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`
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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`
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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.
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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
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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
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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>
The implementation at this place was a remnent of the times the pipeline was
run only once.
Rely instead on the backend verification, after optimizations have had an
opportunity to resolve some uncertainties. (e.g. `!torch.optional`).
* RecomposeComplexOps: Remove dead slice op
* lib/Dialect/Torch/IR/TorchOps.cpp: Fold slice ops even when they are on non-value tensors
* lib/Conversion/TorchToTosa/TorchToTosa.cpp: Fix slice start/end out of range/none
* lib/Dialect/Torch/IR/TorchOps.cpp: AtenSliceTensorOp::fold: Fold slices that go from 0:int_max
* More tests for aten.split.Tensor
In PyTorch, the `NumberType` is equal to `Union[int, float,
complex]`. However, the abstract interpretation library was treating
the `NumberType` as `Union[int, float]`, resulting in type mismatches
when reifying certain dtype functions. This commit fixes the type
inconsistency by having the abstract interpretation functions take as
an input a `Union[int, float, complex]` for the ops that take
`!torch.number` inputs.
This commit adds the support for index.Tensor op when the index values
are negative. This commit wraps around the index values by checking
their values at run time.
Signed-Off By: Vivek Khandelwal <vivek@nod-labs.com>
check the return type of the division to figure out whether to use
the floating point implementation of a division or to use the integer.
the issue rose from the fact that the inputs are all integer but the
result was casted to floating point. The conversion then chose to
use the integer implementation of division which is not legal in tosa
when all the inputs get casted to floating point.
fix(TorchToLinalg): AtenDivScalarOp
upcast self operand as well if applicable, the self operand must also
be casted to float as it can be an integer.
When `use_tracing=True` is used to import a model into Torch-MLIR,
several casts get inserted in the IR to bridge the untyped inputs and
outputs with the typed body of the computation. These casts create
extra aliases of tensors that cause the current analysis in
`maximize-value-semantics` to fail.
In particular, the `maximize-value-semantics` analysis assumes that the
only valid alias right after an overwrite is the overwritten
alias. So, if there is a use of a casted version of the overwritten
alias after the overwrite, the analysis fails.
This commit improves the analysis by identifying all cast-like aliases
of the overwritten alias and allowing such aliases to be used after an
overwrite.
Because this issue only arises when using tracing, it cannot be
currently tested e2e, so only lit test is added.
Lowering torch operations that allow different compatible data types
in its operands to tosa end up generating invalid tosa IR with mixed
data types. In tosa spec, certain operations (generally element-wise
operations) require all operands to have the same data type.
Add wrapper functions for those element-wise tosa ops to perform op
creation with type conversion if necessary.
This commit adds dtype functions for all the torch ops that did not
previously have one and removes the pass `RefineTypes`, since the
abstract interpretation library now takes care of all the dtype
propagation.
All dtype functions added are tested except for
- `aten.embedding`
- `aten._embedding_bag`
- `aten.embedding_bag`
These functions need a change to the testing framework to allow
specifying the actual data inside the tensor used for testing. I will
fix this in a follow up patch.
Co-authored-by: Jiahao Li <liplus17@163.com>
Bool tensors are represented in TorchScript as an array of
`int8_t`s. However, when importing them into Torch-MLIR, the importer
was assuming the array had `int32_t` elements, leading to the importer
reading into memory that was out of bounds. This commit fixes the
casting of the bool tensor.