Creates a build_linux_arm64 job that builds the release on an arm64 self-hosted runner.
Drop Python 3.10 support
Pass TM_TORCH_VERSION to choose the Stable PyTorch version (since arm64 doesn't have nightly builds)
Borrows nightly / stable Pytorch switch from the WIP
https://github.com/llvm/torch-mlir/pull/2038
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.
This patch adds a (default-true) input called `cache-enabled` to the
setup-build action, so that when the input is false, ccache is not setup
on the host machine. This patch also sets the input to be false for the
release builds.
* Add AtenIndexTensor StableHlo support
* clean up
* Empty commit, trigger test
* try to debug hanging test
* fix segfulat
* fix bad include
---------
Co-authored-by: zhekun.zhang <zhekun.zhang@bytedance.com>
Since PRs created by the GitHub action bot cannot trigger workflows (and
thus build tests), this patch uses the token for a GitHub app that was
specifically created for the RollPyTorch action.
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.
We previously used a fork of the action/cache repository for the PyTorch
cache since the actions/cache repo did not support read-only caches.
Now that actions/cache supports separate read and write steps, this
patch switches back to the actions/cache repo.
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>
This patch, by itself, doesn't fix caching on Windows, but once a new
release of ccache is available, caching for Windows builds should start
working again (validated by building ccache from source and using it
with LLVM builds).
Ccache rejects caching when either the `/Zi` or `/ZI` flags are used
during compilation on Windows, since these flags tell the compiler to
embed debug information in a PDB file (separate from the object file
produced by the compiler). In particular, our CI builds add the `/Zi`
flag, making ccache mark these compiler invocations as uncacheable.
But what caused our CI to add debug flags, especially when we specified
`-DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release`? On Windows, unless we specify the
`--config Release` flag during the CMake build step, CMake assumes a
debug build. So all this while, we had been producing debug builds of
torch-mlir for every PR! No doubt it took so long to build the Windows
binaries.
The reason for having to specify the configuration during the _build_
step (as opposed to the _configure_ step) of CMake on Windows is that
CMake's Visual Studio generators will produce _both_ Release and Debug
profiles during the CMake configure step (thus requiring a build-time
value that tells CMake whether to build in Release or Debug mode).
Luckily, on Linux and macOS, the `--config` flag seems to be simply
ignored, instead of causing build errors.
Strangely, based on cursory tests, it seems like on Windows we need to
specify the Relase configuration as both `-DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release` as
well as `--config Release`. Dropping either made my build switch to a
Debug configuration.
Additionally, there is a bug in ccache v4.8 (although this is addressed
in trunk) that causes ccache to reject caching if the compiler
invocation includes any flag that starts with `/Z`, including /`Zc`,
which is added by LLVM's HandleLLVMOptions.cmake and which isn't related
to debug info or PDB files. The next release of ccache should include
the fix, which is to reject caching only for `/Zi` and `/ZI` flags and
not all flags that start with `/Z`.
As a side note, debugging this problem was possible because of ccache's
log file, which is enabled by: `ccache --set-config="log_file=log.txt"`.
The GitHub action for creating the PR expects that either the changes
are not committed (in which case it commits them with the specified
commit message) or that the commit exists but that it is also pushed to
remote.
Prior to this patch, we created the commit but did not push it to
remote, causing failures. This patch leaves the changes uncommitted so
that they're committed and pushed to remote as part of the PR creation.
Add support for lowering torch.aten.cat to tosa.concat
* add support for aten cat to tosa
---------
Co-authored-by: yifei <y.zhou@xilinx.com>
Co-authored-by: Lisa Liu <lingl@xilinx.com>
Currently, we run just the Linux in-tree tests when the RollPyTorch
workflow runs, but this is insufficient since WHL files for macOS or
Windows are sometimes not uploaded by PyTorch, causing the RollPyTorch
action to pass but all subsequent torch-mlir CI tests to fail because of
the broken build.
The easiest way to validate the RollPyTorch action on all platforms is
to run the standard set of tests that we run for each submitted PR, so
this patch makes the RollPyTorch action submit a PR instead of
committing the changes to the main branch directly. The PR is assigned
to a handful of folks for review, although this can be changed in the
future.