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.
There is an issue with stablehlo's linalg compilation. Canonicalization
appears to cleanup the issues until we can determine what in
mlir/stablehlo is the source of the issue.
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.
This was found while tracing backwards graphs: the convolution_backwards
op will return None if the first result is not needed. Confirmed by
defining a custom op with a `Tensor` return signature and having its
meta kernel return None.
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>
Added support for dynamic shapes in `flattenusingints` op in tosa
dialect. Due to this some Argmax tests pass
This PR fixes this issue https://github.com/llvm/torch-mlir/issues/3004
The following tests pass after this PR
```
1. "ArgmaxIntModule_basic"
2. "ArgmaxIntModule_multiple_maxs"
3. "ArgmaxModule_basic"
```
This folds small version of the tensor-scalar comparison operators as
they are commonly used for shape computations. This includes le, lt, ge,
gt, eq, and ne.
The current padding operation was not functional for dynamic shapes.
Updated and enabled tests so that onnx.pad tests pass.
Work TBD for reflection padding.
The addition of an e2e test is actually provided in the Shark-Testsuite.
This adds 2 test cases for the gridsampler e2e test.
Also as intended there were some items found which needed correction, so
the Gridsampler op has also a change.
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.
A bunch of small fixes are interlinked and trigger crashes if not
addressed as a group. This includes:
- aten view when expand from a rank-0 tensor
- slice folder with negative indices
- `aten._shape_as_tensor` folder on a rank-0 tensor
- `aten.cat` of a tensor with a length-0 tensor
We collapsed and broadcasted scatter indices to a single element
version. We should instead upport `tm_tensor.scatter`s support for
multiple indices and the implicitly broadcasted behavior. This avoids
the serialization and materializing a needlessly large indices tensor.
Simple folder for limited size aten tensor operations. This is primarily
useful for shape computation folding as they unfortunately can use
`aten` operators. Add, sub, mul are common examples of these folders.
Even though the reference compiler is not about performance, inlining
the generated sparse helper methods has a rather big positive impact on
performance, leaving a much better first impression. Therefore, we added
this inlining pass (which leaves all other PyTorch modules unaffected,
since they tend to be one big main() method to start with).
testing:
$./tools/e2e_test.sh --config linalg
Summary:
Passed: 1164
Expectedly Failed: 8
$ python -m e2e_testing.main --config=torchdynamo
Summary:
Passed: 976
Expectedly Failed: 162
We can route the torch tests via `onnx` using the `torch.onnx.export`
tooling. We can then reimport, lower to torch, and compile to linalg to
validate the onnx path is working correctly.
The current implementation exposes some failures in the `onnx` path so
we cannot enable the onnx test suite yet due to segmentation faults.
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.
This PR introduces a sparse_jit wrapper that can run simple models with
sparse tensor inputs end-to-end. The implementation shows all required
components on modifying sparse tensor types with a 1:N relation on the
call sites. Two tests shows that the JIT runs end-to-end while computing
the correct results.
More details to follow (generalizing to COO and different ranks, as well
as support for *output* sparse tensors), but the general concepts are
all here now.
**_Update: Thanks to Rob, bump to proper LLVM/MLIR hash is done!_**
_**NOTE that all parameter passing changes are nicely done "downstream"
in MLIR, so very little changes are required in torch-mlir code
proper**_
---------
Co-authored-by: Franz Haniel <77495327+frafranz@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Franz Haniel <franz.haniel@amd.com>