Add verify() method to check if tensors are of
integer type. Also check if tensors are of same shape,
or if the second tensor is a single element tensor.
Add e2e tests. Put them into onnx and stablehlo
xfailed sets.
Fixes https://github.com/iree-org/iree/issues/18562.
During canonicalization pass on `AtenUnflattenIntOp`, if the second dim
was statically equal to one, we would create an `AtenAddIntOp` to add
one to the dimension obtained from `op.getDim()`. This, when passed into
`Torch::unsqueezeTensor()`, would make it get interpreted as
non-constant, which would lead to MLIR failing an assertion when
`UnsqueezeOp` would later get lowered into `ExpandShapeOp`, as the
output of the `UnsqueezeOp` would consist of only dynamic dims.
This patch fixes this behavior, by extracting the integer value from the
dim if it was constant, and then emitting a `ConstantIntOp` from
(dim+1). This creates an output with static shape.
This documents which CMake options must be set to be able to use
`torch_mlir_e2e_test`, required e.g. for
`projects/pt1/tools/e2e_test.sh`.
Makes progress on #3696.
Closes#3719.
- When the signal tensor is real, onnx allows its shape to be
`[batch][length]` as well as `[batch][length][1]`.
- Onnx also allows to specify `frame_length` together with `window` (not
empty), given that it matches the window size.
- Adding checks on signal and result shapes.
Current version does not work for a mixture of dynamic and static shaped
batch dimensions. Rework to grab the correct dynamic shapes.
---------
Co-authored-by: dan <danimal197@gmail.com>
Previously, if the value was absent, this conversion was creating a
dense resource of value 0 with shape equal to the result shape, then
later re-extracting a splat value. This only works if the shape is
statically known, and even when the shape is known, this is completely
unnecessary since the value's shape should be `[1]` and not the result
shape.
This patch simply sets the `splatvalue` to a `torch.constant.float 0.0`
when the onnx op's `value` attr is absent, and adds `nullptr` checks to
the subsequent conditionals to avoid them in the case where an `attr` is
not given.
Addresses <https://github.com/nod-ai/SHARK-Turbine/issues/831>.
- Add Torch to TOSA legalization for the following reduction ops:
+ aten.min.dim
+ aten.min
+ aten.max
+ aten.prod
+ aten.prod.dim_int
+ aten.all.dim
- Add dtype casting support for reduce sum and prod ops
- Extend aten.max.dim legalization to a template to support aten.min.dim
legalization
- Update end-to-end tests sets in xfail_sets.py
Signed-off-by: Justin Ngo <justin.ngo@arm.com>
Change-Id: I854dd6c0c55e570c1fb7242f20c85cf64d6e7fe0
Signed-off-by: Justin Ngo <justin.ngo@arm.com>
Follow up cleanup for [this
PR](https://github.com/llvm/torch-mlir/pull/3689), which introduced a
decomposition for `aten.fmod.Tensor`. This means that the lowering for
this operator in linalg is no longer needed.
Thanks to @vivekkhandelwal1 for pointing this out.
---------
Co-authored-by: Srinath Avadhanula <srinath.avadhanula@getcruise.com>
Bump forward and refactor inline global slots to no longer track via
symlinks. This appears to make the tests past until we manage to remove
torchscript work.
Enabled mask and is_causal parameters for torch.aten.scaled_dot_product
attention + relevant comments + tests.
The tests added highlight the new capabilities introduced in this PR,
including:
Attention with F16 mask
Attention with Boolean mask
Causal attention with same Q K V shapes
Causal attention without Q K V shapes
Made sure that one cannot input both mask and is_causal.
As titled, create a new decomposition for `aten.fmod.Tensor` to
`aten.div`, `aten.trunc`, `aten.mul` and `aten.sub`. Note that we only
use `aten.trunc` for floating point operations. This further gets
decomposed to `aten.where` etc. by other existing decompositions.
This decomposition now makes TOSA pass for a simple model with
`aten.fmod` while it makes `stablehlo` fail. For now, we disallow this
decomposition for `stablehlo`
---------
Co-authored-by: Srinath Avadhanula <srinath.avadhanula@getcruise.com>
The lowering pattern for `aten.T` uses transposition implemented via
`linalg.generic`. For downstream passes it is advantageous to use named
ops wherever possible, so this patch changes the lowering to use
`linalg.transpose` instead.
Addresses an issue in <https://github.com/llvm/torch-mlir/issues/3651>
where some unflatten ops generated from onnx models weren't propagating
static shape information. It may be necessary to add further
optimizations for the more general case when some static information is
present in the unflatten (or possibly reshape/view) op's `sizes` list,
but not reflected in the output shape. These ops will only successfully
infer shapes if the `sizes` list is gotten from a list of constant ints
(with possibly one -1). A common example where this fails is when some
of the `sizes` are determined from `aten.size.int` ops on dynamic
tensors, and other `sizes` are known statically.
This PR includes:
- a canonicalizer for `aten.unflatten.int` which converts to
`aten.unsqueeze` when it is expanding one dim to two, and one of the new
dims is statically 1.
- an improvement to the folder for `aten.__or__.bool` which does not
rely on *both* operands being static.
Downstream projects don't necessarily register this C++ module. This
package removes the dependency and uses `torch.iinfo` to access the max
and min values instead.
This PR add `floordiv` to the `PY_BUILTIN_TO_TORCH_OP`. For
`aten.mul.int` and `aten.floordiv.int` ops, we add new Canonicalization
Patterns as follow:
```
%1 = torch.aten.mul.int %input, %const-5
%2 = torch.aten.mul.int %1, %const-6
```
Will be replaced by
`torch.aten.mul.int %input, %const-30`
And
```
%1 = torch.aten.mul.int %input, %const-5
%2 = torch.aten.floordiv.int %1, %const-5
```
Will directly return `%input`
This PR also relaxes the `float` type constraint in TorchToTosa for the
`AtenRsubScalarOp` conversion.
To test:
`cmake --build build --target check-torch-mlir-all`
This patch add a test for 638ef14, which use `linalg.broadcast` instead
of `generic` for convolution bias.
Co-authored-by: Rongsheng Gao <gaorongsheng@huawei.com>
Supports the result with dynamic shape and scalar indices like
```
func.func @test_gather_scalar(%arg0: !torch.vtensor<[3,4,5],f32>, %arg1: !torch.vtensor<[], si64>) -> !torch.vtensor<[?,?],f32> attributes {torch.onnx_meta.opset_version = 13 : si64} {
%0 = torch.operator "onnx.Gather"(%arg0, %arg1) {torch.onnx.axis = 0 : si64} : (!torch.vtensor<[3,4,5],f32>, !torch.vtensor<[], si64>) -> !torch.vtensor<[?,?],f32>
return %0 : !torch.vtensor<[?,?],f32>
}
```
`Torch::AtenSqueezeOp` is referring to the result shape, so it will
failed on lowering if the result shape is dynamic.
The current implementation uses a `linalg.generic` to broadcast the bias
tensor for the lowering of convolutions. This is suboptimal for later
pattern matching. This patch changes it to use the respective named op,
`linalg.broadcast`, instead.
New sympy type is introduced to represent integer infinity in upstream
PyTorch repo. Subsequently, sympy.oo is no longer used to represent
infinity upper bound for dynamic dimensions where the upper bound is
unknown. Instead `int_oo` is used to represent integer infinity. This
commit updates the `_sympy_int_to_int` utility in light of this change.
The `axis` attribute is optionally available. Added support by computing
the pad based on the axis values.
---------
Signed-off-by: Rob Suderman <rob.suderman@gmail.com>
- This PR adds new (and equivalent) more tensorized impl of
MelWeightMatrix which lowers all the way to linalg.
- [Ref Pytorch
Impl](https://gist.github.com/PhaneeshB/4e6dfcded3007b1b686fbe28f07a67cd)
- Thanks to @rsuderman for pointing out the difficulties [earlier
impl](#3503) posed during lowering to linalg and also for providing a
better numpy impl 🙏
This commit adds the shape info for the tensors created during the
decomposition of GroupNorm op.
Signed-Off By: Vivek Khandelwal <vivekkhandelwal1424@gmail.com>
Without `--no-build-isolation` pip invokes `setup.py` in fresh
environment, which doesn't have `torch` installed. But `setup.py` does
`import torch` to check PyTorch version, so the build crashes. At the
same time the script creates a disposable virtual environment with all
required dependencies specifically to run wheel build. Note that Linux
package build also runs with this option.
15cf7106c4/setup.py (L230)
This was introduced by this commit:
74f7a0c9d6
And looks like macOS builds were not running in CI ever since.
I also updated Python versions in `install_macos_deps.sh`.