Commit Graph

11 Commits (58c703010452bfbc5eabef5543058335c2e2f7b2)

Author SHA1 Message Date
mikeurbach 0f6a65a1c5
Enable building using LLVM_EXTERNAL_PROJECTS. (#152)
This allows building NPCOMP as an external project of LLVM, similar to
how CIRCT can be built: https://github.com/llvm/circt/pull/227.

The CMake options to use this build style look like this:

```
  -DLLVM_EXTERNAL_PROJECTS=npcomp \
  -DLLVM_EXTERNAL_NPCOMP_SOURCE_DIR=/path/to/mlir-npcomp \
```
2021-01-26 11:43:43 -07:00
Stella Laurenzo 5c5b8db70f Update test configuration to import mlir from LLVM install location.
* Also adds two lit tests to verify that all of our extensions load without fireworks, which is a good indication that the shared library deps are sane.
* Bumps llvm-project version to use D89167.
2020-10-12 15:25:07 -07:00
Stella Laurenzo af4edb63ae Start reworking towards a shared library build.
* Need to have a dag of shared library deps in order to interop across python extensions (as presented in ODM).
* Introduced add_npcomp_library and friends to mirror the MLIR setup.
* Adds a libNPCOMP.so shared library.
* Redirects tools and extensions to link against libNPCOMP.so (instead of static libs).
* Moves all libraries to lib/, all binaries to bin/ and all python extensions to python/. The invariant is that the rpaths are setup to have a one level directory structure.
* Reworks the _torch_mlir extension to build like the others (still need to come up with a consolidated rule to do this instead of open coded).
* Includes an upstream version bump to pick up needed changes.

Sizes with dynamic linking (stripped, release, asserts enabled):
  libNPCOMP.so: 43M (includes much of the underlying LLVM codegen deps)
  libMLIR.so: 31M
  _npcomp.so: 1.6M (python extension)
  _torch_mlir.so: 670K (python extension)
  npcomp-capi-ir-test: 6.3K
  npcomp-opt: 351K
  npcomp-run-mlir: 461K
  mnist-playground: 530K

Still more can be done to normalize and optimize but this gets us structurally to the starting point.
2020-10-09 16:02:58 -07:00
Stella Laurenzo e5433e314f Add capture function arguments.
* Adds at::Tensor -> MlirValue tracking.
* Adds conversions for tensor and scalar types to MLIR types.
* Adds npcomp C APIs for constructing custom types.
* Reworks pybind include so as to get Torch pybind helpers (needed to pass at::Tensor type from Python->C++).
2020-10-01 18:59:58 -07:00
stephenneuendorffer 5beaf4cc01
Fix build again (#14)
The RuntimeShlib.so now lives in /lib.
2020-08-07 08:36:03 -07:00
Stella Laurenzo 38abe99805 Collapse python_native/ into python/.
* These were separated originally for layering reasons that no longer apply.
* Most of the python extension code is under lib/ with just the module setup in python/.
2020-08-03 17:46:34 -07:00
Stella Laurenzo 571c8b448a Collapse different top level test directories into test/.
* Uses local configs and unsupported annotation to disable optional tests.
* This separation was just an artifact of having initial trouble getting lit setup.
2020-08-03 17:41:16 -07:00
Sean Silva b4f0cea8fa Rework e2e flow to use new "npcomprt"
This ~totally reworks the existing "runtime" stuff to be more
principled and usable, such as from Python. It's still not fully
production-quality, mainly in the department of memory management (e.g.
it currently leaks memory; we need to figure out "who frees memrefs" +
the analysis and transformation needed to do that (maybe use upstream
buffer allocation pass?)).

The user API is in include/npcomp/runtime/UserAPI.h, though
include/npcomp/JITRuntime/JITModule.h is a friendlier wrapper.

The stuff under {include,lib}/runtime is totally firewalled from the
compiler and tiny (<6kB, though no attention has gone into optimizing
that size). For example, we don't link in libSupport into the runtime,
instead having our own bare bones replacements for basics like ArrayRef
(the JITRuntime helps with bridging that gap, since it *can* depend on
all common LLVM utilities).

The overall features of npcomprt is that it exposes a module that
with multiple function entry points. Each function has arguments and
results that are tensor-valued, and npcomprt::Tensor is the runtime type
that is used to interact with that (and a npcomprt::Ref<T>
reference-counting wrapper is provided to wrap npcomprt::Tensor in the
common case).

From an implementation perspective, an npcomprt module at the
LLVM/object/binary level exposes a single module descriptor struct that
has pointers to other metadata (currently just a list of function
metadata descriptors). All interactions with the npcomp runtime are
keyed off of that module descriptor, including function lookups and
dispatching. This is done to dodge platform ABI issues and also allow
enough reflection to e.g. verify provided arguments.

Most of the compiler-side work here was in LowerToNpcomprtABI and
LowerToLLVM.

Also,
- Rename npcomp_rt/NpcompRt to npcomprt/Npcomprt; it was getting
annoying to type the underscores/caps.
- misc improvements to bash_helpers.sh
2020-07-08 19:36:19 -07:00
Stella Laurenzo af4466197e Add lit test suite for python compiler.
* Adds a test for simple constants and fixes issues.
2020-06-07 14:29:39 -07:00
Sean Silva ea822968fa Add bare-bones npcomp-run-mlir.
The code isn't super clean, but is a useful incremental step
establishing most of the boilerplate for future enhancements.
We can't print or return tensors yet so correctness TBD, but I've
stepped into the running code in the debugger so I know it definitely is
running.

This is the first step to building out an npcomp mini-runtime. The
mini-runtime doesn't have to be fancy or complex, but it should at least
be layered nicely (which this code and the current compiler interaction
with the "runtime" code is not). Now that we have boilerplate for e2e
execution in some form, we can build that out.
2020-05-28 18:37:11 -07:00
Stella Laurenzo 953ef89a30 Add npcomp-opt and lit runner. 2020-04-26 17:55:15 -07:00