Following up from the discussion in
<https://github.com/llvm/torch-mlir/pull/3550>, I've edited the lowering
to prevent OOB extracts in a more direct fashion (i.e., just clamping
directly).
I don't think this affects the lit tests at all, but I've tested the
changes in our external test suite at
<https://github.com/nod-ai/SHARK-TestSuite/tree/main/>. I found the
issue when I was unexpectedly getting `nan`'s along the output image
border for a resize test there.
Change linalg.matmul_unsigned to linalg.matmul with unsigned type_fn
Signed-off-by: Max Dawkins <max.dawkins@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Max Dawkins <max.dawkins@gmail.com>
There were two issues related to `ignore_index` being set
(1) the onnx-to-linalg pass as not reading the value correctly (2) the
mean pass was not considering the `ignore_index` value
For (2) when taking the mean we need to know how many of the values were
considered in the sum and therefore we cannot divide by the total number
of elements. Adding a summation across the total number should correct
this issue.
- Adds support for lowering depthwise + quantized convolution ops to
linalg::DepthwiseConv2DNhwcHwcQOp
- Changed the variable name for groupSize (which is really C/G) to the
more appropriate numGroups (G).
- Discovered in e2e testing that linalg does not accept (Cin = groups &&
Cout = K*groups for K>1) as a "depthwise" conv, so this also updates the
case-checking to reflect this issue.
Pytorch and ONNX apparently round to nearest, ties go to nearest even,
but we were using `math::round` for the torch-to-linalg conversion of
`quantize_per_tensor`, which rounds away from zero on ties.
This PR adds a conversion in the TorchOnnxToTorch pass for the ONNX
Multinomial operation. It also adds a TorchToLinalg lowering for the
`aten.Multinomial` op and does a light refactor of some repeated code
that generates random floating point numbers in
`TorchToLinalg/Random.cpp`.
This patch adds a few misc pad op related changes:
1. Addresses issue <https://github.com/llvm/torch-mlir/issues/3457>
2. Addresses issue <https://github.com/llvm/torch-mlir/issues/3442>
3. Fixes the padding order for asymmetrically padded onnx.Conv ops
4. Enables passing quantization through those onnx.Conv op pre-paddings
5. Modifies the torch-to-linalg lowering of AtenReplicationPad2d op to
enable support for input rank != 4
Unfortunately, even with all of these changes, the e2e tests for the
ReplicationPad2d still fail the onnx config, since the torch export
procedure for rearranging the pad order is complicated enough that the
padding ints end up not being able to fold back to constants.
Addresses an issue with onnx.Gather lowering to linalg:
<https://github.com/nod-ai/SHARK-Turbine/issues/242>
The builder for tensor.expand_shape, without an explicitly provided
output shape, fails to infer an output shape in the case of multiple
dynamic reassociation dims. I tried adding the output shape explicitly
for tensor.expand_shape, but ran into compilation issues later on (see
<https://github.com/iree-org/iree/issues/17760>).
This PR adds support by lowering this op to tensor.reshape when multiple
dynamic reassociation dims are provided.
Before this PR, a statically shaped aten.convolution would generate
dynamically shaped linalg IR, and even `-canonicalize` would not be able
to fold it back into static shapes. This PR ensure that shape
calculations are folded on construction to directly generate statically
shaped linalg IR.
We achieve that by ensuring that `arith` ops involved in computing
shapes are created via `createOrFold`, so that later uses of
`getAsOpFoldResult` see constants instead of those ops.
For example
```
module {
func.func @forward(%arg0: !torch.vtensor<[32,336,112,112],f32>,
%arg1: !torch.vtensor<[336,168,3,3],f32>,
%arg2: !torch.vtensor<[336],f32>)
-> !torch.vtensor<[32,336,56,56],f32> {
%false = torch.constant.bool false
%int2 = torch.constant.int 2
%int1 = torch.constant.int 1
%0 = torch.prim.ListConstruct %int1, %int1 : (!torch.int, !torch.int) -> !torch.list<int>
%1 = torch.prim.ListConstruct %int2, %int2 : (!torch.int, !torch.int) -> !torch.list<int>
%2 = torch.prim.ListConstruct : () -> !torch.list<int>
%3 = torch.aten.convolution %arg0, %arg1, %arg2, %1, %0, %0, %false, %2, %int2
: !torch.vtensor<[32,336,112,112],f32>, !torch.vtensor<[336,168,3,3],f32>, !torch.vtensor<[336],f32>, !torch.list<int>,
!torch.list<int>, !torch.list<int>, !torch.bool, !torch.list<int>, !torch.int
-> !torch.vtensor<[32,336,56,56],f32>
return %3 : !torch.vtensor<[32,336,56,56],f32>
}
}
```
would result in
```
[...]
%padded = tensor.pad %2 low[%14, %15, %16, %17] high[%14, %15, %16, %17] {
^bb0(%arg3: index, %arg4: index, %arg5: index, %arg6: index):
tensor.yield %cst : f32
} : tensor<32x336x112x112xf32> to tensor<?x?x?x?xf32>
[...]
%45 = linalg.conv_2d_ngchw_gfchw {dilations = dense<1> : vector<2xi64>, strides = dense<2> : vector<2xi64>}
ins(%expanded, %expanded_37 : tensor<?x2x?x?x?xf32>, tensor<2x168x168x3x3xf32>)
outs(%expanded_44 : tensor<32x2x168x?x?xf32>) -> tensor<32x2x168x?x?xf32>
[...]
```
and with this PR all shapes are static.
This adds support for a few ops:
- torch.linalg_det
- torch._linalg_det (if the LU and pivot returns are unused)
- onnx.Det
An scf loop is used, since the row reduction algorithm applied here has
some loop-carried dependencies.
The current support being added here is very basic, and only works if no
permutations are required during row reduction, and assumes the matrices
are non-singular.
1. truncates zero-points to i32
2. modifies the default accumulator type for i8 from i64 to i32.
3. now uses the input dtype to infer accumulator dtype.
Issues was found here https://github.com/nod-ai/SHARK-Turbine/issues/643
- [ONNX] Fix padding attributes for onnx.AveragePool
- [Linalg] Add countIncludePad false support for AtenAvgPool1/2dOp
- [Linalg] Add an avg_pool2d countIncludePad False e2e tests
- [Linalg] Fix conflict with AtenAvgPool3dOp
- [Linalg] Fix e2e crash with AtenAvgPool1dOp
- [Linalg] Add dynamic dim support for AtenAvgPool2dOp
- [Linalg] Fix AvgPool2dDivisorOverrideModule crash
There is currently no int16 quantization support in torch. This patch
adds a new mlir type to correspond to the missing "torch.qint16" type,
and enables lowering of quantization-related onnx ops using int16 types.
In follow-up patches, custom quantization logic for ops like
aten.matmul/aten.mm/aten.convolution may need to be revisited to allow
support for qint16. The passes in FuseQuantizedOps.cpp may also need
slight modifications.
This addresses 7 of the model failures I'm seeing in the test suite. See
[Shark-Turbine issue
#566](https://github.com/nod-ai/SHARK-Turbine/issues/566).
Need the op ```linalg.conv_2d_ngchw_gfchw_q``` to be added upstream
before merging this. See [llvm-project PR #92136
](https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/pull/92136).
A small additional expansion to operand quantization is included in this
patch to address a model failure that occurs when unblocking the
quantized group convolutions in one of these onnx models.
Updates:
- some unsupported modes are now going to report a match failure for
unsupported coordinate transformation modes.
- fixes a bug that was introduced in the last patch for resize (my
bad...)
- uses actual x and y coordinates for computing weights in bilinear
interpolation (rather than eps modified values)
- slightly simplifies the bilinear interpolation payload for readability
and performance
- passes coordinate transformation mode information from an onnx.Resize
op to the mode string for the aten._interpolate op. This allows us to
perform custom logic in the torch->linalg lowering to support
onnx.Resize options without losing the default behaviors of the
interpolate op.
The old lowering only had logic for 2d (i.e. images). this patch allows
interpolation for n spatial dims, which is required for some 3d vision
models such as
- onnx/models/pytorch-3dunet_vaiq_int8
which successfully compiles and runs with this patch.
* 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).
I spent a little while debugging numerics issues with some tests similar
to the ones in quantized_models.py, only to find that pytorch's
quantized conv transpose is catastrophically inaccurate. I'll upstream
the issue and only leave the tests here which are of the form quantize
-> dequantize -> op.
Sparse tensor conversions are represented by special aten operators.
This PR ensures the conversions are recognized (instead of failing the
full torch aten lowering to linalg).
A choice was made to quantize the return type of Relu with a scale and
zero point copied from the input's quantization scheme. With this
choice, the torch-to-linalg conversion of quantized Relu essentially
computes max(input, zeroPoint) in the elementwise payload.
We can map to `tensor.reshape` for handling multiple output dynamic
shapes. Later we can perform a more complex analysis for indentifying
expand/collapse cases from the tensor.reshape.
Initially we planned to handle this identification at the `torch` level
however it will be easier to handle once converted to core
mlir-dialects.