* build: push directly from CI to main branch
This avoids the need to create, approve, and merge a separate PR, in
addition to avoiding unnecessary CI runs for the PyTorch version update.
* build: schedule cronjob to run RollPyTorch action
This patch schedules the RollPyTorch action to be run at noon UTC, which
roughly corresponds to 4am Pacific Time. We pick this time since the
commit for PyTorch nightly releases are picked just after midnight
Pacific Time and the nightly release artifacts are produced in about 2
to 3 hours after the commit is picked.
* Update buildRelease.yml
Update Releases right after a Release build.
* Move gh-page update after release builds
This removes the periodic update and updates after a release build.
Prior to this patch, the release process (`pip wheel`) retrieved
dependencies from the pyproject.toml file, which specified a version of
PyTorch that defaulted to the most recent nightly release. Instead, we
want the release process to use the same pinned PyTorch version as the
development build of PyTorch.
Since TOML files can't reference the pytorch-requirements.txt file, this
patch puts the dependencies from pyproject.toml into
whl-requirements.txt, which references pytorch-requirements.txt.
`git diff` does not work by default on untracked files. Since the
function `_check_file_not_changed_by` stores the new generated file in
an untracked file, `git diff` was not catching any modifications in
the new generated file. This commit adds the flag `--no-index` to make
`git diff` work with untracked files.
* test: allow spaces in path to Python executable
On Windows, the path to the Python binary may contain spaces, so this
patch adds quotes around the path to the python executable.
Thanks to @sstamenova for suggesting the fix!
* python: remove header file that causes Windows build failures
Similar to https://reviews.llvm.org/D125284, we can safely remove this
header file without affecting the build on either Linux. It is
necessary to remove this header file on Windows builds since otherwise
it causes build errors.
* python: drop `TORCH_API` from function defined in Torch-MLIR
`TORCH_API` should apply to functions that are either exported by
libtorch.so or ones that are imported from libtorch.so by its downstream
consumers (like Torch-MLIR). Neither case applies to the
`importJitFunctionAsFuncOp()` function, since it is defined in
Torch-MLIR (and thus outside libtorch.so). This patch fixes the problem
by dropping `TORCH_API` from that function's declaration.
* python: make output of class anotations deterministic
The `class-annotator-repr.py` test checks for class annotations in a
specific order, but prior to this patch, the order was
non-deterministic, since the code iterated on an _unordered_ map.
This patch makes the iteration order deterministic through two changes:
1. using a sorted map
2. using the class qualified name instead of the address of the class in
memory
* test: use Python3_EXECUTABLE as interpreter path for consistency
This ensures that tests use the Python3 version that was detected using
CMake, instead of whichever python version that happens to be in the
PATH variable when invoking the test.
* test: fix RUN string
The parenthesis syntax does not run on Windows (the shell interprets the
`(` character as part of the path). Moreover, the ODR violation in the
comment no longer seems to apply.
* python: port parallel test framework to Windows
Since Windows does not support `fork` natively, Python's
`multiprocessing` module needs to use `spawn` on Windows. However, to
use `spawn`, the multiprocessing module serializes (or pickles) the
worker function and its arguments. Sadly, the multiprocessing module
(both the default one in Python and the one that is extended in PyTorch)
is unable to serialize lambda functions (see
https://stackoverflow.com/a/19985580) for detals.
Unfortunately, given how our tests are structured, we require that the
function under test is passed as an argument to another function, so we
cannot sidestep our use of lambda functions.
To resolve this problem, this patch makes use of the `multiprocess` and
`dill` Python modules, which together offers a multiprocessing mechanism
that can serialize lambda functions. The multiprocess module also
offers a process pool, which simplifies the code for our parallel
testing framework.
This commit adds support for TorchToTosa lowering of
`aten.broadcast_to` op for cases:
1.) When the rank of input and output tensor is equal.
2.) When the rank of input tensor is zero.
Signed-Off By: Vivek Khandelwal<vivek@nod-labs.com>
I was helping an engineer the other day who was attempting to use the Docker flow for interactive development and ran into countless issues. Add a note that it is not recommended for interactive development, and also move the Docker section down to avoid positioning it as the "default" that people should be using.
* Propagate parameter name to MLIR
* Add TorchMlirNode Constructor Hook
* Make func_op mutable
- Purpose of this is to allow modification of func_op by subclass
backend
* Clean up unnecessary changes
* Remove unnecessary attribute case
* Address PR comments
This patch fetches the most recent nightly (binary) build of PyTorch,
before pinning it in pytorch-requirements.txt, which is referenced in
the top-level requirements.txt file. This way, end users will continue
to be able to run `pip -r requirements.txt` without worrying whether
doing so will break their Torch-MLIR build.
This patch also fetches the git commit hash that corresponds to the
nightly release, and this hash is passed to the out-of-tree build so
that it can build PyTorch from source.
If we were to sort the torch versions as numbers (in the usual
descending order), then 1.9 appears before 1.13. To fix this problem,
we use the `--version-sort` flag (along with `--reverse` for specifying
a descending order). We also filter out lines that don't contain
version numbers by only considering lines that start with a digit.
As a matter of slight clarity, this patch renames the variable
`torch_from_src` to `torch_from_bin`, since that variable is initialized
to `TM_USE_PYTORCH_BINARY`.
Co-authored-by: powderluv <powderluv@users.noreply.github.com>
Summary of changes:
- Renamed OptionalArrayRefParameter since the name conflicts with an
upstream symbol that has a different meaning
(https://reviews.llvm.org/D133819)
- Removed extraneous dependency between TorchMLIRTorchToMhlo and
ChloOps, since the existing dependency on MhloDialect is sufficient
- Fixed code to prevent warnings related to comparisons between signed
and unsigned values
This adds a very long and obnoxious option to disable crashing tests.
The right fix here is to use the right multiprocessing techniques to
ensure that segfaulting tests can be XFAILed like normal tests, but we
currently don't know how to implement "catch a segfault" in Python
(patches or even just ideas welcome).
Motivated by #1361, where we ended up removing two tests from *all*
backends due to a failure in one backend, which is undesirable.
Strength the shape inference for aten.arange-like op by
1. registering aten.sub and aten.ceil.Scalar op and design folders for them.
2. register a new constant-like op: Torch::ConstantNumberOp and design canonicalizer for it.
This PR adds an `AllowedInModuleInitializer` trait to keep track of ops that are permitted in the module initializer. We have a handful of such ops that are produced by the IValue importer, and so this change avoids maintaining a list of ops in `TorchOps.cpp` that could lead to spurious merge conflicts, and help us integrate torch-mlir in our downstream compiler better. Please let me know if you'd prefer a better name for the trait itself. Feedback is welcome!
Previously we `sudo rm -f` the non-universal zstd installed in the GHA. The CI has this fix but it doesn't take effect in the Release builds without this change.
As @oroppas identified, literal strings that are over 16,380 characters
cause the MSVC compiler to throw an error (C2026), eventually causing
the Windows build of Torch-MLIR to fail because the length of the
generated MLIR for the shape library crosses the allowed threshold.
This patch fixes the problem by making the Python script generate one
literal string per line to satisfy the MSVC compiler.
Thanks to @oroppas for the bulk of the effort required to resolve this!