We were already hitting many cases where backends different in terms of
the legal ops that they wanted. This caused unnecessary coupling between
the backends. Examples:
- https://github.com/llvm/torch-mlir/pull/1161
- https://github.com/llvm/torch-mlir/pull/862
This PR centralizes all compilation to go through `torch_mlir.compile`
so that we can keep the logic centralized there. We should move these
lists closer to each backend. Especially cases like
https://github.com/llvm/torch-mlir/pull/862 where blocking a
decomposition is necessary to avoid a crash emphasize that the set of
decompositions is tightly coupled to the backend, and should be
"controlled by the backend" and not something arbitrarily tweakable.
Also:
- Fix a small bug in the way we passed through the backendLegalOps
option.
- Add better error messages in `torch_mlir.compile` for import errors.
One of the simplifications made by the pass `RefinePublicReturn`
currently only happens if the tensor in question only has one
user. However, the current method of checking this does not correctly
handle the case of a user having multiple uses of the same
tensor. This commit makes sure only unique users are considered.
This is a first step towards formalizing the set of ops in our backend
contract. The goal is to eventually formalize `torch` dialect ops into 3
categories:
1. Legal in backend contract
2. Illegal in backend contract
3. Conditionally legal in backend contract
The "conditionally legal" set are the ops that we can optionally
decompose for backends.
This patch adds relevant pass options for this throughout the compiler,
in preparation for a new set of traits which will formalize this
classification.
This introduces a new pass LowerToBackendContract (better name very
welcome) which performs the bulk of the simplifications that we do,
such as
- shape refinement
- dtype refinement
- maximizing value semantics
- inlining global slots
- decomposing complex ops
The key difference from before is that it iterates the set of
transformations, which can help to break a number of "catch-22" issues
where one simplification depends on another, the latest example being
here:
https://github.com/llvm/torch-mlir/issues/1131
This also exposed that RefineTypes was sometimes crashing/asserting for
certain inputs. This commit hardens it a bit.
Rather than a per-global-slot initializer region, we now have one for
the whole module. For example, it might look like this:
```
torch.global_slot "private" @tensor : !torch.tensor
torch.global_slot "private" @list : !torch.list<tensor>
torch.global_slot.module_initializer {
%0 = torch.tensor.literal(dense<0.0> : tensor<f32>) : !torch.tensor
%1 = torch.prim.ListConstruct %0 : (!torch.tensor) -> !torch.list<tensor>
torch.initialize.global_slots [
@tensor(%0 : !torch.tensor)
@list(%1 : !torch.list<tensor>)
]
}
```
This new structure allows GlobalizeObjectGraph to create the initializer in a
much simpler way, avoiding the need to reason about whether different slots
alias each other. Reasoning about whether slots alias each other now is the
responsibility of InlineGlobalSlots, which has to do a much more complicated
analysis, implemented using MLIR's dataflow analysis framework.
Recommended review order:
- Check out the new IR constructs in the .mlir files of various passes
- Op definitions (*.td)
- Changes to GlobalizeObjectGraph pass.
- InlineGlobalSlots pass (~total rewrite)
- Misc changes:
- Moving torchMlirAdjustStaticInformation for sharing with C++ code.
- EraseModuleInitializer pass
To make this a bit nicer, it would be good to have a `torch.module` op
with an initializer region attached. That would be more invasive though.
This change has highlighted certain aspects of our project layering
which are worth calling out. None of our backends can handle global
slots, so we enforce that there are no global slots before backend
lowering. At an earlier stage in the project, we had aspirations of
transparently handling mutable global state and such, but for reasons
described below, that is no longer a goal. So really global slots should
be seen as a progressive lowering step as part of inlining all the
IValue's in the original program (GlobalizeObjectGraph is also one such
step).
Over time, with insights from work like IREE-JAX, it has become clear
that there isn't a reliable programming model we can compile for users
where we just transparently handle mutable global state (and some other
things, like lists and dictionaries). There is a need for an "outer
program" that orchestrates more restricted subroutines of the kind we
can handle in our compile flow here. The benefit of that is that it
decouples considerations like shapes, dtypes, etc. from the program
constructs used in the outer program. As long as the outer program can
efficiently invoke (pipelining/async/etc.) high-performance
data-parallel numerical subroutines of the kind we compile in our flow
here, then there is a complete programming model. This is also
consistent with the direction of upstream PyTorch which is becoming more
tracing-based (which inherently loses a lot of program structure, which
then has to be applied back with an "outer program" orchestrating the
traced subroutines).
- Includes a canonicalizer for `aten.add.t`needed for successfully lowering the shape function
- Only offers support for statically sized index tensors when there is more than one
- Dynamic shape support remains for single indexing tensors
This commit adds verifiers to the ops `ToBuiltinTensorOp` and
`FromBuiltinTensorOp` that make sure that the input and output have
the same shape and data type.
This commit adds the decomposition for `aten.var.dim` op.
This commit also make changes in the decomposition for `aten.var` op.
Signed-Off By: Vivek Khandelwal <vivek@nod-labs.com>
This patch adds a new pass `torch-verify-conversion-to-value-semantics`,
which looks for non-value semantics tensors to catch such tensors early
during compilation.
This pass requires `torch-refine-public-return` pass to ensure that
return operations are updated to use value tensors, followed by the
canonicalize pass to remove any dead ops that may use or produce
non-value tensors.
Prior to this patch, the canonicalizers for `AtenSizeOp` and
`AtenSizeIntOp` succeeded only if the tensor operand's type information
included the size of the requested dimension(s). We can extend the set
of optimizable cases by propagating types across operations whose result
type matches the input tensor type.
Specifically, this patch enables the canonicalizers for `AtenSizeOp` and
`AtenSizeIntOp` to see past `tensor_static_info_cast`,
`copy.to_vtensor`, and `copy.to_tensor` ops until it reaches the first
op whose result type contains size information for the requested
dimensions, with a maximum bound of 6 parent lookups to avoid indefinite
compilation times. All other encountered ops cause the canonicalizer to
give up.
Prior to this patch, the code in the `torch-simplify-shape-calculations`
pass iterated on the uses of an op's result while also modifying the
value. This caused the iterator to get invalidated, thus terminating
the loop early and producing incorrect IR. This patch makes use of
`llvm::make_early_inc_range()` to ensure that the iterator is not
invalidated while executing the loop body.
This commit does three things:
1. Reverts some of the shape lib changes merged in
https://github.com/llvm/torch-mlir/pull/844
2. Updates the signature of `aten.sum_dim_IntList` that was recently
updated in
23bdb570cf
3. Replaces `aten.zero.functional` with `aten.zero`, updated in 960758b0b7
`aten.select_scatter` op.
This commit adds:
1. Lowering of `aten.slice_scatter` op into `tensor.insert_slice`
op.
2. Decomposes the `aten.select_scatter` op into `aten.slice_scater`
op.
Signed-Off-By: Prateek Gupta <gprateek93@gmail.com>
The canonicalizer converts `torch.prim.dtype` ops into integer constants
for valid types, but the type may not be known until type refinement is
complete. However, type refinement cannot make progress until
`torch.prim.dtype` ops have been resolved to their corresponding integer
constants, thus creating a circular dependency.
This patch creates a tight coupling between type refinement and the
lowering of `torch.prim.dtype` ops by handling such ops as they are
encountered during type refinement. The unit test in this patch aims to
check whether the type refinement pass can now handle chains of
operations that alternate between type construction and type refinement.
A prior patch (63538de2) that added support for bfloat16 type did not
add the canonicalization pattern to fold `torch.prim.dtype` operations
on bfloat16 tensors into the integer constant 15. This patch fixes the
problem.
In the `pyhpc_turbulent_kinetic_energy` TorchBench benchmark, the shape
calculation occurs inside loops, but because `DropShapeCalculationsPass`
does not explicitly mark the Torch dialect as legal, the pass execution
fails.
This patch adds Torch to the list of legal dialects, and adds a test to
validate the translation.
* [MLIR][TORCH] Add folder for torch_c.from_i64 & torch_c.to_i64
* add unit tests for each individual fold
* fix failure of NumelZeroRankModule & TestMultipleTensorAndPrimitiveTypesReturn
This commit decomposes `aten.baddbmm` op into `aten.bmm`,
`aten.mul.Scalar`, and `aten.add.Tensor` op.
Signed-Off By: Vivek Khandelwal <vivek@nod-labs.com>
This commit adds the decomposition of `aten.adaptive_avg_pool2d` op into
`aten.avg_pool2d` op. The current decomposition only supports cases where
input size is equal to the output size.
Signed-Off By: Vivek Khandelwal <vivek@nod-labs.com>
In addition to updating the llvm-project submodule, this patch also:
1. updates shape functions and tests so that `func` and `call`
operations refer to the `func` dialect
2. avoid duplicate registration of dialects
The op `aten.rand_like` was missing a shape function, unit tests, and
the `dtype` argument was being ignored in its decomposition. This
commit fixes all three things.
Fix the type promotion code for scalar only operation to return
TorchType which is the type tracked in ValueKnowledge.scalarType.
- Fix `getPromotedResultScalarType` to return Torch type.
- Add `getBuiltInTypeForTorchScalar` helper to convert scalar type
to builtin type before passing to the next level type promotion
helper `updateResultTypeState`.
- Add `setScalarType` helper to make setting ValueKnowledge.scalarType
easier.
This commit adds lowering of `aten.ge.float`, `aten.ge.float_int`,
`aten.ne.float_int`, `aten.gt.float_int` and `aten.ceil.float` op.
This commit also fixes formatting for the file scalar.py and scalar_comparison.py.
Signed-Off By: Vivek Khandelwal <vivek@nod-labs.com>
The main changes are:
- Added `ValueKnowledge.scalarType` to track scalar type information.
- Added `ValueKnowledge.kind` to indicate the value kind.
- Modified the meet and join helper functions. The ValueKnowledge has
slightly more complicated state now so the meet and join function need
to look at the `kind` field in addition to just the type field.
This commit decomposes `aten.to.dtype_layout` op into `aten.to.dtype` op.
This commit also fixes the formatting for the file type_conversion.py.
Signed-Off By: Vivek Khandelwal <vivek@nod-labs.com>
This commit fixes the `ConstantPad2dStaticModule` test case by adding
the lowering of `aten.pad` operation. Previously the test case
mapped to `aten.constant_pad_nd` operation.
The `aten.pad` now decomposes into `aten.constant_pad_nd` operation.
Signed-Off-By: Prateek Gupta <prateek@nod-labs.com>
This commit adds lowering of `aten.ceil.float` op.
This commit also fixes formatting for the file scalar.py.
Signed-Off By: Vivek Khandelwal <vivek@nod-labs.com>
The updated LLVM code includes a patch to create bfloat16 array
attributes, thus enabling a different patch to torch-mlir to flesh out
support for the bfloat16 type.
Prior to this patch, the result type for several tensor operations could
only be float32, float64, or null. This patch adds bf16 to the list of
allowed result types.
The issue was in the canonicalizer for torch.aten.ge.int -- in cases
where the operands were swapped, it would miscompile. This issue is
fixed and folding support generalized to `torch.aten.size.int < 0` as
well.
Fixes#716
This commit decomposes different variants of `aten.where.*` op into
`aten.where.Self` op. It covers `aten.where.Scalar`,
`aten.where.ScalarSelf` and `aten.where.ScalarOther` ops.
Signed-Off-by: Gaurav Shukla <gaurav@nod-labs.com>
This commit decomposes `aten.new_empty` op into `aten.empty.memory_format` op.
This commit also made a dtype fix to the constant tensor allocation like ops.
Earlier the dtype for the result was inferred from the result type; now, it's
being evaluated as per the original definition of the op.
Signed-Off By: Vivek Khandelwal <vivek@nod-labs.com>
A recent PyTorch commit made ConstantPad2d call a helper function with a
`Union[int, float]` type annotated. This commit adds minimal support for
representing and dealing with that.
https://github.com/pytorch/pytorch/pull/73287
Changes:
- Adding support for `!torch.union<T1, T2, T3>`/`Torch::UnionType`,
along with the importer and CAPI code.
- Add support in isValidSubtype for union types.
- Adding a canonicalizer for `torch.derefine` to help simplify some code
that derefines to a UnionType (this also fixes#664).
There is still more work to do for really supporting UnionType well,
such as canonicalizing UnionType's so that they can be compared with
pointer equality.
The reified code to compute the shape of torch.aten.constant_pad_nd
uses negative indices when setting list elements. This was not
converted to a positive offset in one place in SimplifyShapeCalculations
which prevented computation of the static shape.
The logic in the rewriting phase had a bug in case of a read-only op
coming before mutation ops. The logic would use the op itself as the
"latest literal", but that is not correct, because later on we replace
the op itself with the *final* "latest literal", assuming that all uses
of the op have been rewritten -- that was working in general, except for
any read-only ops at the beginning.
Big thanks to @ljfitz for the tiny reproducer!
Fixes#704
- This commit adds decomposition of `aten.dropout` op. It also covers the
training mode of the same op.
- It also adds lowering of `aten.sub.float` op.
Signed-Off-by: Gaurav Shukla <gaurav@nod-labs.com>
This commit adds the op `ValsemVariantAtenCopyOp` that represents
`AtenCopy_Op` without the underscore. This is needed to make sure
that the `ReduceOpVariants` pass turns the in-place op into an op
that takes value tensors as inputs, otherwise the
`MaximizeValueSemantics` pass will not be able to add value
semantics correctly.
This commit also adds the lowering of `ValsemVariantAtenCopyOp`.
Signed-Off By: Vivek Khandelwal <vivek@nod-labs.com>
This commit adds support for type refinement when
`torch.tensor_static_info_cast`s are involved, even when there are
users of the casted tensor that don't allow type refinements.
Originally the canonicalization pattern for
`torch.tensor_static_info_cast` would check if all the users of the
casted tensor allowed type refinements before making any changes. This
means that if at least one of the users did not allow type
refinements, the pattern would fail. This becomes an issue when doing
shape calculations because the calculations need the shape information
of each input tensor to be available before the calculation can be
simplified.
This commit adds the op `ValsemVariantAtenIndexPutImplOp` that represents
`Aten_IndexPutImpl_Op` without the underscore. This is needed to
make sure that the `ReduceOpVariants` pass turns the in-place op
into an op that takes value tensors as inputs, otherwise the
`MaximizeValueSemantics` pass will not be able to add value
semantics correctly.
This commit also adds the lowering of `ValsemVariantAtenIndexPutImplOp` op.
This commit also updates the `torch.bincount` op test cases.
The term "pseudo" is very vague and was getting confusing (I felt I had
to explain it in every comment referencing it). Instead, rework the
"pseudo" ops to instead be named:
- MLIR Syntax: `torch.valsem.*`
- C++ / ODS: `ValsemVariant*Op`
This makes it clear what the concept is, and avoids confusion with other
things that might be called "pseudo", since these are very specific and
should be 100% consistently named w.r.t. the non-valsem-variant ops that
they correspond to.
This leads to much more succinct types in many cases:
```
!torch.list<!torch.int>
!torch.list<int>
!torch.tuple<!torch.list<!torch.int>, !torch.list<!torch.int>>
!torch.tuple<list<int>, list<int>>
!torch.optional<!torch.list<!torch.int>>
!torch.optional<list<int>>
!torch.list<list<list<tensor>>>
!torch.list<!torch.list<!torch.list<!torch.tensor>>>
```
I would like to take this further and allow omitting the `!torch.`
prefix in all cases, but that's harder -- for example, we currently use
`FuncOp` for functions, and so I don't think we can customize the
printing there. It seems like it will be a longer road to getting that
level of customization.
See the documentation in `docs/shape_lib.md` and
`docs/adding_a_shape_function.md` for an overview of the system.
This completely overhauls how we represent shape functions. In
particular, RefineTypes does not infer shapes anymore (only dtypes).
Shape functions are now written in (TorchScript'able) Python.
Recommended review order:
1. Read `docs/shape_lib.md` and `docs/adding_a_shape_function.md`.
1. Code and tests for ReifyShapeCalculations, DropShapeCalculations.
1. Code and tests for SimplifyShapeCalculations.
1. shape_lib_gen.py
1. Code and tests for new RefineTypes pass.
1. Random folders/canonicalizers in TorchOps.cpp and associated test in
`canonicalize.mlir`.
1. New ReadOnly trait inferred from the registry.
1. Any miscellaneous remaining stuff.
Example `-print-ir-after-all` for ElementwiseUnaryModule:
[IR lowering dump](https://gist.github.com/silvasean/e4dc8cbc8d00aac7819602e3cbd8e212).
Example `-print-ir-after-all` for ElementwiseBinaryModule:
[IR lowering dump](https://gist.github.com/silvasean/daf6860ecced732af3568af6b1899113).
This commit replaces the two rewrite patterns of
maximize-value-semantics with a single pattern that captures the
behavior of both as well as other edge cases previously not
supported. The new pattern works by first performing alias analysis on
a subgraph to see if pattern is applicable, then rewriting all
non-value tensors to value tensors in a single go.
- This commit adds E2E support for `aten.rand_like` and
`aten.bernoulli_.Tensor` ops.
- The `aten.bernoulli(x)` was implemented as:
`aten.bernoulli(x) = rand_like(x) < 0.5`, assuming 0.5 as default
probability, whereas according to the pytorch documentation:
https://pytorch.org/docs/stable/generated/torch.bernoulli.html#torch.bernoulli
the input x in `aten.bernoulli(x)` is itself a tensor containing
probabilities to be used for drawing the binary random number.
- So this commit fixes the `aten.bernoulli(x)` implementation as:
`aten.bernoulli(x) = rand_like(x) < x`.
- It also fixes the case where the input to `aten.bernoulli_.float` is
an integer tensor. In this case the input must be casted to float type
before passing it as operand to `aten.rand_like` op.
`aten.bernoulli_.float(x, p) = rand_like(float(x)) < p`.
Signed-Off-by: Gaurav Shukla <gaurav@nod-labs.com>
This commit adds the invariant to the op `torch.overwrite.tensor.contents` that
both of its operands have the same shape and size. In order to
maintain the invariant, special handling of this op is added to the
`RefineTypes` pass.
This commit adds handling to the `maximize-value-semantics` pass for
the case where a view-like op depends on a tensor that has been
overwritten by a value tensor. The approach for removing the
dependency is to change the input to the view-like op to be a copy of
the value tensor that is being used to overwrite.
This commit also removes `AtenFill_ScalarOp` and
`AtenBernoulli_FloatOp` from the list of view-like ops, since these
ops now have a corresponding op with value semantics into which they
get converted in the `reduce-op-variants` pass.
- This commit decomposes the `aten.batch_norm` op into the
`aten.native_batch_norm` op, instead of lowering it to the
`linalg.generic` op.
- It also adds run-time asserts in the `aten.native_batch_norm` lowering
to make sure that the shape of the weight, bias, running_mean, and
running_var must match the num of features.
- Since the `aten.native_batch_norm` op is not supported at TOSA backend,
all the modules that are dependent on the `aten.native_batch_norm` op
will fail and therefore they should be removed from the TOSA `passing`
set.
- It also moves `checkNotNone` to utility.
Signed-Off-by: Gaurav Shukla <gaurav@nod-labs.com>
This commit adds the op `PseudoAtenFillScalarOp` that represents
`AtenFill_ScalarOp` without the underscore. The approach is the same
as in commit dd998fa4d4.
Adding this op allows for a simpler and more consistent version of the
`empty` and `empty_like` op e2e tests.
This commit adds the op `PseudoAtenBernoulliFloatOp` that represents
`AtenBernoulli_FloatOp` without the underscore. This is needed to make
sure that the `ReduceOpVariants` pass turns the in-place op into an op
that takes value tensors as inputs, otherwise the
`MaximizeValueSemantics` pass will not be able to add value semantics
correctly.
- This commit adds lowering of `aten.Bool.Tensor` and
`aten.Float.Tensor` op as a part of `convert-torch-to-linalg` pass.
- It also adds support for returning bool types.
- It also fixes lowering of the `aten.Int.Tensor` op for non-zero rank
input tensors.
- If a scalar number is converted to a 0-d tensor and passed on to the
`aten.Float.Tensor` op, it folds to the scalar number.
Signed-Off-by: Gaurav Shukla <gaurav@nod-labs.com>
This PR include the following pieces:
- Add torch `Generator` type. `Generator` type is converted to i64 in
refbackend type converter.
- Add seed managment support for the default global generator.
`torch_c.getNextSeed` op is used to get the seed. On refbackend, the
`torch_c.getNextSeed` is lowered to load/store from [0] of global
variable `default_generator` memref<i64> in `InsertRngGlobals` pass.
- Add `aten.uniform_` and testing as an example op for RNG ops. Add
`torch.pseudo.aten.uniform` op. It has the same operands and return as
the `aten.uniform_` from the op registry except for value semantics.
The added e2e maxpool testcase from #545 was not getting a static shape
due to an unfolded prim.If when RefineTypes was called. This was because
of unfolded torch.iaten.__is__ and torch.prim.unchecked_cast operators
with torch.derefine operands.
Note that to enable folding of the code coming from an example
like the ConstantPad2dStaticModule e2e test, support for other
operations had to be added/improved:
- aten::neg.int
- aten::eq.float
- aten::eq.str
- prim::Uninitialized
This involes the following 2 parts:
- Change refine type to propagate more static shape info.
- Get as much static shape info as possible when creating the result
tensor when converting to linalg.
This commit adds lowering of `aten.arange.start_step` op.
This commit decomposes `aten.arange` and `aten.arange.start` into
`aten.arange.start_step` op.
Signed-Off By: Vivek Khandelwal <vivek@nod-labs.com>
- It folds `aten.to.dtype` when the input tensor type and result type
are exactly same.
- It folds `aten.view` when the rank of both the input tensor type and
result type is unity.
Signed-Off-by: Gaurav Shukla <gaurav@nod-labs.com>
Add the required lowerings and correct test cases.
These op produce zero-d tensors and it was incorrectly mentioned in
refine types to produce 1d tensor of size 1.
This commit adds lowering of `aten.squeeze.dim` op into
`linalg.TensorCollapseShape` op. Here, the dim(th) dimension of the
input tensor is not supposed to be dynamic.
Signed-Off-by: Gaurav Shukla <gaurav@nod-labs.com>
This commit adds lowering of `aten.Squeeze` op into
`linalg.TensorCollapseShape` op. The size 1 dynamic dimensions are not
handled as a part of this commit.
Signed-Off-by: Gaurav Shukla <gaurav@nod-labs.com>
This is to fold the common pattern from Bert inference like:
```
%111 = torch.prim.NumToTensor.Scalar %110 : !torch.int ->
!torch.vtensor<[],si64>
%112 = torch.aten.Int.Tensor %111 : !torch.vtensor<[],si64> ->
!torch.int
```
This change is to unblock the work of some backprop ops returning more
than one tensors. We will need to think of a more scalable approach
in the future if more flexible return types combinations are needed.
This is to facilitate scalar type conversion in the TorchToLinalg. As
part of adding the helper, this PR also:
- Updated `AtenAddTensorOp`, `AtenSubTensorOp` to use the helpers to
support more type variants.
- Added e2e type promotion testing.
- Added i32 memref return/arg type to support e2e testing.
The types have different levels of categories: where
complex > floating > integral > boolean (> means left hand
side has higher category).
The operands have different levels of priorities where:
dimensioned tensor > 0-dim tensor > scalar == wrapped 0-dim tensor.
This is represented by the `ResultTypeState.dimResult`,
`ResultTypeState.zeroResult` and `ResultTypeState..wrappedResult` in
the source code.
For operands of the same priorities, the result type should be the
highest categories with sufficient width to hold all operands.
By default, only the highest priority operands participate in the type
promotion logic. Lower priority operands participate if they are in
a higher category than any higher priority operands.
For example, <[],f32> (lower priority) and <[1], si64> tensor would
result in <[?],f32> tensor because floating > integeral. Another example
<[],f64> (lower priority) and <[1], f32> tensor would result in
<[?], f32> tensor because f32 and f64 are the same category.
The ScalarType enum definition, type promotion table, ResultTypeState
struct definition and some helpers are copied from
aten/src/ATen/native/TypeProperties.*
Other references:
- https://pytorch.org/docs/stable/tensor_attributes.html#type-promotion-doc
- https://github.com/pytorch/pytorch/issues/9515
Other minor changes:
1. Fix `visitExpandLikeOp` to consider cases where the given sizes list
size is larger than the input rank.
2. Add back the somehow deleted `torch.aten.softmax.int` tests in
decompose-complex-ops.mlir.
Lowering of `aten.matmul` op is added from torch to linalg dialect.
The different cases correspond to
https://pytorch.org/docs/stable/generated/torch.matmul.html.
TODO: Broadcasting in case of batch-matmul is yet to be taken care of.
Signed-off-by: Prashant Kumar <prashant@nod-labs.com>
- Added a DecomposeComplexOps pass to decompose complex torchOps.
- Refactored `visitAtenArgmaxOp` and `visitAtenAnyDimOp` to
`visitReductionAlongDimIntOp`.
- Moved some helper functions into
torch-mlir/Dialect/Torch/Utils/Utils.h to be shared by multiple files.
- Added support for f64 tensor as argument and return types.
We lower through linalg-on-tensors and use RefBackend to run it.
This adds enough support for a "tanh" op. Adding more ops should be
fairly mechanical now that things are wired up. Run with:
```
./tools/torchscript_e2e_test.sh -c tosa
```
The backend structure is very similar to linalg-on-tensors based E2E
backends and is a nice parallel (see `tosa_backend.py`). Actually, this
forced a nice refactoring to the layering here. We removed
`torchscript-module-to-linalg-on-tensors-backend-pipeline` and instead
require separately running
```
torchscript-function-to-torch-backend-pipeline,torch-backend-to-linalg-on-tensors-backend-pipeline
```
This highlights the step that lowers to the "torch backend contract"
of cleaned up `torch` dialect ops is a critical step in the lowering.
Going forward, that is the key load-bearing contract of the torch-mlir
project, not the linalg-on-tensors backend contract.
Recommended review order:
- `TorchToTosa.cpp` / `TorchToTosa/basic.mlir`
- `python/torch_mlir_e2e_test/torchscript/configs/tosa_backend.py` and
the new `utils.py` file there.
- `python/torch_mlir_e2e_test/tosa_backends/linalg_on_tensors.py` and
`abc.py` in that directory for the TOSA backend e2e interface.
- other misc mechanical changes
Also contains the following changes:
- Remove derefineOp canonicalizer because it's not safe.
- Support for optional tensor and list tensors in reduceOpVariant. This
only works for some special detected and easy to handle cases. For list,
it covers the case list is got from a `ListConstruct`. For optional, it
covers the case optional is constructed from a `DerefineOp`.
- Remove the `inferReturnTypes` for `FromBuiltinTensorOp` because it's
not safe to deduce types from the input. For example, a built-in tensor
of i8 could be converted to si8 or ui8. It's better to let the user
specify the return type explicitly.
A few remain in examples/docs that will be naturally be updated in due
time.
This regresses the list support and the general direction of more widely
supported control flow, lists/dicts/globals that we were going for with
the TorchScript path. The idea is that we are deferring that work to
make torch-mlir a very clean standalone thing. We will reboot it,
probably using some of the tools of iree_pydm to make it simpler, and in
a more natural place (such as an iree-torch repo that depends on IREE and
torch-mlir to build a working PyTorch frontend solution for IREE -- it
was really weird that npcomp depended on IREE).
`tools/torchscript_e2e_test.sh` is all green.
This needs a few passes I put into torch-mlir/lib/RefBackend (not to be
confused with `npcomp/lib/RefBackend`, which will soon be deleted).
For the sake of review, since this brings together a lot of things, I
split this into its own commit. I temporarily commented out some "list"
stuff that we are going to remove as part of the torch-mlir refocus.
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.
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.
This plumbs through a vertical slice of support for lists.
The main chunk of new code here is AnnotateABIPass which captures the
program signature at the Torch backend contract layer, right before we
start `TorchConversion`. The `TorchConversion` lowering process is lossy
w.r.t. types, so it's necessary to do this for all targets in general.
Like using `!iree.list` directly, we use IREE's ABI annotation
representation for this, although there is nothing very IREE-specific
about it (see
https://github.com/google/iree/blob/main/docs/developers/design_docs/function_abi.md)
We change `ListLiteralModule_basic` to use `!torch.int` because IREE
doesn't support f64 yet (and we don't yet have a way for users to say
that they want `!torch.float` to lower as f32).
Recommended review order:
- AnnotateABIPass and tests
- Arg marshaling in npcomp_backend.py and `iree.py`
- Updates to `list_programs.py` / `xfail_sets.py`
- Moving DeleteDeadIREEListsPass to Backend/Common, so that backends
that don't support lists can use it. RefBackend uses that pass, for
example.
This contains the following changes:
- Fix optional knowledge propagation. The initial knowledge should
always be NotNone for the operations we implemented.
- Add Folder for `prim.dtype`
- builder.getSymbolRefAttr is gone.
- OpAsmOpInterface's getAsmResultNames method needs explicit override
- a bunch of churn for builtin.func needing to be made explicit (and
sometimes implicit?)
- operation printers no longer need to print the operation name
themselves.
- snuck in beneficial trivial addition to TmpDeleteDeadIREEListsPass to
test a particular upstream change e2e with my local patchset.
- Add `!torch.optional` knowledge tracking
- Changes to improve type propagation for branches and terminators. See
examples in `refine-types-branch.mlir`
- Refator to separate handling of different ops from `visitOperation`
- Add refine types for a few new ops