This change combines for ROCm what was done for CUDA in D97463, D98203, D98360, and D98396.
I did not try to compile SerializeToHsaco.cpp or test mlir/test/Integration/GPU/ROCM because I don't have an AMD card. I fixed the things that had obvious bit-rot though.
Reviewed By: whchung
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98447
The Intel Advanced Matrix Extensions (AMX) provides a tile matrix
multiply unit (TMUL), a tile control register (TILECFG), and eight
tile registers TMM0 through TMM7 (TILEDATA). This new MLIR dialect
provides a bridge between MLIR concepts like vectors and memrefs
and the lower level LLVM IR details of AMX.
Reviewed By: nicolasvasilache
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98470
Change CUDA integration tests to use mlir-opt + mlir-cpu-runner instead.
Depends On D98203
Reviewed By: herhut
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98396
This offers the ability to create a JIT and invoke a function by passing
ctypes pointers to the argument and the result.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97523
This adds minimalistic bindings for the execution engine, allowing to
invoke the JIT from the C API. This is still quite early and
experimental and shouldn't be considered stable in any way.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96651
This does not change the behavior directly: the tests only run when
`-DMLIR_INCLUDE_INTEGRATION_TESTS=ON` is configured. However running
`ninja check-mlir` will not run all the tests within a single
lit invocation. The previous behavior would wait for all the integration
tests to complete before starting to run the first regular test. The
test results were also reported separately. This change is unifying all
of this and allow concurrent execution of the integration tests with
regular non-regression and unit-tests.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97241
The CMake changes in 2aa1af9b1d to make it possible to build MLIR as a
standalone project unfortunately disabled all unit-tests from the
regular in-tree build.
Add the necessary bits to CMakeLists to make it possible to configure
MLIR against installed LLVM, and build it with minimal need for LLVM
source tree. The latter is only necessary to run unittests, and if it
is missing then unittests are skipped with a warning.
This change includes the necessary changes to tests, in particular
adding some missing substitutions and defining missing variables
for lit.site.cfg.py substitution.
Reviewed By: stephenneuendorffer
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85464
Co-authored-by: Isuru Fernando <isuruf@gmail.com>
This revision improves the usage of the codegen strategy by adding a few flags that
make it easier to control for the CLI.
Usage of ModuleOp is replaced by FuncOp as this created issues in multi-threaded mode.
A simple benchmarking capability is added for linalg.matmul as well as linalg.matmul_column_major.
This latter op is also added to linalg.
Now obsolete linalg integration tests that also take too long are deleted.
Correctness checks are still missing at this point.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95531
Attributes represent additional data about an operation and are intended to be
modifiable during the lifetime of the operation. In the dialect-specific Python
bindings, attributes are exposed as properties on the operation class. Allow
for assigning values to these properties. Also support creating new and
deleting existing attributes through the generic "attributes" property of an
operation. Any validity checking must be performed by the op verifier after the
mutation, similarly to C++. Operations are not invalidated in the process: no
dangling pointers can be created as all attributes are owned by the context and
will remain live even if they are not used in any operation.
Introduce a Python Test dialect by analogy with the Test dialect and to avoid
polluting the latter with Python-specific constructs. Use this dialect to
implement a test for the attribute access and mutation API.
Reviewed By: stellaraccident, mehdi_amini
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91652
This only exposes the ability to round-trip a textual pipeline at the
moment.
To exercise it, we also bind the libTransforms in a new Python extension. This
does not include any interesting bindings, but it includes all the
mechanism to add separate native extensions and load them dynamically.
As such passes in libTransforms are only registered after `import
mlir.transforms`.
To support this global registration, the TableGen backend is also
extended to bind to the C API the group registration for passes.
Reviewed By: stellaraccident
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D90819
This is exposing the basic functionalities (create, nest, addPass, run) of
the PassManager through the C API in the new header: `include/mlir-c/Pass.h`.
In order to exercise it in the unit-test, a basic TableGen backend is
also provided to generate a simple C wrapper around the pass
constructor. It is used to expose the libTransforms passes to the C API.
Reviewed By: stellaraccident, ftynse
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D90667
This patch introduces a SPIR-V runner. The aim is to run a gpu
kernel on a CPU via GPU -> SPIRV -> LLVM conversions. This is a first
prototype, so more features will be added in due time.
- Overview
The runner follows similar flow as the other runners in-tree. However,
having converted the kernel to SPIR-V, we encode the bind attributes of
global variables that represent kernel arguments. Then SPIR-V module is
converted to LLVM. On the host side, we emulate passing the data to device
by creating in main module globals with the same symbolic name as in kernel
module. These global variables are later linked with ones from the nested
module. We copy data from kernel arguments to globals, call the kernel
function from nested module and then copy the data back.
- Current state
At the moment, the runner is capable of running 2 modules, nested one in
another. The kernel module must contain exactly one kernel function. Also,
the runner supports rank 1 integer memref types as arguments (to be scaled).
- Enhancement of JitRunner and ExecutionEngine
To translate nested modules to LLVM IR, JitRunner and ExecutionEngine were
altered to take an optional (default to `nullptr`) function reference that
is a custom LLVM IR module builder. This allows to customize LLVM IR module
creation from MLIR modules.
Reviewed By: ftynse, mravishankar
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86108
This reverts commit 4986d5eaff with
proper patches to CMakeLists.txt:
- Add MLIRAsync as a dependency to MLIRAsyncToLLVM
- Add Coroutines as a dependency to MLIRExecutionEngine
Lower from Async dialect to LLVM by converting async regions attached to `async.execute` operations into LLVM coroutines (https://llvm.org/docs/Coroutines.html):
1. Outline all async regions to functions
2. Add LLVM coro intrinsics to mark coroutine begin/end
3. Use MLIR conversion framework to convert all remaining async types and ops to LLVM + Async runtime function calls
All `async.await` operations inside async regions converted to coroutine suspension points. Await operation outside of a coroutine converted to the blocking wait operations.
Implement simple runtime to support concurrent execution of coroutines.
Reviewed By: herhut
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89292
Introduce an initial version of C API for MLIR core IR components: Value, Type,
Attribute, Operation, Region, Block, Location. These APIs allow for both
inspection and creation of the IR in the generic form and intended for wrapping
in high-level library- and language-specific constructs. At this point, there
is no stability guarantee provided for the API.
Reviewed By: stellaraccident, lattner
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D83310
Some dialects have semantics which is not well represented by common
SSA structures with dominance constraints. This patch allows
operations to declare the 'kind' of their contained regions.
Currently, two kinds are allowed: "SSACFG" and "Graph". The only
difference between them at the moment is that SSACFG regions are
required to have dominance, while Graph regions are not required to
have dominance. The intention is that this Interface would be
generated by ODS for existing operations, although this has not yet
been implemented. Presumably, if someone were interested in code
generation, we might also have a "CFG" dialect, which defines control
flow, but does not require SSA.
The new behavior is mostly identical to the previous behavior, since
registered operations without a RegionKindInterface are assumed to
contain SSACFG regions. However, the behavior has changed for
unregistered operations. Previously, these were checked for
dominance, however the new behavior allows dominance violations, in
order to allow the processing of unregistered dialects with Graph
regions. One implication of this is that regions in unregistered
operations with more than one op are no longer CSE'd (since it
requires dominance info).
I've also reorganized the LangRef documentation to remove assertions
about "sequential execution", "SSA Values", and "Dominance". Instead,
the core IR is simply "ordered" (i.e. totally ordered) and consists of
"Values". I've also clarified some things about how control flow
passes between blocks in an SSACFG region. Control Flow must enter a
region at the entry block and follow terminator operation successors
or be returned to the containing op. Graph regions do not define a
notion of control flow.
see discussion here:
https://llvm.discourse.group/t/rfc-allowing-dialects-to-relax-the-ssa-dominance-condition/833/53
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D80358
Summary:
* Native '_mlir' extension module.
* Python mlir/__init__.py trampoline module.
* Lit test that checks a message.
* Uses some cmake configurations that have worked for me in the past but likely needs further elaboration.
Subscribers: mgorny, mehdi_amini, rriddle, jpienaar, shauheen, antiagainst, nicolasvasilache, arpith-jacob, mgester, lucyrfox, aartbik, liufengdb, stephenneuendorffer, Joonsoo, grosul1, Kayjukh, jurahul, msifontes
Tags: #mlir
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D83279
Summary:
* This allows these flags to be passed on the command line with normal CMake bool-interpreted values like ON/OFF instead of requiring 0/1.
* As-is, if passing ON/OFF, these will cause a parse error in lit.site.cfg.py because Python tries to interpret the string literally.
Reviewers: stephenneuendorffer
Subscribers: mgorny, mehdi_amini, rriddle, jpienaar, shauheen, antiagainst, nicolasvasilache, arpith-jacob, mgester, lucyrfox, aartbik, liufengdb, Joonsoo, grosul1, Kayjukh, jurahul, msifontes
Tags: #mlir
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D83451
Create the framework and testing environment for MLIR Reduce - a tool
with the objective to reduce large test cases into smaller ones while
preserving their interesting behavior.
Implement the functionality to parse command line arguments, parse the
MLIR test cases into modules and run the interestingness tests on
the modules.
Reviewed By: jpienaar
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D82803
with the objective to reduce large test cases into smaller ones while
preserving their interesting behavior.
Implement the framework to parse the command line arguments, parse the
input MLIR test case into a module and call reduction passes on the MLIR module.
Implement the Tester class which allows the different reduction passes to test the
interesting behavior of the generated reduced variants of the test case and keep track
of the most reduced generated variant.
Summary:
`mlir-rocm-runner` is introduced in this commit to execute GPU modules on ROCm
platform. A small wrapper to encapsulate ROCm's HIP runtime API is also inside
the commit.
Due to behavior of ROCm, raw pointers inside memrefs passed to `gpu.launch`
must be modified on the host side to properly capture the pointer values
addressable on the GPU.
LLVM MC is used to assemble AMD GCN ISA coming out from
`ConvertGPUKernelToBlobPass` to binary form, and LLD is used to produce a shared
ELF object which could be loaded by ROCm HIP runtime.
gfx900 is the default target be used right now, although it could be altered via
an option in `mlir-rocm-runner`. Future revisions may consider using ROCm Agent
Enumerator to detect the right target on the system.
Notice AMDGPU Code Object V2 is used in this revision. Future enhancements may
upgrade to AMDGPU Code Object V3.
Bitcode libraries in ROCm-Device-Libs, which implements math routines exposed in
`rocdl` dialect are not yet linked, and is left as a TODO in the logic.
Reviewers: herhut
Subscribers: mgorny, tpr, dexonsmith, mehdi_amini, rriddle, jpienaar, shauheen, antiagainst, nicolasvasilache, csigg, arpith-jacob, mgester, lucyrfox, aartbik, liufengdb, stephenneuendorffer, Joonsoo, grosul1, frgossen, Kayjukh, jurahul, llvm-commits
Tags: #mlir, #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D80676
Summary:
This revision adds a tool that generates the ODS and C++ implementation for "named" Linalg ops according to the [RFC discussion](https://llvm.discourse.group/t/rfc-declarative-named-ops-in-the-linalg-dialect/745).
While the mechanisms and language aspects are by no means set in stone, this revision allows connecting the pieces end-to-end from a mathematical-like specification.
Some implementation details and short-term decisions taken for the purpose of bootstrapping and that are not set in stone include:
1. using a "[Tensor Comprehension](https://arxiv.org/abs/1802.04730)-inspired" syntax
2. implicit and eager discovery of dims and symbols when parsing
3. using EDSC ops to specify the computation (e.g. std_addf, std_mul_f, ...)
A followup revision will connect this tool to tablegen mechanisms and allow the emission of named Linalg ops that automatically lower to various loop forms and run end to end.
For the following "Tensor Comprehension-inspired" string:
```
def batch_matmul(A: f32(Batch, M, K), B: f32(K, N)) -> (C: f32(Batch, M, N)) {
C(b, m, n) = std_addf<k>(std_mulf(A(b, m, k), B(k, n)));
}
```
With -gen-ods-decl=1, this emits (modulo formatting):
```
def batch_matmulOp : LinalgNamedStructured_Op<"batch_matmul", [
NInputs<2>,
NOutputs<1>,
NamedStructuredOpTraits]> {
let arguments = (ins Variadic<LinalgOperand>:$views);
let results = (outs Variadic<AnyRankedTensor>:$output_tensors);
let extraClassDeclaration = [{
llvm::Optional<SmallVector<StringRef, 8>> referenceIterators();
llvm::Optional<SmallVector<AffineMap, 8>> referenceIndexingMaps();
void regionBuilder(ArrayRef<BlockArgument> args);
}];
let hasFolder = 1;
}
```
With -gen-ods-impl, this emits (modulo formatting):
```
llvm::Optional<SmallVector<StringRef, 8>> batch_matmul::referenceIterators() {
return SmallVector<StringRef, 8>{ getParallelIteratorTypeName(),
getParallelIteratorTypeName(),
getParallelIteratorTypeName(),
getReductionIteratorTypeName() };
}
llvm::Optional<SmallVector<AffineMap, 8>> batch_matmul::referenceIndexingMaps()
{
MLIRContext *context = getContext();
AffineExpr d0, d1, d2, d3;
bindDims(context, d0, d1, d2, d3);
return SmallVector<AffineMap, 8>{
AffineMap::get(4, 0, {d0, d1, d3}),
AffineMap::get(4, 0, {d3, d2}),
AffineMap::get(4, 0, {d0, d1, d2}) };
}
void batch_matmul::regionBuilder(ArrayRef<BlockArgument> args) {
using namespace edsc;
using namespace intrinsics;
ValueHandle _0(args[0]), _1(args[1]), _2(args[2]);
ValueHandle _4 = std_mulf(_0, _1);
ValueHandle _5 = std_addf(_2, _4);
(linalg_yield(ValueRange{ _5 }));
}
```
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D77067
The "cblas" lib under mlir/test is meant as a simple integration demonstration.
However it is installed and ends up conflicting with external projects who want to
define the real cblas.
Rename to avoid conflicts.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76615
Summary:
This revision split out a new CRunnerUtils library that supports
MLIR execution on targets without a C++ runtime.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75257
Previously C++ test passes for SPIR-V were put under
test/Dialect/SPIRV. Move them to test/lib/Dialect/SPIRV
to create a better structure.
Also fixed one of the test pass to use new
PassRegistration mechanism.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75066
Add an initial version of mlir-vulkan-runner execution driver.
A command line utility that executes a MLIR file on the Vulkan by
translating MLIR GPU module to SPIR-V and host part to LLVM IR before
JIT-compiling and executing the latter.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72696
SPIR-V has a few mechanisms to control op availability: version,
extension, and capabilities. These mechanisms are considered as
different availability classes.
This commit introduces basic definitions for modelling SPIR-V
availability classes. Specifically, an `Availability` class is
added to SPIRVBase.td, along with two subclasses: MinVersion
and MaxVersion for versioning. SPV_Op is extended to take a
list of `Availability`. Each `Availability` instance carries
information for generating op interfaces for the corresponding
availability class and also the concrete availability
requirements.
With the availability spec on ops, we can now auto-generate the
op interfaces of all SPIR-V availability classes and also
synthesize the op's implementations of these interfaces. The
interface generation is done via new TableGen backends
-gen-avail-interface-{decls|defs}. The op's implementation is
done via -gen-spirv-avail-impls.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71930
Moving cuda-runtime-wrappers.so into subdirectory to match libmlir_runner_utils.so.
Provide parent directory when running test and load .so from subdirectory.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 282410749
This chapter adds a new composite type to Toy, and shows the process of adding a new type to the IR, adding and updating operations to use it, and constant folding operations producing it.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 279107885
This part of the tutorial is now covered by a new flow in Toy. This also removes a point of confusion as there is also a proper Linalg dialect.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 275338933
This chapters introduces the notion of a full conversion, and adds support for lowering down to the LLVM dialect, LLVM IR, and thus code generation.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 275337786
Now that MLIR has a standardized StridedMemRef descriptor, it becomes very easy to interact with external library functions and build utilities directly in C++.
This CL introduces basic printing support in a libmlir_utils.so.
Unit tests are rewritten using this feature and also to improve coverage.
For now, C mandates that we have a unique function for each MemRef element type and rank.
In a future a simple unranked descriptor can be introduced to only require uniqu'ing by element type.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 273304741
This tool allows to execute MLIR IR snippets written in the GPU dialect
on a CUDA capable GPU. For this to work, a working CUDA install is required
and the build has to be configured with MLIR_CUDA_RUNNER_ENABLED set to 1.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 256551415
This CL adds a lowering to LLVM for MamulOp and a corresponding integration test.
View descriptor manipulation is moved from MLIR's LLVM dialect to C++ code compiled on the side. To this end a separation is introduced between `cblas.cpp` and `cblas_interface.cpp`, the latter operating on view types whose ABI correspond to the LLVM signature generated by MLIR.
An intermediary step is introduced that allocates a new descriptor on the MLIR side for the purpose of passing it to LLVM. The reason for this extra step is that the ABI for by-value ViewType objects wants aligned descriptors, e.g.:
```
extern "C" void linalg_dot_impl(ViewType<float, 1> X, ViewType<float, 1> Y,
BaseViewType<float> Z) {
...
}
```
produces LLVM IR with the signature:
```
%struct.ViewType = type { %struct.BaseViewType, [1 x i64], [1 x i64] }
%struct.BaseViewType = type { float*, i64 }
define void @linalg_dot_impl(%struct.ViewType* byval align 8, %struct.ViewType* byval align 8, float*, i64) tensorflow/mlir#0 {
...
}
```
We don't seem to be able to make such aligned allocations in the MLIR -> LLVM converter atm.
Going through a level of indirection allows the test to pass.
The temporary tradeoff is that the MLIR shims have to be written by hand.
They will disappear in the future.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 252670672
EDSC builder test uses FileCheck to match the IR produced by EDSC in the
textual order. For mathematical operations, EDSC relies on overloaded
operators. Since they are essentially function calls, the order of evaluation
of their operands is unspecified and differs between compilers. Do not rely on
a specific order of operands and just check they are all emitted before the
last operation. Give names to matched SSA values in order to make sure the
right operands are used in relevant places.
--
PiperOrigin-RevId: 249494995
We now have sufficient extensibility in dialects to move attribute components
such as SDBM out of the core IR into a dedicated dialect and make them
optional. Introduce an SDBM dialect and move the code. This is a mostly
non-functional change.
--
PiperOrigin-RevId: 249244802
EDSC subsystem contains an API test which is a .cpp file calling the API in
question and producing IR. This IR is further checked using FileCheck and
should plug into lit. Provide a CMakeLists.txt to build the test and modify
the lit configuration to process the source file.
--
PiperOrigin-RevId: 248794443
This CL performs post-commit cleanups.
It adds the ability to specify which shared libraries to load dynamically in ExecutionEngine. The linalg integration test is updated to use a shared library.
Additional minor cleanups related to LLVM lowering of Linalg are also included.
--
PiperOrigin-RevId: 248346589