This is useful for "build tuple" type ops. In my case, in npcomp, I have
an op:
```
// Result type is `!torch.tuple<!torch.tensor, !torch.tensor>`.
torch.prim.TupleConstruct %0, %1 : !torch.tensor, !torch.tensor
```
and the context is required for the `Torch::TupleType::get` call (for
the case of an empty tuple).
The handling of these FmtContext's in the code is pretty ad-hoc -- I didn't
attempt to rationalize it and just made a targeted fix. As someone
unfamiliar with the code I had a hard time seeing how to more broadly fix
the situation.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104274
This matches the current support provided to operations, and allows attaching traits, interfaces, and using the DeclareInterfaceMethods utility. This was missed when attribute/type generation was first added.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D100233
The issue was introduced in D98468.
The `{0}Regions` is an array of `std::unique_ptr<Region>` objects,
so it should be processed accordingly.
Reviewed By: mehdi_amini
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99332
In particular for Graph Regions, the terminator needs is just a
historical artifact of the generalization of MLIR from CFG region.
Operations like Module don't need a terminator, and before Module
migrated to be an operation with region there wasn't any needed.
To validate the feature, the ModuleOp is migrated to use this trait and
the ModuleTerminator operation is deleted.
This patch is likely to break clients, if you're in this case:
- you may iterate on a ModuleOp with `getBody()->without_terminator()`,
the solution is simple: just remove the ->without_terminator!
- you created a builder with `Builder::atBlockTerminator(module_body)`,
just use `Builder::atBlockEnd(module_body)` instead.
- you were handling ModuleTerminator: it isn't needed anymore.
- for generic code, a `Block::mayNotHaveTerminator()` may be used.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98468
The "else" group of an optional element is a collection of elements that get parsed/printed when the anchor of the main element group is *not* present. This is useful when there is a special syntax when an element is not present. The new syntax for an optional element is shown below:
```
optional-group: `(` elements `)` (`:` `(` else-elements `)`)? `?`
```
An example of how this might be used is shown below:
```tablegen
def FooOp : ... {
let arguments = (ins UnitAttr:$foo);
let assemblyFormat = "attr-dict (`foo_is_present` $foo^):(`foo_is_absent`)?";
}
```
would be formatted as such:
```mlir
// When the `foo` attribute is present:
foo.op foo_is_present
// When the `foo` attribute is not present:
foo.op foo_is_absent
```
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99129
This allows for referencing nearly every component of an operation from within a custom directive.
It also fixes a bug with the current type_ref implementation, PR48478
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96189
Add printer and parser hooks for a custom directive that allows
parsing and printing of idioms that can represent a list of values
each of which is either an integer or an SSA value. For example in
`subview %source[%offset_0, 1] [4, %size_1] [%stride_0, 3]`
each of the list (which represents offset, size and strides) is a mix
of either statically know integer values or dynamically computed SSA
values. Since this is used in many places adding a custom directive to
parse/print this idiom allows using assembly format on operations
which use this idiom.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95773
This revision adds support for using either operand or result types to anchor an optional group. It also removes the arbitrary restriction that type directives must refer to variables in the same group, which is overly limiting for a declarative format syntax.
Fixes PR#48784
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95109
I attempted to write a test case for this, but the situations in which the kind is used for RegionDirective and ResultsDirective have zero overlap; meaning that there isn't a situation in which sharing the kind creates a conflict.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D94988
In the overwhelmingly common case, enum attribute case strings represent valid identifiers in MLIR syntax. This revision updates the format generator to format as a keyword in these cases, removing the need to wrap values in a string. The parser still retains the ability to parse the string form, but the printer will use the keyword form when applicable.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D94575
This is a variant of TypesMatchWith that provides support for variadic arguments. This is necessary because ranges generally can't use the default operator== comparators for checking equality.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D94574
Right now constraint/predicate traits/etc. use their "description" field as a one line human readable string. This breaks the current convention, by which a "description" may be multi-line. This revision renames the "description" field in these cases to "summary" which matches what the string is actually used as. This also unbreaks the use of TypeDefs(and eventually AttrDefs) in conjunction with existing type constraint facilities like `Optional`.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D94133
This class used to serve a few useful purposes:
* Allowed containing a null DictionaryAttr
* Provided some simple mutable API around a DictionaryAttr
The first of which is no longer an issue now that there is much better caching support for attributes in general, and a cache in the context for empty dictionaries. The second results in more trouble than it's worth because it mutates the internal dictionary on every action, leading to a potentially large number of dictionary copies. NamedAttrList is a much better alternative for the second use case, and should be modified as needed to better fit it's usage as a DictionaryAttrBuilder.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93442
This revision adds a new `printNewline` hook to OpAsmPrinter that allows for printing a newline within the custom format of an operation, that is then indented to the start of the operation. Support for the declarative assembly format is also added, in the form of a `\n` literal.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93151
The check for formatting enum attributes was missing a call to get the base attribute, which is necessary to strip off the top-level OptionalAttr<> wrapper.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92713
The tokens are already handled by the lexer. This revision exposes them
through the parser interface.
This revision also adds missing functions for question mark parsing and
completes the list of valid punctuation tokens in the documentation.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D90907
I would like to use this for D90589 to switch std.alloc to assemblyFormat.
Hopefully it will be useful in other places as well.
Reviewed By: rriddle
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91068
This tweaks the generated code for parsing attributes with a custom
directive to call `addAttribute` on the `OperationState` directly,
and adds a newline after this call. Previously, the generated code
would call `addAttribute` on the `OperationState` field `attributes`,
which has no such method and fails to compile. Furthermore, the lack
of newline would generate code with incorrectly formatted single line
`if` statements. Added tests for parsing and printing attributes with
a custom directive.
Reviewed By: mehdi_amini
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87860
This revision allows representing a reduction at the level of linalg on tensors for named ops. When a structured op has a reduction and returns tensor(s), new conventions are added and documented.
As an illustration, the syntax for a `linalg.matmul` writing into a buffer is:
```
linalg.matmul ins(%a, %b : memref<?x?xf32>, tensor<?x?xf32>)
outs(%c : memref<?x?xf32>)
```
, whereas the syntax for a `linalg.matmul` returning a new tensor is:
```
%d = linalg.matmul ins(%a, %b : tensor<?x?xf32>, memref<?x?xf32>)
init(%c : memref<?x?xf32>)
-> tensor<?x?xf32>
```
Other parts of linalg will be extended accordingly to allow mixed buffer/tensor semantics in the presence of reductions.
- Change OpClass new method addition to find and eliminate any existing methods that
are made redundant by the newly added method, as well as detect if the newly added
method will be redundant and return nullptr in that case.
- To facilitate that, add the notion of resolved and unresolved parameters, where resolved
parameters have each parameter type known, so that redundancy checks on methods
with same name but different parameter types can be done.
- Eliminate existing code to avoid adding conflicting/redundant build methods and rely
on this new mechanism to eliminate conflicting build methods.
Fixes https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=47095
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87059
Now backends spell out which namespace they want to be in, instead of relying on
clients #including them inside already-opened namespaces. This also means that
cppNamespaces should be fully qualified, and there's no implicit "::mlir::"
prepended to them anymore.
Reviewed By: mehdi_amini
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86811
This adds some initial support for regions and does not support formatting the specific arguments of a region. For now this can be achieved by using a custom directive that formats the arguments and then parses the region.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86760
Symbol names are a special form of StringAttr that get treated specially in certain areas, such as formatting. This revision adds a special derived attr for them in ODS and adds support in the assemblyFormat for formatting them properly.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86759
This revision adds support for custom directives to the declarative assembly format. This allows for users to use C++ for printing and parsing subsections of an otherwise declaratively specified format. The custom directive is structured as follows:
```
custom-directive ::= `custom` `<` UserDirective `>` `(` Params `)`
```
`user-directive` is used as a suffix when this directive is used during printing and parsing. When parsing, `parseUserDirective` will be invoked. When printing, `printUserDirective` will be invoked. The first parameter to these methods must be a reference to either the OpAsmParser, or OpAsmPrinter. The type of rest of the parameters is dependent on the `Params` specified in the assembly format.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84719
The PDL Interpreter dialect provides a lower level abstraction compared to the PDL dialect, and is targeted towards low level optimization and interpreter code generation. The dialect operations encapsulates low-level pattern match and rewrite "primitives", such as navigating the IR (Operation::getOperand), creating new operations (OpBuilder::create), etc. Many of the operations within this dialect also fuse branching control flow with some form of a predicate comparison operation. This type of fusion reduces the amount of work that an interpreter must do when executing.
An example of this representation is shown below:
```mlir
// The following high level PDL pattern:
pdl.pattern : benefit(1) {
%resultType = pdl.type
%inputOperand = pdl.input
%root, %results = pdl.operation "foo.op"(%inputOperand) -> %resultType
pdl.rewrite %root {
pdl.replace %root with (%inputOperand)
}
}
// May be represented in the interpreter dialect as follows:
module {
func @matcher(%arg0: !pdl.operation) {
pdl_interp.check_operation_name of %arg0 is "foo.op" -> ^bb2, ^bb1
^bb1:
pdl_interp.return
^bb2:
pdl_interp.check_operand_count of %arg0 is 1 -> ^bb3, ^bb1
^bb3:
pdl_interp.check_result_count of %arg0 is 1 -> ^bb4, ^bb1
^bb4:
%0 = pdl_interp.get_operand 0 of %arg0
pdl_interp.is_not_null %0 : !pdl.value -> ^bb5, ^bb1
^bb5:
%1 = pdl_interp.get_result 0 of %arg0
pdl_interp.is_not_null %1 : !pdl.value -> ^bb6, ^bb1
^bb6:
pdl_interp.record_match @rewriters::@rewriter(%0, %arg0 : !pdl.value, !pdl.operation) : benefit(1), loc([%arg0]), root("foo.op") -> ^bb1
}
module @rewriters {
func @rewriter(%arg0: !pdl.value, %arg1: !pdl.operation) {
pdl_interp.replace %arg1 with(%arg0)
pdl_interp.return
}
}
}
```
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84579
PDL presents a high level abstraction for the rewrite pattern infrastructure available in MLIR. This abstraction allows for representing patterns transforming MLIR, as MLIR. This allows for applying all of the benefits that the general MLIR infrastructure provides, to the infrastructure itself. This means that pattern matching can be more easily verified for correctness, targeted by frontends, and optimized.
PDL abstracts over various different aspects of patterns and core MLIR data structures. Patterns are specified via a `pdl.pattern` operation. These operations contain a region body for the "matcher" code, and terminate with a `pdl.rewrite` that either dispatches to an external rewriter or contains a region for the rewrite specified via `pdl`. The types of values in `pdl` are handle types to MLIR C++ types, with `!pdl.attribute`, `!pdl.operation`, and `!pdl.type` directly mapping to `mlir::Attribute`, `mlir::Operation*`, and `mlir::Value` respectively.
An example pattern is shown below:
```mlir
// pdl.pattern contains metadata similarly to a `RewritePattern`.
pdl.pattern : benefit(1) {
// External input operand values are specified via `pdl.input` operations.
// Result types are constrainted via `pdl.type` operations.
%resultType = pdl.type
%inputOperand = pdl.input
%root, %results = pdl.operation "foo.op"(%inputOperand) -> %resultType
pdl.rewrite(%root) {
pdl.replace %root with (%inputOperand)
}
}
```
This is a culmination of the work originally discussed here: https://groups.google.com/a/tensorflow.org/g/mlir/c/j_bn74ByxlQ
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84578
Unit attributes are given meaning by their existence, and thus have no meaningful value beyond "is it present". As such, in the format of an operation unit attributes are generally used to guard the printing of other elements and aren't generally printed themselves; as the presence of the group when parsing means that the unit attribute should be added. This revision adds support to the declarative format for eliding unit attributes in situations where they anchor an optional group, but aren't the first element.
For example,
```
let assemblyFormat = "(`is_optional` $unit_attr^)? attr-dict";
```
would print `foo.op is_optional` when $unit_attr is present, instead of the current `foo.op is_optional unit`.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84577
This adds a `parseOptionalAttribute` method to the OpAsmParser that allows for parsing optional attributes, in a similar fashion to how optional types are parsed. This also enables the use of attribute values as the first element of an assembly format optional group.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D83712
An operation can specify that an operation or result type matches the
type of another operation, result, or attribute via the `AllTypesMatch`
or `TypesMatchWith` constraints.
Use these constraints to also automatically resolve types in the
automatically generated assembly parser.
This way, only the attribute needs to be listed in `assemblyFormat`,
e.g. for constant operations.
Reviewed By: rriddle
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D78434
This enables better support for traits such as SameOperandsAndResultType, and other situations in which a variadic operand may be resolved from a non-variadic.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D83011
This revision adds support to ODS for generating interfaces for attributes and types, in addition to operations. These interfaces can be specified using `AttrInterface` and `TypeInterface` in place of `OpInterface`. All of the features of `OpInterface` are supported except for the `verify` method, which does not have a matching representation in the Attribute/Type world. Generating these interface can be done using `gen-(attr|type)-interface-(defs|decls|docs)`.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D81884
Using fully qualified names wherever possible avoids ambiguous class and function names. This is a follow-up to D82371.
Reviewed By: rriddle
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D82471
Summary: This revision adds support for assembly formats with optional attributes. It elides optional attributes that are part of the syntax from the attribute dictionary.
Reviewers: ftynse, Kayjukh
Reviewed By: ftynse, Kayjukh
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, rriddle, jpienaar, shauheen, antiagainst, nicolasvasilache, arpith-jacob, mgester, lucyrfox, liufengdb, stephenneuendorffer, Joonsoo, grosul1, frgossen, jurahul, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D80113
This is a wrapper around vector of NamedAttributes that keeps track of whether sorted and does some minimal effort to remain sorted (doing more, e.g., appending attributes in sorted order, could be done in follow up). It contains whether sorted and if a DictionaryAttr is queried, it caches the returned DictionaryAttr along with whether sorted.
Change MutableDictionaryAttr to always return a non-null Attribute even when empty (reserve null cases for errors). To this end change the getter to take a context as input so that the empty DictionaryAttr could be queried. Also create one instance of the empty dictionary attribute that could be reused without needing to lock context etc.
Update infer type op interface to use DictionaryAttr and use NamedAttrList to avoid incurring multiple conversion costs.
Fix bug in sorting helper function.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79463
Summary:
When creating an operation with
* `AttrSizedOperandSegments` trait
* Variadic operands of only non-buildable types
* assemblyFormat to automatically generate the parser
the `builder` local variable is used, but never declared.
This adds a fix as well as a test for this case as existing ones use buildable types only.
Reviewers: rriddle, Kayjukh, grosser
Reviewed By: Kayjukh
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, jpienaar, shauheen, antiagainst, nicolasvasilache, arpith-jacob, mgester, lucyrfox, liufengdb, Joonsoo, grosul1, frgossen, llvm-commits
Tags: #mlir, #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79004
This revision refactors the structure of the operand storage such that there is no additional memory cost for resizable operand lists until it is required. This is done by using two different internal representations for the operand storage:
* One using trailing operands
* One using a dynamically allocated std::vector<OpOperand>
This allows for removing the resizable operand list bit, and will free up APIs from needing to workaround non-resizable operand lists.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D78875
MLIR supports operations with resizable operand lists, but this property must
be indicated during the construction of such operations. It can be done
programmatically by calling a function on OperationState. Introduce an
ODS-internal trait `ResizableOperandList` to indicate such operations are use
it when generating the bodies of various `build` functions as well as the
`parse` function when the declarative assembly format is used.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D78292
This class implements a switch-like dispatch statement for a value of 'T' using dyn_cast functionality. Each `Case<T>` takes a callable to be invoked if the root value isa<T>, the callable is invoked with the result of dyn_cast<T>() as a parameter.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D78070
These have proved incredibly useful for interleaving values between a range w.r.t to streams. After this revision, the mlir/Support/STLExtras.h is empty. A followup revision will remove it from the tree.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D78067