Commit Graph

5 Commits (902c2e579bb089991743e44e3448525c0b494ad1)

Author SHA1 Message Date
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 47ac80491c Delete old PyTorch 1.3 type dispatch oriented code paths.
* We aren't quite at e2e parity, but we aren't going back and the old path is bit-rotted.
2020-11-12 22:27:05 -08:00
Stella Laurenzo 0cb28f0b06 Move tests around so we can have dedicated tests for the c10 dispatcher.
* Adds a trivial missing test for _torch_mlir.c10.get_registered_ops()
* Disables the regression tests for now on c10 (until implemented).
2020-09-24 18:28:06 -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