This upstreams the Cpp emitter, initially presented with [1], from [2]
to MLIR core. Together with the previously upstreamed EmitC dialect [3],
the target allows to translate MLIR to C/C++.
[1] https://reviews.llvm.org/D76571
[2] https://github.com/iml130/mlir-emitc
[3] https://reviews.llvm.org/D103969
Co-authored-by: Jacques Pienaar <jpienaar@google.com>
Co-authored-by: Simon Camphausen <simon.camphausen@iml.fraunhofer.de>
Co-authored-by: Oliver Scherf <oliver.scherf@iml.fraunhofer.de>
Reviewed By: jpienaar
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104632
There is no need for the interface implementations to be exposed, opaque
registration functions are sufficient for all users, similarly to passes.
Reviewed By: mehdi_amini
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97852
Port the translation of five dialects that define LLVM IR intrinsics
(LLVMAVX512, LLVMArmNeon, LLVMArmSVE, NVVM, ROCDL) to the new dialect
interface-based mechanism. This allows us to remove individual translations
that were created for each of these dialects and just use one common
MLIR-to-LLVM-IR translation that potentially supports all dialects instead,
based on what is registered and including any combination of translatable
dialects. This removal was one of the main goals of the refactoring.
To support the addition of GPU-related metadata, the translation interface is
extended with the `amendOperation` function that allows the interface
implementation to post-process any translated operation with dialect attributes
from the dialect for which the interface is implemented regardless of the
operation's dialect. This is currently applied to "kernel" functions, but can
be used to construct other metadata in dialect-specific ways without
necessarily affecting operations.
Depends On D96591, D96504
Reviewed By: nicolasvasilache
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96592
Migrate the translation of the OpenMP dialect operations to LLVM IR to the new
dialect-based mechanism.
Depends On D96503
Reviewed By: nicolasvasilache
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96504
The existing approach to translation to the LLVM IR relies on a single
translation supporting the base LLVM dialect, extensible through inheritance to
support intrinsic-based dialects also derived from LLVM IR such as NVVM and
AVX512. This approach does not scale well as it requires additional
translations to be created for each new intrinsic-based dialect and does not
allow them to mix in the same module, contrary to the rest of the MLIR
infrastructure. Furthermore, OpenMP translation ingrained itself into the main
translation mechanism.
Start refactoring the translation to LLVM IR to operate using dialect
interfaces. Each dialect that contains ops translatable to LLVM IR can
implement the interface for translating them, and the top-level translation
driver can operate on interfaces without knowing about specific dialects.
Furthermore, the delayed dialect registration mechanism allows one to avoid a
dependency on LLVM IR in the dialect that is translated to it by implementing
the translation as a separate library and only registering it at the client
level.
This change introduces the new mechanism and factors out the translation of the
"main" LLVM dialect. The remaining dialects will follow suit.
Reviewed By: nicolasvasilache
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96503
This avoids large source files and gives a better structure. It also
allows leveraging compilation parallelism.
Reviewed By: mravishankar
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D94360
This commit splits SPIR-V's serialization and deserialization code
into separate libraries. The motiviation being that the serializer
is used more often the deserializer and therefore lumping them
together unnecessarily increases binary size for the most common
case.
This commit also moves these libraries into the Target/ directory
to follow MLIR convention.
Reviewed By: antiagainst
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91548
The OmpDialect is in practice optional during translation to LLVM IR: the code is tolerant
to have a "nullptr" when not present / needed.
The dependency still exists on the export to LLVMIR.
Reviewed By: ftynse
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88351
With new LLVM dialect type modeling, the dialect types no longer wrap LLVM IR
types. Therefore, they need to be translated to and from LLVM IR during export
and import. Introduce the relevant functionality for translating types. It is
currently exercised by an ad-hoc type translation roundtripping test that will
be subsumed by the actual translation test when the type system transition is
complete.
Depends On D84339
Reviewed By: herhut
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85019
- Exports MLIR targets to be used out-of-tree.
- mimicks `add_clang_library` and `add_flang_library`.
- Fixes libMLIR.so
After https://reviews.llvm.org/D77515 libMLIR.so was no longer containing
any object files. We originally had a cludge there that made it work with
the static initalizers and when switchting away from that to the way the
clang shlib does it, I noticed that MLIR doesn't create a `obj.{name}` target,
and doesn't export it's targets to `lib/cmake/mlir`.
This is due to MLIR using `add_llvm_library` under the hood, which adds
the target to `llvmexports`.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D78773
[MLIR] Fix libMLIR.so and LLVM_LINK_LLVM_DYLIB
Primarily, this patch moves all mlir references to LLVM libraries into
either LLVM_LINK_COMPONENTS or LINK_COMPONENTS. This enables magic in
the llvm cmake files to automatically replace reference to LLVM components
with references to libLLVM.so when necessary. Among other things, this
completes fixing libMLIR.so, which has been broken for some configurations
since D77515.
Unlike previously, the pattern is now that mlir libraries should almost
always use add_mlir_library. Previously, some libraries still used
add_llvm_library. However, this confuses the export of targets for use
out of tree because libraries specified with add_llvm_library are exported
by LLVM. Instead users which don't need/can't be linked into libMLIR.so
can specify EXCLUDE_FROM_LIBMLIR
A common error mode is linking with LLVM libraries outside of LINK_COMPONENTS.
This almost always results in symbol confusion or multiply defined options
in LLVM when the same object file is included as a static library and
as part of libLLVM.so. To catch these errors more directly, there's now
mlir_check_all_link_libraries.
To simplify usage of add_mlir_library, we assume that all mlir
libraries depend on LLVMSupport, so it's not necessary to separately specify
it.
tested with:
BUILD_SHARED_LIBS=on,
BUILD_SHARED_LIBS=off + LLVM_BUILD_LLVM_DYLIB,
BUILD_SHARED_LIBS=off + LLVM_BUILD_LLVM_DYLIB + LLVM_LINK_LLVM_DYLIB.
By: Stephen Neuendorffer <stephen.neuendorffer@xilinx.com>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79067
[MLIR] Move from using target_link_libraries to LINK_LIBS
This allows us to correctly generate dependencies for derived targets,
such as targets which are created for object libraries.
By: Stephen Neuendorffer <stephen.neuendorffer@xilinx.com>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79243
Three commits have been squashed to avoid intermediate build breakage.
The Vector Dialect [document](https://mlir.llvm.org/docs/Dialects/Vector/) discusses the vector abstractions that MLIR supports and the various tradeoffs involved.
One of the layer that is missing in OSS atm is the Hardware Vector Ops (HWV) level.
This revision proposes an AVX512-specific to add a new Dialect/Targets/AVX512 Dialect that would directly target AVX512-specific intrinsics.
Atm, we rely too much on LLVM’s peephole optimizer to do a good job from small insertelement/extractelement/shufflevector. In the future, when possible, generic abstractions such as VP intrinsics should be preferred.
The revision will allow trading off HW-specific vs generic abstractions in MLIR.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75987
MLIR supports terminators that have the same successor block with different
block operands, which cannot be expressed in the LLVM's phi-notation as the
block identifier is used to tell apart the predecessors. This limitation can be
worked around by branching to a new block instead, with this new block
unconditionally branching to the original successor and forwarding the
argument. Until now, this transformation was performed during the conversion
from the Standard to the LLVM dialect. This does not scale well to multiple
dialects targeting the LLVM dialect as all of them would have to be aware of
this limitation and perform the preparatory transformation. Instead, do it as a
separate pass and run it immediately before the translation.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75619
Putting this up mainly for discussion on
how this should be done. I am interested in MLIR from
the Julia side and we currently have a strong preference
to dynamically linking against the LLVM shared library,
and would like to have a MLIR shared library.
This patch adds a new cmake function add_mlir_library()
which accumulates a list of targets to be compiled into
libMLIR.so. Note that not all libraries make sense to
be compiled into libMLIR.so. In particular, we want
to avoid libraries which primarily exist to support
certain tools (such as mlir-opt and mlir-cpu-runner).
Note that the resulting libMLIR.so depends on LLVM, but
does not contain any LLVM components. As a result, it
is necessary to link with libLLVM.so to avoid linkage
errors. So, libMLIR.so requires LLVM_BUILD_LLVM_DYLIB=on
FYI, Currently it appears that LLVM_LINK_LLVM_DYLIB is broken
because mlir-tblgen is linked against libLLVM.so and
and independent LLVM components.
Previous version of this patch broke depencies on TableGen
targets. This appears to be because it compiled all
libraries to OBJECT libraries (probably because cmake
is generating different target names). Avoiding object
libraries results in correct dependencies.
(updated by Stephen Neuendorffer)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D73130
CMake allows calling target_link_libraries() without a keyword,
but this usage is not preferred when also called with a keyword,
and has surprising behavior. This patch explicitly specifies a
keyword when using target_link_libraries().
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75725
Putting this up mainly for discussion on
how this should be done. I am interested in MLIR from
the Julia side and we currently have a strong preference
to dynamically linking against the LLVM shared library,
and would like to have a MLIR shared library.
This patch adds a new cmake function add_mlir_library()
which accumulates a list of targets to be compiled into
libMLIR.so. Note that not all libraries make sense to
be compiled into libMLIR.so. In particular, we want
to avoid libraries which primarily exist to support
certain tools (such as mlir-opt and mlir-cpu-runner).
Note that the resulting libMLIR.so depends on LLVM, but
does not contain any LLVM components. As a result, it
is necessary to link with libLLVM.so to avoid linkage
errors. So, libMLIR.so requires LLVM_BUILD_LLVM_DYLIB=on
FYI, Currently it appears that LLVM_LINK_LLVM_DYLIB is broken
because mlir-tblgen is linked against libLLVM.so and
and independent LLVM components.
Previous version of this patch broke depencies on TableGen
targets. This appears to be because it compiled all
libraries to OBJECT libraries (probably because cmake
is generating different target names). Avoiding object
libraries results in correct dependencies.
(updated by Stephen Neuendorffer)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D73130
When compiling libLLVM.so, add_llvm_library() manipulates the link libraries
being used. This means that when using add_llvm_library(), we need to pass
the list of libraries to be linked (using the LINK_LIBS keyword) instead of
using the standard target_link_libraries call. This is preparation for
properly dealing with creating libMLIR.so as well.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74864
Putting this up mainly for discussion on
how this should be done. I am interested in MLIR from
the Julia side and we currently have a strong preference
to dynamically linking against the LLVM shared library,
and would like to have a MLIR shared library.
This patch adds a new cmake function add_mlir_library()
which accumulates a list of targets to be compiled into
libMLIR.so. Note that not all libraries make sense to
be compiled into libMLIR.so. In particular, we want
to avoid libraries which primarily exist to support
certain tools (such as mlir-opt and mlir-cpu-runner).
Note that the resulting libMLIR.so depends on LLVM, but
does not contain any LLVM components. As a result, it
is necessary to link with libLLVM.so to avoid linkage
errors. So, libMLIR.so requires LLVM_BUILD_LLVM_DYLIB=on
FYI, Currently it appears that LLVM_LINK_LLVM_DYLIB is broken
because mlir-tblgen is linked against libLLVM.so and
and independent LLVM components
(updated by Stephen Neuendorffer)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D73130
When compiling libLLVM.so, add_llvm_library() manipulates the link libraries
being used. This means that when using add_llvm_library(), we need to pass
the list of libraries to be linked (using the LINK_LIBS keyword) instead of
using the standard target_link_libraries call. This is preparation for
properly dealing with creating libMLIR.so as well.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74864
Summary:
This revision adds basic support for emitting line table information when exporting to LLVMIR. We don't yet have a story for supporting all of the LLVM debug metadata, so this revision stubs some features(like subprograms) to enable emitting line tables.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D73934
This adds an importer from LLVM IR or bitcode to the LLVM dialect. The importer is registered with mlir-translate.
Known issues exposed by this patch but not yet fixed:
* Globals' initializers are attributes, which makes it impossible to represent a ConstantExpr. This will be fixed in a followup.
* icmp returns i32 rather than i1.
* select and a couple of other instructions aren't implemented.
* llvm.cond_br takes its successors in a weird order.
The testing here is known to be non-exhaustive.
I'd appreciate feedback on where this functionality should live. It looks like the translator *from MLIR to LLVM* lives in Target/, but the SPIR-V deserializer lives in Dialect/ which is why I've put this here too.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 278711683
This function-like operation allows one to define functions that have wrapped
LLVM IR function type, in particular variadic functions. The operation was
added in parallel to the existing lowering flow, this commit only switches the
flow to use it.
Using a custom function type makes the LLVM IR dialect type system more
consistent and avoids complex conversion rules for functions that previously
had to use the built-in function type instead of a wrapped LLVM IR dialect type
and perform conversions during the analysis.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 273910855
This commit introduces the ROCDL Dialect (i.e. the ROCDL ops + the code to lower those ROCDL ops to LLWM intrinsics/functions). Think of ROCDL Dialect as analogous to the NVVM Dialect, but for AMD GPUs. This patch contains just the essentials needed to get a simple example up and running. We expect to make further additions to the ROCDL Dialect.
This is the first of 3 commits, the follow-up will be:
* add a pass that lowers GPU Dialect to ROCDL Dialect
* add a "mlir-rocm-runner" utility
Closestensorflow/mlir#146
COPYBARA_INTEGRATE_REVIEW=https://github.com/tensorflow/mlir/pull/146 from deven-amd:deven-rocdl-dialect e78e8005c75a78912631116c78dc844fcc4b0de9
PiperOrigin-RevId: 271511259
PTX backend in LLVM expects additional module-level metadata
`!nvvm.annotations` that lists functions that can be used as GPU kernels.
Generate this metadata based on the `gpu.kernel` attribute attached to
functions. This attribute is added automatically by the kernel outlining pass
in the GPU dialect lowering flow.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 254957345