This commit also cleans up the OnnxToTorch lowering for the Squeeze and
Unsqueeze op and adds the support for handling edge cases.
Signed-Off By: Vivek Khandelwal <vivekkhandelwal1424@gmail.com>
Version number was set too high. Lowered to support more cases allows
more tests to pass.
Co-authored-by: Robert Suderman <rsuderman@Roberts-MacBook-Pro.local>
Previous implementation erroneously mixed up num_outputs with
slice_size. New version correctly computs the slice size and directly
performs slicing rather than leveraging `aten.split.tensor`. This is due
to `onnx` supporting a fixed number of splits making the size
computation more easily computeable when lowering to `aten` rather than
deferring to `aten.split.tensor`.
---------
Co-authored-by: Robert Suderman <rsuderman@Roberts-MacBook-Pro.local>
This PR only performs a lit test. In lieu of an e2e test, https://github.com/nod-ai/SHARK-TestSuite/pull/142 makede sure that the lowering works & the numbers check out.
Co-authored-by: Xida Ren <xida.ren.dev@gmail.com>
Shapes can be processed as tensors to represent the set of dimensions.
As reshapes take a list of scalars this can result in a single dynamic
dimension blocking the adjacent static dimensions.
This pass attempts to de-couple tensor computations related to shapes
and propagate values to better support lowering scalar tensor
computations.
This commit also cleans up the OnnxToTorch lowering for the ReduceMean
op and adds the support for handling edge cases.
Signed-Off By: Vivek Khandelwal vivekkhandelwal1424@gmail.com
Reshaping tensors depend on directly matching individual dimensions to
their corresponding dim in the `torch.view` reshape dimensions. This
involves decoupling dynamic dimensions from their static counterparts
and support cleanup / canonicalization.
This commit adds the OnnxToTorch lowering for the Mish, Softplus,
HardSwish, Trilu, ThresholdedRelu op
Signed-Off By: Vivek Khandelwal <vivekkhandelwal1424@gmail.com>
Reduce mean lowerings did not succesfully lower to `linalg` via torched.
There were two separate paths that could be consolidated to a single
simpler pass. This resulted in a significant improvement in test
coverage.
We can support `onnx.Size` by requesing the size of each dimensions and
taking the product of the results, then packing it into a tensor.
---------
Co-authored-by: Scott Todd <scott.todd0@gmail.com>
This mostly copy-pastes the reduce minimum implementation to reduce max
to improve test coverage. We also improve the aten lowering for min/max
dim for unsigned types.
Finish supporting importing the vast majority of `onnx` operations. This
includes:
- region support
- region value inherentance
- `torch.string` support
- `torch.list` support
- `torch.optional` support
Torch lowering only supported the most recent version. Refactored the
lowering so more easily handle default values and optional operands /
attributes.
Onnx slice lowering used arange needlessly instead of directly
constructing the constant dimension values. This makes lowerings to
linalg struggle as multiple folders are required to get what is a
constant index value.
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>
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`.
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.
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
```
We can plumb the linear matmul into pytorch using its quantized types
with side channel information. To handle the final int8 operation we
dequantize and requantize.
We can map the per_tensor case to the `torch.aten.quantize_per_linear`
operation. In this case we extract the `scale` and `zeropoint` values
and directly invoke the quantization, then return the integer
representation value.
Implemented ONNX.Range. The spec says the data type for start, limit,
delta are 0-D can be double, float, int16, int32, int64, All int types
mapped to !torch.int and all float types mapped to !torch.float
---------
Co-authored-by: Kumar Deepak <kumar@xilinx.com>
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`.