The MacOS builders are having linking trouble with the extension library.
Until it's fixed, all support for op extensions is disabled. It should be
easy to restore once the issue is resolved.
The function `AffineMap::inferFromExprList` does not work if the first
vector of expressions is empty, because it uses these expressions to
obtain the context. This prevented `aten.permute` from working for
inputs of 0-rank. This commit adds support for 0-rank inputs.
PyTorch allows new operators to be registered dynamically in modules.
Torch-mlir already makes it fairly straightforward to add support for
new operators, and this commit just extends that support to allow new
PyTorch ops to come from a external module.
This does *not* allow ops to be dynamically loaded into torch-mlir.
Torch-mlir must still be compiled with support built-in.
Add a `_torch_mlir_custom_op_example` subpackage to `torch_mlir` which
registers an demonstration op. It will not be imported by default when
importing torch_mlir. It's strictly for testing and documentation.
Adds an end-to-end test for the `torch_mlir_custom_op_example::identity` op.
With all these changes, we should now be actively testing PyTorch extension
support with all future patches.
This commit adds lowering of `aten.div.Tensor_mode` op.
This commit also fixes formatting for the test file elementwise.py.
Signed-Off By: Vivek Khandelwal <vivek@nod-labs.com>
This commit adds the decomposition of `aten.adaptive_avg_pool2d` op into
`aten.avg_pool2d` op. The current decomposition only supports cases where
input size is equal to the output size.
Signed-Off By: Vivek Khandelwal <vivek@nod-labs.com>
When compiling without assertions (i.e. in `NDEBUG` mode), a handful of
statements turn to NOPs, which results in warnings such as missing
return statement or unused variables and function. This patch replaces
such statements with `llvm_unreachable()`, which informs the compiler
about program termination regardless of the `NDEBUG` mode. This also
enables torch-mlir to be compiled using the flags `-Wall`, `-Wextra`,
`-Wpedantic`, and `-Werror`.
This patch adds support for the torch.linalg.vector_norm op to the torch
dialect, including the necessary shape function. It also extends the
conversion of reduction operators to support lowering of
AtenLinalgVectorNormOp, in addition to adding a handful of end-to-end
tests to validate the lowering.
There exist several opportunities to make this lowering optimal and
robust. For instance, in its current form, the translation does not
support ord = 0, +inf, or -inf. For L1 norms, we don't need to raise
each element to the power 1.0. Similarly, L2 norms could benefit from
strength reduction. Since the canonicalization pass is not able to
apply these optimizations, we should consider applying them during the
linalg lowering itself.
This commit adds support for aten.max_pool2d, aten.max_pool2d_with_indices,
and aten.avg_pool2d op for the cases where ceil_mode = true.
Signed-Off By: Vivek Khandelwal <vivek@nod-labs.com>
The preserve memory specifies that `If any of the input tensors is in channels_last format,
operator output should be in channels_last format` and hence can be
added as is in aten_empty_like 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>
This commit adds lowering of `aten.masked_fill.Scalar` op.
This commit also fixes the formatting of the file constant_alloc.py.
Signed-Off By: Vivek Khandelwal <vivek@nod-labs.com>
1. This commit adds lowering of "while-like" prim loop to scf.while
operation.
2. Adds lowering of "for-like" prim loops to scf.for operation.
Signed-Off-By: Prateek Gupta <prateek@nod-labs.com>
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>
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.
* shape: add shape transfer function for aten.neg
Prior to this patch, the list of shape transfer functions did not
include `aten.neg`, which resulted in errors like below.
```
error: unsupported by backend lowering: tensor with unknown rank or dtype
note: see current operation: %0 = "torch.aten.neg"(%arg0) :
(!torch.vtensor<[256,256],f32>) -> !torch.vtensor<*,f32>
note: this is likely due to a missing shape transfer function in shape_lib_gen.py
```
This patch fixes the problem by adding a shape transfer function to
reflect the point-wise nature of this operation.
* linalg: add translation of aten.neg operation
This patch adds a translation rule to lower `aten.neg` operations on
tensors to an `arith.negf` operation wrapped inside a `linalg.generic`
operation. This patch also adds a rudimentary test.
This commit adds lowering of `aten::max_pool2d_with_indices_backward` op.
This commit also fixes formatting issues in basic.py.
Signed-Off By: Vivek Khandelwal <vivek@nod-labs.com>
This commit adds the following support to the op `nll_loss_backward`:
- `input` tensor can be rank-1
- `weight` parameter
- `reduction` parameter
- `target`, `grad_output`, `total_weight` can be rank-0
- Checks that input tensors are of the expected type
This commit adds support for multi-dimensional tensors as input to the
`_index_put_impl_` op. The support was to some degree already there,
since `ScatterOp` already supports multi-dimensional tensors. This
commit also adds a bit more error checking to `index_put` and
refactors the code for creating `ScatterOp`s to mimic the way one
would make a `Linalg::GenericOp`.
This commit decomposes `aten.new_empty` op into `aten.empty.memory_format` op.
This commit also made a dtype fix to the constant tensor allocation like ops.
Earlier the dtype for the result was inferred from the result type; now, it's
being evaluated as per the original definition of the op.
Signed-Off By: Vivek Khandelwal <vivek@nod-labs.com>
This commit adds support for the cases of view op where the rank and
the shapes of the input and result are equal.
Signed-Off By: Vivek Khandelwal <vivek@nod-labs.com>
In order to make sure that the TorchToLinalg conversions leave the
graph in a valid state, the final result of the conversion has to be
casted to the result type of the op. This commit adds this cast to ops
that did not have it.
- 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>
This commit adds the op `ValsemVariantAtenCopyOp` that represents
`AtenCopy_Op` without the underscore. This is needed to make sure
that the `ReduceOpVariants` pass turns the in-place op into an op
that takes value tensors as inputs, otherwise the
`MaximizeValueSemantics` pass will not be able to add value
semantics correctly.
This commit also adds the lowering of `ValsemVariantAtenCopyOp`.
Signed-Off By: Vivek Khandelwal <vivek@nod-labs.com>
This commit fixes the 2nd and 3rd return types of the `aten.native_layer_norm`.
Previously the mean and rSTD were returned with reduction dims removed.
This commit fixes this and keeps the reduction dims of the results.
Signed-Off-By: Prateek Gupta <prateek@nord-labs.com>
This commit adds the op `ValsemVariantAtenIndexPutImplOp` that represents
`Aten_IndexPutImpl_Op` without the underscore. This is needed to
make sure that the `ReduceOpVariants` pass turns the in-place op
into an op that takes value tensors as inputs, otherwise the
`MaximizeValueSemantics` pass will not be able to add value
semantics correctly.
This commit also adds the lowering of `ValsemVariantAtenIndexPutImplOp` op.
This commit also updates the `torch.bincount` op test cases.
The term "pseudo" is very vague and was getting confusing (I felt I had
to explain it in every comment referencing it). Instead, rework the
"pseudo" ops to instead be named:
- MLIR Syntax: `torch.valsem.*`
- C++ / ODS: `ValsemVariant*Op`
This makes it clear what the concept is, and avoids confusion with other
things that might be called "pseudo", since these are very specific and
should be 100% consistently named w.r.t. the non-valsem-variant ops that
they correspond to.
This helps keep things organized and also exposes more parallelism to
the build system. It seems though that most of the compile time is
actually spent in the headers though, so the wall time doesn't decrease
as much as I had hoped (and now that the headers are being included
multiple times, the cpu time actually increases a lot, sadly -- will try
to dig into this).
This pass is added to lower ops, which can not be lowered
via the TorchToLinalg pass, such as `torch.bincount` op.
This pass also uses torch-mlir's TMTensor Dialect to lower the
complex ops.
Also add torch.bincount op lowering with the help of TMTensor dialect
Signed-Off By: Vivek Khandelwal <vivek@nod-labs.com>
This commit moves the helper function which are common across
different torch-mlir conversion passes into a common directory
Utils.
Signed-Off By: Vivek Khandelwal <vivek@nod-labs.com>
This commit adds support for integer type inputs for
`AtenMaxOp`, `AtenSumOp`, `AtenSumDimIntListOp`.
Signed-Off By: Vivek Khandelwal <vivek@nod-labs.com>
The view op allows for the new shape argument to have a -1 value for
one of the dimensions, and the op is expected to deduce the size of
that dimension by looking at the sizes of the other dimensions and
comparing it to the total number of elements in the original
tensor. This commit adds this functionality.
This commit does a couple of things. First, it fixes a bug in the
`linalg.generic` body of the `nll_loss_forward` lowering where the
`ignoreIndex` was being compared with the loop index rather than the
current element of the `target` tensor. This was not being caught by
the tests because they were not testing the case where `ingnoreIndex`
actually corresponds to a value in `target`. This has been fixed.
Second, this commit adds support for the `reduction` argument in
`torch.nll_loss_forward` as well as support for 1-D inputs. In order
to simplify the lowering code, I've refactored the code that creates
the `linalg.generic` ops for elementwise and reduction ops into static
functions, to avoid having boilerplate code for indexing maps, etc
that can be very error prone.
Note: The function `convertScalarToDtype` was moved to before all the
conversion patterns, but nothing in it was modified.
- This commit decomposes the `aten.batch_norm` op into the
`aten.native_batch_norm` op, instead of lowering it to the
`linalg.generic` op.
- It also adds run-time asserts in the `aten.native_batch_norm` lowering
to make sure that the shape of the weight, bias, running_mean, and
running_var must match the num of features.
- Since the `aten.native_batch_norm` op is not supported at TOSA backend,
all the modules that are dependent on the `aten.native_batch_norm` op
will fail and therefore they should be removed from the TOSA `passing`
set.
- It also moves `checkNotNone` to utility.
Signed-Off-by: Gaurav Shukla <gaurav@nod-labs.com>
This commit adds the op `PseudoAtenFillScalarOp` that represents
`AtenFill_ScalarOp` without the underscore. The approach is the same
as in commit dd998fa4d4.
Adding this op allows for a simpler and more consistent version of the
`empty` and `empty_like` op e2e tests.
- This commit adds lowering of `aten.le.Scalar` and `aten.ge.Scalar` ops
as a part of `convert-torch-to-linalg` pass.
- It also creates a new test script `elementwise_comparison.py` for all
element-wise comparison ops.
Signed-Off-by: Gaurav Shukla <gaurav@nod-labs.com>
- 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>
- This commit adds lowering of `aten.Bool.Tensor` and
`aten.Float.Tensor` op as a part of `convert-torch-to-linalg` pass.
- It also adds support for returning bool types.
- It also fixes lowering of the `aten.Int.Tensor` op for non-zero rank
input tensors.
- If a scalar number is converted to a 0-d tensor and passed on to the
`aten.Float.Tensor` op, it folds to the scalar number.
Signed-Off-by: Gaurav Shukla <gaurav@nod-labs.com>
Some of the lowerings use the result type obtained from the op itself
to tell the `linalg::GenericOp` what the type of the result should be
rather than using the type of the result tensor given to the
`linalg::GenericOp`. This becomes a problem when the result type of
the op has static size information and the result tensor used in
`linalg::GenericOp` has dynamic dimensions, for `linalg::GenericOp`
expects the result type to be equal to the type of the output tensor.
This commit replaces the use of the result type from the op itself
with the type of the result tensor passed to `linalg::GenericOp`.
In order to not create too many dynamic/static versions of the same
e2e test, e2e tests have only been added to the ops that currently
fail when used with static sizes.
* [tosa] Support for AtenNe[Tensor|Scalar]Op, AtenLog2Op,
AtenBitwiseAndTensorOp, AtenSquareOp and AtenThresholdOp
* Fix for Issue #532 - Mixed input types for few ops and updated few
tests to use i32 instead of i64
Signed-off-by: Anup Gangwar <anup.gangwar@arm.com>
Co-authored-by: Anup Gangwar <anup.gangwar@arm.com>
- 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>
The lowering of aten::nll_loss_backward op has been added
from torch to linalg dialect. The changes has been made as
a part of -torch-convert-to-linalg pass.
Signed-off-by: Prashant Kumar prashant@nod-labs.com
This PR include the following pieces:
- Add torch `Generator` type. `Generator` type is converted to i64 in
refbackend type converter.
- Add seed managment support for the default global generator.
`torch_c.getNextSeed` op is used to get the seed. On refbackend, the
`torch_c.getNextSeed` is lowered to load/store from [0] of global
variable `default_generator` memref<i64> in `InsertRngGlobals` pass.
- Add `aten.uniform_` and testing as an example op for RNG ops. Add
`torch.pseudo.aten.uniform` op. It has the same operands and return as
the `aten.uniform_` from the op registry except for value semantics.
* [tosa] Support for AtenCeilOp and AtenReciprocalOp
* [tosa] Support for comparator ops, Aten[Gt|Lt|Eq][Tensor|Scalar]Op with scalar constant
* [tosa] Support for Scalar variants of Aten[Mul|Div|Add|Sub] Ops with scalar constants
Signed-off-by: Anup Gangwar <anup.gangwar@arm.com>
Co-authored-by: Anup Gangwar <anup.gangwar@arm.com>
- Common code as TF repository, being moved to MLIR core.
- Will support further legalizations to be published.
Signed-off-by: Suraj Sudhir <suraj.sudhir@arm.com>
Note that to enable folding of the code coming from an example
like the ConstantPad2dStaticModule e2e test, support for other
operations had to be added/improved:
- aten::neg.int
- aten::eq.float
- aten::eq.str
- prim::Uninitialized
This commit adds lowering of `aten.threshold` op
This commit adds lowering of `aten.threshold_backward` op
Signed-Off By: Vivek Khandelwal <vivek@nod-labs.com>
This involes the following 2 parts:
- Change refine type to propagate more static shape info.
- Get as much static shape info as possible when creating the result
tensor when converting to linalg.
This commit adds lowering of `aten.arange.start_step` op.
This commit decomposes `aten.arange` and `aten.arange.start` into
`aten.arange.start_step` op.
Signed-Off By: Vivek Khandelwal <vivek@nod-labs.com>
We only handle the expanding OR collapsing cases, we do not handle
expanding And collapsing happening at the same time or cases where
it's neither collapsing nor expanding like view of [2,3] for
3x2 tensor.
It's assumed that if a shape list element is got from
`aten.size(tensor, dim)` the corresponding dim is not splitted or
collapsed. This assumption makes it easier to deal with dynamic shapes.
- Added E2E support for `aten.eq.Tensor` and `aten.lt.Tensor` ops. Both
the operands are expected to be of the same type, i.e., type promotion
is not addressed as a part of this commit.
- Added E2E support for `aten.eq.Scalar` and `aten.lt.Scalar` ops.
Tensor operand type to Scalar operand type promotion has not been
handled in this commit.
Signed-Off-by: Gaurav Shukla <gaurav@nod-labs.com>
The existing implementation of `ConvertConstantTensorAllocOp<>` requires
a C++17 feature `if constexpr ()`. This commit removes the use of that
feature to support the implementation even for lower C++ versions.
Signed-Off-by: Gaurav Shukla <gaurav@nod-labs.com>
Add the required lowerings and correct test cases.
These op produce zero-d tensors and it was incorrectly mentioned in
refine types to produce 1d tensor of size 1.
- Templatize `aten.zeros` and `aten.ones` ops lowering.
- Add E2E support for `aten.empty` op.
- Add Integer type support in `aten.mul.Scalar` op lowering.
Signed-Off-by: Gaurav Shukla <gaurav@nod-labs.com>
`aten.gt.Tensor` op has been added in torch dialect and the
lowering of the op has been done to the linalg dialect.
Signed-off-by: Prashant Kumar <prashant@nod-labs.com>
This commit adds support for aten.native_layer_norm operation. Here
the previous code for aten.layer_norm is tweaked a little bit to
accomodate both mean and variance values alongwith the layer norm
value. This commit also adds decomposition of aten.layer_norm into
aten.native_layer_norm, which was previously getting lowered directly
to linalg.
Signed-Off-By: Prateek Gupta<prateek@nod-labs.com>
This commit adds lowering of `aten.squeeze.dim` op into
`linalg.TensorCollapseShape` op. Here, the dim(th) dimension of the
input tensor is not supposed to be dynamic.
Signed-Off-by: Gaurav Shukla <gaurav@nod-labs.com>
This commit adds lowering of `aten.gt.Scalar` and `aten.where.self` as a
part of element-wise ops lowering.
Signed-Off-by: Gaurav Shukla <gaurav@nod-labs.com>
The op lowering has been added as a part of `torch-lower-to-linalg`
pass. This takes care of ignore_index but the weight and reduction
operand is still to be accounted for.
Signed-off-by: Prashant Kumar <prashant@nod-labs.com>
- Supports variants with multiple dims, one dim, all dime
- Leverages legalize_common and legalize_utils code from
TensorFlow-TOSA work
Signed-off-by: Suraj Sudhir <suraj.sudhir@arm.com>
Many reduction ops take as an argument an optional output dtype that
can change the type of the input tensor before the reduction is
performed. This commit adds support for the optional dtype flag that
had been previously ignored.
Test:
/tools/torchscript_e2e_test.sh -f 'ReduceSumDtype'
/tools/torchscript_e2e_test.sh -f 'ReduceSumDImIntListDtype'
This commit adds lowering of `aten.Squeeze` op into
`linalg.TensorCollapseShape` op. The size 1 dynamic dimensions are not
handled as a part of this commit.
Signed-Off-by: Gaurav Shukla <gaurav@nod-labs.com>
The lowering of aten.fill.Scalar has been added.
The changes have been made as a part of -torch-convert-to-linalg pass.
Signed-off-by: Prashant Kumar <prashant@nod-labs.com>
This commit adds lowering of `aten.mul.Scalar` and also adds
decomposition of `aten.addmm` to `aten.mul.Scalar`, `aten.add.Tensor`
and `aten.mm` ops.
Signed-Off-by: Gaurav Shukla <gaurav@nod-labs.com>
Now, aten::linear supports rank 3 inputs. This is a fix
for upcoming bert-inference task. The correct way should be
to support broadcasting in `aten.matmul` op and decompose
`aten.linear` into right ops.
This commit adds new operation `aten.gelu_backward` in the aten
dialect and adds lowering of this operation from aten to linalg.
Signed-Off-By: Prateek Gupta <prateek@nod-labs.com>
- Remove use of conversion construction macros
- Add mul and div op conversions
- Add corresponding tests
Signed-off-by: Suraj Sudhir <suraj.sudhir@arm.com>
This is to facilitate scalar type conversion in the TorchToLinalg. As
part of adding the helper, this PR also:
- Updated `AtenAddTensorOp`, `AtenSubTensorOp` to use the helpers to
support more type variants.
- Added e2e type promotion testing.
- Added i32 memref return/arg type to support e2e testing.
The lowering of `aten.Int.Tensor` op has been added.
The changes has been made as a part of `convert-torch-to-linalg` pass.
Signed-off-by: Prashant Kumar <prashant@nod-labs.com>
- This commit adds lowering of `aten.View` to `linalg.TensorExpandShape`.
- This lowering will be successful only when one or more static
dimensions are expanded.
- It also fixes a typo in `ConvertAtenFlattenUsingIntsOp` conversion
pattern.
Signed-Off-by: Gaurav Shukla <gaurav@nod-labs.com>
The types have different levels of categories: where
complex > floating > integral > boolean (> means left hand
side has higher category).
The operands have different levels of priorities where:
dimensioned tensor > 0-dim tensor > scalar == wrapped 0-dim tensor.
This is represented by the `ResultTypeState.dimResult`,
`ResultTypeState.zeroResult` and `ResultTypeState..wrappedResult` in
the source code.
For operands of the same priorities, the result type should be the
highest categories with sufficient width to hold all operands.
By default, only the highest priority operands participate in the type
promotion logic. Lower priority operands participate if they are in
a higher category than any higher priority operands.
For example, <[],f32> (lower priority) and <[1], si64> tensor would
result in <[?],f32> tensor because floating > integeral. Another example
<[],f64> (lower priority) and <[1], f32> tensor would result in
<[?], f32> tensor because f32 and f64 are the same category.
The ScalarType enum definition, type promotion table, ResultTypeState
struct definition and some helpers are copied from
aten/src/ATen/native/TypeProperties.*
Other references:
- https://pytorch.org/docs/stable/tensor_attributes.html#type-promotion-doc
- https://github.com/pytorch/pytorch/issues/9515
Other minor changes:
1. Fix `visitExpandLikeOp` to consider cases where the given sizes list
size is larger than the input rank.
2. Add back the somehow deleted `torch.aten.softmax.int` tests in
decompose-complex-ops.mlir.
Part of #380
Also
- BoolType is not considered as Scalar
- e2e framework fixes for nan handling
- `tu.rand(..., low=, high=)` support
- delete unused variable (fix warning)
- Add IouOfModule from #380 to e2e test suite (this is a common
calculation in vision models)
Your branch is ahead of 'origin/main' by 1 commit.
Lowering of `aten.matmul` op is added from torch to linalg dialect.
The different cases correspond to
https://pytorch.org/docs/stable/generated/torch.matmul.html.
TODO: Broadcasting in case of batch-matmul is yet to be taken care of.
Signed-off-by: Prashant Kumar <prashant@nod-labs.com>
* Print more exception info on error during test execution
* Fix formatting
* Add aten::gelu lowering
Co-authored-by: Boian Petkantchin <boian@nod-labs.com>
Summary:
This commit fixes an off-by-one error in how negative dimensiosn were
being handled in the lowering of transpose. This commit also adds
tests to transpose and unsqueeze to test negative dimensions.
- Added a DecomposeComplexOps pass to decompose complex torchOps.
- Refactored `visitAtenArgmaxOp` and `visitAtenAnyDimOp` to
`visitReductionAlongDimIntOp`.
- Moved some helper functions into
torch-mlir/Dialect/Torch/Utils/Utils.h to be shared by multiple files.
- Added support for f64 tensor as argument and return types.
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
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.
Also contains the following changes:
- Remove derefineOp canonicalizer because it's not safe.
- Support for optional tensor and list tensors in reduceOpVariant. This
only works for some special detected and easy to handle cases. For list,
it covers the case list is got from a `ListConstruct`. For optional, it
covers the case optional is constructed from a `DerefineOp`.
- Remove the `inferReturnTypes` for `FromBuiltinTensorOp` because it's
not safe to deduce types from the input. For example, a built-in tensor
of i8 could be converted to si8 or ui8. It's better to let the user
specify the return type explicitly.
A few remain in examples/docs that will be naturally be updated in due
time.
This regresses the list support and the general direction of more widely
supported control flow, lists/dicts/globals that we were going for with
the TorchScript path. The idea is that we are deferring that work to
make torch-mlir a very clean standalone thing. We will reboot it,
probably using some of the tools of iree_pydm to make it simpler, and in
a more natural place (such as an iree-torch repo that depends on IREE and
torch-mlir to build a working PyTorch frontend solution for IREE -- it
was really weird that npcomp depended on IREE).
This moves the bulk of the Python code (including the Torch interop)
from `frontends/pytorch` into `torch-mlir/TorchPlugin`. This also
required reconciling a bunch of other Python-related stuff, like the
`torch` dialects.
As I did this, it was simpler to just remove all the old numpy/basicpy
stuff because we were going to delete it anyway and it was faster than
debugging an intermediate state that would only last O(days) anyway.
torch-mlir has two top-level python packages (built into the
`python_packages` directory):
- `torch_mlir_dialects`: `torch` dialect Python bindings (does not
depend on PyTorch). This also involves building the aggregate CAPI for
`torch-mlir`.
- `torch_mlir`: bindings to the part of the code that links against
PyTorch (or C++ code that transitively does).
Additionally, there remain two more Python packages in npcomp (but
outside `torch-mlir`):
- `npcomp_torch`: Contains the e2e test framework and testing configs
that plug into RefBackend and IREE.
- `npcomp_core`: Contains the low-level interfaces to RefBackend and
IREE that `npcomp_torch` uses, along with its own
`MLIR_PYTHON_PACKAGE_PREFIX=npcomp.` aggregation of the core MLIR
python bindings. (all other functionality has been stripped out)
After all the basicpy/numpy deletions, the `npcomp` C++ code is now very
tiny. It basically just contains RefBackend and the `TorchConversion`
dialect/passes (e.g. `TorchToLinalg.cpp`).
Correspondingly, there are now 4 main testing targets paralleling the
Python layering (which is reflective of the deeper underlying dependency
structure)
- `check-torch-mlir`: checks the `torch-mlir` pure MLIR C++ code.
- `check-torch-mlir-plugin`: checks the code in `TorchPlugin` (e.g.
TorchScript import)
- `check-frontends-pytorch`: Checks the little code we have in
`frontends/pytorch` -- mainly things related to the e2e framework
itself.
- `check-npcomp`: Checks the pure MLIR C++ code inside npcomp.
There is a target `check-npcomp-all` that runs all of them.
The `torch-mlir/build_standalone.sh` script does a standalone build of
`torch-mlir`.
The e2e tests (`tools/torchscript_e2e_test.sh`) are working too.
The update_torch_ods script now lives in
`torch-mlir/build_tools/update_torch_ods.sh` and expects a standalone
build.
This change also required a fix upstream related to cross-shlib Python
dependencies, so we also update llvm-project to
8dca953dd39c0cd8c80decbeb38753f58a4de580 to get
https://reviews.llvm.org/D109776 (no other fixes were needed for the
integrate, thankfully).
This completes most of the large source code changes. Next will be
bringing the CI/packaging/examples back to life.
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.
We were not filling the `outs` with the neutral element of the
reduction, which resulted in reading uninitialized values (we were
getting lucky that sometimes the uninitialized buffers were all zero's).
Also,
- Slight tweak to error messages in the e2e framework.
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.
- torch.aten.flatten.using_ints to linalg lowering
- torch.aten.max_pool2d to linalg lowering
- Support torch.aten.conv2d for more flexible dilation and strides values
These were legacy concepts that are now superceded by direct Torch to
linalg-on-tensors lowering. These were based on some very early thinking
related to the layering of frontends vs codegen, which is now obsolete
because:
- We expected a lot more centralization at the frontend (TCF) level. It
turns out that frontend needs really vary a lot, and there is no grand
unifying TCF dialect plausible. The additional layer isn't worth it.
- Linalg-on-tensors obsoletes the primary need for TCP. There are still
a few things not representable with linalg-on-tensors, but the support
is growing and the whole "not included in linalg-on-tensors" direction
needs to be rethought. Our TCP dialect didn't cover any of the
actually important things in this space (such as sort, FFT, top-k,
etc.).
See historical [slides](https://drive.google.com/file/d/1iljcpTQ5NPaMfGpoPDFml1XkYxjK_6A4/view) / [recording](https://drive.google.com/file/d/1jSPa8TwPKUt0WuLquGc8OgSUVYJHMvWZ/view)
for more details on the origin story here.
Their presence was confusing users too
[bug](https://github.com/llvm/mlir-npcomp/issues/248).
Also,
- Trim down npcomp-run-mlir testing. It was testing TCF to TCP
lowering for the most part. The essential stuff is retained and
rephrased with linalg-on-tensors. (we should probably rename it
"refback-run" or something, as it is just a way to invoke RefBackend)
- test/Python/Backend/RefJIT/simple_invoke_numpy.py is XFAIL'ed. Our
"anti-framework" direction seems to be the likely future path.
* Added additional *ToLLVM conversion patterns (they were disaggregated from standard).
* Misc renames.
* Spelling change on ConvNCHW op, and it now expects strides and dilations attributes.