Commit Graph

41 Commits (6484776a25b6cb181e7083efd6795a74a5ca186c)

Author SHA1 Message Date
Vivek Khandelwal 7247c6a3a7 [MLIR][TORCH] Add E2E support for aten.ge.int op
This commit adds lowering of `aten.ge.int` op.

Signed-Off By: Vivek Khandelwal <vivek@nod-labs.com>
2022-07-29 11:08:57 +05:30
Maksim Levental 829717c96e
Bump LLVM (#958) 2022-06-22 22:23:46 -05:00
Albert Sandru 708a51ae2e Add E2E support for aten.is_floating_point 2022-06-15 11:54:00 -05:00
Vidush Singhal 0a913bc904
Add E2E support for AtenAllBoolOp (#874) 2022-06-01 18:20:25 -07:00
Vivek Khandelwal 56e77d4213 [MLIR][TORCH] Add E2E support for aten.Bool.[float|int] op
This commit adds lowering of `aten.Bool.float` and `aten.Bool.int` op.

Signed-Off By: Vivek Khandelwal <vivek@nod-labs.com>
2022-05-24 21:18:34 +05:30
Vivek Khandelwal 014a6d16c7 [MLIR][TORCH] Add E2E support for aten.any.bool op
This commit adds lowering of `aten.any.bool` op.

Signed-Off By: Vivek Khandelwal <vivek@nod-labs.com>
2022-05-24 17:24:28 +05:30
Vivek Khandelwal bc9b2156e3 [MLIR][TORCH] Add E2E support for aten.sqrt.int op
This commit adds lowering of `aten.sqrt.int` op.

Signed-Off By: Vivek Khandelwal <vivek@nod-labs.com>
2022-05-24 16:50:39 +05:30
Vivek Khandelwal 96fabc0036 [MLIR][TORCH] E2E support for [ge|ceil].float, [ge|ne|gt].float_int op
This commit adds lowering of `aten.ge.float`, `aten.ge.float_int`,
`aten.ne.float_int`, `aten.gt.float_int` and `aten.ceil.float` op.
This commit also fixes formatting for the file scalar.py and scalar_comparison.py.

Signed-Off By: Vivek Khandelwal <vivek@nod-labs.com>
2022-05-05 21:48:35 +05:30
Sean Silva 44c7b181d3 Revert "[MLIR][TORCH] Add E2E support for aten.ge.float op"
This reverts commit 564734b2d7.
2022-04-28 07:49:58 -07:00
Sean Silva eff144c0b7 Revert "[MLIR][TORCH] Add E2E support for aten.ge.float_int op"
This reverts commit 1f102cc400.
2022-04-28 07:49:58 -07:00
Sean Silva 7669ee4e4a Revert "[MLIR][TORCH] Add E2E support for aten.ne.float_int op"
This reverts commit 51dd462592.
2022-04-28 07:49:58 -07:00
Sean Silva 5ef9f501fa Revert "[MLIR][TORCH] Add E2E support for aten.ceil.float op"
This reverts commit 78f5747568.
2022-04-28 07:49:58 -07:00
Vivek Khandelwal 78f5747568 [MLIR][TORCH] Add E2E support for aten.ceil.float op
This commit adds lowering of `aten.ceil.float` op.
This commit also fixes formatting for the file scalar.py.

Signed-Off By: Vivek Khandelwal <vivek@nod-labs.com>
2022-04-28 11:49:35 +05:30
Vivek Khandelwal 51dd462592 [MLIR][TORCH] Add E2E support for aten.ne.float_int op
This commit adds lowering of `aten.ne.float_int` op.

Signed-Off By: Vivek Khandelwal <vivek@nod-labs.com>
2022-04-27 21:16:48 +05:30
Vivek Khandelwal 1f102cc400 [MLIR][TORCH] Add E2E support for aten.ge.float_int op
This commit adds lowering of `aten.ge.float_int` op.

Signed-Off By: Vivek Khandelwal <vivek@nod-labs.com>
2022-04-27 21:16:48 +05:30
Vivek Khandelwal 564734b2d7 [MLIR][TORCH] Add E2E support for aten.ge.float op
This commit adds lowering of `aten.ge.float` op.

Signed-Off By: Vivek Khandelwal <vivek@nod-labs.com>
2022-04-27 21:16:48 +05:30
Vivek Khandelwal f5b6c4b601 [MLIR][TORCH] Add E2E support for aten.div.float op
This commit adds lowering of `aten.div.float` op.

Signed-Off By: Vivek Khandelwal <vivek@nod-labs.com>
2022-04-27 21:16:48 +05:30
Ashay Rane 9208bf0eb6
llvm: bump tag to e1318078 (#781)
The updated LLVM code includes a patch to create bfloat16 array
attributes, thus enabling a different patch to torch-mlir to flesh out
support for the bfloat16 type.
2022-04-26 12:27:51 -07:00
Gaurav Shukla 7c3ba25238 [LINALG] Add decomposition of `aten.dropout` op
- This commit adds decomposition of `aten.dropout` op. It also covers the
  training mode of the same op.
- It also adds lowering of `aten.sub.float` op.

Signed-Off-by: Gaurav Shukla <gaurav@nod-labs.com>
2022-03-22 13:14:49 +05:30
Vigilans 63fb1e5aad Bump LLVM at 8361c5da30588d3d4a48eae648f53be1feb5cfad 2022-03-18 13:16:14 -04:00
Nirvedh f8cb32faf0 LLVM bump
Major changes: opTrait changed to Trait, selectOp moved to arith dialect
assertOp moved to cf dialect
2022-02-16 15:28:13 -05:00
Gaurav Shukla 78c7844c6c [LINALG] Add E2E support for `aten.eq.int` op
- This commit adds lowering of `aten.eq.int` op as a part of
  `convert-torch-to-std` pass.
- It also refactors the code for binary comparison ops lowering.

Signed-Off-by: Gaurav Shukla <gaurav@nod-labs.com>
2022-02-15 01:37:35 +05:30
Gaurav Shukla bd177bdfc7 [TORCH][MLIR] Add run-time assert support in Torch-dialect
- This commit adds `aten.assert` op in the Torch dialect.
- The `aten.assert` op is lowered to `mlir::Assert` op.

Signed-Off-by: Gaurav Shukla <gaurav@nod-labs.com>
2022-02-09 12:03:01 -05:00
dan 3745f54489 Update external/llvm-project
- Add `qualified` to ods because of
https://reviews.llvm.org/D113873 and https://reviews.llvm.org/D116905
- Needed to revert https://github.com/llvm/torch-mlir/pull/520 as it
was based on an old torch version.
https://github.com/llvm/torch-mlir/pull/527 will bring this back with
a better design.
- Change ConvertAtenCatOp to use more accurate tensor shape info and
as much static info as possible to pass `tensor.insert_slice`
verification code added by https://reviews.llvm.org/D114715
- Other minor fixes
2022-01-18 13:25:42 -05:00
Yi Zhang 7cf7b91664 [MLIR][TORCH] Fix tensor literal int elem type to be signless
The element type of tensor literal should be signless when converted to
builtin tensor types.
2022-01-07 16:34:24 -05:00
xndcn 5eed562e19 add aten.sub.int/aten.mul.int lowering in TorchToStd 2021-12-17 10:35:15 -08:00
dan 03fdf56f21 add aten.add.int lowering in TorchToStd 2021-11-29 13:22:50 -05:00
Yi Zhang 53733933a4 Update llvm upstream to 0b17336f793108a7b10c3fa913039144ef1d0f61
Update AsmPrinter/Parser and MatchAndRewrite
2021-11-16 13:04:51 -05:00
Yi Zhang 0902438882 Update llvm-project to a54f4eae0e1d0ef5adccdcf9f6c2b518dc1101aa
This brings in https://reviews.llvm.org/D110797. PRs that are in
progress will need to use scripts provided by
https://llvm.discourse.group/t/psa-removed-arithmetic-ops-from-standard/4455.
2021-10-18 13:36:42 -04:00
Sean Silva 0c5c84d63d Add a basic TOSA E2E backend.
We lower through linalg-on-tensors and use RefBackend to run it.
This adds enough support for a "tanh" op. Adding more ops should be
fairly mechanical now that things are wired up. Run with:
```
./tools/torchscript_e2e_test.sh -c tosa
```

The backend structure is very similar to linalg-on-tensors based E2E
backends and is a nice parallel (see `tosa_backend.py`). Actually, this
forced a nice refactoring to the layering here. We removed
`torchscript-module-to-linalg-on-tensors-backend-pipeline` and instead
require separately running
```
torchscript-function-to-torch-backend-pipeline,torch-backend-to-linalg-on-tensors-backend-pipeline
```
This highlights the step that lowers to the "torch backend contract"
of cleaned up `torch` dialect ops is a critical step in the lowering.
Going forward, that is the key load-bearing contract of the torch-mlir
project, not the linalg-on-tensors backend contract.

Recommended review order:
- `TorchToTosa.cpp` / `TorchToTosa/basic.mlir`
- `python/torch_mlir_e2e_test/torchscript/configs/tosa_backend.py` and
  the new `utils.py` file there.
- `python/torch_mlir_e2e_test/tosa_backends/linalg_on_tensors.py` and
  `abc.py` in that directory for the TOSA backend e2e interface.
- other misc mechanical changes
2021-10-08 09:59:45 -07:00
Sean Silva 5b6902e31c Dual license the torch-mlir project.
This commit (with approval from all contributors) dual licenses
the torch-mlir project under both the standard LLVM license and the
standard PyTorch license. This will facilitate moving code between
torch-mlir and the two upstream projects.

The standard file comment is now:

```
// This file is licensed under the Apache License v2.0 with LLVM Exceptions.
// See https://llvm.org/LICENSE.txt for license information.
// SPDX-License-Identifier: Apache-2.0 WITH LLVM-exception
// Also available under a BSD-style license. See LICENSE.
```

See `LICENSE` in the project root for the terms of both licenses.
2021-10-01 10:46:08 -07:00
Sean Silva 4fad753073 Move external/torch-mlir to the root of the repo. 2021-09-27 17:11:08 -07:00
Sean Silva a99cbeeb7e Move TorchConversion dialect and TorchTo* into torch-mlir 2021-09-23 21:39:31 -07:00
Sean Silva 28a7738189 [torch-mlir earthmoving (1/N)] C/C++ code movement.
This creates the `external/torch-mlir` directory as an
LLVM_EXTERNAL_PROJECTS-compatible project (analogous to
`iree-dialects`) and completes movement/rename of all pure MLIR C/C++
compiler code into there. The next step will be to move all the Python
code / code that links/includes PyTorch C++ code (which currently lives
in `frontends/pytorch`) into a subdirectory here.

I call this "earthmoving" because it is mostly mechanical changes and
renames. As a quick summary (we can change this down the road easily)
- C++ `mlir::NPCOMP::Torch -> mlir::torch::Torch`
- CAPI `npcompTorchListTypeGet -> torchMlirTorchListTypeGet`
- preprocessor `#ifndef NPCOMP_ -> #ifndef TORCHMLIR_`
- CMake `NPCOMPFoo -> TorchMLIRFoo`

The goal of this is to create a standalone project creating a center of
mass for entry into the MLIR ecosystem from PyTorch, suitable in scope
for eventual inclusion/ownership in PyTorch. The idea is that
`external/torch-mlir` will some day be pulled out into its own
repository, and then npcomp will simply pull it in as a submodule.

Layering-wise, what lives in `torch-mlir` lowers code from PyTorch
(currently TorchScript, but TorchFX or pytorch/xla-style tracing are
possible extensions) down to what we have been calling the "Torch
backend contract" which is cleaned up IR (inlining, simplifcation,
conversion to value tensors, ...) entirely in the `torch` dialect. This
is the branching off point for further lowering, of which npcomp takes
one opinion (outside `torch-mlir` of course!), namely the
`TorchConversion` dialect/transforms which lower to IR suitable for IREE
and other linalg-on-tensors based lower-level compilers.

Summary of changes:
- move `{include,lib,test}/Dialect/Torch` into `torch-mlir`
- move relevant parts of CAPI into `torch-mlir`.
- leave a few things related to the `torch-mlir` Python build commented
  out, which should be resolved in a subsequent change.
2021-09-10 21:44:37 -07:00
Sean Silva cab8d922ec Add TorchToIREE and factor out TorchConversion dialect.
This converts a basic list op (torch.prim.ListConstruct) to the IREE
dialect.

```
    def forward(self, x: float):
            return [x, x]
```

turns into:

```
builtin.func @forward(%arg0: !torch.float) -> !torch.list<!torch.float> {
  %0 = torch.prim.ListConstruct %arg0, %arg0 : (!torch.float, !torch.float) -> !torch.list<!torch.float>
  return %0 : !torch.list<!torch.float>
}
```

which turns into:

```
builtin.func @forward(%arg0: f64) -> !iree.list<f64> {
  %c1 = constant 1 : index
  %c0 = constant 0 : index
  %c2 = constant 2 : index
  %0 = iree.list.create %c2 : !iree.list<f64>
  iree.list.set %0[%c0], %arg0 : !iree.list<f64>, f64
  iree.list.set %0[%c1], %arg0 : !iree.list<f64>, f64
  return %0 : !iree.list<f64>
}
```

As part of doing this, I realized that it was time to formalize the IR
form that we reach right before running TorchTo{Linalg,Std,...}. We now
call it the "Torch backend contract". We then lower the "Torch backend
contract" to the "npcomp backend contract", which involves the new
TorchConversion (`torch_c`) dialect, which holds ops that need to
operate on both the npcomp backend types (e.g. builtin tensors, i1, IREE
list, etc.) and the `!torch` types.

This made more sense, as I realized that if I didn't factor out
`torch_c` then the Torch dialect would have a dependency on IREE
dialect (we previously didn't notice this was an issue because we only
depended on `builtin` types), which seemed wrong to me.

Recommended review order:
- TorchToIREE.cpp / `TorchToIREE/basic.mlir`
- Look at the new structure of createTorchScriptToNpcompBackendPipeline.
  It now lives in TorchConversion/Transforms/Passes.cpp and cleanly
  calls into `Torch::createTorchScriptToTorchBackendPipeline` for the
  frontend lowering to the Torch backend contract.
- Mechanical change extracting
  `torch_c.{to,from}_{i1,i64,f64,builtin_tensor,iree_list}` into a new
  TorchConversion dialect, and a few passes specific to the lowering
  from the Torch backend contract to the npcomp backend contract.
- Minor fixes to TorchToLinalg.cpp to use unconverted operands (now that
  we convert lists as part of operand materialization, we need to use
  the original operands). Also added test for AtenMaxPool2dOp and fixed
  m_TorchConstantIntList.
- TmpDeleteDeadIREELists pass. Temporary pass for deleting dead IREE lists that
  are created as part of operand materialization for conv/max pool/avg pool ops
  in TorchToLinalg.
2021-08-16 15:01:58 -07:00
Yi Zhang e6adecac83 Convert Torch constant ops to std.constant 2021-06-18 12:22:47 -07:00
Sean Silva 333e07a74e Add `torch.vtensor.literal` op.
This op is much better behaved than the `torch.tensor.literal` op
(which is the new name of the `torch.tensor` op). In particular
`torch.tensor.literal`:
- always has a maximally refined type.
- always has value semantics.
- can be constant folded / CSE'd.

ReduceOpVariants is changed to perform the transformation from
`torch.tensor.literal` to `torch.vtensor.literal` (which in general
involves static information casts and copies.

This new op also allowed tightening up `torch.tensor.literal` to only
accept NonValueTensorType (instead of any tensor type).

This new ".literal" name is more descriptive. It was getting too
confusing seeing an op called just `torch.tensor` (we originally called
it that because that's the name of the similar function in the Torch
Python API, but it just doesn't fit here).
2021-06-17 14:37:04 -07:00
Sean Silva f49ebf1690 Add `!torch.int` type.
This replaces the ad-hoc use of `i64` throughout the Torch layer, and
helps to keep it crystal clear the distinction between `!torch.int`
(which is modeling the Python `int` type) and the various types that
serve as dtypes of tensors, which are a totally different type universe.

Changes:
- `!torch.int` type and C bindings.
- Change `torch.constant.int` parser to not need the `: i64` at the end.
- `m_TorchConstantInt` matcher to aid with matching constants.
- BackendTypeConversion changes for `!torch.int` -> `i64` type
  conversion.
- Refactor finalizing patterns in FinalizingBackendTypeConversionPass
  (they were getting very repetitive).
- Mechanical rewriting of `!torch.int` to `i64` in all the tests, and
  `AnyTorchIntType` to `Torch_IntType` in the `.td` files.
2021-06-17 07:28:23 -07:00
Sean Silva 784156a998 Add `!torch.bool` type.
This finishes removing the dependence on the basicpy dialect!

Changes:
- Add `!torch.bool` type and replace use of `!basicpy.BoolType` in
  Torch-related code.
- Rename BuiltinTensorize to BackendTypeConversion since now it handles
  bool conversions (and, when we add !torch.int and !torch.float, it
  will handle those as well), and generalize the related utilities (I
  also moved them to Torch/Transforms since they aren't really part of
  Torch/IR).
  - Add `torch.to_i1` and `torch.from_i1` ops for materializations
- [cleanup] Reorganize `torch.constant.*` ops in TorchOps.td
- Remove dependency of `torch` dialect on `basicpy` dialect and also
  `std` dialect. For `std`, we use some call related ops, but the
  `torch` dialect itself never produces them (we have passes that do
  though).

This is fairly mechanical. Recommended review order:
- New stuff in Torch/IR
- New BuiltinTypeConversion files.
- Mechnical fixups elsewhere.
2021-06-16 13:22:00 -07:00
Sean Silva 370e3270ab Introduce `!torch.tensor` / `!torch.vtensor` types.
This removes our reliance on the numpy dialect and avoids our off-label
use of the builtin tnesor type for modeling unknown dtypes.  The
`!torch.vtensor` (`ValueTensorType`) type is a value-semantic tensor.
The `!torch.tensor` (`NonValueTensorType`) type is a non-value-semantic
tensor. The new types look as follows syntactically:

```
// Least-static-information, non-value-semantic tensor.
!torch.tensor
// Explicit form of least-static-information variant.
!torch.tensor<*,unk>
// Least-static-information, value-semantic tensor.
!torch.vtensor
// Explicit form of least-static-information variant.
!torch.vtensor<*,unk>
// Fixed-set of allowable element types, with first-class support for
// Torch's frontend signedness semantics.
!torch.tensor<*,si32>
// First-class support for unknown dtypes.
!torch.tensor<[?,?,?],unk>
// Standard MLIR representation of `?` for unknown dimensions.
!torch.tensor<[?,2,?,4],unk>
// Statically shaped / dtyped example.
!torch.vtensor<[1,2,3,4],f32>
```

This required fairly significant changes throughout the compiler, but
overall it is a big cleanup. We now have a much clearer layering of "the
Torch frontend lowering" vs "lowering to std + linalg + etc.".

At the C++ level, there is `ValueTensorType`, `NonValueTensorType`.
We also have a helper `BaseTensorType` (kind of like ShapedType) which
interoperates with those two.

Included changes:
- New `torch.tensor(dense<0.0> : tensor<5xf32>) : !torch.tensor` op for
  creating torch tensor literals in the frontend.
- Consistently use signedness for the types (except i1 which I didn't
  touch -- we need to sort out the situation with !basicpy.BoolType
  there anyway so will be attending to that soon)
- Frontend can annotate whether an argument to the function has value
  semantics. We currently require this, as our backend contract does not
  currently allow us to even model the non-value-semantic case. Before,
  the value-semantic assumption was randomly injected in the middle of
  the pass pipeline.
- Move ArrayToTensor (now called MaximizeValueSemantics) and
  RefinePublicReturn passes to torch dialect.
- The TorchToStd and TorchToLinalg passes are now type conversions from
  `!torch.vtensor` to `tensor` and use the dialect conversion infra.
  The overall conversion pipeline is set up following the best practices
  of the "Type Conversions the Not-So-Hard Way" talk. This required
  introducing `torch-func-builtin-tensorize` and
  `torch-finalizing-builtin-tensorize` passes analogous to the upstream
  bufferization passes with the corresponding names (mostly just
  copypasta from there).
- Misc Torch-level canonicalizations -- we now cleanly layer the
  lowering to std later in the pipeline, so we are gradually lessening
  our reliance on random std constant folding before we get to that
  point.

Recommended review order:
- New types in TorchTypes.td/TorchTypes.h/TorchDialect.cpp
- New ops in TorchOps.td / TorchOps.cpp
- Less important / more mechanical stuff
  - Frontend changes.
  - Pass changes/additions in `Torch/Transforms` and `Conversion/`
2021-06-10 10:56:48 -07:00
Sean Silva 2efda323ff Significantly restructure torch/aten import design.
This is a really major and invasive restructuring of the way we get
torch operators (`torch::jit::Operator` / `c10::OperatorHandle`) into
MLIR. Please forgive the challenging review, but due to the sheer
invasiveness, it wasn't really practical do do it in sane smaller
pieces.

This fully replaces everything that was already working on the
TorchScript path (actually, more -- we added tanh support to
TorchToLinalg in order to delete the older code paths). Additionally,
I've kept the lights on for the acap path too, including what little e2e
stuff was working before (for expediency I made a few tiny compromises
along the way that will be easy to undo when we give that path proper
attention).

Overview of the new design:
- The torch operator `somens::someunqualname.someoverloadname` is
  imported as `torch.somens.someunqualname.someoverloadname` (skip the
  last dotted part if the overload name is empty), OR, if we don't have
  such an op registered, it is imported as
  `torch.operator "somens.someunqualname.someoverloadname" (...) : ...`.
  - The addition of the "overload name" is a critical element here, as
    the `(ns,unqual,overload)` triple is unique, which solves a lot of
    problems we were having.
  - This involves having separate MLIR ops for the `trailing_` and
    `.out` variants and all the different overloads. This seemed
    necessary, because the set of overloads is so wild and varied and
    unstructured. The previous design was leaning into some underlying
    structure that just isn't there -- the default situation is
    the "random overload that we want to manage on the MLIR side",
    rather than that being an exception. E.g.  `aten::ne` (not-equal)
    has 21 overloads, only 4 of which are c10 dispatcher ops see
    [gist](https://gist.github.com/silvasean/190ba918c550c956260e21254e1b8aa1),
    and the "out" variant is really called `.Tensor_out` instead of
    `.out` as it frequently is for other ops.
  - Rationale for all being in `torch` namespace: the set of operators
    are so varied and unstructured that "dialect per namespace"
    doesn't result in anything resembling the typical MLIR dialect
    boundary expectations. We could maybe draw the boundary at
    dispatcher ops vs non-dispatcher ops, but that doesn't seem to
    really result in very much useful structure at this point in time.
  - Note: within the torch operator registry, we effectively have a
    mini-basicpy subdialect (already type-resolved), which is reasonably
    structured.
  - The existing Torch op interfaces are also removed -- now that we
    track the overload name, we can losslessly find the original
    operator.
- Instead of `ATenRecognizeKernelsPass`, we now have a
  `ReduceOpVariantsPass` that keys off certain traits (and perhaps
  eventually interfaces) to reduce variants of ops to a smaller set,
  ideally operating on immutable tensors and using surrounding ops to
  model the mutability/aliasing aspects.
  - Note: `torch.ns.unqual.overload` ops allow both immutable and
    mutable tensors (unlike the previous hard distinction in the common
    case). This is a premonition for a future change that will introduce a
    bona fide `!torch.tensor` type that will clean up a bunch of stuff.
- `TorchToLinalg` / `TorchToStd` supercede the existing
  "ATen->TCF->TCP->Linalg" path.
- The new `torch_ods_gen.py` supercedes `torch_signature_ods_gen.py`.
  It should look somewhat familiar, but the benefit of hindsight has
  allowed a lot of simplifications.

The overall trend seems to be to make the `torch` dialect a nice layer
independent of anything else. It feels like as a natural result of
various future changes we will be removing the reliance on basicpy+numpy
dialects and have a nice self-contained type system too that properly
models the TorchScript type system (including proper subtyping,
mutable/immutable tensors, optional dtype, etc.).

Recommended review order:
- Start at some of the new import IR, e.g. in
  `frontends/pytorch/test/node_import/prim.py`,
  `frontends/pytorch/test/acap_export/test_export_add3.py`, and other
  tests.
- `frontends/pytorch/python/torch_mlir_utils/codegen/torch_ods_gen.py`
  and associated generated files:
  - `include/npcomp/Dialect/Torch/IR/GeneratedAtenOps.td`
  - `include/npcomp/Dialect/Torch/IR/GeneratedPrimOps.td`
- Inspect `ReduceOpVariants.cpp` / `reduce-op-variants.mlir` and the new
  traits in `include/npcomp/Dialect/Torch/IR/TorchTraits.h`
- Various code changes in the import path in
  `frontends/pytorch/csrc/builder`. Probably most interesting is the new
  code in `torch_to_mlir_utils.cpp` that has the logic to create the
  `torch.operator` ops or `torch.ns.unqual.overload` ops.

This is the [new ResNet IR](https://gist.github.com/silvasean/5407aafb710d07612b7b5b92eabecebe),
just to be able to look at a substantial sample of IR in the new style.
2021-05-19 13:37:39 -07:00