Gridsampler
In onnx the interpolation mode is called 'linear' whereas in pytorch it
is called 'bilinear'. This led to the problem that everything other than
'bilinear' was rejected. It needed to be changed to linear.
Sparse tensor conversions are represented by special aten operators.
This PR ensures the conversions are recognized (instead of failing the
full torch aten lowering to linalg).
- Fix pad size to data_rank for dynamic paddingSize Tensor.
- This fix is in accordance with [input
specification](https://onnx.ai/onnx/operators/onnx__Pad.html#inputs) for
onnx.Pad
- Impl will need to be updated for dynamic padSize when support for
`axes` is added.
A choice was made to quantize the return type of Relu with a scale and
zero point copied from the input's quantization scheme. With this
choice, the torch-to-linalg conversion of quantized Relu essentially
computes max(input, zeroPoint) in the elementwise payload.
All e2e iree tests compiled, but they have the run issue of mismatch of
dtype like the following
```
expected:
1x1x2x2xsi32=[[[12 16][24 28]]]
actual:
1x1x2x2xi32=[[[12 16][24 28]]]
```
* promote input to output element-type when lowering to stablehlo, so
that it could satisfy stablehlo's type constraints.
* split promote-to-fp unary ops from fp-only unary ops.
This commit also cleans up the OnnxToTorch lowering for the Squeeze and
Unsqueeze op and adds the support for handling edge cases.
Signed-Off By: Vivek Khandelwal <vivekkhandelwal1424@gmail.com>
Version number was set too high. Lowered to support more cases allows
more tests to pass.
Co-authored-by: Robert Suderman <rsuderman@Roberts-MacBook-Pro.local>
Previous implementation erroneously mixed up num_outputs with
slice_size. New version correctly computs the slice size and directly
performs slicing rather than leveraging `aten.split.tensor`. This is due
to `onnx` supporting a fixed number of splits making the size
computation more easily computeable when lowering to `aten` rather than
deferring to `aten.split.tensor`.
---------
Co-authored-by: Robert Suderman <rsuderman@Roberts-MacBook-Pro.local>
We can map to `tensor.reshape` for handling multiple output dynamic
shapes. Later we can perform a more complex analysis for indentifying
expand/collapse cases from the tensor.reshape.
Initially we planned to handle this identification at the `torch` level
however it will be easier to handle once converted to core
mlir-dialects.
Decomposition RepeatInterleaveSelfInt with following ops:
```python
def my_repeat_interleave(input, repeats, dim=None):
if dim is None:
# Flatten the input and then repeat
return input.flatten().unsqueeze(-1).tile((1, repeats)).flatten()
else:
# Calculate the shape after repeat
expanded_shape = list(input.shape)
expanded_shape[dim] *= repeats
# Repeat the tensor along the specified dimension
repeat_shape = [1] * (input.dim() + 1)
repeat_shape[dim + 1] = repeats
input = input.unsqueeze(-1)
# Tile and then reshape
tiled = torch.tile(input, repeat_shape)
# Rearrange and reshape
repeated = tiled.reshape(*expanded_shape)
return repeated
```
I passed the tests of stablehlo and linalg. When testing onnx, strange
things happened.
In torch-mlir's CI **torch_nightly** and my own
environment(torch==2.4.0.dev20240318+cpu), it can **pass the pass**.
In torch-mlir's CI **torch_stable**, it **failed**.
The test case is `RepeatInterleaveSelfIntNoDimModule_basic`, the result
shape should be [120].
```python
class RepeatInterleaveSelfIntNoDimModule(torch.nn.Module):
def __init__(self):
super().__init__()
@export
@annotate_args([
None,
([3, 4, 5], torch.float32, True),
])
def forward(self, x):
return x.repeat_interleave(2)
@register_test_case(module_factory=lambda: RepeatInterleaveSelfIntNoDimModule())
def RepeatInterleaveSelfIntNoDimModule_basic(module, tu: TestUtils):
module.forward(tu.rand(3, 4, 5))
```
The error log is as follows:
```
Unexpected outcome summary: (onnx)
****** Failed tests - 1 tests
FAIL - "RepeatInterleaveSelfIntNoDimModule_basic"
@ trace item #0 - call to "forward"
@ output of call to "forward"
ERROR: shape (torch.Size([6, 4, 5])) is not equal to golden shape (torch.Size([120]))
```
@rsuderman
Would you please help me check what's wrong with my PR? Thanks a lot.
weights and biases and other model parameters appear as a separate data
structure to the traced graph, but are needed when running the MLIR
compiled code; this PR implements that extended functionality