerToNpcomprtABI and LowerToLLVM are updated to properly plumb this through e2e. See test/npcomp-run-mlir/invalid-broadcast.mlir for an execution test that properly aborts in case of an error. 3. Lowering tensors to memrefs. This is done via a series of passes rather than an single mega conversion. Unlike the previous code that mixed in the npcomprt ABI stuff here, it's now a very clean "pure memref" conversion. See test/E2E/lower-*-to-memref.mlir and lib/E2E/TensorToMemref/ Most of the changes are concentrated here. 4. As part of the above, we use the upstream ConvertShapeToStandard for lowering shapes. 5. We lower linalg to loops and lower loops to CFG using upstream passes. 6. Rewrite the "ABI" boundaries of the program to npcomprt data structures (LowerToNpcomprtABI). This mainly affects ABI boundaries and how global tensor constants are represented. One of the major improvements in this commit is that now it's a very clean rewrite that just replaces memrefs on ABI boundaries with !npcomprt.tensor (before there was a get_extent function that is not needed). See test/E2E/lower-to-npcomprt-abi.mlir 7. Lower to LLVM with upstream mlir patterns + some patterns for the npcomprt lowerings. One aspect here that is still a remnant of a non-descriptor-based tensor to memref flow is the BypassShapes + LowerShapedResultsToMemref. BypassShapes wraps the "tensor compute" ops in a tcp.shaped_results (basically a "tie_shape" kind of op), and then LowerShapedResultsToMemref uses those annotations to allocate output buffers while lowering the "tensor compute ops". Note that there are very few "tensor compute" ops currently supported (tcp.add + tcp.broadcast_to), so we just hardcode them in both passes. Realistically, I expect this to go away as we fully embrace the descriptor-based approach for simplicity, so don't look too deep into it.
2020-09-17 08:31:40 +08:00
#include "mlir/Transforms/DialectConversion.h"
#include "npcomp/Dialect/Refback/IR/RefbackDialect.h"
#include "npcomp/Dialect/Refback/IR/RefbackOps.h"
Totally rework RefE2E tensor to memref flow. (#42) This now gets the overall "RefE2E" compilation stack to a point that I'm fairly happy with. We simplify it by mostly embracing the "descriptor" view of the world. The overall flow is best understood by reading through the createE2ELoweringPipeline function in lib/E2E/E2E.cpp That function creates a pass pipeline that lowers from "TCF" (which is ~numpy level of abstraction) down to LLVM IR. A brief high-level summary of what happens there: 1. TCF to TCP conversion. This involves reifying error handling in the form of shape constraints. See test/Conversion/TCFToTCP/basic.mlir 2. Lowering shape constraints. This converts shape constraints into eager error-handling code. See test/E2E/lower-shape-constraints.mlir This pass will soon go upstream. Because this lowers to std.assert, some later passes like LowerToNpcomprtABI and LowerToLLVM are updated to properly plumb this through e2e. See test/npcomp-run-mlir/invalid-broadcast.mlir for an execution test that properly aborts in case of an error. 3. Lowering tensors to memrefs. This is done via a series of passes rather than an single mega conversion. Unlike the previous code that mixed in the npcomprt ABI stuff here, it's now a very clean "pure memref" conversion. See test/E2E/lower-*-to-memref.mlir and lib/E2E/TensorToMemref/ Most of the changes are concentrated here. 4. As part of the above, we use the upstream ConvertShapeToStandard for lowering shapes. 5. We lower linalg to loops and lower loops to CFG using upstream passes. 6. Rewrite the "ABI" boundaries of the program to npcomprt data structures (LowerToNpcomprtABI). This mainly affects ABI boundaries and how global tensor constants are represented. One of the major improvements in this commit is that now it's a very clean rewrite that just replaces memrefs on ABI boundaries with !npcomprt.tensor (before there was a get_extent function that is not needed). See test/E2E/lower-to-npcomprt-abi.mlir 7. Lower to LLVM with upstream mlir patterns + some patterns for the npcomprt lowerings. One aspect here that is still a remnant of a non-descriptor-based tensor to memref flow is the BypassShapes + LowerShapedResultsToMemref. BypassShapes wraps the "tensor compute" ops in a tcp.shaped_results (basically a "tie_shape" kind of op), and then LowerShapedResultsToMemref uses those annotations to allocate output buffers while lowering the "tensor compute ops". Note that there are very few "tensor compute" ops currently supported (tcp.add + tcp.broadcast_to), so we just hardcode them in both passes. Realistically, I expect this to go away as we fully embrace the descriptor-based approach for simplicity, so don't look too deep into it.
2020-09-17 08:31:40 +08:00
#include "npcomp/Dialect/TCP/IR/TCPDialect.h"
#include "npcomp/Dialect/TCP/IR/TCPOps.h"
#include "npcomp/Dialect/TCP/Transforms/Passes.h"
Totally rework RefE2E tensor to memref flow. (#42) This now gets the overall "RefE2E" compilation stack to a point that I'm fairly happy with. We simplify it by mostly embracing the "descriptor" view of the world. The overall flow is best understood by reading through the createE2ELoweringPipeline function in lib/E2E/E2E.cpp That function creates a pass pipeline that lowers from "TCF" (which is ~numpy level of abstraction) down to LLVM IR. A brief high-level summary of what happens there: 1. TCF to TCP conversion. This involves reifying error handling in the form of shape constraints. See test/Conversion/TCFToTCP/basic.mlir 2. Lowering shape constraints. This converts shape constraints into eager error-handling code. See test/E2E/lower-shape-constraints.mlir This pass will soon go upstream. Because this lowers to std.assert, some later passes like LowerToNpcomprtABI and LowerToLLVM are updated to properly plumb this through e2e. See test/npcomp-run-mlir/invalid-broadcast.mlir for an execution test that properly aborts in case of an error. 3. Lowering tensors to memrefs. This is done via a series of passes rather than an single mega conversion. Unlike the previous code that mixed in the npcomprt ABI stuff here, it's now a very clean "pure memref" conversion. See test/E2E/lower-*-to-memref.mlir and lib/E2E/TensorToMemref/ Most of the changes are concentrated here. 4. As part of the above, we use the upstream ConvertShapeToStandard for lowering shapes. 5. We lower linalg to loops and lower loops to CFG using upstream passes. 6. Rewrite the "ABI" boundaries of the program to npcomprt data structures (LowerToNpcomprtABI). This mainly affects ABI boundaries and how global tensor constants are represented. One of the major improvements in this commit is that now it's a very clean rewrite that just replaces memrefs on ABI boundaries with !npcomprt.tensor (before there was a get_extent function that is not needed). See test/E2E/lower-to-npcomprt-abi.mlir 7. Lower to LLVM with upstream mlir patterns + some patterns for the npcomprt lowerings. One aspect here that is still a remnant of a non-descriptor-based tensor to memref flow is the BypassShapes + LowerShapedResultsToMemref. BypassShapes wraps the "tensor compute" ops in a tcp.shaped_results (basically a "tie_shape" kind of op), and then LowerShapedResultsToMemref uses those annotations to allocate output buffers while lowering the "tensor compute ops". Note that there are very few "tensor compute" ops currently supported (tcp.add + tcp.broadcast_to), so we just hardcode them in both passes. Realistically, I expect this to go away as we fully embrace the descriptor-based approach for simplicity, so don't look too deep into it.
2020-09-17 08:31:40 +08:00
using namespace mlir;
using namespace mlir::NPCOMP;
// TODO: Don't just open-code all shape transfer functions here.
static SmallVector<Value, 6> bypassResultShapes(Operation &op) {
OpBuilder builder(&op);
if (auto broadcastTo = dyn_cast<tcp::BroadcastToOp>(op)) {
return {broadcastTo.shape()};
}
if (auto splatted = dyn_cast<tcp::SplattedOp>(op)) {
return {splatted.shape()};
}
// No shape transfer function.
return {};
}
static FailureOr<SmallVector<Value, 6>>
allocateResults(Operation *op, ConversionPatternRewriter &rewriter,
Location loc,
SmallVectorImpl<Value> *resultShapesOut = nullptr) {
auto resultShapes = bypassResultShapes(*op);
SmallVector<Value, 6> results;
for (auto t : llvm::zip(op->getResults(), resultShapes)) {
auto result = std::get<0>(t);
auto resultShape = std::get<1>(t);
auto tensorType = result.getType().cast<RankedTensorType>();
auto memrefType =
MemRefType::get(tensorType.getShape(), tensorType.getElementType());
auto memref =
rewriter.create<refback::AllocMemRefOp>(loc, memrefType, resultShape);
results.push_back(memref);
}
if (resultShapesOut)
resultShapesOut->append(resultShapes.begin(), resultShapes.end());
return results;
Totally rework RefE2E tensor to memref flow. (#42) This now gets the overall "RefE2E" compilation stack to a point that I'm fairly happy with. We simplify it by mostly embracing the "descriptor" view of the world. The overall flow is best understood by reading through the createE2ELoweringPipeline function in lib/E2E/E2E.cpp That function creates a pass pipeline that lowers from "TCF" (which is ~numpy level of abstraction) down to LLVM IR. A brief high-level summary of what happens there: 1. TCF to TCP conversion. This involves reifying error handling in the form of shape constraints. See test/Conversion/TCFToTCP/basic.mlir 2. Lowering shape constraints. This converts shape constraints into eager error-handling code. See test/E2E/lower-shape-constraints.mlir This pass will soon go upstream. Because this lowers to std.assert, some later passes like LowerToNpcomprtABI and LowerToLLVM are updated to properly plumb this through e2e. See test/npcomp-run-mlir/invalid-broadcast.mlir for an execution test that properly aborts in case of an error. 3. Lowering tensors to memrefs. This is done via a series of passes rather than an single mega conversion. Unlike the previous code that mixed in the npcomprt ABI stuff here, it's now a very clean "pure memref" conversion. See test/E2E/lower-*-to-memref.mlir and lib/E2E/TensorToMemref/ Most of the changes are concentrated here. 4. As part of the above, we use the upstream ConvertShapeToStandard for lowering shapes. 5. We lower linalg to loops and lower loops to CFG using upstream passes. 6. Rewrite the "ABI" boundaries of the program to npcomprt data structures (LowerToNpcomprtABI). This mainly affects ABI boundaries and how global tensor constants are represented. One of the major improvements in this commit is that now it's a very clean rewrite that just replaces memrefs on ABI boundaries with !npcomprt.tensor (before there was a get_extent function that is not needed). See test/E2E/lower-to-npcomprt-abi.mlir 7. Lower to LLVM with upstream mlir patterns + some patterns for the npcomprt lowerings. One aspect here that is still a remnant of a non-descriptor-based tensor to memref flow is the BypassShapes + LowerShapedResultsToMemref. BypassShapes wraps the "tensor compute" ops in a tcp.shaped_results (basically a "tie_shape" kind of op), and then LowerShapedResultsToMemref uses those annotations to allocate output buffers while lowering the "tensor compute ops". Note that there are very few "tensor compute" ops currently supported (tcp.add + tcp.broadcast_to), so we just hardcode them in both passes. Realistically, I expect this to go away as we fully embrace the descriptor-based approach for simplicity, so don't look too deep into it.
2020-09-17 08:31:40 +08:00
}
namespace {
// TODO: Lower to a "buffer version" of tcp::BroadcastTo instead of directly to
// loops.
class LowerBroadcastToToLoopsPattern
: public OpConversionPattern<tcp::BroadcastToOp> {
public:
using OpConversionPattern::OpConversionPattern;
LogicalResult
matchAndRewrite(tcp::BroadcastToOp op, ArrayRef<Value> operands,
ConversionPatternRewriter &rewriter) const override {
auto resultType = op.getType().cast<RankedTensorType>();
auto inputType = op.operand().getType().cast<RankedTensorType>();
SmallVector<Value, 6> resultShapes;
auto resultsOrFailure =
allocateResults(op, rewriter, op.getLoc(), &resultShapes);
if (failed(resultsOrFailure))
return failure();
Value resultMemref = (*resultsOrFailure)[0];
auto resultShape = resultShapes[0];
Totally rework RefE2E tensor to memref flow. (#42) This now gets the overall "RefE2E" compilation stack to a point that I'm fairly happy with. We simplify it by mostly embracing the "descriptor" view of the world. The overall flow is best understood by reading through the createE2ELoweringPipeline function in lib/E2E/E2E.cpp That function creates a pass pipeline that lowers from "TCF" (which is ~numpy level of abstraction) down to LLVM IR. A brief high-level summary of what happens there: 1. TCF to TCP conversion. This involves reifying error handling in the form of shape constraints. See test/Conversion/TCFToTCP/basic.mlir 2. Lowering shape constraints. This converts shape constraints into eager error-handling code. See test/E2E/lower-shape-constraints.mlir This pass will soon go upstream. Because this lowers to std.assert, some later passes like LowerToNpcomprtABI and LowerToLLVM are updated to properly plumb this through e2e. See test/npcomp-run-mlir/invalid-broadcast.mlir for an execution test that properly aborts in case of an error. 3. Lowering tensors to memrefs. This is done via a series of passes rather than an single mega conversion. Unlike the previous code that mixed in the npcomprt ABI stuff here, it's now a very clean "pure memref" conversion. See test/E2E/lower-*-to-memref.mlir and lib/E2E/TensorToMemref/ Most of the changes are concentrated here. 4. As part of the above, we use the upstream ConvertShapeToStandard for lowering shapes. 5. We lower linalg to loops and lower loops to CFG using upstream passes. 6. Rewrite the "ABI" boundaries of the program to npcomprt data structures (LowerToNpcomprtABI). This mainly affects ABI boundaries and how global tensor constants are represented. One of the major improvements in this commit is that now it's a very clean rewrite that just replaces memrefs on ABI boundaries with !npcomprt.tensor (before there was a get_extent function that is not needed). See test/E2E/lower-to-npcomprt-abi.mlir 7. Lower to LLVM with upstream mlir patterns + some patterns for the npcomprt lowerings. One aspect here that is still a remnant of a non-descriptor-based tensor to memref flow is the BypassShapes + LowerShapedResultsToMemref. BypassShapes wraps the "tensor compute" ops in a tcp.shaped_results (basically a "tie_shape" kind of op), and then LowerShapedResultsToMemref uses those annotations to allocate output buffers while lowering the "tensor compute ops". Note that there are very few "tensor compute" ops currently supported (tcp.add + tcp.broadcast_to), so we just hardcode them in both passes. Realistically, I expect this to go away as we fully embrace the descriptor-based approach for simplicity, so don't look too deep into it.
2020-09-17 08:31:40 +08:00
Value inputMemref = operands[0];
SmallVector<Value, 6> outputExtents;
for (int i = 0, e = resultType.getRank(); i < e; i++) {
Value dimIndex = rewriter.create<ConstantIndexOp>(op.getLoc(), i);
Value outputExtent = rewriter.create<tensor::ExtractOp>(
op.getLoc(), resultShape, ValueRange({dimIndex}));
Totally rework RefE2E tensor to memref flow. (#42) This now gets the overall "RefE2E" compilation stack to a point that I'm fairly happy with. We simplify it by mostly embracing the "descriptor" view of the world. The overall flow is best understood by reading through the createE2ELoweringPipeline function in lib/E2E/E2E.cpp That function creates a pass pipeline that lowers from "TCF" (which is ~numpy level of abstraction) down to LLVM IR. A brief high-level summary of what happens there: 1. TCF to TCP conversion. This involves reifying error handling in the form of shape constraints. See test/Conversion/TCFToTCP/basic.mlir 2. Lowering shape constraints. This converts shape constraints into eager error-handling code. See test/E2E/lower-shape-constraints.mlir This pass will soon go upstream. Because this lowers to std.assert, some later passes like LowerToNpcomprtABI and LowerToLLVM are updated to properly plumb this through e2e. See test/npcomp-run-mlir/invalid-broadcast.mlir for an execution test that properly aborts in case of an error. 3. Lowering tensors to memrefs. This is done via a series of passes rather than an single mega conversion. Unlike the previous code that mixed in the npcomprt ABI stuff here, it's now a very clean "pure memref" conversion. See test/E2E/lower-*-to-memref.mlir and lib/E2E/TensorToMemref/ Most of the changes are concentrated here. 4. As part of the above, we use the upstream ConvertShapeToStandard for lowering shapes. 5. We lower linalg to loops and lower loops to CFG using upstream passes. 6. Rewrite the "ABI" boundaries of the program to npcomprt data structures (LowerToNpcomprtABI). This mainly affects ABI boundaries and how global tensor constants are represented. One of the major improvements in this commit is that now it's a very clean rewrite that just replaces memrefs on ABI boundaries with !npcomprt.tensor (before there was a get_extent function that is not needed). See test/E2E/lower-to-npcomprt-abi.mlir 7. Lower to LLVM with upstream mlir patterns + some patterns for the npcomprt lowerings. One aspect here that is still a remnant of a non-descriptor-based tensor to memref flow is the BypassShapes + LowerShapedResultsToMemref. BypassShapes wraps the "tensor compute" ops in a tcp.shaped_results (basically a "tie_shape" kind of op), and then LowerShapedResultsToMemref uses those annotations to allocate output buffers while lowering the "tensor compute ops". Note that there are very few "tensor compute" ops currently supported (tcp.add + tcp.broadcast_to), so we just hardcode them in both passes. Realistically, I expect this to go away as we fully embrace the descriptor-based approach for simplicity, so don't look too deep into it.
2020-09-17 08:31:40 +08:00
outputExtents.push_back(outputExtent);
}
int rankDiff = resultType.getRank() - inputType.getRank();
SmallVector<Value, 6> inputDimRequiresBroadcasting;
for (int i = 0, e = inputType.getRank(); i < e; i++) {
// Calculate the relevant extents.
Value inputExtent = rewriter.create<DimOp>(op.getLoc(), op.operand(), i);
inputDimRequiresBroadcasting.push_back(
rewriter.create<CmpIOp>(op.getLoc(), CmpIPredicate::ne, inputExtent,
outputExtents[rankDiff + i]));
}
{
OpBuilder::InsertionGuard guard(rewriter);
Value c0 = rewriter.create<ConstantIndexOp>(op.getLoc(), 0);
Value c1 = rewriter.create<ConstantIndexOp>(op.getLoc(), 1);
SmallVector<Value, 6> inductionVariables;
// Create the (perfectly nested) loops.
// Loop invariant: At the start of iteration `i`, the rewriter insertion
// point is inside `i` nested loops.
for (int i = 0, e = resultType.getRank(); i < e; i++) {
auto loop = rewriter.create<scf::ForOp>(
op.getLoc(), c0, outputExtents[i], c1, ValueRange({}));
Block *body = loop.getBody();
inductionVariables.push_back(body->getArgument(0));
// Leave the insertion point at the beginning of the body.
rewriter.setInsertionPointToStart(body);
}
// Create the inner loop body.
// When reading from the input, clamp any indices for dimensions that are
// being broadcast.
SmallVector<Value, 6> inputIndices;
for (int i = 0, e = inputType.getRank(); i < e; i++) {
auto c0 = rewriter.create<ConstantIndexOp>(op.getLoc(), 0);
auto select = rewriter.create<SelectOp>(
op.getLoc(), inputDimRequiresBroadcasting[i], c0,
inductionVariables[rankDiff + i]);
inputIndices.push_back(select);
}
Value load =
rewriter.create<LoadOp>(op.getLoc(), inputMemref, inputIndices);
rewriter.create<StoreOp>(op.getLoc(), load, resultMemref,
inductionVariables);
}
rewriter.replaceOp(op, resultMemref);
return success();
}
};
} // namespace
namespace {
class BufferizeSplattedOp : public OpConversionPattern<tcp::SplattedOp> {
public:
using OpConversionPattern::OpConversionPattern;
LogicalResult
matchAndRewrite(tcp::SplattedOp op, ArrayRef<Value> operands,
ConversionPatternRewriter &rewriter) const override {
auto resultsOrFailure = allocateResults(op, rewriter, op.getLoc());
if (failed(resultsOrFailure))
return failure();
auto results = *resultsOrFailure;
rewriter.create<linalg::FillOp>(op.getLoc(), results[0], op.splatVal());
rewriter.replaceOp(op, results);
Totally rework RefE2E tensor to memref flow. (#42) This now gets the overall "RefE2E" compilation stack to a point that I'm fairly happy with. We simplify it by mostly embracing the "descriptor" view of the world. The overall flow is best understood by reading through the createE2ELoweringPipeline function in lib/E2E/E2E.cpp That function creates a pass pipeline that lowers from "TCF" (which is ~numpy level of abstraction) down to LLVM IR. A brief high-level summary of what happens there: 1. TCF to TCP conversion. This involves reifying error handling in the form of shape constraints. See test/Conversion/TCFToTCP/basic.mlir 2. Lowering shape constraints. This converts shape constraints into eager error-handling code. See test/E2E/lower-shape-constraints.mlir This pass will soon go upstream. Because this lowers to std.assert, some later passes like LowerToNpcomprtABI and LowerToLLVM are updated to properly plumb this through e2e. See test/npcomp-run-mlir/invalid-broadcast.mlir for an execution test that properly aborts in case of an error. 3. Lowering tensors to memrefs. This is done via a series of passes rather than an single mega conversion. Unlike the previous code that mixed in the npcomprt ABI stuff here, it's now a very clean "pure memref" conversion. See test/E2E/lower-*-to-memref.mlir and lib/E2E/TensorToMemref/ Most of the changes are concentrated here. 4. As part of the above, we use the upstream ConvertShapeToStandard for lowering shapes. 5. We lower linalg to loops and lower loops to CFG using upstream passes. 6. Rewrite the "ABI" boundaries of the program to npcomprt data structures (LowerToNpcomprtABI). This mainly affects ABI boundaries and how global tensor constants are represented. One of the major improvements in this commit is that now it's a very clean rewrite that just replaces memrefs on ABI boundaries with !npcomprt.tensor (before there was a get_extent function that is not needed). See test/E2E/lower-to-npcomprt-abi.mlir 7. Lower to LLVM with upstream mlir patterns + some patterns for the npcomprt lowerings. One aspect here that is still a remnant of a non-descriptor-based tensor to memref flow is the BypassShapes + LowerShapedResultsToMemref. BypassShapes wraps the "tensor compute" ops in a tcp.shaped_results (basically a "tie_shape" kind of op), and then LowerShapedResultsToMemref uses those annotations to allocate output buffers while lowering the "tensor compute ops". Note that there are very few "tensor compute" ops currently supported (tcp.add + tcp.broadcast_to), so we just hardcode them in both passes. Realistically, I expect this to go away as we fully embrace the descriptor-based approach for simplicity, so don't look too deep into it.
2020-09-17 08:31:40 +08:00
return success();
}
};
} // namespace
namespace {
class TCPBufferizePass : public TCPBufferizeBase<TCPBufferizePass> {
void getDependentDialects(::mlir::DialectRegistry &registry) const override {
registry.insert<refback::RefbackDialect>();
registry.insert<linalg::LinalgDialect>();
registry.insert<scf::SCFDialect>();
2020-09-22 05:48:44 +08:00
}
void runOnOperation() override {
Totally rework RefE2E tensor to memref flow. (#42) This now gets the overall "RefE2E" compilation stack to a point that I'm fairly happy with. We simplify it by mostly embracing the "descriptor" view of the world. The overall flow is best understood by reading through the createE2ELoweringPipeline function in lib/E2E/E2E.cpp That function creates a pass pipeline that lowers from "TCF" (which is ~numpy level of abstraction) down to LLVM IR. A brief high-level summary of what happens there: 1. TCF to TCP conversion. This involves reifying error handling in the form of shape constraints. See test/Conversion/TCFToTCP/basic.mlir 2. Lowering shape constraints. This converts shape constraints into eager error-handling code. See test/E2E/lower-shape-constraints.mlir This pass will soon go upstream. Because this lowers to std.assert, some later passes like LowerToNpcomprtABI and LowerToLLVM are updated to properly plumb this through e2e. See test/npcomp-run-mlir/invalid-broadcast.mlir for an execution test that properly aborts in case of an error. 3. Lowering tensors to memrefs. This is done via a series of passes rather than an single mega conversion. Unlike the previous code that mixed in the npcomprt ABI stuff here, it's now a very clean "pure memref" conversion. See test/E2E/lower-*-to-memref.mlir and lib/E2E/TensorToMemref/ Most of the changes are concentrated here. 4. As part of the above, we use the upstream ConvertShapeToStandard for lowering shapes. 5. We lower linalg to loops and lower loops to CFG using upstream passes. 6. Rewrite the "ABI" boundaries of the program to npcomprt data structures (LowerToNpcomprtABI). This mainly affects ABI boundaries and how global tensor constants are represented. One of the major improvements in this commit is that now it's a very clean rewrite that just replaces memrefs on ABI boundaries with !npcomprt.tensor (before there was a get_extent function that is not needed). See test/E2E/lower-to-npcomprt-abi.mlir 7. Lower to LLVM with upstream mlir patterns + some patterns for the npcomprt lowerings. One aspect here that is still a remnant of a non-descriptor-based tensor to memref flow is the BypassShapes + LowerShapedResultsToMemref. BypassShapes wraps the "tensor compute" ops in a tcp.shaped_results (basically a "tie_shape" kind of op), and then LowerShapedResultsToMemref uses those annotations to allocate output buffers while lowering the "tensor compute ops". Note that there are very few "tensor compute" ops currently supported (tcp.add + tcp.broadcast_to), so we just hardcode them in both passes. Realistically, I expect this to go away as we fully embrace the descriptor-based approach for simplicity, so don't look too deep into it.
2020-09-17 08:31:40 +08:00
auto func = getOperation();
auto *context = &getContext();
BufferizeTypeConverter typeConverter;
Totally rework RefE2E tensor to memref flow. (#42) This now gets the overall "RefE2E" compilation stack to a point that I'm fairly happy with. We simplify it by mostly embracing the "descriptor" view of the world. The overall flow is best understood by reading through the createE2ELoweringPipeline function in lib/E2E/E2E.cpp That function creates a pass pipeline that lowers from "TCF" (which is ~numpy level of abstraction) down to LLVM IR. A brief high-level summary of what happens there: 1. TCF to TCP conversion. This involves reifying error handling in the form of shape constraints. See test/Conversion/TCFToTCP/basic.mlir 2. Lowering shape constraints. This converts shape constraints into eager error-handling code. See test/E2E/lower-shape-constraints.mlir This pass will soon go upstream. Because this lowers to std.assert, some later passes like LowerToNpcomprtABI and LowerToLLVM are updated to properly plumb this through e2e. See test/npcomp-run-mlir/invalid-broadcast.mlir for an execution test that properly aborts in case of an error. 3. Lowering tensors to memrefs. This is done via a series of passes rather than an single mega conversion. Unlike the previous code that mixed in the npcomprt ABI stuff here, it's now a very clean "pure memref" conversion. See test/E2E/lower-*-to-memref.mlir and lib/E2E/TensorToMemref/ Most of the changes are concentrated here. 4. As part of the above, we use the upstream ConvertShapeToStandard for lowering shapes. 5. We lower linalg to loops and lower loops to CFG using upstream passes. 6. Rewrite the "ABI" boundaries of the program to npcomprt data structures (LowerToNpcomprtABI). This mainly affects ABI boundaries and how global tensor constants are represented. One of the major improvements in this commit is that now it's a very clean rewrite that just replaces memrefs on ABI boundaries with !npcomprt.tensor (before there was a get_extent function that is not needed). See test/E2E/lower-to-npcomprt-abi.mlir 7. Lower to LLVM with upstream mlir patterns + some patterns for the npcomprt lowerings. One aspect here that is still a remnant of a non-descriptor-based tensor to memref flow is the BypassShapes + LowerShapedResultsToMemref. BypassShapes wraps the "tensor compute" ops in a tcp.shaped_results (basically a "tie_shape" kind of op), and then LowerShapedResultsToMemref uses those annotations to allocate output buffers while lowering the "tensor compute ops". Note that there are very few "tensor compute" ops currently supported (tcp.add + tcp.broadcast_to), so we just hardcode them in both passes. Realistically, I expect this to go away as we fully embrace the descriptor-based approach for simplicity, so don't look too deep into it.
2020-09-17 08:31:40 +08:00
OwningRewritePatternList patterns;
ConversionTarget target(*context);
// All lowering to buffers involves refback.alloc_memref ops.
// TODO: This makes the tests cleaner, but otherwise isn't too essential as
// we can just open-code the extents for the alloc.
target.addLegalOp<refback::AllocMemRefOp>();
Totally rework RefE2E tensor to memref flow. (#42) This now gets the overall "RefE2E" compilation stack to a point that I'm fairly happy with. We simplify it by mostly embracing the "descriptor" view of the world. The overall flow is best understood by reading through the createE2ELoweringPipeline function in lib/E2E/E2E.cpp That function creates a pass pipeline that lowers from "TCF" (which is ~numpy level of abstraction) down to LLVM IR. A brief high-level summary of what happens there: 1. TCF to TCP conversion. This involves reifying error handling in the form of shape constraints. See test/Conversion/TCFToTCP/basic.mlir 2. Lowering shape constraints. This converts shape constraints into eager error-handling code. See test/E2E/lower-shape-constraints.mlir This pass will soon go upstream. Because this lowers to std.assert, some later passes like LowerToNpcomprtABI and LowerToLLVM are updated to properly plumb this through e2e. See test/npcomp-run-mlir/invalid-broadcast.mlir for an execution test that properly aborts in case of an error. 3. Lowering tensors to memrefs. This is done via a series of passes rather than an single mega conversion. Unlike the previous code that mixed in the npcomprt ABI stuff here, it's now a very clean "pure memref" conversion. See test/E2E/lower-*-to-memref.mlir and lib/E2E/TensorToMemref/ Most of the changes are concentrated here. 4. As part of the above, we use the upstream ConvertShapeToStandard for lowering shapes. 5. We lower linalg to loops and lower loops to CFG using upstream passes. 6. Rewrite the "ABI" boundaries of the program to npcomprt data structures (LowerToNpcomprtABI). This mainly affects ABI boundaries and how global tensor constants are represented. One of the major improvements in this commit is that now it's a very clean rewrite that just replaces memrefs on ABI boundaries with !npcomprt.tensor (before there was a get_extent function that is not needed). See test/E2E/lower-to-npcomprt-abi.mlir 7. Lower to LLVM with upstream mlir patterns + some patterns for the npcomprt lowerings. One aspect here that is still a remnant of a non-descriptor-based tensor to memref flow is the BypassShapes + LowerShapedResultsToMemref. BypassShapes wraps the "tensor compute" ops in a tcp.shaped_results (basically a "tie_shape" kind of op), and then LowerShapedResultsToMemref uses those annotations to allocate output buffers while lowering the "tensor compute ops". Note that there are very few "tensor compute" ops currently supported (tcp.add + tcp.broadcast_to), so we just hardcode them in both passes. Realistically, I expect this to go away as we fully embrace the descriptor-based approach for simplicity, so don't look too deep into it.
2020-09-17 08:31:40 +08:00
patterns.insert<LowerBroadcastToToLoopsPattern>(typeConverter, context);
target.addIllegalOp<tcp::BroadcastToOp>();
patterns.insert<BufferizeSplattedOp>(typeConverter, context);
target.addIllegalOp<tcp::SplattedOp>();
target.addLegalDialect<linalg::LinalgDialect>();
Totally rework RefE2E tensor to memref flow. (#42) This now gets the overall "RefE2E" compilation stack to a point that I'm fairly happy with. We simplify it by mostly embracing the "descriptor" view of the world. The overall flow is best understood by reading through the createE2ELoweringPipeline function in lib/E2E/E2E.cpp That function creates a pass pipeline that lowers from "TCF" (which is ~numpy level of abstraction) down to LLVM IR. A brief high-level summary of what happens there: 1. TCF to TCP conversion. This involves reifying error handling in the form of shape constraints. See test/Conversion/TCFToTCP/basic.mlir 2. Lowering shape constraints. This converts shape constraints into eager error-handling code. See test/E2E/lower-shape-constraints.mlir This pass will soon go upstream. Because this lowers to std.assert, some later passes like LowerToNpcomprtABI and LowerToLLVM are updated to properly plumb this through e2e. See test/npcomp-run-mlir/invalid-broadcast.mlir for an execution test that properly aborts in case of an error. 3. Lowering tensors to memrefs. This is done via a series of passes rather than an single mega conversion. Unlike the previous code that mixed in the npcomprt ABI stuff here, it's now a very clean "pure memref" conversion. See test/E2E/lower-*-to-memref.mlir and lib/E2E/TensorToMemref/ Most of the changes are concentrated here. 4. As part of the above, we use the upstream ConvertShapeToStandard for lowering shapes. 5. We lower linalg to loops and lower loops to CFG using upstream passes. 6. Rewrite the "ABI" boundaries of the program to npcomprt data structures (LowerToNpcomprtABI). This mainly affects ABI boundaries and how global tensor constants are represented. One of the major improvements in this commit is that now it's a very clean rewrite that just replaces memrefs on ABI boundaries with !npcomprt.tensor (before there was a get_extent function that is not needed). See test/E2E/lower-to-npcomprt-abi.mlir 7. Lower to LLVM with upstream mlir patterns + some patterns for the npcomprt lowerings. One aspect here that is still a remnant of a non-descriptor-based tensor to memref flow is the BypassShapes + LowerShapedResultsToMemref. BypassShapes wraps the "tensor compute" ops in a tcp.shaped_results (basically a "tie_shape" kind of op), and then LowerShapedResultsToMemref uses those annotations to allocate output buffers while lowering the "tensor compute ops". Note that there are very few "tensor compute" ops currently supported (tcp.add + tcp.broadcast_to), so we just hardcode them in both passes. Realistically, I expect this to go away as we fully embrace the descriptor-based approach for simplicity, so don't look too deep into it.
2020-09-17 08:31:40 +08:00
target.addLegalDialect<StandardOpsDialect>();
target.addLegalDialect<scf::SCFDialect>();
target.addLegalDialect<tensor::TensorDialect>();
Totally rework RefE2E tensor to memref flow. (#42) This now gets the overall "RefE2E" compilation stack to a point that I'm fairly happy with. We simplify it by mostly embracing the "descriptor" view of the world. The overall flow is best understood by reading through the createE2ELoweringPipeline function in lib/E2E/E2E.cpp That function creates a pass pipeline that lowers from "TCF" (which is ~numpy level of abstraction) down to LLVM IR. A brief high-level summary of what happens there: 1. TCF to TCP conversion. This involves reifying error handling in the form of shape constraints. See test/Conversion/TCFToTCP/basic.mlir 2. Lowering shape constraints. This converts shape constraints into eager error-handling code. See test/E2E/lower-shape-constraints.mlir This pass will soon go upstream. Because this lowers to std.assert, some later passes like LowerToNpcomprtABI and LowerToLLVM are updated to properly plumb this through e2e. See test/npcomp-run-mlir/invalid-broadcast.mlir for an execution test that properly aborts in case of an error. 3. Lowering tensors to memrefs. This is done via a series of passes rather than an single mega conversion. Unlike the previous code that mixed in the npcomprt ABI stuff here, it's now a very clean "pure memref" conversion. See test/E2E/lower-*-to-memref.mlir and lib/E2E/TensorToMemref/ Most of the changes are concentrated here. 4. As part of the above, we use the upstream ConvertShapeToStandard for lowering shapes. 5. We lower linalg to loops and lower loops to CFG using upstream passes. 6. Rewrite the "ABI" boundaries of the program to npcomprt data structures (LowerToNpcomprtABI). This mainly affects ABI boundaries and how global tensor constants are represented. One of the major improvements in this commit is that now it's a very clean rewrite that just replaces memrefs on ABI boundaries with !npcomprt.tensor (before there was a get_extent function that is not needed). See test/E2E/lower-to-npcomprt-abi.mlir 7. Lower to LLVM with upstream mlir patterns + some patterns for the npcomprt lowerings. One aspect here that is still a remnant of a non-descriptor-based tensor to memref flow is the BypassShapes + LowerShapedResultsToMemref. BypassShapes wraps the "tensor compute" ops in a tcp.shaped_results (basically a "tie_shape" kind of op), and then LowerShapedResultsToMemref uses those annotations to allocate output buffers while lowering the "tensor compute ops". Note that there are very few "tensor compute" ops currently supported (tcp.add + tcp.broadcast_to), so we just hardcode them in both passes. Realistically, I expect this to go away as we fully embrace the descriptor-based approach for simplicity, so don't look too deep into it.
2020-09-17 08:31:40 +08:00
if (failed(applyPartialConversion(func, target, std::move(patterns))))
Totally rework RefE2E tensor to memref flow. (#42) This now gets the overall "RefE2E" compilation stack to a point that I'm fairly happy with. We simplify it by mostly embracing the "descriptor" view of the world. The overall flow is best understood by reading through the createE2ELoweringPipeline function in lib/E2E/E2E.cpp That function creates a pass pipeline that lowers from "TCF" (which is ~numpy level of abstraction) down to LLVM IR. A brief high-level summary of what happens there: 1. TCF to TCP conversion. This involves reifying error handling in the form of shape constraints. See test/Conversion/TCFToTCP/basic.mlir 2. Lowering shape constraints. This converts shape constraints into eager error-handling code. See test/E2E/lower-shape-constraints.mlir This pass will soon go upstream. Because this lowers to std.assert, some later passes like LowerToNpcomprtABI and LowerToLLVM are updated to properly plumb this through e2e. See test/npcomp-run-mlir/invalid-broadcast.mlir for an execution test that properly aborts in case of an error. 3. Lowering tensors to memrefs. This is done via a series of passes rather than an single mega conversion. Unlike the previous code that mixed in the npcomprt ABI stuff here, it's now a very clean "pure memref" conversion. See test/E2E/lower-*-to-memref.mlir and lib/E2E/TensorToMemref/ Most of the changes are concentrated here. 4. As part of the above, we use the upstream ConvertShapeToStandard for lowering shapes. 5. We lower linalg to loops and lower loops to CFG using upstream passes. 6. Rewrite the "ABI" boundaries of the program to npcomprt data structures (LowerToNpcomprtABI). This mainly affects ABI boundaries and how global tensor constants are represented. One of the major improvements in this commit is that now it's a very clean rewrite that just replaces memrefs on ABI boundaries with !npcomprt.tensor (before there was a get_extent function that is not needed). See test/E2E/lower-to-npcomprt-abi.mlir 7. Lower to LLVM with upstream mlir patterns + some patterns for the npcomprt lowerings. One aspect here that is still a remnant of a non-descriptor-based tensor to memref flow is the BypassShapes + LowerShapedResultsToMemref. BypassShapes wraps the "tensor compute" ops in a tcp.shaped_results (basically a "tie_shape" kind of op), and then LowerShapedResultsToMemref uses those annotations to allocate output buffers while lowering the "tensor compute ops". Note that there are very few "tensor compute" ops currently supported (tcp.add + tcp.broadcast_to), so we just hardcode them in both passes. Realistically, I expect this to go away as we fully embrace the descriptor-based approach for simplicity, so don't look too deep into it.
2020-09-17 08:31:40 +08:00
return signalPassFailure();
}
};
} // namespace
std::unique_ptr<OperationPass<FuncOp>> mlir::NPCOMP::createTCPBufferizePass() {
return std::make_unique<TCPBufferizePass>();
Totally rework RefE2E tensor to memref flow. (#42) This now gets the overall "RefE2E" compilation stack to a point that I'm fairly happy with. We simplify it by mostly embracing the "descriptor" view of the world. The overall flow is best understood by reading through the createE2ELoweringPipeline function in lib/E2E/E2E.cpp That function creates a pass pipeline that lowers from "TCF" (which is ~numpy level of abstraction) down to LLVM IR. A brief high-level summary of what happens there: 1. TCF to TCP conversion. This involves reifying error handling in the form of shape constraints. See test/Conversion/TCFToTCP/basic.mlir 2. Lowering shape constraints. This converts shape constraints into eager error-handling code. See test/E2E/lower-shape-constraints.mlir This pass will soon go upstream. Because this lowers to std.assert, some later passes like LowerToNpcomprtABI and LowerToLLVM are updated to properly plumb this through e2e. See test/npcomp-run-mlir/invalid-broadcast.mlir for an execution test that properly aborts in case of an error. 3. Lowering tensors to memrefs. This is done via a series of passes rather than an single mega conversion. Unlike the previous code that mixed in the npcomprt ABI stuff here, it's now a very clean "pure memref" conversion. See test/E2E/lower-*-to-memref.mlir and lib/E2E/TensorToMemref/ Most of the changes are concentrated here. 4. As part of the above, we use the upstream ConvertShapeToStandard for lowering shapes. 5. We lower linalg to loops and lower loops to CFG using upstream passes. 6. Rewrite the "ABI" boundaries of the program to npcomprt data structures (LowerToNpcomprtABI). This mainly affects ABI boundaries and how global tensor constants are represented. One of the major improvements in this commit is that now it's a very clean rewrite that just replaces memrefs on ABI boundaries with !npcomprt.tensor (before there was a get_extent function that is not needed). See test/E2E/lower-to-npcomprt-abi.mlir 7. Lower to LLVM with upstream mlir patterns + some patterns for the npcomprt lowerings. One aspect here that is still a remnant of a non-descriptor-based tensor to memref flow is the BypassShapes + LowerShapedResultsToMemref. BypassShapes wraps the "tensor compute" ops in a tcp.shaped_results (basically a "tie_shape" kind of op), and then LowerShapedResultsToMemref uses those annotations to allocate output buffers while lowering the "tensor compute ops". Note that there are very few "tensor compute" ops currently supported (tcp.add + tcp.broadcast_to), so we just hardcode them in both passes. Realistically, I expect this to go away as we fully embrace the descriptor-based approach for simplicity, so don't look too deep into it.
2020-09-17 08:31:40 +08:00
}