Commit Graph

88 Commits (79ae0afc2fc1a7b3bc25060de45f4de53444247b)

Author SHA1 Message Date
Sean Silva a25163fbfa Remove old RefBackend
It is superceded by the new one.
2021-09-22 15:33:28 -07:00
Sean Silva 6d8e7f1bb1 Implement Python relayout from #311
Fixes https://github.com/llvm/mlir-npcomp/issues/311

The key change is that TorchPlugin is folded into
`torch_mlir.dialects.torch.importer.jit_ir` (it imports the PyTorch
JIT's IR, so that's a good, scoped name for it).
The CMake option `-DTORCH_MLIR_ENABLE_JIT_IR_IMPORTER=OFF` disables it,
which allows building without a PyTorch native dependency.
2021-09-21 09:29:40 -07:00
Sean Silva 68fefe7e1f Remove NPCOMP_ENABLE_IREE CMake flag.
Our new dependency management solution relies:
- on the C++ side with the public iree-dialects project, which we
  include and are using as representative of some missing upstream
  ops (so we treat them "as if" they were upstream, with the hope of
  upstreaming them after some codevelopment has happened)
- on the Python side, with simple PYTHONPATH manipulation or installed
  Python packages. No CMake stuff required.
2021-09-17 09:27:49 -07:00
Sean Silva 0eb767ea45 Remove frontends/pytorch directory.
It just contained the e2e testing framework. We now fold it into the
main project to reduce complexity.

- `frontends/pytorch/python/` -> `python/torch_support`
- `frontends/pytorch/e2e_testing -> e2e_testing`
- `frontends/pytorch/examples -> examples`
- `frontends/pytorch/test` -> `python/test`
- `torch_mlir_torchscript` python module -> `npcomp_torchscript`
- `torch_mlir_torchscript_e2e_test_configs` python module ->
  `npcomp_torchscript_e2e_test_configs`

This also changes the license of a handful of files from the
"pytorch-style" license to the regular LLVM/npcomp license. The only
people who committed to those files were myself and Yi.
2021-09-17 09:27:49 -07:00
Sean Silva b6be96d722 [torch-mlir earthmoving (2/N)] Python code movement.
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.
2021-09-15 13:40:30 -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
M4tr1xt4ng 78fd07da5f Deal with CMP0116 2021-08-12 09:40:55 -07:00
Stella Laurenzo 2dbab50444
Rework the python build to a static assembly of MLIR+NPCOMP (#251)
* Adapt to python build system updates.

* Bump llvm to 310c9496d80961188e8d8f8ad306cdf44bd7541f (includes python build updates)
* Adds refback C-API.
* Re-layers all python builds.
* Rework CI.
2021-07-27 16:10:10 -07:00
mikeurbach 0f6a65a1c5
Enable building using LLVM_EXTERNAL_PROJECTS. (#152)
This allows building NPCOMP as an external project of LLVM, similar to
how CIRCT can be built: https://github.com/llvm/circt/pull/227.

The CMake options to use this build style look like this:

```
  -DLLVM_EXTERNAL_PROJECTS=npcomp \
  -DLLVM_EXTERNAL_NPCOMP_SOURCE_DIR=/path/to/mlir-npcomp \
```
2021-01-26 11:43:43 -07:00
Stella Laurenzo f6d7ee06ef Make torch_mlir compatible with binary PyTorch installations.
* This has been anticipated for a long time in that it is quite hard to keep C++ binary compatibility across a system landscape as diverse as PyTorch, LLVM, and this project. This is why we based the PyTorch extension on the MLIR and NPCOMP C APIs only: that is the only sane linkage story for the entire matrix.
* Removes the few LLVM'isms in torch_mlir that had snuck in, using either STL or PyTorch support utilities. The new rule here is that LLVM C++ includes are forbidden at this level and (as stated in the design), torch_mlir should use the PyTorch runtime and support libraries (not introduce an incidental C++ dependency on LLVM).
* Also deletes mnist-playground as it was proving impossible to keep the grid of PyTorch vs system ABI divisions functioning. I am open to a less drastic course here (optional/disabled by default?)
* This gets us pretty close to just using PyTorch's extension builder API, which will be nice for distribution (i.e. it integrates well with the PyTorch ecosystem for deployment). I ended up just simplifying the in-tree CMake support for now.
* Fixes #138
2020-12-14 09:51:00 -08:00
Stella Laurenzo f03225b1f1 Bump llvm-project to f4f8a67aaf13bc66a2b7d55561b14a3724a5e0de.
* Incorporates source fixes.
* Uses upstream pybind11 detection logic.
* Patches CI.
* This may break the CI, which will need to be fixed manually in a followup.
2020-11-22 13:14:44 -08:00
Stella Laurenzo 4f9c9ecda0 Fix optional Torch package lookup.
* Days since CMake-is-not-a-language failure: 0
2020-11-16 21:41:59 -08:00
Stella Laurenzo a7ff87a922 Sever C++ level depend on IREE and rebase on exe and python interface.
* IREE doesn't have proper install support, so there is some temporary hoaky hacking in our CMakeLists.txt to shuttle some symlinks around.
* Reworked the original numpy e2e with IREE test to pipe through iree-translate.
* Removed all of the C++-level dependencies.
* Will generalize and apply to the PyTorch backend in a followup.
2020-11-16 21:32:56 -08:00
Stella Laurenzo 6850295ec5 Teach cmake how to find the installed PyTorch.
* In most situations, this eliminates the need to explicitly set a path to the Torch cmake files.
* Also upgrades to new Python3 find package. (should eliminate 2.x mismatches)
* Since PyTorch is located by asking Python where it is, this eliminates a lot of causes of mismatch. (one source of truth)
2020-11-13 17:19:25 -08:00
Stella Laurenzo 59b7c559f4 Tweak build flags for efficiency and document building without a container.
* Enables -gsplit-dwarf for both LLVM and NPCOMP, reducing the occurrence of the ~GB scale binaries.
* CMake shared linking seems incompatible with this, so shared objects are still "too big" but there are few of them.
* Reduces disk thrash on clean/install of everything.
2020-11-03 13:46:46 -08:00
Stella Laurenzo af4edb63ae Start reworking towards a shared library build.
* Need to have a dag of shared library deps in order to interop across python extensions (as presented in ODM).
* Introduced add_npcomp_library and friends to mirror the MLIR setup.
* Adds a libNPCOMP.so shared library.
* Redirects tools and extensions to link against libNPCOMP.so (instead of static libs).
* Moves all libraries to lib/, all binaries to bin/ and all python extensions to python/. The invariant is that the rpaths are setup to have a one level directory structure.
* Reworks the _torch_mlir extension to build like the others (still need to come up with a consolidated rule to do this instead of open coded).
* Includes an upstream version bump to pick up needed changes.

Sizes with dynamic linking (stripped, release, asserts enabled):
  libNPCOMP.so: 43M (includes much of the underlying LLVM codegen deps)
  libMLIR.so: 31M
  _npcomp.so: 1.6M (python extension)
  _torch_mlir.so: 670K (python extension)
  npcomp-capi-ir-test: 6.3K
  npcomp-opt: 351K
  npcomp-run-mlir: 461K
  mnist-playground: 530K

Still more can be done to normalize and optimize but this gets us structurally to the starting point.
2020-10-09 16:02:58 -07:00
stephenneuendorffer 31b3041e88
Add pytorch interface to ATen Dialect (#30)
This patch adds a pytorch interface to npcomp.  This interface is modeled
after pytorch_xla and exposes the MLIR-based flow as a virtual device (similar
to a gpu device or the xla backend).  Usage is intended to be something like:

  dev = torch_mlir.mlir_device()
  t0 = torch.randn((4,4), device=dev)
  t1 = torch.randn((4,4), device=dev)
  t2 = t0 + t1
  t2_mlir = torch_mlir.get_mlir( t2 )
  t2_cpu = t2.to('cpu')

In this case t2_cpu would contain the result of the computation, and t2_mlir
contains the mlir description of the computation.  Note that this also
properly returns backward paths synthesized by pytorch.  There are several
parts of this:

1) A tensor type (implemented by tensor.* and tensor_impl.*)
2) The device modeling (aten_mlir_bridge.*, aten_mlir_device.*, aten_mlir_type*)
3) a temporary IR (implemented by ir.cpp)

There is also a reference lowering directly from the ATen dialect to C
function calls consisting of two parts:

1) The driver that uses the IR to generate MLIR, run Passes and compile the
result using mlir::ExecutionEngine (implemented by jit.cpp and
mlir_gen.cpp)
2) A runtime library implemented by lib/aten_ops.cpp.  Most of the operations
are implemented by callbacks into the torch C++ libraries.

Some aspects of this are known to be less than optimal, in particular:
1) There's some function definitions that don't live in the file corresponding
to their declaration.
2) More aspects of this (e.g. the IR) seem like they should be automatically
generated.
3) It's unclear to me how much of the 'IR' is actually necessary, or whether
MLIR could be created on the fly.

Note that this code is licensed in a way similar to pytorch, with the
intention that eventually (when npcomp reaches some maturity) it should be
pushed there.  (see frontends/pytorch/LICENSE)  The code is also structured
much closer to the pytorch coding style than the LLVM coding style.
2020-08-21 11:22:47 -07:00
stephenneuendorffer 44af7a6d30
[cmake] Updates for basic shared library support (#7)
Mostly this is CMake cleanup.  Several library dependencies are missing, which
is often revealed with shared library builds.  Also, it's generally bad to
link directly against LLVM libraries because it fails when using
LLVM_LINK_LLVM_DYLIB.  MLIR will pull in libLLVM.so, and there will be
duplicate linkage with the the explicit libraries.  There may need to be more
refactoring here.
2020-08-05 14:49:18 -07:00
Stella Laurenzo 3efbbe8735 Misc fixes to enable building/testing on manylinux2014 images.
* Since the manylinux images do not hard-link against python libs (resolving them at runtime), the module must be built without resolving undefined references.
* For some reason, builds on this platform are stricter, exposing dependency ordering issues.
* The CMake bits to build the extension are still somewhat of a mess. I have better versions both upstream and in IREE and will be reconciling. For now, don't look too closely.
2020-08-04 17:26:15 -07:00
Stella Laurenzo 38abe99805 Collapse python_native/ into python/.
* These were separated originally for layering reasons that no longer apply.
* Most of the python extension code is under lib/ with just the module setup in python/.
2020-08-03 17:46:34 -07:00
Stella Laurenzo 571c8b448a Collapse different top level test directories into test/.
* Uses local configs and unsupported annotation to disable optional tests.
* This separation was just an artifact of having initial trouble getting lit setup.
2020-08-03 17:41:16 -07:00
Stella Laurenzo aea05d68d7 Initial python plumbing to interface with the refjit backend. 2020-07-10 22:57:26 -07:00
Sean Silva b4f0cea8fa Rework e2e flow to use new "npcomprt"
This ~totally reworks the existing "runtime" stuff to be more
principled and usable, such as from Python. It's still not fully
production-quality, mainly in the department of memory management (e.g.
it currently leaks memory; we need to figure out "who frees memrefs" +
the analysis and transformation needed to do that (maybe use upstream
buffer allocation pass?)).

The user API is in include/npcomp/runtime/UserAPI.h, though
include/npcomp/JITRuntime/JITModule.h is a friendlier wrapper.

The stuff under {include,lib}/runtime is totally firewalled from the
compiler and tiny (<6kB, though no attention has gone into optimizing
that size). For example, we don't link in libSupport into the runtime,
instead having our own bare bones replacements for basics like ArrayRef
(the JITRuntime helps with bridging that gap, since it *can* depend on
all common LLVM utilities).

The overall features of npcomprt is that it exposes a module that
with multiple function entry points. Each function has arguments and
results that are tensor-valued, and npcomprt::Tensor is the runtime type
that is used to interact with that (and a npcomprt::Ref<T>
reference-counting wrapper is provided to wrap npcomprt::Tensor in the
common case).

From an implementation perspective, an npcomprt module at the
LLVM/object/binary level exposes a single module descriptor struct that
has pointers to other metadata (currently just a list of function
metadata descriptors). All interactions with the npcomp runtime are
keyed off of that module descriptor, including function lookups and
dispatching. This is done to dodge platform ABI issues and also allow
enough reflection to e.g. verify provided arguments.

Most of the compiler-side work here was in LowerToNpcomprtABI and
LowerToLLVM.

Also,
- Rename npcomp_rt/NpcompRt to npcomprt/Npcomprt; it was getting
annoying to type the underscores/caps.
- misc improvements to bash_helpers.sh
2020-07-08 19:36:19 -07:00
Stella Laurenzo adb8094108 Fix some compiler option and warning levels. 2020-07-04 17:38:01 -07:00
Stella Laurenzo aeb422b030 Some fixes to get npcomp building and passing on windows.
There is more that can be done here, but this gets it minimally working.
2020-07-01 21:28:04 -07:00
Stella Laurenzo 529873d13c Wire up IREE compilation and runtime in a new backend test.
* Adds python bindings for invoking flow, HAL, and VM lowering pipelines.
* Adds pythong bindings for translating to VM module flatbuffer.
* Adds a new backend_test/iree directory and configure lit to find the IREE python rt bindings.
* Open code a simple_invoke.py that exercises the whole pipeline (need real APIs for a lot of this).
* Fails when invoking the function because I never implemented argument marshaling for scalars :(
* Plenty of stuff to do tomorrow.
2020-06-19 00:30:34 -07:00
Stella Laurenzo b21b5322f6 Basicpy conversion to IREE+std skeleton and first conversions.
* Conversions to std for numeric binary expressions, numeric to_boolean, and numeric comparisons.
* Added folders to constant ops to comply with requirements of the pass system.
* Extended the frontend with parameter/result annotation processing for primitives (can specify types for function arguments).
* Added (empty) directory/sources for IREEVM conversions. These are only enabled if IREE is enabled.
2020-06-13 23:45:43 -07:00
Stella Laurenzo 19196f23e1 Make a real library for InitAll and extend it to conditionally initialize dependencies.
* Conditioned on the top level CMake option to enable IREE.
* There is still some warning flags and such that need triage, but it does build/work.
2020-06-11 17:47:14 -07:00
Stella Laurenzo a29ef9adc8 Add initial support for taking a dep on IREE.
* This won't work for most people until some upstream changes percolate.
* Sequestered it behind a flag and a special configure script (cmake_configure_iree.sh) for now.
2020-06-11 16:40:31 -07:00
Stella Laurenzo 8280b86c05 Aggregate all lit test targets under check-npcomp. 2020-06-07 14:35:58 -07:00
Stella Laurenzo af4466197e Add lit test suite for python compiler.
* Adds a test for simple constants and fixes issues.
2020-06-07 14:29:39 -07:00
Sean Silva ea822968fa Add bare-bones npcomp-run-mlir.
The code isn't super clean, but is a useful incremental step
establishing most of the boilerplate for future enhancements.
We can't print or return tensors yet so correctness TBD, but I've
stepped into the running code in the debugger so I know it definitely is
running.

This is the first step to building out an npcomp mini-runtime. The
mini-runtime doesn't have to be fancy or complex, but it should at least
be layered nicely (which this code and the current compiler interaction
with the "runtime" code is not). Now that we have boilerplate for e2e
execution in some form, we can build that out.
2020-05-28 18:37:11 -07:00
Stella Laurenzo 3611958b11 Move python native library to python_native/_npcomp...so.
This allows binary and source packages to exist at different physical paths.
2020-05-06 22:44:12 -07:00
Stella Laurenzo 953ef89a30 Add npcomp-opt and lit runner. 2020-04-26 17:55:15 -07:00
Stella Laurenzo d3b6e1767a Add stub numpy dialect. 2020-04-26 17:20:58 -07:00
Stella Laurenzo 36717e97e1 Adapt to use installed MLIR 2020-04-26 16:26:45 -07:00
Stella Laurenzo 9ee2f6ff7f Initial commit of python boiler-plate. 2020-04-26 15:50:23 -07:00