This adds a few passes that will ensure linalg with sparse tensors are
properly lowered to loops and can run using the ExecutionEngine for
testing (a few details on parameter passing from PyTorch still TBD)
Test results:
$ ./tools/e2e_test.sh --config linalg
Summary:
Passed: 1144
Expectedly Failed: 8
$ python -m e2e_testing.main --config=torchdynamo -v
Summary:
Passed: 960
Expectedly Failed: 163
Filed issue:
https://github.com/pytorch/pytorch/issues/119407
This PR contains three commits to update the validation checks in the
ONNX -> Torch conversion pass for the AveragePool, Pad, and Slice operators:
> onnx: fix preconditions for lowering AveragePool ops
>
> The `pads` attribute of the AveragePool operator specifies the value to
> pad at both the beginning as well as the end of the axis (see
> https://onnx.ai/onnx/operators/onnx__AveragePool.html#attributes), so
> the size of this attribute should be twice the rank of the input tensor.
> However, our TorchOnnxToTorch bails out early since it incorrectly
> compares the pads attribute with the rank (not twice the rank) of the
> input tensor.
>
> This patch fixes the code to match the spec and adds a lit test.
> onnx: allow optional constant value for Pad operator
>
> The `constant_value` input of the onnx.Pad operator is optional (see
> https://onnx.ai/onnx/operators/onnx__Pad.html#inputs), but the
existing
> logic for lowering the operator into the Torch dialect assumes that it
> is mandatory.
>
> This patch makes the attribute optional and constructs a default value
> (a list of zeros the size of the input tensor) if the attribute was not
> specified.
> onnx: fix checks for axes and steps inputs of Slice operator
>
> The ONNX Spec for the Slice operator allows the `starts` and `ends`
> inputs to have fewer indices that the dimensions of the `data` tensor
> (see https://onnx.ai/onnx/operators/onnx__Slice.html), but our code
> expects these inputs to be as many as the `data` tensor's dimensions.
>
> More precisely, the spec requires that the `starts` and `ends` inputs
> are only as long as the `axes` input, but since the `axes` input is
> optional, the default type for the `axes` input has to match the type
> for the `starts` and `ends` inputs. Moreover, the number of indices in
> the `steps` input also has to match those in the `axes` inputs (instad
> of matching the dimensions of the `data` input).
>
> This patch fixes the checks in the TorchOnnxToTorch conversion so that
> they match the ONNX spec.
This commit modifies the OnnxToTorch lowering of Onnx.Reshape op by
creating the result shape list for the aten.reshape using the result
shape values inferred from the op's result shape.
Signed-Off By: Vivek Khandelwal <vivekkhandelwal1424@gmail.com>
Folds aten::index_select ops under the following conditions:
1. If the input and output are the same shape, the indexing operation is
a NOP, so just return the input.
2. If the input has shape <1x1x...xNx...x1> (all 1's except for one
dim), and the output shape is <1x1x...x1> (all 1's), then there is a
single index, so extract the single element value and return a tensor
with that value.
---------
Co-authored-by: Dave Liddell <dliddell@xilinx.com>
Lowering of torch.aten.all.dim to linalg.
Per PyTorch documentation:
> This function matches the behaviour of NumPy in returning output of
dtype bool for all supported dtypes except uint8. For uint8 the dtype of
output is uint8 itself.
Since there is no support for ui8 in torch-mlir currently
(https://github.com/llvm/torch-mlir/pull/1384#issuecomment-1260011334)
implementation returns failure for that case.
Link to related RFC:
https://discourse.llvm.org/t/rfc-rename-torch-mlir-compile-apis-and-introduce-fx-based-analogs/76646
This commit updates the documentation, tests, CMake files, and API for
the proposed changes in the RFC. There is a new torch_mlir/fx.py for
user level APIs related to importing modules and a corresponding test
for this path can be found at test/python/fx_importer/basic_test.py.
---------
Co-authored-by: MaheshRavishankar <mravisha@amd.com>
Adds an escape hatch from creating a DenseResourceElementsAttr for
single value tensors into DenseElementsAttr.
For 0d or 1element, splats are better as DenseElementsAttr. Don't use
DenseResourceElementsAttr for it
If a tensor is initialized by a list with a single constant integer,
this folder turns it into a torch.vtensor.literal
---------
Co-authored-by: Dave Liddell <dliddell@xilinx.com>
Leaning on the QDQ functionality in torch we can support the QLinearConv
operation by piggybacking through `torch.Convolution`. This includes
some changes such as allowing the `onnx` rewriter to run recursively.
Doing so allows `QLinearConv` to decopmose to `onnx.Convolution` which
is then lowered to `torch`.
The existing `flatten` lowering did not define what the intermediate
shape was. This could result in failures to lower further to linalg as
the intermediate shape was unknown. Added a shape refinement section.
So that the CumSum Op in OPT can get the constant that it requires to be lowered to TMTensor
---------
Co-authored-by: Rob Suderman <rob.suderman@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Xida Ren <xida.ren.dev@gmail.com>
`[build]
D:\Dev\iree\third_party\torch-mlir\lib\Conversion\TorchOnnxToTorch\DefaultDomainGtoP.cpp(734):
warning C4305: 'argument': truncation from 'double' to 'float'`
`torch` requires that padding be symmetric for pooling operations. To
support non-symmetric pad we need to separately materialize out the
padding operation.
---------
Co-authored-by: James Newling <james.newling@gmail.com>
Fix for https://github.com/llvm/torch-mlir/issues/2765
The onnx docs say that you can't do shape inference using the in-memory
API for models > 2 GB. This fix replaces that API with the file-based
API. Since the new API generates an intermediate file, also added a
--keep switch to keep that file, which I delete by default.
---------
Co-authored-by: Dave Liddell <dliddell@xilinx.com>
We do not support average pool when `countIncludePad is set to false.
However if the input is unpadded then the setting of the boolean is
unneeded. Extended use by checking if padding is zero before rejecting
the lowering.
With the recent LLVM integrate and changes from
https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/pull/78260, we hit this build error
in Stablehlo (which is quite old).
```
external/stablehlo/stablehlo/transforms/StablehloRefineShapes.cpp:1020:14: error: no member named 'startRootUpdate' in 'mlir::PatternRewriter'
rewriter.startRootUpdate(op);
~~~~~~~~ ^
external/stablehlo/stablehlo/transforms/StablehloRefineShapes.cpp:1026:16: error: no member named 'finalizeRootUpdate' in 'mlir::PatternRewriter'
rewriter.finalizeRootUpdate(op);
~~~~~~~~ ^
external/stablehlo/stablehlo/transforms/StablehloRefineShapes.cpp:1029:16: error: no member named 'cancelRootUpdate' in 'mlir::PatternRewriter'
rewriter.cancelRootUpdate(op);
~~~~~~~~ ^
external/stablehlo/stablehlo/transforms/StablehloRefineShapes.cpp:1108:14: error: no member named 'updateRootInPlace' in 'mlir::PatternRewriter'
rewriter.updateRootInPlace(op->getParentOp(), [&]() { return; });
~~~~~~~~ ^
4 errors generated.
Target @torch-mlir//:torch-mlir-opt failed to build
```
I'm still puzzled as to how this didn't fail with the CMake merge gating
CI (do we not test Stablehlo builds/tests?). In any case, bumping our
submodule to https://github.com/openxla/stablehlo/pull/1918 fixes it.
It exposes a new failing lit test in TorchToStablehlo though, that I
have looped stablehlo developers into
([here](https://discord.com/channels/999073994483433573/999074539138990131/1201235845391331419)).
```
bazel run @torch-mlir//test/Conversion:TorchToStablehlo/scatter.mlir.test
...external/torch-mlir/test/Conversion/TorchToStablehlo/scatter.mlir
within split at <stdin>:1 offset :33:8: error: unexpected error: Expects non-empty reduction block for type inference
%0 = torch.aten.scatter.src %arg0, %int0, %arg1, %arg2 : !torch.vtensor<[?,?],si64>, !torch.int, !torch.vtensor<[?,?],si64>, !torch.vtensor<[?,?],si64> -> !torch.vtensor<[?,?],si64>
^
LLVM ERROR: Failed to infer result type(s).
```
Bazel CI:
https://github.com/sjain-stanford/torch-mlir/actions/runs/7732673480/job/21083102228
To handle the conversion from raw bytes to `DenseElementsAttr` we need
to handle the endianness conversion during `torch-onnx-to-torch`.
Therefore when importing `onnx.Constant` it is better to represent using
the `onnx` constant operation so that only one location requires the
endianness correction.
`onnx` explicitly specifies that `raw_data` is stored in `little-endian`
layout. While converting
to `torch` we need to convert from a known endian format to an internal
format of consistent
layout. This means endianness must be correct during the import of
`onnx.Constant`.
---------
Co-authored-by: Xida Ren (Cedar) <cedar.ren@gmail.com>
Required some massaging of LTC to make it warning clean, and I had to
manually disable some warnings on the generated source files (which we
don't control).
The project is warning clean now.
The `-Werror` flag is disabled by default as we can't control everywhere
people will try to build/install. The CI enables it via
-DTORCH_MLIR_ENABLE_WERROR_FLAG=ON.
Note that we are waiting for actual FX traced graph support for sparse
tensors. For details see
https://github.com/pytorch/pytorch/issues/117188
Until then, however, we provide this clever importer that builds the FX
traced graph for for the dense case and then puts a sparse annotation
back on the parameters.
With import test.
This PR adds a check to the CI right after checking out the Torch-MLIR
repository to make sure that the changes in the PR don't require any
`git clang-format` modifications.
Linalg has quantized specific operations. We can lower to these
operations when there is a known zeropoint and scale operations. This
allows the `convolution` to occur with lower bitwidth's, improving the
overall performance.
We were seeing some assertion failures after some checks around folders
were tightened up in LLVM:
https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/pull/75887 . This PR essentially
moves the logic that used to be applied at the LLVM level into the
folder, which seems to be the suggested fix.
I'm not sure if the IR that caused issues for us _should_ be valid?
```
%1 = torch.aten.detach %arg0 : !torch.tensor<[1],f32> -> !torch.tensor
```
A better fix might be to create a verifier ensuring the result of
`aten.detach` has the same type as its operand.
---------
Co-authored-by: aaron-stgeorge <aaron.stgeorge@getcruise.com>
This allows the following command to be used to ignore sweeping
formatting changes.
```
git blame --ignore-revs-file .git-blame-ignore-revs <file_of_interest>
```
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
```
Torch does not have an equivalent matmul operation for integers. Instead
it sidechannels the information via its quantized types. For this
lowering we setup these sidechannels then invoke `torch.mm`.
Per the RFC and numerous conversations on Discord, this rebuilds the
torch-mlir CI and discontinues the infra and coupling to the binary
releases
(https://discourse.llvm.org/t/rfc-discontinuing-pytorch-1-binary-releases/76371).
I iterated on this to get latency back to about what it was with the old
(much larger and non-ephemeral) runners: About 4m - 4.5m for an
incremental change.
Behind the scenes changes:
* Uses a new runner pool operated by AMD. It is currently set to manual
scaling and has two runners (32-core, 64GiB RAM) while we get some
traction. We can either fiddle with some auto-scaling or use a schedule
to give it an increase during certain high traffic hours.
* Builds are now completely isolated and cannot have run-to-run
interference like we were getting before (i.e. lock file/permissions
stuff).
* The GHA runner is installed directly into a manylinux 2.28 container
with upgraded dev tools. This eliminates the need to do sub-invocations
of docker on Linux in order to run on the same OS that is used to build
wheels.
* While not using it now, this setup was cloned from another project
that posts the built artifacts to the job and fans out testing. Might be
useful here later.
* Uses a special git cache that lets us have ephemeral runners and still
check out the repo and deps (incl. llvm) in ~13s.
* Running in an Azure VM Scale Set.
In-repo changes:
* Disables (but does not yet delete):
* Old buildAndTest.yml jobs
* releaseSnapshotPackage.yml
* Adds a new `ci.yml` pipeline and scripts the steps in `build_tools/ci`
(by decomposing the existing `build_linux_packages.sh` for in-tree
builds and modularizing it a bit better).
* Test framework changes:
* Adds a `TORCH_MLIR_TEST_CONCURRENCY` env var that can be used to bound
the multiprocess concurrency. Ended up not using this in the final
version but is useful to have as a knob.
* Changes the default concurrency to `nproc * 0.8 + 1` vs `nproc * 1.1`.
We're running on systems with significantly less virtual memory and I
did a bit of fiddling to find a good tradeoff.
* Changed multiprocess mode to spawn instead of fork. Otherwise, I was
getting instability (as discussed on discord).
* Added MLIR configuration to disable multithreaded contexts globally
for the project. Constantly spawning `nproc * nproc` threads (more than
that actually) was OOM'ing.
* Added a test timeout of 5 minutes. If a multiprocess worker crashes,
the framework can get wedged indefinitely (and then will just be reaped
after multiple hours). We should fix this, but this at least keeps the
CI pool from wedging with stuck jobs.
Functional changes needing followup:
* No matter what I did, I couldn't get the LTC tests to work, and I'm
not 100% sure they were being run in the old setup as the scripts were a
bit twisty. I disabled them and left a comment.
* Dropped out-of-tree build variants. These were not providing much
signal and increase CI needs by 50%.
* Dropped MacOS and Windows builds. Now that we are "just a library" and
not building releases, there is less pressure to test these commit by
commit. Further, since we bump torch-mlir to known good commits on these
platforms, it has been a long time since either of these jobs have
provided much signal (and they take ~an hour+ to run). We can add them
back later post-submit if ever needed.