Commit Graph

3 Commits (f77d88390a8e3c4bdc2172a0f0342d0df21c598d)

Author SHA1 Message Date
Aart Bik 534b266f2d
[torch-mlir][NFC] remove trailing whitespace (#2936) 2024-02-20 11:23:14 -08:00
Rik Huijzer 8328998172
Allow printing all IR in `torch_mlir.compile` (#2669)
This PR adds the `enable_ir_printing` option to `torch_mlir.compile`,
which can be used to print the IR for all intermediate passes.

When running the added test file via:
```shell
$ python test/python/compile.py 2> tiny.stderr
```
the file `tiny.stderr` is about 700 KB.
2023-12-20 15:08:21 -06:00
Stella Laurenzo 6961f0a247
Re-organize project structure to separate PyTorch dependencies from core project. (#2542)
This is a first step towards the structure we discussed here:
https://gist.github.com/stellaraccident/931b068aaf7fa56f34069426740ebf20

There are two primary goals:

1. Separate the core project (C++ dialects and conversions) from the
hard PyTorch dependencies. We move all such things into projects/pt1 as
a starting point since they are presently entangled with PT1-era APIs.
Additional work can be done to disentangle components from that
(specifically LTC is identified as likely ultimately living in a
`projects/ltc`).
2. Create space for native PyTorch2 Dynamo-based infra to be upstreamed
without needing to co-exist with the original TorchScript path.

Very little changes in this path with respect to build layering or
options. These can be updated in a followup without commingling
directory structure changes.

This also takes steps toward a couple of other layering enhancements:

* Removes the llvm-external-projects/torch-mlir-dialects sub-project,
collapsing it into the main tree.
* Audits and fixes up the core C++ build to account for issues found
while moving things. This is just an opportunistic pass through but
roughly ~halves the number of build actions for the project from the
high 4000's to the low 2000's.

It deviates from the discussed plan by having a `projects/` tree instead
of `compat/`. As I was thinking about it, this will better accommodate
the follow-on code movement.

Once things are roughly in place and the CI passing, followups will
focus on more in-situ fixes and cleanups.
2023-11-02 19:45:55 -07:00