The three remaining compare operations
onnx.Greater
onnx.Less
onnx.GreaterOrEqual
Are also added with this push request.
This concludes a set of basic tensor compare functions.
Lowerings for `transpose` from ONNX to `aten`. Implementation depends on
making multiple `aten.transpose` operations swapping pairs of dimensions.
As `onnx.transpose` can swap around any dimensions it may require
constructing multiple `aten.transpose`.
This replaces the lowering of aten.cat with tensor.concat, allowing more
efficient handling of concatenations in downstream flows. The refbackend
populates concat decomposition patterns that can be used to recover the
previous lowering.
This commit adds the OnnxToTorch support for Reciprocal, Round,
ScatterElements, Sigmoid, Sin, Tanh, Sqrt, Sub, Sum, Where, Xor,
Squeeze, Unsqueeze ops.
For reviewers, the ops that weren't trivial and probably require extra
review are Sum, Squeeze, and Unsqueeze.
Lowerings for `selu` lowerings for ONNX to the corresponding torch
implementations. Torch's `selu` implementation has fewer features so
we use the a generalized `elu` with the input scale set to `1.0`.
Simple Python console script to import an ONNX protobuf to the torch
dialect for additional processing.
For installed wheels, this can be used with something like:
```
torch-mlir-import-onnx test/python/onnx_importer/LeakyReLU.onnx
```
Or from a dev setup:
```
python -m torch_mlir.tools.import_onnx ...
```
This is part 1 of 2, which will also include upstreaming the FX
importer. I started with ONNX because it forces some project layout
updates and is more self contained/easier as a first step.
Deviating somewhat from the RFCs on project layout, I made the following
decisions:
* Locating the `onnx_importer.py` into `torch_mlir.extras` as Maks
already has opened up that namespace and it seemed to fit. Better to
have fewer things at that level.
* Setup the build so that the root project only contains MLIR Python and
pure Python deps (like the importers), but this can be augmented with
the `projects/` adding more depending on which features are enabled.
* The default build continues to build everything whereas in
`TORCH_MLIR_ENABLE_ONLY_MLIR_PYTHON_BINDINGS=1` mode, it builds a
`torch-mlir-core` wheel with the pure contents only.
`onnx_importer.py` and `importer_smoke_test.py` are almost verbatim
copies from SHARK-Turbine. I made some minor local alterations to adapt
to paths and generalize the way they interact with the outer project. I
expect I can copy these back to Turbine verbatim from here. I also
updated the license boilerplate (they have the same license but slightly
different project norms for the headers) but retained the correct
copyright.
Other updates:
* Added the ONNX importer unit test (which also can generate test data)
in lit, conditioned on the availability of the Python `onnx` package. In
a followup once I know everything is stable, I'll add another env var
that the CI can set to always enable this so we know conclusively if
tests pass.
* Moved the ONNX conversion readme to `docs/`.
* Renamed CMake option `TORCH_MLIR_ENABLE_ONLY_MLIR_PYTHON_BINDINGS` ->
`TORCH_MLIR_ENABLE_PYTORCH_EXTENSIONS` and inverted the sense. Made the
JitIR importer and LTC options `cmake_dependent_options` for robustness.
This commit adds the OnnxToTorch support for BitwiseXor, BitwiseOr, Div, Equal, Cast,
Ceil, Floor, Cos, and Clip op.
This commit also adds the TorchToLinalg support for aten.clamp.Tensor and aten.clamp_min.Tensor op.
Signed-Off By: vivekkhandelwal1424@gmail.com
Despite aten.mm requiring the input and output types match, we still opt
to maintain signedness semantics in case later passes try to do any sort
of integer type narrowing.
This commit adds the OnnxToTorch support for Atan, Bitshift, BitwiseAnd,
and BitwiseNot op.
This commit also adds the TorchToLinalg support for AtenBitwiseLeftShiftTensorOp.
Signed-Off By: vivekkhandelwal@nod-labs.com
Adds a pipeline to convert custom ops and metadata represented as
`torch.operator` custom ops to corresponding `torch` ops where possible.
This is part of a multi-part approach for building ONNX import in as a
regular feature of torch-mlir. It is focused on the conversions vs the
infra. We will end up maintaining a [pure-python
importer](https://github.com/nod-ai/SHARK-Turbine/blob/main/python/shark_turbine/importers/onnx_importer.py)
to go with this in torch-mlir, and we will also maintain test case
generation utilities derived from it.
I have left substantial documentation in the README of the conversion
directory, including the recommended approach that we will take to keep
building this out.
(note that this organizes the code to coincide with the refactoring in
#2442 versus the current flat arrangement)
The logic for lowering the aten view op to linalg is fairly complex.
In this PR I have tried to follow all non-failing paths through the
lowering and add unit tests where they're missing.
There is 1 logical change to the lowering: redundant tensor.cast ops
(same source and destination type) are folded.
This lifts the core of the jit_ir_importer and ltc out of the pt1
project, making them peers to it. As a side-effect of this layering, now
the "MLIR bits" (dialects, etc) are not commingled with the various
parts of the pt1 project, allowing pt1 and ltc to overlay cleanly onto a
more fundamental "just MLIR" Python core. Prior to this, the Python
namespace was polluted to the point that this could not happen.
That "just MLIR" Python core will be introduced in a followup, which
will create the space to upstream the FX and ONNX pure Python importers.
This primary non-NFC change to the API is:
* `torch_mlir.dialects.torch.importer.jit_ir` ->
`torch_mlir.jit_ir_importer`.
The rest is source code layering so that we can make the pt1 project
optional without losing the other features.
Progress on #2546.
- adds support for an optional verifier to the generated torch op
tablegen (GeneratedTorchOps.td)
- uses the above to add a verifier for the torch permute op.
Motivation: I hit an unclear error from linalg while developing a
decomposition pass for pixel_shuffle. The error would have been clearer
if the problem had been detected earlier in the invalid aten.permute op.
Testing: new tests added. To run added tests, from the base directory
run
```
./build/bin/llvm-lit test/Dialect/Torch/invalid.mlir
```
This is a first step towards the structure we discussed here:
https://gist.github.com/stellaraccident/931b068aaf7fa56f34069426740ebf20
There are two primary goals:
1. Separate the core project (C++ dialects and conversions) from the
hard PyTorch dependencies. We move all such things into projects/pt1 as
a starting point since they are presently entangled with PT1-era APIs.
Additional work can be done to disentangle components from that
(specifically LTC is identified as likely ultimately living in a
`projects/ltc`).
2. Create space for native PyTorch2 Dynamo-based infra to be upstreamed
without needing to co-exist with the original TorchScript path.
Very little changes in this path with respect to build layering or
options. These can be updated in a followup without commingling
directory structure changes.
This also takes steps toward a couple of other layering enhancements:
* Removes the llvm-external-projects/torch-mlir-dialects sub-project,
collapsing it into the main tree.
* Audits and fixes up the core C++ build to account for issues found
while moving things. This is just an opportunistic pass through but
roughly ~halves the number of build actions for the project from the
high 4000's to the low 2000's.
It deviates from the discussed plan by having a `projects/` tree instead
of `compat/`. As I was thinking about it, this will better accommodate
the follow-on code movement.
Once things are roughly in place and the CI passing, followups will
focus on more in-situ fixes and cleanups.
NonValueSemantic Ops like Add_, div_, etc. expect result DType to be the
same as the first input. However, current implementation would result in
wrong result type for case like:
```python
a = torch.randn(3, 3).half() # float16
b = torch.randn(3, 3) # float32
a += b # i.e. torch.ops.aten.add_(a, b)
```
torch expects `a` to be float16, but dtype refinement would infer
float32 type, since it's replaced by `aten.add`.
Add aten.isclose op
Add its torch-to-tosa lowering
Update the TorchToTosa/basic.mlir tests
To test e2e tosa lowering:
`python -m e2e_testing.main -v -c=tosa`
---------
Co-authored-by: Ze Zhang <ze.zhang@getcruise.com>
Add aten.unflatten.int op
Add its torch-to-tosa lowering
Update the TorchToTosa/basic.mlir tests
To test e2e tosa lowering:
`python -m e2e_testing.main -v -c=tosa`
---------
Co-authored-by: Ze Zhang <ze.zhang@getcruise.com>
Strict symbolic shapes allow us to assume numpy-style dynamic broadcasts
never occur. This allows us to strengthen the folder for broadcasts to
cases where the rank is the same and all shapes match (including dynamic
sentinel values).
When importing dynamic shaped programs from Dynamo, via torch.compile or
torch.export, we can assume that strict symbolic shape checks have been
done prior to generating torch IR. Among other shape checking, this
eliminates the case where an unknown dimension can be dynamically '1' in
a way that signals a broadcast.
Adds a `isAssumingStrictSymbolicShapes` utility which consults a
`torch.assume_strict_symbolic_shapes` attribute on an enclosing scope
and returns true if present.
In the linalg pipeline, many runtime checks are elided when this returns
true.
Corresponding commits:
* mlir-hlo: 16886a108eff5197f816ca0f1950cc5ff1b078d9
* stablehlo: 77a59815a82b34f7b08ed2d42a711d9920682d0e
* llvm-project: 4acc3ffbb0af5631bc7916aeff3570f448899647
* Adapt to ByteCodeOpInterface changes.
* Adapt to RegionBranchPoint changes: https://reviews.llvm.org/D159116
* Adapt inferReturnTypes to get the value from properties.
* Adapt invalid.mlir to properties syntax
* [TOSA] Align with custom assembly format change.
* [TOSA] handle change of axis to int32 type
* [TOSA] Restore improper convert to i32
Landing with Windows broken (it cannot be fixed because of the way the mlir-hlo dep is inserted). Will followup with an untangling.
---------
Co-authored-by: TatWai Chong <tatwai.chong@arm.com>
Co-authored-by: Eric Kunze <eric.kunze@arm.com>
* view_as_real test case, allow dtype in testutils.randn
* abstract python upstream func implemented
* fixed upstream dtype func, implemented view_as_real backend op
* formatted AtenViewAsRealOp, removed change in e2etest/framework
* removed test suit from reshape_like.py, because it's moved to basic.py
* implemented C-API wrapper for mlirComplexF128 type
* fixed torch.complex dtype width in MLIR and Torch MLIR, deleted float16 dtype dict
* Changed IR input of aten fft_fft unit test
* code refactored
* code refactored and fixed ci test
* refactored: removed white spaces, and rolled back to having both input/output affine expr
* refactored: deleted output affine expr to reduce redundancy
* xfail ltc backend
* removed ComplexImag and ComplexReal from torchdynamo xfail set
* copied and pasted from main branch as there's no change to be made in this file
* refactored abstract_interp_lib_gen.py
* refactored: torchtypes.td, formatted, removed commented out code
* Support brevitas custom op (#2320)
* f16 change for brevitas
* Adapt the change of brevitas quant custom op name
* Add unit tests
* Make brevitas conversions isolated
* Address the comments
---------
Co-authored-by: dan <danimal197@gmail.com>
When using custom ops, sometimes PyTorch will insert namespaces to the
abstract interpretation function name in the format:
`__torch__.{namespace_1}.{namespace_2}...{op_name}`. The extra
namespaces are not part of the abstract interpretation function name,
so it needs to be removed before generating the library of MLIR
snippets of abstract interpretation functions. This commit adds
support for removing the namespace information.
* LTC->MLIR Debug Info support
* SW-95317 Propagate Lazy->Jit->MLIR scope name.
* Enhance location information based on op names
Currently, the location information attached to the ops just considers
the filename, line number and column number. Attaching operation name
would help identify the type of computation by just looking at the
profile of execution.
* Update locations logic; updated debug-info.py test
* Use {scope}/{op_name} format to track names by default
---------
Co-authored-by: Gleb Kazantaev <gleb.kazantaev@cerebras.net>
Co-authored-by: Mark Browning <mark@cerebras.net>
Co-authored-by: Vimal Patel <vimal@polymagelabs.com>