Torch-to-linalg pass fails for `EmbeddingBag` when the training only
specific properties of the operator are set to `true.` For instance,
this operator's `sparse` input/property is training-specific, and if the
value of this property is `true,` the existing lowering bails out.
However, we don't need to check for training-specific parameters and
bailout from the legalization since we don't care about these properties
during the eval/inference mode.
---------
Co-authored-by: Hanumanth Hanumantharayappa <hhanuman@ah-hhanuman-l.dhcp.mathworks.com>
After noticing a number of commits with unrelated formatting changes,
I think something was changed with clang-format at one point and we're
seeing a number of unrelated changes. Doing a refresh can help avoid
this.
The changes made here came from
```
find lib -iname *.h -o -iname *.cpp | xargs clang-format -i --style=llvm
find include -iname *.h -o -iname *.cpp | xargs clang-format -i --style=llvm
find projects -iname *.h -o -iname *.cpp | xargs clang-format -i --style=llvm
```
This preserves sparsity at the most obvious places of lowering TORCH
tensors to MLIR RankedTensorType tensors. Other places are marked for
audit. With some initial lowering tests.
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.
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>
-- In Python we have the concept of negative dimension indexing.
-- We would want to normalize such dimensions to be +ve and within the
expected range instead.
-- This commit takes care of a few remaining set of Ops and their
lowerings by applying `toPositiveDim` and `isValidDim` to the
extracted integer `dim` value.
Signed-off-by: Abhishek Varma <abhishek@nod-labs.com>
- Support for non-prefixed accessors has been removed. See:
https://reviews.llvm.org/D136727
- Rename `operands` to `methodOperands` in `prim.CallMethod` since the
name `operands` overlaps with a builtin method name. See:
https://reviews.llvm.org/D136727
- Add passes in refbackend to lower memref.subview. See:
https://reviews.llvm.org/D136377
- Replace `CopyToValueTensorOps` first in `RewriteViewLikeSubgraph` in
maximize-value-semantics.
The current implementation of the `RewriteViewLikeSubgraph` pass in
maximize-value-semantics creates temporarily invalid IR. In
particular, given a forward slice starting from a
`CopyToNonValueTensorOp` and ending in `CopyToValueTensorOp`s, the
pass first replaces all uses of the `CopyToNonValueTensorOp` with
its operand, which results in all the `CopyToValueTensorOp` users
having their operand have type `!torch.vtensor`, which is invalid.
The correct way to do things is to first replace all the
`CopyToValueTensorOp`s with their operand, and then replace all uses
of the `CopyToNonValueTensorOp` with its operand.
This only started failing now because the generated accessor
`getOperand` for the `CopyToValueTensorOp` now returns a
`TypedValue<NonValueTensorType>`, which has an assert checking that
the value returned is of the expected type.
Summary of changes:
- Replace call to `MemoryEffectOpInterface::hasNoEffect`
with `isMemoryEffectFree`.
- Make fix for the dynamic dims, since
`kDynamicSize` value changed to
`std::numeric_limits<int64_t>::min()` from `-1` in llvm
- `makeShapeLLVMCompatible` and `makeShapeTorchCompatible`
utilities convert shapes in order to remain consistent
with the Torch and MLIR semantics.
- Update tags
llvm: 147fe9de29dc13c14835127b35280c4d95c8e8ba
mhlo: 1944b5fa6062ec4c065d726c9c5d64f1487ee8c5
Signed-Off By: Vivek Khandelwal<vivek@nod-labs.com>
-- aten.upsample_nearest2d.vec op is not present
owing to https://github.com/pytorch/pytorch/pull/85638
-- So this commit adds a lowering on aten.upsample_nearest2d.
Signed-off-by: Abhishek Varma <abhishek@nod-labs.com>
This commit makes the following changes needed to update bump LLVM:
- Replace `linalg.init_tensor` with `tensor.empty` (see:
https://reviews.llvm.org/D135129)
- Replace `NoSideEffect` with `Pure` (see
https://reviews.llvm.org/D135505)
- Replace `body` region accessor for `ReduceOp` and `ReduceWindowOp`
with `getBody`
- Fix incorrect use of `tosa::ReduceSumOp` in `AtenNativeLayerNormOp`
conversion pattern. The result type of `tosa::ReduceSumOp` must have
the same rank as the input type. (see:
https://www.mlplatform.org/tosa/tosa_spec.html#_reduce_sum)
Co-authored-by: Ashay Rane <ashay@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Ashay Rane <ashay@users.noreply.github.com>
Summary of changes:
- Updated references to the Arith dialect
(https://reviews.llvm.org/D134762)
- Switched to prefixed accessors for MemRef dialect
(https://reviews.llvm.org/D134995)
- Fixed warnings about signed/unsigned comparisons, ignored return
values, and unused variables
- Includes a canonicalizer for `aten.add.t`needed for successfully lowering the shape function
- Only offers support for statically sized index tensors when there is more than one
- Dynamic shape support remains for single indexing tensors
This commit fixes the shape function for `index.Tensor`, adding
support for multiple index tensors and `None`s in the indices
list. This commit also adds support for input tensors of rank greater
than 1. The lowering for `index.Tensor` still has the the limitation
that only a single index tensor along the first dimension of the input
tensor is supported.
This helps keep things organized and also exposes more parallelism to
the build system. It seems though that most of the compile time is
actually spent in the headers though, so the wall time doesn't decrease
as much as I had hoped (and now that the headers are being included
multiple times, the cpu time actually increases a lot, sadly -- will try
to dig into this).