Commit Graph

10 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Alex Zinenko bd30a796fc [mlir] use built-in vector types instead of LLVM dialect types when possible
Continue the convergence between LLVM dialect and built-in types by using the
built-in vector type whenever possible, that is for fixed vectors of built-in
integers and built-in floats. LLVM dialect vector type is still in use for
pointers, less frequent floating point types that do not have a built-in
equivalent, and scalable vectors. However, the top-level `LLVMVectorType` class
has been removed in favor of free functions capable of inspecting both built-in
and LLVM dialect vector types: `LLVM::getVectorElementType`,
`LLVM::getNumVectorElements` and `LLVM::getFixedVectorType`. Additional work is
necessary to design an implemented the extensions to built-in types so as to
remove the `LLVMFixedVectorType` entirely.

Note that the default output format for the built-in vectors does not have
whitespace around the `x` separator, e.g., `vector<4xf32>` as opposed to the
LLVM dialect vector type format that does, e.g., `!llvm.vec<4 x fp128>`. This
required changing the FileCheck patterns in several tests.

Reviewed By: mehdi_amini, silvas

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D94405
2021-01-12 10:04:28 +01:00
Alex Zinenko dd5165a920 [mlir] replace LLVM dialect float types with built-ins
Continue the convergence between LLVM dialect and built-in types by replacing
the bfloat, half, float and double LLVM dialect types with their built-in
counterparts. At the API level, this is a direct replacement. At the syntax
level, we change the keywords to `bf16`, `f16`, `f32` and `f64`, respectively,
to be compatible with the built-in type syntax. The old keywords can still be
parsed but produce a deprecation warning and will be eventually removed.

Depends On D94178

Reviewed By: mehdi_amini, silvas, antiagainst

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D94179
2021-01-08 17:38:12 +01:00
Alex Zinenko 2230bf99c7 [mlir] replace LLVMIntegerType with built-in integer type
The LLVM dialect type system has been closed until now, i.e. did not support
types from other dialects inside containers. While this has had obvious
benefits of deriving from a common base class, it has led to some simple types
being almost identical with the built-in types, namely integer and floating
point types. This in turn has led to a lot of larger-scale complexity: simple
types must still be converted, numerous operations that correspond to LLVM IR
intrinsics are replicated to produce versions operating on either LLVM dialect
or built-in types leading to quasi-duplicate dialects, lowering to the LLVM
dialect is essentially required to be one-shot because of type conversion, etc.
In this light, it is reasonable to trade off some local complexity in the
internal implementation of LLVM dialect types for removing larger-scale system
complexity. Previous commits to the LLVM dialect type system have adapted the
API to support types from other dialects.

Replace LLVMIntegerType with the built-in IntegerType plus additional checks
that such types are signless (these are isolated in a utility function that
replaced `isa<LLVMType>` and in the parser). Temporarily keep the possibility
to parse `!llvm.i32` as a synonym for `i32`, but add a deprecation notice.

Reviewed By: mehdi_amini, silvas, antiagainst

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D94178
2021-01-07 19:48:31 +01:00
Alex Zinenko ec1f4e7c3b [mlir] switch the modeling of LLVM types to use the new mechanism
A new first-party modeling for LLVM IR types in the LLVM dialect has been
developed in parallel to the existing modeling based on wrapping LLVM `Type *`
instances. It resolves the long-standing problem of modeling identified
structure types, including recursive structures, and enables future removal of
LLVMContext and related locking mechanisms from LLVMDialect.

This commit only switches the modeling by (a) renaming LLVMTypeNew to LLVMType,
(b) removing the old implementaiton of LLVMType, and (c) updating the tests. It
is intentionally minimal. Separate commits will remove the infrastructure built
for the transition and update API uses where appropriate.

Depends On D85020

Reviewed By: rriddle

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85021
2020-08-04 14:29:25 +02:00
jerryyin 9c53ac08de [mlir][rocdl] Exposing buffer load/store intrinsic
Summary:
* Updated ROCDLOps tablegen
* Added parsing and printing function for new intrinsic
* Added unit tests

Reviewers: ftynse

Subscribers: mehdi_amini, rriddle, jpienaar, shauheen, antiagainst, nicolasvasilache, arpith-jacob, mgester, lucyrfox, liufengdb, stephenneuendorffer, Joonsoo, grosul1, frgossen, Kayjukh, jurahul, llvm-commits

Tags: #llvm

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D80233
2020-05-21 14:14:35 +00:00
rtayl 58cb88733f [mlir][rocdl] Add xdlops intrinsics to rocdl dialect
Summary: This adds xdlops (mfma) to the rocdl dialect and also tests the translation to llvm ir.

Reviewers: ftynse

Subscribers: mehdi_amini, rriddle, jpienaar, shauheen, antiagainst, nicolasvasilache, arpith-jacob, mgester, lucyrfox, liufengdb, stephenneuendorffer, Joonsoo, grosul1, frgossen, Kayjukh, llvm-commits

Tags: #llvm #mlir

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79642
2020-05-11 10:08:58 -04:00
Wen-Heng (Jack) Chung bc23c1d85e [mlir][rocdl] add rocdl.barier op.
- Add rocdl.barrier op.
- Lower gpu.barier to rocdl.barrier in -convert-gpu-to-rocdl.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79126
2020-05-04 10:35:01 +02:00
Alex Zinenko 5e7959a353 Use llvm.func to define functions with wrapped LLVM IR function type
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
2019-10-10 01:34:06 -07:00
Deven Desai 956a831130 [ROCm] Fix the return type for the device function calls from i32 to i64.
This is matching what the runtime library is expecting.

Closes tensorflow/mlir#171

COPYBARA_INTEGRATE_REVIEW=https://github.com/tensorflow/mlir/pull/171 from deven-amd:deven-rocdl-device-func-i64 80762629a8c34e844ebdc542b34dd783990db9db
PiperOrigin-RevId: 273640767
2019-10-08 17:41:42 -07:00
Deven Desai fee40fef5c [ROCm] Adding ROCDL Dialect.
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

Closes tensorflow/mlir#146

COPYBARA_INTEGRATE_REVIEW=https://github.com/tensorflow/mlir/pull/146 from deven-amd:deven-rocdl-dialect e78e8005c75a78912631116c78dc844fcc4b0de9
PiperOrigin-RevId: 271511259
2019-09-27 00:22:32 -07:00