Fix confusing diagnostic during partial dialect conversion. A failure to
legalize is not the same as an operation being illegal: for eg. an
operation neither explicity marked legal nor explicitly marked illegal
could have been generated and may have failed to legalize further. The
op isn't an illegal one per
https://mlir.llvm.org/docs/DialectConversion/#conversion-target
which is an op that is explicitly marked illegal.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D116152
MLIR supports recursive types but they could not be handled by the conversion
infrastructure directly as it would result in infinite recursion in
`convertType` for elemental types. Support this case by keeping the "call
stack" of nested type conversions in the TypeConverter class and by passing it
as an optional argument to the individual conversion callback. The callback can
then check if a specific type is present on the stack more than once to detect
and handle the recursive case.
This approach is preferred to the alternative approach of having a separate
callback dedicated to handling only the recursive case as the latter was
observed to introduce ~3% time overhead on a 50MB IR file even if it did not
contain recursive types.
This approach is also preferred to keeping a local stack in type converters
that need to handle recursive types as that would compose poorly in case of
out-of-tree or cross-project extensions.
Reviewed By: rriddle
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D113579
Precursor: https://reviews.llvm.org/D110200
Removed redundant ops from the standard dialect that were moved to the
`arith` or `math` dialects.
Renamed all instances of operations in the codebase and in tests.
Reviewed By: rriddle, jpienaar
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D110797
This is redundant with the callback variant and untested. Also remove
the callback-less methods for adding a dynamically legal op, as they
are no longer useful.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106786
This infrastructure has evolved a lot over the course of MLIRs lifetime, and has never truly been documented outside of rationale or proposals. This revision aims to document the infrastructure and user facing API, with the rationale specific portions moved to the Rationale folder and updated.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85260
This revision updates the documentation for dialect conversion, as many concepts have changed/evolved over time.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85167
This revision removes the TypeConverter parameter passed to the apply* methods, and instead moves the responsibility of region type conversion to patterns. The types of a region can be converted using the 'convertRegionTypes' method, which acts similarly to the existing 'applySignatureConversion'. This method ensures that all blocks within, and including those moved into, a region will have the block argument types converted using the provided converter.
This has the benefit of making more of the legalization logic controlled by patterns, instead of being handled explicitly by the driver. It also opens up the possibility to support multiple type conversions at some point in the future.
This revision also adds a new utility class `FailureOr<T>` that provides a LogicalResult friendly facility for returning a failure or a valid result value.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D81681
Dialect conversion infrastructure supports 1->N type conversions by requiring
individual conversions to provide facilities to generate operations
retrofitting N values into 1 of the original type when N > 1. This
functionality can also be used to materialize explicit "cast"-like operations,
but it did not support 1->1 type conversions until now. Modify TypeConverter to
support materialization of cast operations for 1-1 conversions.
This also makes materialization specification more extensible following the
same pattern as type conversions. Instead of overloading a virtual function,
users or subclasses of TypeConversion can now register type-specific
materialization callbacks that will be called in order for the given type.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79729
Summary:
This revision refactors the TypeConverter class to not use inheritance to add type conversions. It instead moves to a registration based system, where conversion callbacks are added to the converter with `addConversion`. This method takes a conversion callback, which must be convertible to any of the following forms(where `T` is a class derived from `Type`:
* Optional<Type> (T type)
- This form represents a 1-1 type conversion. It should return nullptr
or `llvm::None` to signify failure. If `llvm::None` is returned, the
converter is allowed to try another conversion function to perform
the conversion.
* Optional<LogicalResult>(T type, SmallVectorImpl<Type> &results)
- This form represents a 1-N type conversion. It should return
`failure` or `llvm::None` to signify a failed conversion. If the new
set of types is empty, the type is removed and any usages of the
existing value are expected to be removed during conversion. If
`llvm::None` is returned, the converter is allowed to try another
conversion function to perform the conversion.
When attempting to convert a type, the TypeConverter walks each of the registered converters starting with the one registered most recently.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74584
Summary: This allows for providing a default "catchall" legality check that is not dependent on specific operations or dialects. For example, this can be useful to check legality based on the specific types of operation operands or results.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D73379