* Propagate device data names
* Address PR comment
* Add example usage
* Add test for device data names
* Make TorchMlirComputation fields protected
* Add lazy backend device data name unit tests
* Disable lazy backend tests if LTC is disabled
* Add comments
In some cases, users know that a traced graph is valid for a wider set
of shapes than they originally traced it with. Provide an option for
users to ignore the shapes in the traced graph when they know it is
legal.
Fixes#997
use_tracing=True was behaving unexpectedly because the handling of
single arguments was happening after the torch.jit.trace call.
This also fixes the check to specifically test for a torch.Tensor or
TensorPlaceholder so that both lists and tuples would be correctly
handled.
We do this by inroducing a TensorPlaceholder class, which can be used to
specify dynamic sizes. Internally, we canonicalize all example inputs
to TensorPlaceholder's.
This commit also adds some basic testing, which was missing before.
NB: `shouldnt_normalize2` and `shouldnt_normalize3` currently XPASS i.e., args *will* successfully normalize despite being incorrect due to an [upstream bug](https://github.com/pytorch/pytorch/issues/75342).
- Split out TOSA in the CI.
- Add summary of unexpected test outcomes. This works better when there
are many XFAIL'ing tests, as it only prints out the error_str on
FAIL, not on XFAIL. Example here:
https://gist.github.com/silvasean/c7886ec7b3d35c21563cb09f7c3407da
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.
This leaves no real code outside torch-mlir.
This also renames the "npcomp backend contract" to "linalg on tensors
backend contract" as the name of the abstraction layer that RefBackend
(IREE too) accepts.
Fixes https://github.com/llvm/mlir-npcomp/issues/311
The key change is that TorchPlugin is folded into
`torch_mlir.dialects.torch.importer.jit_ir` (it imports the PyTorch
JIT's IR, so that's a good, scoped name for it).
The CMake option `-DTORCH_MLIR_ENABLE_JIT_IR_IMPORTER=OFF` disables it,
which allows building without a PyTorch native dependency.
After this change, there are now just two subdirectories in the
`python_packages` directory in our combined build:
- `npcomp_core` with all the npcomp stuff
- `torch_mlir` with all the `torch-mlir` stuff.
The combined `torch_mlir` build will be packaged for use by `pip`.
There isn't anything super useful for wider use in `npcomp_core` so for
now we aren't going to package that one.
It just contained the e2e testing framework. We now fold it into the
main project to reduce complexity.
- `frontends/pytorch/python/` -> `python/torch_support`
- `frontends/pytorch/e2e_testing -> e2e_testing`
- `frontends/pytorch/examples -> examples`
- `frontends/pytorch/test` -> `python/test`
- `torch_mlir_torchscript` python module -> `npcomp_torchscript`
- `torch_mlir_torchscript_e2e_test_configs` python module ->
`npcomp_torchscript_e2e_test_configs`
This also changes the license of a handful of files from the
"pytorch-style" license to the regular LLVM/npcomp license. The only
people who committed to those files were myself and Yi.