This patch adds two `memref` passes to `torch-mlir-opt`, which already
occur in the pass pipeline
`torch-backend-to-linalg-on-tensors-backend-pipeline`. Additionally,
necessary op interface external models are included to address issue
#3352.
This is a first step towards the structure we discussed here:
https://gist.github.com/stellaraccident/931b068aaf7fa56f34069426740ebf20
There are two primary goals:
1. Separate the core project (C++ dialects and conversions) from the
hard PyTorch dependencies. We move all such things into projects/pt1 as
a starting point since they are presently entangled with PT1-era APIs.
Additional work can be done to disentangle components from that
(specifically LTC is identified as likely ultimately living in a
`projects/ltc`).
2. Create space for native PyTorch2 Dynamo-based infra to be upstreamed
without needing to co-exist with the original TorchScript path.
Very little changes in this path with respect to build layering or
options. These can be updated in a followup without commingling
directory structure changes.
This also takes steps toward a couple of other layering enhancements:
* Removes the llvm-external-projects/torch-mlir-dialects sub-project,
collapsing it into the main tree.
* Audits and fixes up the core C++ build to account for issues found
while moving things. This is just an opportunistic pass through but
roughly ~halves the number of build actions for the project from the
high 4000's to the low 2000's.
It deviates from the discussed plan by having a `projects/` tree instead
of `compat/`. As I was thinking about it, this will better accommodate
the follow-on code movement.
Once things are roughly in place and the CI passing, followups will
focus on more in-situ fixes and cleanups.
At some point in the past month, stablehlo gained a number of patches that implement a non-trivial bit of threaded reference code. It fails to compile in Windows in pretty catastrophic ways.
But this isn't the main problem: by way of the MLIR CMake macros being used, if we include stablehlo before our code, we end up building the whole project, whether needed or not.
We just have to do this: I ran into an issue today where I needed to make a one line patch to stablehlo to work around a compiler issue, and it is completely unapparent how to do so given that the mlir-hlo repo is a read-only export and is at the tail end of a multi-week integration chain from the open-source stablehlo repo.
We've discussed this often enough and gotten +1 from everyone that they are ok with taking the e2e testing hit if it becomes necessary: It is necessary as the current situation is unmanageable.
Looking at it, I expect it wouldn't actually be very difficult to build a little runner binary out of the stablehlo interpreter and subprocess call that in order to get the testing coverage back. I leave that as an exercise to the users of this part of the stack and recommend following the breadcrumbs from the deleted python/torch_mlir_e2e_test/stablehlo_backends/linalg_on_tensors.py file and the main.py changes.
Note that I am pointing us at a stablehlo fork for the moment until it is apparent that we don't need to carry any local patches to it. We can update this in a few days if everything is clear.
This patch updates the submodules to:
- llvm: 3f8d8c1aac3086f603ad73f18fe2bd4fb91fa10a
- mhlo: 4384a47b03dc377d651523037867899a340b0e96
The only change made is calling `registerAllExtensions` during dialect
registration. See: https://reviews.llvm.org/D120368
This commit updates the `llvm-project` and `mlir-hlo` submodules to
commits:
- llvm-project: 6875424135312aeb26ab8e0358ba7f9e6e80e741
- mlir-hlo: 92fd33a4bacbeb93ab276a49f38bdebd5f9d7487
The calls to `mlir::MlirOptMain` are updated to no longer specify the
flag `preloadDialectInContext` that has been removed (see:
https://reviews.llvm.org/D149039).
* Adding stablehlo dialects support for torch-mlir-opt tool.
* Update torch-mlir-opt.cpp
Fixed the build error according to build configuration for macOS.
This commit (with approval from all contributors) dual licenses
the torch-mlir project under both the standard LLVM license and the
standard PyTorch license. This will facilitate moving code between
torch-mlir and the two upstream projects.
The standard file comment is now:
```
// This file is licensed under the Apache License v2.0 with LLVM Exceptions.
// See https://llvm.org/LICENSE.txt for license information.
// SPDX-License-Identifier: Apache-2.0 WITH LLVM-exception
// Also available under a BSD-style license. See LICENSE.
```
See `LICENSE` in the project root for the terms of both licenses.