Commit Graph

16 Commits (63ee4f268a67ee9e568bf31bd9f4a404001ba05f)

Author SHA1 Message Date
Aaron J Arthurs c0e14da888 Fix TensorFromElementsOp reference 2021-01-28 12:01:35 -08:00
Aaron J Arthurs fc650c9447 Import TCP pad 2021-01-28 12:01:35 -08:00
Sean Silva 1c7c362e29 [TCP] Replace tcp.matmul with linalg.matmul.
This involved adding a `tcp.splatted` op to splat a dynamically sized
init tensor. See rationale in TCPOps.td docs.

One interesting observation is that when lowering tcf.matmul to
linalg.matmul, we need to both 1) create the error checks and 2)
calculate a shape transfer function to create the init tensors.
Previously, 2) was deferred to bufferizing tcp.matmul later. I'm not
sure if this is a conflation of concerns or not. For now, it's not a big
burden.
2020-11-10 18:58:28 -08:00
Sean Silva 0427aacb0b [TCP] Replace elementwise ops with std elementwise ops. 2020-11-10 18:58:28 -08:00
Sean Silva 0761df9f58 Bump llvm-project to 72ddd559b8aafef402091f8e192e025022e4ebef
- Fixup to OpBuilderDAG
- Update for affine map naming
2020-10-30 18:12:41 -07:00
Aaron J Arthurs 29c715b6b1 Add TCP mul test 2020-10-30 15:11:52 -07:00
Sean Silva 06a8ba6900 [RefBackend] Use more idiomatic bufferize pattern for TCP.
The time has come for BypassShapes/LowerShapedResultsToMemref to go away :(
For the reference backend, being consistent with upstream conventions is
the name of the game now.

This is a step down in a number of ways, e.g. test clarity and
separation of concerns. But it is fewer files and fewer tests, and
*does* address the "TODO: This is really fragile". It also eliminates two
more ops from the refback dialect (sadly, they are the
shaped_results/yield that we were getting kind of fond of, but alas).
2020-10-15 20:15:53 -07:00
Sean Silva 5017430dc7 [RefBackend] Split out RefBackend (refback) dialect from TCP.
This is the first in a patch series that is refactoring the
constellation of things variously called or associated with "E2E",
"RefE2E", "npcomprt", and "TCP" into a more cleanly layered result.

Concretely, this first patch fixes the fact that TCP was basically
acting like a dumping ground needed by the reference backend. This
splits it out, which is fairly mechanical, but touches a lot of lines of
code (basically replacing `tcp` with `refback` and `TCP` with
`RefBackend).

Now, the RefBackend dialect is that dumping ground, which
is slighly better, as it starts allowing TCP to become a nice clean
middle layer that is not related per se to the reference backend.

The previous name RefE2E or "reference e2e flow" was super confusing.
Now that we are seeing more clearly where the "backend" distinction
lies, the [RefBackend] commit tag is born :)
2020-10-07 10:29:48 -07:00
Sean Silva f9b37c55b7 [RefE2E] Add support for unary ops exp and tanh
This is fairly mechanical.
2020-09-24 18:41:30 -07:00
Sean Silva c69e9fabc5 [RefE2E] Add support for "max".
This cleans up the lowering pipeline to easily allow extending to
multiple binary ops. It looks fairly repetitive at multiple levels, but
I don't want to prematurely generalize. I think that in principle we
could derive a large swatch of TCF + TCP from a single linalg-style
specification. Another direction is to use an OpInterface (something
like "buildLinalgGenericBody"). I'm keeping my eye on it.

In a subsequent commit, I'll mechanically add a set of binary ops
modeled off of the std arithmetic ops.
2020-09-22 18:38:32 -07:00
Sean Silva 276f5b80ea [RefE2E] Add assemblyFormat for TCF and TCP ops and tidy up. 2020-09-18 15:03:53 -07:00
Sean Silva d8675f8ad2 [RefE2E] Add support for matmul.
I'm pretty happy with how this turned out. It looks pretty much like it
should -- one change at each layer. This particular op bottoms out on
linalg which takes care of the rest.

- Add tcf.matmul
- Add tcp.matmul
- Add TCF->TCP lowering
- Add tcp.matmul shape transfer function (BypassShapes.cpp)
- Add tcp.matmul -> linalg.matmul lowering (LowerShapedResultsToMemref.cpp)
- Add support to LowerShapeConstraints for lowering the new
shape.cstr_require

This matmul op is pretty limited in its capabilities. There is no
batching and no multidimensional contraction. Certainly more design work
will be needed to find the right abstractions that aren't too general
but also help to canonicalize many cases from frontends. This is mainly
to show that adding a new op needn't be very "scary" once we have the
e2e infra in place.

Also,
- this clears out some exploratory cruft from the TCF dialect now that
this is starting to become real.
2020-09-18 11:31:01 -07:00
Sean Silva 75f57b461e
Totally rework RefE2E tensor to memref flow. (#42)
This now gets the overall "RefE2E" compilation stack to a point that I'm
fairly happy with. We simplify it by mostly embracing the "descriptor"
view of the world.

The overall flow is best understood by reading through the
createE2ELoweringPipeline function in lib/E2E/E2E.cpp
That function creates a pass pipeline that lowers from "TCF" (which is
~numpy level of abstraction) down to LLVM IR.

A brief high-level summary of what happens there:

1. TCF to TCP conversion. This involves reifying error handling in the
form of shape constraints. See test/Conversion/TCFToTCP/basic.mlir

2. Lowering shape constraints. This converts shape constraints into
eager error-handling code. See test/E2E/lower-shape-constraints.mlir
This pass will soon go upstream.
Because this lowers to std.assert, some later passes like
LowerToNpcomprtABI and LowerToLLVM are updated to properly plumb this
through e2e.
See test/npcomp-run-mlir/invalid-broadcast.mlir for an execution test
that properly aborts in case of an error.

3. Lowering tensors to memrefs. This is done via a series of passes
rather than an single mega conversion. Unlike the previous code that
mixed in the npcomprt ABI stuff here, it's now a very clean "pure
memref" conversion.
See test/E2E/lower-*-to-memref.mlir and
lib/E2E/TensorToMemref/
Most of the changes are concentrated here.

4. As part of the above, we use the upstream ConvertShapeToStandard for
lowering shapes.

5. We lower linalg to loops and lower loops to CFG using upstream
passes.

6. Rewrite the "ABI" boundaries of the program to npcomprt data
structures (LowerToNpcomprtABI). This mainly affects ABI boundaries and
how global tensor constants are represented. One of the major
improvements in this commit is that now it's a very clean rewrite that
just replaces memrefs on ABI boundaries with !npcomprt.tensor (before
there was a get_extent function that is not needed).
See test/E2E/lower-to-npcomprt-abi.mlir

7. Lower to LLVM with upstream mlir patterns + some patterns for the
npcomprt lowerings.

One aspect here that is still a remnant of a non-descriptor-based tensor
to memref flow is the BypassShapes + LowerShapedResultsToMemref.
BypassShapes wraps the "tensor compute" ops in a tcp.shaped_results
(basically a "tie_shape" kind of op), and then
LowerShapedResultsToMemref uses those annotations to allocate output
buffers while lowering the "tensor compute ops". Note that there are
very few "tensor compute" ops currently supported (tcp.add +
tcp.broadcast_to), so we just hardcode them in both passes.
Realistically, I expect this to go away as we fully embrace the
descriptor-based approach for simplicity, so don't look too deep into
it.
2020-09-16 17:31:40 -07:00
Sean Silva e228aa4b11 npcomprt: add support for constants
- create tcp.global + tcp.get_global_memref
- create npcomprt.global + npcomprt.get_global
- LLVM lowering for new npcomprt ops
- Runtime:
 - GlobalDescriptor struct emitted by LLVM lowering
 - implement __npcomp_compiler_rt_get_global

Also,
- cleanly isolate all runtime data structure definitions shared by the
compiler and runtime into lib/runtime/CompilerDataStructures.h
2020-07-10 17:31:24 -07:00
Sean Silva 1b48d0d80b Remove the present tcp.island.
The idea was half-baked and after some deep thought felt like a solution
looking for a problem. What we had here (and is removed in this patch)
just wasn't pulling its weight.

I cannot think of anything we would want to do with tcp.island as it is
removed here beyond just sinking and merging them within a basic block,
such that the witness argument is kind of pointless (only matters for
hoisting).

TCP compute ops like tcp.add and tcp.broadcast_to have the strong
invariant of "pure or undefined behavior", which means they are always
safe to sink. The island concept as removed here conferred no benefit.

Also, I'll note that "islands" are a trick you can only play once in a
system (unless they strictly nest). I have some early-stage thoughs on
having an island concept that helps with modeling tensor shapes
robustly which seems promising (the island would serve a similar role as
tie_shape).
2020-05-14 15:19:37 -07:00
Sean Silva e29aef855b Initial TCF/TCP E2E seed.
Very much WIP.

This is enough to get tcf.add down to approximately the "linalg.generic
on buffers" level of abstraction. (but there are nuances)
2020-05-08 20:20:41 -07:00