Commit Graph

5 Commits (6dabf185f5c819fddcfa167c82833e83fa9b90a1)

Author SHA1 Message Date
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 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 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 9ba77c6e13 Add InlineGlobalSlots pass.
This inlines global slots if possible. This allows them to participate
in folding, canonicalization, shape inference, etc.

Example use cases:
- inlining weights and biases that are readonly during inference
- inlining the "training" bool to allow stuff to fold away

For training use cases (especially internal training loop), we will need
something smarter to get good performance. That would look like an "SSA
formation" which promotes the global slots to tensors in the program,
flushing them back to the slots at the minimal number of necessary
places. We might want to let backends do that transformation though.
This also interacts with shape inference (type bounds on the slots to
even lower them to backends in the first place).
2021-04-27 12:18:54 -07:00