This PR adds support to `fx_importer.py` for handling custom ops that
return an array of tensors. As long as the length of the array is
consistent across runs (determined statically), then this patch will
work. This does not require that the number of tensors returned is
determined by the op's definition.
CC @sjain-stanford
This commit adds the support for new data types: uint4, and int4 and
uint8 tensor protos. Also, it moves some tests from failing to crashing.
Fixes https://github.com/llvm/torch-mlir/issues/3507
Signed-Off By: Vivek Khandelwal <vivekkhandelwal1424@gmail.com>
Resolves#3384.
Many ONNX operators are defined by functions and therefore could be
expanded into simpler ONNX operations during importing, avoiding the
need for tools downstream to support these operators directly.
This commit adds this capability to onnx_importer.py. When importing a
node, the schema for the node's operator is retrieved. If the schema
provides a function for the operator, a specialized version for the
node's types and attributes will be created and imported as an MLIR
function with private visibility. An MLIR function call will then be
emitted, instead of a normal operator node. Caching is used to avoid
generating redundant functions within the same module.
In order to avoid a disruptive change to the importer output for a
large number of operators that already have TorchOnnxToTorch support,
an allowlist strategy is used by default. With this commit, only one
operator is allowlisted for expansion, MeanVarianceNormalization.
However, many other operators can be correctly expanded by the current
code, so hopefully the allowlist can be gradually extended. It is
possible to disable the allowlist in the configuration, in which case
all functions are expanded (useful for testing).
Tools downstream of the importer may now need to do inlining when
consuming the output of the importer, e.g.:
cat imported.mlir | torch-mlir-opt --inline --convert-onnx-to-torch
Explanations for subtle code changes:
- Looking up the correct schema and function for an operator requires
knowing the opset version. NodeImporter retrieves this from the
opset imports on the ModelProto retained by the GraphInfo. Previously,
the model_proto field on GraphInfo was None when importing a subgraph
in import_regions, but this conflicts with the new need for opset
version info. Since the apparent purpose of setting it to None was to
control how GraphInfo generates its input map, a new flag is added to
GraphInfo (is_subgraph) to control this behavior, so that the actual
ModelProto can now be provided without breaking this. This also turned
out to be useful for getting the Config via ModelInfo via GraphInfo.
- Some operators' functions are context-dependent, which means the
function definition depends on the types of the inputs. Therefore node
importing now needs to look up the types of a node's inputs, not just
its outputs as was the case previously. Consequently the operand to
find_type_proto_for_name() may now be a graph input or initializer in
some cases, so it has to be updated.
Adds the following arguments:
- "--clear-domain": enabling this flag (default False) will delete the
domain attribute from each node in the onnx model before importing.
Shape inference does not seem to work for onnx ops in custom domains. In
the rare case when these ops have a corresponding counterpart in base
onnx, enabling this flag might allow shape inference to work properly.
- "--opset-version": allows setting the opset version manually. This
will cause the importer to attempt to update the opset_version of the
onnx model before importing. Newer opset versions sometimes have more
robust shape inference patterns.
Tests the basic constructs of registering a custom op and its abstract
implementations (with FakeTensors) in python, going through TorchDynamo
export, followed by importing the shape expressions in the Torch
dialect.
Also fixes the importer were previously the symbolic bind op insertion
was not gated in one place.
Resolving `bool` literals can result in a type change to uint8. This
needs to be converted back to the expected type before returning to the
wrapped `torch` operators.
* Enables assume_strict_symbolic_shapes on fx_importer imported
programs, indicating strict shape semantics.
* Reworks the view->reshape lowering to take advantage of strict mode
and do one of:
* Collapse to 0D
* Flatten/Unflatten when there is an inferred dim.
* Fallback to tensor.reshape
* Splits some test cases up and adds an attribute to control the old
pattern (so new corners can be tested in strict mode in isolation).
* Dynamic inferred mode needs upstream work to generalize expand_shape
(so that case is suppressed here).
* Deletes the assert from the existing tensor.reshape lowering if strict
shape mode is enabled (since the condition it is dynamically asserting
cannot happen).
This is probably a decent PR for learning about blocks and regions.
If you're here to learn about that, consider also looking at
lib/Conversion/TorchToSCF/TorchToSCF.cpp
While this doesn't include an e2e test, it is tested downstream in
https://github.com/nod-ai/SHARK-TestSuite/blob/main/e2eshark/onnx/operators/If/model.py
---------
Co-authored-by: Xida Ren <xida.ren.dev@gmail.com>
This is a large change because prior to this point, Python files in the
project were not consistently formatted. This reformats them all with
black defaults.
Based on experience with prior projects, if you have a dev/long-term
branch with Python patches, you can minimize merge conflicts prior to
rebasing to include this commit by running `black` on your modified
Python files, squashing, and then rebasing/merging.
In the prior state when I supported mutation of user inputs by treating
them as mutable-tensor SSA values, I had left the case of buffer
mutation only vaguely implemented until a concrete use emerged.
This patch reworks this buffer mutation support by assuming that buffers
must be resolved via the hooks symbolically and treated with load/store
semantics. This is implied in the structure since we have no SSA value
that represents a buffer and we already assume that reading parameters
happens via such a mechanism.
* Also adds the basic scaffolding for handling more of these, which will
be needed for cond, while, etc.
* Refactors some of the support in the generic OpOverload emitter so it
can be shared with these other special forms.
This has been on my list for a while, but it just so happens that as
part of upgrading to PyTorch 2.3 and a pure upstream flow in Turbine, we
were using a feature that required integration with auto_functionalized.
This is perhaps the "weirdest" of the higher-order ops and a poor place
to start, but needs must. We have testing for this in Turbine.
Full support in Turbine has an entire custom ops facility. I've reduced
this down to a unit test in torch-mlir.
At some point, this op became kwarg-only instead of arg/kwarg.
Discovered when upgrading to PyTorch 2.3.
Also adds a test as this was untested in-tree (was caught out of tree).
Finish supporting importing the vast majority of `onnx` operations. This
includes:
- region support
- region value inherentance
- `torch.string` support
- `torch.list` support
- `torch.optional` support
Also note that we are in the process of proposing SparseTensorMetadata
to PyTorch FX graph export (see
https://github.com/pytorch/pytorch/pull/117907). This will hopefully
eventually replace the current data structures in torch-mlir.
There is no reason to treat `ConstantOfShape` as a specialized import
any as there exists a onnx-to-torch equivalent. Dropping the import
coding and adding support for resource conversion substantially
increases test coverage for dynamically shaped tests.
As of https://github.com/pytorch/pytorch/pull/118969, `ExportedProgram`
has the long awaited fixes to correctly categorize various things
relating to parameters, buffers, mutated inputs and constants.
With this additional modeling, we are finally able to implement
(safely/soundly) the mutable semantics that were attempted on the
TorchScript path. The difference is that on that path, we had to
conservatively treat everything as mutable and run some dodgy heuristics
(which have been the cause of many bugs relating to
"MaximizeValueSemantics") to try to get back to an immutable state.
The new model supports mutability at the graph edges, allowing both user
inputs and buffers to be mutated (there is some more support than that,
but that is all I fully tracked through to implementation).
Therefore, when we receive programs like this, we now can selectively
enable mutation at the edges. This happens to be the mutability model
that IREE supports, which I expect to be a primary beneficiary. However,
there is nothing stopping anyone else from handling the `!torch.tensor`
types and the existing copy/overwrite ops that will be selectively
added.
Since this relies on API changes that will not release until 2.3, I'm
being a bit cautious about not refactoring existing facilities.
We can route the torch tests via `onnx` using the `torch.onnx.export`
tooling. We can then reimport, lower to torch, and compile to linalg to
validate the onnx path is working correctly.
The current implementation exposes some failures in the `onnx` path so
we cannot enable the onnx test suite yet due to segmentation faults.
This commit adds decomposition support into the core aten operators
before importing the module from torch.
Also, this commit deals with the lifted tensor constants in
torch.export.export(). We don't want to add unnecessary placeholder
nodes in the graph (extra args in the block module), and should treat
them like the constants that they are. The unnecessary clone is also
removed for max efficiency.
The investigation is largely recorded in
https://github.com/llvm/torch-mlir/pull/2881, but this change allows us
to capture non-persistent buffers that were lifted as tensor constants
(after https://github.com/pytorch/pytorch/pull/118969 landed in upstream
PyTorch), and propagate them to `Torch` dialect as "frozen"
`torch.vtensor.literal`. I believe this patch should work with both
nightly and stable PyTorch, but will let CI confirm the same. Thanks
@stellaraccident for the valuable pointers and guidance.
---------
Co-authored-by: Vivek Khandelwal <vivekkhandelwal1424@gmail.com>