Previously, it could only handle the situations where outputsize == (1,
1) or outputsize == (input_H, input_W). Now it supports all situations
where input_H % output_H== 0 && input_W % output_W == 0
Shapes can be processed as tensors to represent the set of dimensions.
As reshapes take a list of scalars this can result in a single dynamic
dimension blocking the adjacent static dimensions.
This pass attempts to de-couple tensor computations related to shapes
and propagate values to better support lowering scalar tensor
computations.
See the related issues here:
[SHARK-Turbine#556](https://github.com/nod-ai/SHARK-Turbine/issues/556)
1. Adds uint8 casting to onnx.Cast op
2. Fixes an issue with onnx.DequantizeLinear when the scale comes with
shape [1].
3. Adds support for unsigned types in an AtenItemOp folder
4. Adds a simpler quantized model for easier debugging
5. Adds a fusion pass to convert [quant -> dequant -> transpose -> mm]
patterns to [transpose -> quant -> mm].
6. Moved some xfails that are still not passing, but for different
reasons than onnx.cast failures.
Fix bug of DecomposeAtenSelectIntOp. Because it may use resultTy when
resultTy has not been inferred.
```
auto resultTy = op.getType().cast<BaseTensorType>();
if (sliceTy.getSizes().size() == resultTy.getSizes().size()) {
rewriter.replaceOp(op, slice);
return success();
}
```
So I add restriction.
Reshaping tensors depend on directly matching individual dimensions to
their corresponding dim in the `torch.view` reshape dimensions. This
involves decoupling dynamic dimensions from their static counterparts
and support cleanup / canonicalization.
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>
This mostly copy-pastes the reduce minimum implementation to reduce max
to improve test coverage. We also improve the aten lowering for min/max
dim for unsigned types.
Current implementation depends on using `aten.view` which has issues
inferring tensor collapse/expand operations during the lowering to
`linalg`. Using flatten and unsqueeze better infers what the later
reshape behavior.
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>
Existing lowering via aten.view does not work as well for dynamic shapes
as the lowering to tensor.expand must re-infer dynamic shape matching.
Better to directly lower.
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
The decomposition only suports a NCHW lowering however the operation can
support arbitrary spatial dimensions. Updated the lowering to better
support spatial dimensions.
Torch lowering only supported the most recent version. Refactored the
lowering so more easily handle default values and optional operands /
attributes.
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>
Some operations include a backend matcher for specialized operations. We
map these back to generics so they appropriately match to the high
performance versions. This is done for the attention operation.
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.
Leaning on the QDQ functionality in torch we can support the QLinearConv
operation by piggybacking through `torch.Convolution`. This includes
some changes such as allowing the `onnx` rewriter to run recursively.
Doing so allows `QLinearConv` to decopmose to `onnx.Convolution` which
is then lowered to `torch`.
Linalg has quantized specific operations. We can lower to these
operations when there is a known zeropoint and scale operations. This
allows the `convolution` to occur with lower bitwidth's, improving the
overall performance.
After noticing a number of commits with unrelated formatting changes,
I think something was changed with clang-format at one point and we're
seeing a number of unrelated changes. Doing a refresh can help avoid
this.
The changes made here came from
```
find lib -iname *.h -o -iname *.cpp | xargs clang-format -i --style=llvm
find include -iname *.h -o -iname *.cpp | xargs clang-format -i --style=llvm
find projects -iname *.h -o -iname *.cpp | xargs clang-format -i --style=llvm
```
This includes custom op matching for decomposed operations and fusing
dequantization into dense operations. As a validation we compare
to the dequant+mm torch implementation.
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>