Decomposition RepeatInterleaveSelfInt with following ops:
```python
def my_repeat_interleave(input, repeats, dim=None):
if dim is None:
# Flatten the input and then repeat
return input.flatten().unsqueeze(-1).tile((1, repeats)).flatten()
else:
# Calculate the shape after repeat
expanded_shape = list(input.shape)
expanded_shape[dim] *= repeats
# Repeat the tensor along the specified dimension
repeat_shape = [1] * (input.dim() + 1)
repeat_shape[dim + 1] = repeats
input = input.unsqueeze(-1)
# Tile and then reshape
tiled = torch.tile(input, repeat_shape)
# Rearrange and reshape
repeated = tiled.reshape(*expanded_shape)
return repeated
```
I passed the tests of stablehlo and linalg. When testing onnx, strange
things happened.
In torch-mlir's CI **torch_nightly** and my own
environment(torch==2.4.0.dev20240318+cpu), it can **pass the pass**.
In torch-mlir's CI **torch_stable**, it **failed**.
The test case is `RepeatInterleaveSelfIntNoDimModule_basic`, the result
shape should be [120].
```python
class RepeatInterleaveSelfIntNoDimModule(torch.nn.Module):
def __init__(self):
super().__init__()
@export
@annotate_args([
None,
([3, 4, 5], torch.float32, True),
])
def forward(self, x):
return x.repeat_interleave(2)
@register_test_case(module_factory=lambda: RepeatInterleaveSelfIntNoDimModule())
def RepeatInterleaveSelfIntNoDimModule_basic(module, tu: TestUtils):
module.forward(tu.rand(3, 4, 5))
```
The error log is as follows:
```
Unexpected outcome summary: (onnx)
****** Failed tests - 1 tests
FAIL - "RepeatInterleaveSelfIntNoDimModule_basic"
@ trace item #0 - call to "forward"
@ output of call to "forward"
ERROR: shape (torch.Size([6, 4, 5])) is not equal to golden shape (torch.Size([120]))
```
@rsuderman
Would you please help me check what's wrong with my PR? Thanks a lot.
- Added linalg lowering for `AtenFloorDivideScalarOp`
- Needed `AtenDivScalarModeOp` for the decomp.
- Added linalg lowering for `AtenDivScalarModeOp`
- Moved linalg payload logic to `createDivModePayload()` since the logic
was nearly identical for both `AtenDivScalarModeOp` and
`AtenDivTensorModeOp`. Just a template function
- Added `AtenDivScalarModeOp` lowering for stablehlo
Pytorch's
[`torch.floor_divide()`](https://pytorch.org/docs/stable/generated/torch.floor_divide.html)
in a previous version (for a reason unknown to me) preformed a
truncation instead of "floor". The already implemented op
`AtenFloorDivideTensorOp` was done before this change. However, this
wasn't caught because our testcases only tested positive floor division.
I changed this to floor as well as adding a few test cases.
The previous conversions for AtenAdaptiveAvgPool1dOp and
AtenAdaptiveMaxPool2dOp are refactored into a general templated
conversion that works for all of the AtenAdaptive...PoolNdOp's.
New support is added for the following ops:
1. AtenAdaptiveMaxPool1d
2. AtenAdaptiveMaxPool3d
3. AtenAdaptiveAvgPool3d
Support is also provided for passing inputs without batch dimensions.
For example, applying adaptive_avg_pool2d to an input tensor of rank 3.
After [pytorch #118162](https://github.com/pytorch/pytorch/pull/118162)
gets down to torch-mlir, I'll add a test for AdaptiveMaxPool1d with
return_indices (which will pass with that upstream fix).
---------
Co-authored-by: James Newling <james.newling@gmail.com>
Add e2d support for `aten.linalg_norm` by decompose it to
`aten.linalg_vector_norm`.
Lowering to `aten.linalg_matrix_norm` is still unsupported.
To Test:
`python -m e2e_testing.main -v`
---------
Co-authored-by: Ze Zhang <ze.zhang@getcruise.com>
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
This commit adds the OnnxToTorch lowering for cosh, acosh, asin, asinh,
and atanh op.
This commit also adds the TorchToLinalg lowering for acosh, asin, asinh,
and atanh op.
Signed-Off By: Vivek Khandelwal <vivekkhandelwal1424@gmail.com>
The lowering decomposes AtenTraceOp into an AtenDiagonalOp followed by
AtenSumOp.
The progress is tracked in
https://github.com/nod-ai/SHARK-Turbine/issues/333.
---------
Co-authored-by: Franz Haniel <franz.haniel@amd.com>
Lowering of torch.aten.all.dim to linalg.
Per PyTorch documentation:
> This function matches the behaviour of NumPy in returning output of
dtype bool for all supported dtypes except uint8. For uint8 the dtype of
output is uint8 itself.
Since there is no support for ui8 in torch-mlir currently
(https://github.com/llvm/torch-mlir/pull/1384#issuecomment-1260011334)
implementation returns failure for that case.
The logic here is very similar to the conversion for AdaptiveAvgPool1d
#2661 with a few modifications:
1. buffVal = -inf instead of 0
2. the main linalg generic op accumulates a max, instead of a sum, to
the first output tensor
3. avg pooling requires dividing the sum pool by the kernel width, which
we stored as an auxilliary tensor (kSizeTensor). Here, the auxiliary
tensor will be recording the indices. Strangely enough, the only
signature available for this function is to return indices, and it
appears that they must be computed whether the user desires them or not.
See
[pytorch/torch/nn/functional.py](https://github.com/pytorch/pytorch/blob/main/torch/nn/functional.py#L1174).
Before writing other adaptive pooling conversions, the logic of this
decomposition should be rolled into a helper function that will work for
both max and avg pooling ops. Even the auxiliary tensor should likely be
automated. This code was written in a slightly more tedious way than
strictly necessary (often using loops to fill SmallVectors up to rank-2,
which is only two in this case), in order to more easily facilitate the
transition to a helper function.
convolution with [time,batch,channel] ordering, as opposed to the
default [batch, channel, time]. Currently implementing by transposing
the input and output, but may need to get its own implementation in the
future because this is supposed to be an op that gives a speedup. This
is used by fairseq
(https://github.com/facebookresearch/fairseq/issues/172).
(in case you were wondering like me, this is different from transposed
convolution. Transposed convolution has fractional strides).
---------
Co-authored-by: Xida Ren <xida.ren.dev@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Frederik Harwath <frederik.harwath@amd.com>