…cation and sparse tensors.
**NOTE**: This PR _doges_ the issue in buffer-deallocation pass instead
of resolving it. In the future, we need to fix the bug in
buffer-deallocation pass when handling code generated by sparse
compiler.
While playing with TorchDynamo on ResNet18. I notice following issues:
- `prims.convert_element_type` can’t be canonicalized even if the input
and the output share the same type
- `aten.max_pool2d_with_indices` is always used instead of
`aten.max_pool2d`, even if the second returned output (indices) has no
user
This PR fixes above issues by adding a folder to the
PrimsConvertElementTypeOp and a canonicalizer to the
AtenMaxPool2dWithIndicesOp
Lit test:
`cmake --build build --target check-torch-mlir-all`
---------
Co-authored-by: Ze Zhang <ze.zhang@getcruise.com>
This is probably a decent PR for learning about blocks and regions.
If you're here to learn about that, consider also looking at
lib/Conversion/TorchToSCF/TorchToSCF.cpp
While this doesn't include an e2e test, it is tested downstream in
https://github.com/nod-ai/SHARK-TestSuite/blob/main/e2eshark/onnx/operators/If/model.py
---------
Co-authored-by: Xida Ren <xida.ren.dev@gmail.com>
I spent a little while debugging numerics issues with some tests similar
to the ones in quantized_models.py, only to find that pytorch's
quantized conv transpose is catastrophically inaccurate. I'll upstream
the issue and only leave the tests here which are of the form quantize
-> dequantize -> op.
For some sparse programs (and I am sure other not-seen corner cases for
dense), some passes were missing in the reference pipeline, eventually
resulting in e.g. a unresolved unrealized cast issue. This PR adds some
very obvious missing passes to avoid this situation.
This is a large change because prior to this point, Python files in the
project were not consistently formatted. This reformats them all with
black defaults.
Based on experience with prior projects, if you have a dev/long-term
branch with Python patches, you can minimize merge conflicts prior to
rebasing to include this commit by running `black` on your modified
Python files, squashing, and then rebasing/merging.
This is part 1 of ~3, formatting all miscellaneous text files and CPP files matched by a first run of pre-commit. These tend to be low change-traffic and are likely not disruptive.
Subsequent patches will format Python files and remaining CPP files.
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.
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.
Align corner modes which select what the corners mean.
Either the center of the corner points or the edges of the edge points.
---------
Co-authored-by: Rob Suderman <rob.suderman@gmail.com>
The new cases added for quantized matmuls are:
1. vec-vec
2. vec-mat
3. mat-vec
each of which are now lowered to expand(s), quantized_matmul, and
collapse.
1. onnx.MatMulInteger now converts to aten.matmul instead of aten.mm
2. aten.matmul, for ranks >=2, now allows quantized inputs and will
lower to linalg::quantized_matmul or linalg::quantized_batch_matmul.
3. added AtenMatmulOp to the FuseQuantizeOps rewrite patters
QuantizeOperands, QuantizeTransposedOperands, and QuantizeAccumulator
4. added several tests, including some to test AtenMmOp with varying
quantization signed-ness.
5. a quantized matmul mat-vec test is added to verify the failure to
lower to linalg; cleaned of out-of-date code related to common
torch-mlir lowering xfails.
6. in debugging a real model with quantized matmuls, I found a bug on
the scalarize-shapes pass which resulted from the aten.full op folder
returning an incompatible result type. This is fixed by the small change
here to
[lib/Dialect/Torch/IR/TorchOps.cpp](https://github.com/llvm/torch-mlir/compare/main...zjgarvey:torch-mlir:MatMulIntegerFix?expand=1#diff-dc8ed165c207918e606490eee3984b1ad51d7034e6aac36fc046bf47f6f03f4f).
- Added linalg lowering for `AtenFloorDivideScalarOp`
- Needed `AtenDivScalarModeOp` for the decomp.
- Added linalg lowering for `AtenDivScalarModeOp`
- Moved linalg payload logic to `createDivModePayload()` since the logic
was nearly identical for both `AtenDivScalarModeOp` and
`AtenDivTensorModeOp`. Just a template function
- Added `AtenDivScalarModeOp` lowering for stablehlo
Pytorch's
[`torch.floor_divide()`](https://pytorch.org/docs/stable/generated/torch.floor_divide.html)
in a previous version (for a reason unknown to me) preformed a
truncation instead of "floor". The already implemented op
`AtenFloorDivideTensorOp` was done before this change. However, this
wasn't caught because our testcases only tested positive floor division.
I changed this to floor as well as adding a few test cases.
If there is only a single value scattered there can be an implicit batch
dimension. This includes a check for the implicit batch dimension when
reshaping the update tensor. It includes an e2e test to verify
correctness.
Fix the case PrimListUnpackOp's result num is not equal to PrimList
length.
See the following example:
```python
def forward(self, x):
if len(x.shape) == 5:
b0, t, c0, h0, w0 = x.shape
b, c, h, w = torch.mul(b0, t), c0, h0, w0
else:
b1, c1, h1, w1 = x.shape
b, c, h, w = b1, c1, h1, w1
res = torch.reshape(x, [b, c, h, w])
return res
```
Without this fix, the following error message will occur:
```
/root/torch-mlir/externals/llvm-project/mlir/lib/IR/PatternMatch.cpp:118: virtual void mlir::RewriterBase::replaceOp(mlir::Operation *, mlir::ValueRange): Assertion `op->getNumResults() == newValues.size() && "incorrect # of replacement values"' failed.
```
Previously, it could only handle the situations where outputsize == (1,
1) or outputsize == (input_H, input_W). Now it supports all situations
where input_H % output_H== 0 && input_W % output_W == 0
1. Changes the linalg lowering for dequantization ops to always sign
cast to float to prevent misrepresenting uint32 overflow on subtraction
with zero point.
2. Adds a basic quantized model test which only quantizes and
dequantizes and now passes with these changes in linalg and onnx
configs.
3. Changes the aten.mm lowering to allow mismatched quantized types.
4. If a quantized matmul arg is uint8, we shift by 128 to faithfully
represent the quantization as a signed i8 quantization. This worked fine
in the AtenMmOp lowering, but I'd be happy to move it to a rewrite in
FuseQuantizedOps.cpp instead if that seems more appropriate.
With the changes 3 and 4, the QuantizedMLP_basic and
QuantizedSingleLayer_basic e2e tests now passes with the onnx config.
Added error message when adding new torch op to
[torch_ods_gen.py](https://github.com/llvm/torch-mlir/compare/main...IanWood1:torch-mlir:ods_gen_error_message?expand=1#diff-889b60b904ed67a5065a14e8de6fc89e00e199577e4d2bfa134ac4d1c89832d2).
New message displays which op key is failing and possible matches in the
torch `Registry`.
```Op does not match any Torch ops in Registry
Given op:
"aten::hardtanh_wrong : (Tensor, Scalar) -> (Tensor)"
Possible matches:
"aten::hardshrink : (Tensor, Scalar) -> (Tensor)"
"aten::hardtanh_ : (Tensor, Scalar, Scalar) -> (Tensor)"
"aten::hardtanh : (Tensor, Scalar, Scalar) -> (Tensor)"
"aten::clamp_min : (Tensor, Scalar) -> (Tensor)"
"aten::linalg_cond : (Tensor, Scalar?) -> (Tensor)"```
Also, ran black formatting on file. Based on LLVM style guides this seems to be correct, but I can revert the formatting if needed.
This PR only performs a lit test. In lieu of an e2e test, https://github.com/nod-ai/SHARK-TestSuite/pull/142 makede sure that the lowering works & the numbers check out.
Co-authored-by: Xida Ren <xida.ren.dev@gmail.com>
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