Commit Graph

58 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Mehdi Amini b3a407fa68 Fix MacOS build
This is making up for some differences in standard library and linker flags.
    It also get rid of the requirement to build with RTTI.

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PiperOrigin-RevId: 241348845
2019-04-01 11:00:30 -07:00
Jacques Pienaar 1273af232c Add build files and update README.
* Add initial version of build files;
    * Update README with instructions to download and build MLIR from github;

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PiperOrigin-RevId: 241102092
2019-03-30 11:23:22 -07:00
Dimitrios Vytiniotis 79bd6badb2 Remove global LLVM CLI variables from library code
Plus move parsing code into the MLIR CPU runner binary.

PiperOrigin-RevId: 240786709
2019-03-29 17:50:23 -07:00
Jacques Pienaar ed4fa52b4a Add missing numeric header for std::accumulate.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 240593135
2019-03-29 17:45:42 -07:00
Alex Zinenko d9cc3c31cc ExecutionEngine OptUtils: support -On flags in string-based initialization
Original implementation of OutUtils provided two different LLVM IR module
transformers to be used with the MLIR ExecutionEngine: OptimizingTransformer
parameterized by the optimization levels (similar to -O3 flags) and
LLVMPassesTransformer parameterized by the string formatted similarly to
command line options of LLVM's "opt" tool without support for -O* flags.
Introduce such support by declaring the flags inside the parser and by
populating the pass managers similarly to what "opt" does.  Remove the
additional flags from mlir-cpu-runner as they can now be wrapped into
`-llvm-opts` together with other LLVM-related flags.

PiperOrigin-RevId: 236107292
2019-03-29 16:49:44 -07:00
Alex Zinenko 4bb31f7377 ExecutionEngine: provide utils for running CLI-configured LLVM passes
A recent change introduced a possibility to run LLVM IR transformation during
JIT-compilation in the ExecutionEngine.  Provide helper functions that
construct IR transformers given either clang-style optimization levels or a
list passes to run.  The latter wraps the LLVM command line option parser to
parse strings rather than actual command line arguments.  As a result, we can
run either of

    mlir-cpu-runner -O3 input.mlir
    mlir-cpu-runner -some-mlir-pass -llvm-opts="-llvm-pass -other-llvm-pass"

to combine different transformations.  The transformer builder functions are
provided as a separate library that depends on LLVM pass libraries unlike the
main execution engine library.  The library can be used for integrating MLIR
execution engine into external frameworks.

PiperOrigin-RevId: 234173493
2019-03-29 16:29:41 -07:00
Alex Zinenko 50700b8122 Reimplement LLVM IR translation to use the MLIR LLVM IR dialect
Original implementation of the translation from MLIR to LLVM IR operated on the
Standard+BuiltIn dialect, with a later addition of the SuperVector dialect.
This required the translation to be aware of a potetially large number of other
dialects as the infrastructure extended.  With the recent introduction of the
LLVM IR dialect into MLIR, the translation can be switched to only translate
the LLVM IR dialect, and the translation of the operations becomes largely
mechanical.

The reimplementation of the translator follows the lines of the original
translator in function and basic block conversion.  In particular, block
arguments are converted to LLVM IR PHI nodes, which are connected to their
sources after all blocks of a function had been converted.  Thanks to LLVM IR
types being wrapped in the MLIR LLVM dialect type, type conversion is
simplified to only convert function types, all other types are simply
unwrapped.  Individual instructions are constructed using the LLVM IRBuilder,
which has a great potential for being table-generated from the LLVM IR dialect
operation definitions.

The input of the test/Target/llvmir.mlir is updated to use the MLIR LLVM IR
dialect.  While it is now redundant with the dialect conversion test, the point
of the exercise is to guarantee exactly the same LLVM IR is emitted.  (Only the
name of the allocation function is changed from `__mlir_alloc` to `alloc` in
the CHECK lines.)  It will be simplified in a follow-up commit.

PiperOrigin-RevId: 233842306
2019-03-29 16:27:10 -07:00
Alex Zinenko 5a4403787f Simple CPU runner
This implements a simple CPU runner based on LLVM Orc JIT.  The base
functionality is provided by the ExecutionEngine class that compiles and links
the module, and provides an interface for obtaining function pointers to the
JIT-compiled MLIR functions and for invoking those functions directly.  Since
function pointers need to be casted to the correct pointer type, the
ExecutionEngine wraps LLVM IR functions obtained from MLIR into a helper
function with the common signature `void (void **)` where the single argument
is interpreted as a list of pointers to the actual arguments passed to the
function, eventually followed by a pointer to the result of the function.
Additionally, the ExecutionEngine is set up to resolve library functions to
those available in the current process, enabling support for, e.g., simple C
library calls.

For integration purposes, this also provides a simplistic runtime for memref
descriptors as expected by the LLVM IR code produced by MLIR translation.  In
particular, memrefs are transformed into LLVM structs (can be mapped to C
structs) with a pointer to the data, followed by dynamic sizes.  This
implementation only supports statically-shaped memrefs of type float, but can
be extened if necessary.

Provide a binary for the runner and a test that exercises it.

PiperOrigin-RevId: 230876363
2019-03-29 15:36:08 -07:00