These tests pass on the reference backend.
- Add aten.linear op + shape xfer function + ATen->Linalg lowering.
- Note: this needs to be more automated, and needs to cover more cases.
- Current not implemented caveats:
- size-1 broadcasting for bias vector (either static-size-1 or ? case)
- higher-rank aten.linear ops (not produced by torch.nn.Linear though)
- type promotion (still don't even know the exact rules here)
- Add folder for torch.derefine op. Now the inliner can clean it up as
it inlines. (call boundaries are a main place we need to insert
torch.derefine) This is brittle -- the other important case is control
flow which will need to be handled via an extension to
RefineTypes.cpp (as will more robust call handling). River has an
in-flight patch to update it to the new dataflow framework so I didn't
want to do anything intrusive here.
- Also adjust torch.derefine syntax to use the keyword `to` instead of
`->`, as most type-only, cast-like ops do.
The E2E tests can be run with
```
npcpy frontends/pytorch/e2e_testing/torchscript/main.py
```
This commit adds a couple items supporting that end, including new sugar
for annotations (no more raw use of ClassAnnotator!).
Recommended review order:
1. `frontends/pytorch/e2e_testing/torchscript/main.py` for
the harness + `basic.py` in that directory for examples of tests.
2. Annotation sugar in `frontends/pytorch/python/torch_mlir/torchscript/annotations.py`
and unittest in `frontends/pytorch/test/ivalue_import/annotations/sugar.py`
3. Global test registry / sugar in
`frontends/pytorch/python/torch_mlir/torchscript/e2e_test/registry.py`
4. `frontends/pytorch/python/torch_mlir/torchscript/e2e_test/framework.py`
for the meat of the testing framework (start at `run_tests`), and
looking at the backend configs in
`frontends/pytorch/python/torch_mlir/torchscript/e2e_test/configs`
for examples of backends. This is likely the bulk of review time.
5. Unit tests of the framework logic in `frontends/pytorch/test/torchscript_e2e_test`
There's TODO's scattered throughout, but this seems functional enough to
start pulling stuff into and kicking the tires. A few missing pieces:
1. Marking test expected pass/fail per backend.
2. Figuring out how best to fit this into dev workflows.
3. IREE TestConfig.
Also, forgive this Python newbie... Any advice on Python code structure
/ library design would be much appreciated.
These allow users to annotate a known "type bound" on the argument,
which can seed shape/dtype inference. We don't rewrite the function
types as part of the import process (it will happen in a
yet-to-be-written pass) because:
1. We would need to interprocedurally rewrite all calls to keep the IR
consistent. Currently, we have a place after GlobalizeObjectGraph but
before we convert to tensors where this is convenient to do. Ideally,
we would do this on the object graph representation.
1. We don't necessarily know that adjusting the function type is a legal
calling convention change. The pass will have blessed knowledge (by
the pass pipeline author) that adjusting the argument type based on
the type bound is safe (which it frequently is).
2. Note that in principle, a type bound could be a fairly general thing
(such as maximum sizes of dimensions, unions of multiple concrete
types, etc.). The pass will in principle have logic to interpret the
type bounds and to determine a suitable "best" (and legal) argument
type.
This primarily unlocks proper handling of free functions (that is,
functions that are not methods of any torch.nn.Module).
Recommended review order:
- `ivalue_importer.cpp` + `ivalue_import/functions*.py`
- `GlobalizeObjectGraph.cpp` + test case
- misc other stuff
The `torch::jit::CompilationUnit` is basically a backing store or
"context" holding all the possible functions in the program. The
previous code was not explicitly accessing this data structure, since it
just imported the `torch::jit::Function`'s that it saw attached to
methods.
Subtly, any time a TorchScript module called into a free function, the
free function gets incorporated into the torch::jit::CompilationUnit,
but doesn't show up anywhere when dumping the module, except in the
curious pattern:
```
%5 : Function = prim::Constant[name="adaptive_avg_pool2d"]()
%6 : Tensor = prim::CallFunction(%5, %input.1, %4)
```
That is, calls are indirect calls, and are accessed via `prim::Constant`
materializing a function object. Even stranger, the `name` attribute here
doesn't really even tell the full story -- it doesn't correspond to
anything. It turns out that the c10::FunctionType itself actually holds
a pointer to the `torch::jit::Function` in the compilation unit
directly (so there is actually no indirection in prim::CallMethod,
because any two values of the same FunctionType call the same
function!). E.g. when converting the IR to bytecode, the "name" is
ignored [code link](1d6bd15790/torch/csrc/jit/runtime/interpreter.cpp (L937)).
We do import `prim::CallFunction` as a `std.call_indirect` though
because it's more braindead to do it that way (it gets canonicalized to
a direct call easily).
- `module_import -> ivalue_import`, as it mainly tests ivalue_importer.cpp
- `graph_import -> node_import`, as it mainly tests node_importer.cpp
- graph_importer.cpp does call into node_importer.cpp, but doesn't do
much.
This was getting pretty confusing. Also add README.md's in each
directory for more clarity.