These properties were useful for a few things before traits had a better integration story, but don't really carry their weight well these days. Most of these properties are already checked via traits in most of the code. It is better to align the system around traits, and improve the performance/cost of traits in general.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96088
Add support for vectorization for linalg.generic representing element-wise ops.
Those are converted to transfer_read + vector ops + transfer_write.
Also re-organize the vectorization tests to be together.
Implementation derived from the work of @burmako, @agrue and
@fedelebron.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92540
Callback-based constructions of blocks where the body is populated in the same
function as the block creation is a natural extension of callback-based loop
construction. They provide more concise and simple APIs than EDSC BlockBuilder
at less than 20% infrastructural code cost, and are compatible with
ScopedContext. BlockBuilder, Blockhandle and related functionality has been
deprecated, remove them.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D82015
Callback-based loop construction, with loop bodies being constructed during the
construction of the parent op using a function, is now fully supported by the
core infrastructure. This provides almost the same level of brevity as EDSC
LoopBuilder at less than 30% infrastructural code cost. Functional equivalents
compatible with EDSC ScopedContext are implemented on top of the main builders.
LoopBuilder and related functionality has been deprecated, remove it.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D81874
The ScopedBuilder class in EDSC is being gradually phased out in favor of core
OpBuilder-based helpers with callbacks. Provide helper functions that are
compatible with `edsc::ScopedContext` and can be used to create and populate
blocks using callbacks that take block arguments as callback arguments. This
removes the need for `edsc::BlockHandle`, forward-declaration of `Value`s used
for block arguments and the tag `edsc::Append` class, leading to noticable
reduction in the verbosity of the code using helper functions.
Remove "eager mode" construction tests that are only relevant to the
`BlockBuilder`-based approach.
`edsc::BlockHandle` and `edsc::BlockBuilder` are now deprecated and will be
removed soon.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D82008
- 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.
Summary:
This revision cleans up a layer of complexity in ScopedContext and uses InsertGuard instead of previously manual bookkeeping.
The method `getBuilder` is renamed to `getBuilderRef` and spurious copies of OpBuilder are tracked.
This results in some canonicalizations not happening anymore in the Linalg matmul to vector test. This test is retired because relying on DRRs for this has been shaky at best. The solution will be better support to write fused passes in C++ with more idiomatic pattern composition and application.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79208
OperationHandle mostly existed to mirror the behavior of ValueHandle.
This has become unnecessary and can be retired.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D78692
Libraries declared as target_link_libraries() do not also need
to be declared as dependencies using add_dependencies().
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D78320
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
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
In cmake, it is redundant to have a target list under target_link_libraries()
and add_dependency(). This patch removes the redundant dependency from
add_dependency().
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74929
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
In cmake, it is redundant to have a target list under target_link_libraries()
and add_dependency(). This patch removes the redundant dependency from
add_dependency().
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74929
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
This CL refactors EDSCs to layer them better and break unnecessary
dependencies. After this refactoring, the top-level EDSC target only
depends on IR but not on Dialects anymore and each dialect has its
own EDSC directory.
This simplifies the layering and breaks cyclic dependencies.
In particular, the declarative builder + folder are made explicit and
are now confined to Linalg.
As the refactoring occurred, certain classes and abstractions that were not
paying for themselves have been removed.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74302
Summary:
This patch is a step towards enabling BUILD_SHARED_LIBS=on, which
builds most libraries as DLLs instead of statically linked libraries.
The main effect of this is that incremental build times are greatly
reduced, since usually only one library need be relinked in response
to isolated code changes.
The bulk of this patch is fixing incorrect usage of cmake, where library
dependencies are listed under add_dependencies rather than under
target_link_libraries or under the LINK_LIBS tag. Correct usage should be
like this:
add_dependencies(MLIRfoo MLIRfooIncGen)
target_link_libraries(MLIRfoo MLIRlib1 MLIRlib2)
A separate issue is that in cmake, dependencies between static libraries
are automatically included in dependencies. In the above example, if MLIBlib1
depends on MLIRlib2, then it is sufficient to have only MLIRlib1 in the
target_link_libraries. When compiling with shared libraries, it is necessary
to have both MLIRlib1 and MLIRlib2 specified if MLIRfoo uses symbols from both.
Reviewers: mravishankar, antiagainst, nicolasvasilache, vchuravy, inouehrs, mehdi_amini, jdoerfert
Reviewed By: nicolasvasilache, mehdi_amini
Subscribers: Joonsoo, merge_guards_bot, jholewinski, mgorny, mehdi_amini, rriddle, jpienaar, burmako, shauheen, antiagainst, csigg, arpith-jacob, mgester, lucyrfox, herhut, aartbik, liufengdb, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D73653
mlir currently fails to build on Solaris:
/vol/llvm/src/llvm-project/dist/mlir/lib/Conversion/VectorToLoops/ConvertVectorToLoops.cpp:78:20: error: reference to 'index_t' is ambiguous
IndexHandle zero(index_t(0)), one(index_t(1));
^
/usr/include/sys/types.h:103:16: note: candidate found by name lookup is 'index_t'
typedef short index_t;
^
/vol/llvm/src/llvm-project/dist/mlir/include/mlir/EDSC/Builders.h:27:8: note: candidate found by name lookup is 'mlir::edsc::index_t'
struct index_t {
^
and many more.
Given that POSIX reserves all identifiers ending in `_t` 2.2.2 The Name Space <https://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/functions/V2_chap02.html>, it seems
quite unwise to use such identifiers in user code, even more so without a distinguished
prefix.
The following patch fixes this by renaming `index_t` to `index_type`.
cases.
Tested on `amd64-pc-solaris2.11` and `sparcv9-sun-solaris2.11`.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72619
This is an initial step to refactoring the representation of OpResult as proposed in: https://groups.google.com/a/tensorflow.org/g/mlir/c/XXzzKhqqF_0/m/v6bKb08WCgAJ
This change will make it much simpler to incrementally transition all of the existing code to use value-typed semantics.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 286844725
Rename the 'shlis' operation in the standard dialect to 'shift_left'. Add tests
for this operation (these have been missing so far) and add a lowering to the
'shl' operation in the LLVM dialect.
Add also 'shift_right_signed' (lowered to LLVM's 'ashr') and 'shift_right_unsigned'
(lowered to 'lshr').
The original plan was to name these operations 'shift.left', 'shift.right.signed'
and 'shift.right.unsigned'. This works if the operations are prefixed with 'std.'
in MLIR assembly. Unfortunately during import the short form is ambigous with
operations from a hypothetical 'shift' dialect. The best solution seems to omit
dots in standard operations for now.
Closestensorflow/mlir#226
PiperOrigin-RevId: 286803388
This will be evolved into a simple programming model for custom ops and custom layers in followup CLs.
This CL also deletes the obsolete tablegen's reference-impl.td that was using EDSCs.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 285459545
This CL refactors some of the MLIR vector dependencies to allow decoupling VectorOps, vector analysis, vector transformations and vector conversions from each other.
This makes the system more modular and allows extracting VectorToVector into VectorTransforms that do not depend on vector conversions.
This refactoring exhibited a bunch of cyclic library dependencies that have been cleaned up.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 283660308
MLIRIR includes generated header for interfaces, including these headers require
an extra dependency to ensure these headers are generated before we attempt to
build MLIREDSCInterface.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 276518255
This allows mixing linalg operations with vector transfer operations (with additional modifications to affine ops) and is a step towards solving tensorflow/mlir#189.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 275543361
This CL adds support for loop.for operations in EDSC and adds a test.
This will be used in a followup commit to implement lowering of vector_transfer ops so that it works more generally and is not subject to affine constraints.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 275349796
Python bindings currently currently provide a makeScalarType function that
constructs one of the predefined types. It was implemented in the bindings
directly to circumvent the absence of standalone type parsing function. Now
that mlir::parseType has been made available, rely on the core parsing
procedure to construct types from strings in the bindings.
This changes includes a library reshuffling that splits out "CoreAPIs"
implementing the binding helper APIs into a separate library and makes that
dependent on the Parser library.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 274794516