After #75103, `MLPrgramTransforms` depends on `BufferizationDialect`.
Also fix an unrelated compile error in `GreedyPatternRewriteDriver.cpp`.
(This was not failing on CI. I may be running an old compiler locally.)
There is currently no lowering out of `ml_program` in the LLVM
repository. This change adds a lowering to `memref` so that it can be
lowered all the way to LLVM. This lowering was taken from the [reference
backend in
torch-mlir](f416953600
).
I had tried implementing the `BufferizableOpInterface` for `ml_program`
instead of adding a new pass but that did not work because
`OneShotBufferize` does not visit module-level ops like
`ml_program.global`.
Added pass optimizes MLProgram global operations by reducing to only
the minimal load/store operations for global tensors. This avoids
unnecessary global operations throughout a program and potentially
improves operation gusion.
Reviewed By: jpienaar
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D159228
Functions are always callable operations and thus every operation
implementing the `FunctionOpInterface` also implements the
`CallableOpInterface`. The only exception was the FuncOp in the toy
example. To make implementation of the `FunctionOpInterface` easier,
this commit lets `FunctionOpInterface` inherit from
`CallableOpInterface` and merges some of their methods. More precisely,
the `CallableOpInterface` has methods to get the argument and result
attributes and a method to get the result types of the callable region.
These methods are always implemented the same way as their analogues in
`FunctionOpInterface` and thus this commit moves all the argument and
result attribute handling methods to the callable interface as well as
the methods to get the argument and result types. The
`FuntionOpInterface` then does not have to declare them as well, but
just inherits them from the `CallableOpInterface`.
Adding the inheritance relation also required to move the
`FunctionOpInterface` from the IR directory to the Interfaces directory
since IR should not depend on Interfaces.
Reviewed By: jpienaar, springerm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D157988
Despite the dialect depending on the interface it previously got away with not linking against it.
138df298208a095dc9bb9e5d1e3c67231b0abd77 changed this causing build failures.
The MLIR classes Type/Attribute/Operation/Op/Value support
cast/dyn_cast/isa/dyn_cast_or_null functionality through llvm's doCast
functionality in addition to defining methods with the same name.
This change begins the migration of uses of the method to the
corresponding function call as has been decided as more consistent.
Note that there still exist classes that only define methods directly,
such as AffineExpr, and this does not include work currently to support
a functional cast/isa call.
Context:
* https://mlir.llvm.org/deprecation/ at "Use the free function variants for dyn_cast/cast/isa/…"
* Original discussion at https://discourse.llvm.org/t/preferred-casting-style-going-forward/68443
Implementation:
This follows a previous patch that updated calls
`op.cast<T>()-> cast<T>(op)`. However some cases could not handle an
unprefixed `cast` call due to occurrences of variables named cast, or
occurring inside of class definitions which would resolve to the method.
All C++ files that did not work automatically with `cast<T>()` are
updated here to `llvm::cast` and similar with the intention that they
can be easily updated after the methods are removed through a
find-replace.
See https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/compare/main...tpopp:llvm-project:tidy-cast-check
for the clang-tidy check that is used and then update printed
occurrences of the function to include `llvm::` before.
One can then run the following:
```
ninja -C $BUILD_DIR clang-tidy
run-clang-tidy -clang-tidy-binary=$BUILD_DIR/bin/clang-tidy -checks='-*,misc-cast-functions'\
-export-fixes /tmp/cast/casts.yaml mlir/*\
-header-filter=mlir/ -fix
rm -rf $BUILD_DIR/tools/mlir/**/*.inc
```
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D150348
Reland D139447, D139471 With flang actually working
- FunctionOpInterface: make get/setFunctionType interface methods
This patch removes the concept of a `function_type`-named type attribute
as a requirement for implementors of FunctionOpInterface. Instead, this
type should be provided through two interface methods, `getFunctionType`
and `setFunctionTypeAttr` (*Attr because functions may use different
concrete function types), which should be automatically implemented by
ODS for ops that define a `$function_type` attribute.
This also allows FunctionOpInterface to materialize function types if
they don't carry them in an attribute, for example.
Importantly, all the function "helper" still accept an attribute name to
use in parsing and printing functions, for example.
- FunctionOpInterface: arg and result attrs dispatch to interface
This patch removes the `arg_attrs` and `res_attrs` named attributes as a
requirement for FunctionOpInterface and replaces them with interface
methods for the getters, setters, and removers of the relevent
attributes. This allows operations to use their own storage for the
argument and result attributes.
Reviewed By: jpienaar
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D139736
and "[mlir] Fix examples build"
This reverts commit fbc253fe81da4e1d6bfa2519e01e03f21d8c40a8 and
96cf183bccd7d1c3083f169a89a6af1f263b3aae.
Which I missed in the first revert in f3379feabe38fd3711b13ffcf6de4aab03b7ccdc.
and "[flang] Fix flang after MLIR update"
This reverts commit dd74e6b6f4fb7a4685086a4895c1934e043f875b and
1897b67ae86470ad54f6baea6f220933d8053b5b due to ongoing test failures on flang
bots e.g. https://lab.llvm.org/buildbot/#/builders/179/builds/5050
This patch removes the `arg_attrs` and `res_attrs` named attributes as a
requirement for FunctionOpInterface and replaces them with interface
methods for the getters, setters, and removers of the relevent
attributes. This allows operations to use their own storage for the
argument and result attributes.
Depends on D139471
Reviewed By: rriddle
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D139472
This patch removes the concept of a `function_type`-named type attribute
as a requirement for implementors of FunctionOpInterface. Instead, this
type should be provided through two interface methods, `getFunctionType`
and `setFunctionTypeAttr` (*Attr because functions may use different
concrete function types), which should be automatically implemented by
ODS for ops that define a `$function_type` attribute.
This also allows FunctionOpInterface to materialize function types if
they don't carry them in an attribute, for example.
Importantly, all the function "helper" still accept an attribute name to
use in parsing and printing functions, for example.
Reviewed By: rriddle, lattner
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D139447
* Split ops into X_graph variants as discussed;
* Remove tokens from non-Graph region variants and rely on side-effect
modelling there while removing side-effect modelling from Graph
variants and relying on explicit ordering there;
* Make tokens required to be produced by Graph variants - but kept
explicit token type specification given previous discussion on this
potentially being configurable in future;
This results in duplicating some code. I considered adding helper
functions but decided against adding an abstraction there early given
size of duplication and creating accidental coupling.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D127813
The approach I took was to define a dialect 'extern' attribute that a GlobalOp can take as a value to signify external linkage. I think this approach should compose well and should also work with wherever the OpaqueElements work goes in the future (since that is just another kind of attribute). I special cased the GlobalOp parser/printer for this case because it is significantly easier on the eyes.
In the discussion, Jeff Niu had proposed an alternative syntax for GlobalOp that I ended up not taking. I did try to implement it but a) I don't think it made anything easier to read in the common case, and b) it made the parsing/printing logic a lot more complicated (I think I would need a completely custom parser/printer to do it well). Please have a look at the common cases where the global type and initial value type match: I don't think how I have it is too bad. The less common cases seem ok to me.
I chose to only implement the direct, constant load op since that is non side effecting and there was still discussion pending on that.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D124318