This patch adds support for Calling Convention attribute in LLVM
dialect, including enums, custom syntax and import from LLVM IR.
Additionally fix import of dso_local attribute.
Reviewed By: ftynse
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D126161
This removes any potential confusion with the `getType` accessors
which correspond to SSA results of an operation, and makes it
clear what the intent is (i.e. to represent the type of the function).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D121762
The Func has a large number of legacy dependencies carried over from the old
Standard dialect, which was pervasive and contained a large number of varied
operations. With the split of the standard dialect and its demise, a lot of lingering
dead dependencies have survived to the Func dialect. This commit removes a
large majority of then, greatly reducing the dependence surface area of the
Func dialect.
The last remaining operations in the standard dialect all revolve around
FuncOp/function related constructs. This patch simply handles the initial
renaming (which by itself is already huge), but there are a large number
of cleanups unlocked/necessary afterwards:
* Removing a bunch of unnecessary dependencies on Func
* Cleaning up the From/ToStandard conversion passes
* Preparing for the move of FuncOp to the Func dialect
See the discussion at https://discourse.llvm.org/t/standard-dialect-the-final-chapter/6061
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D120624
This commit refactors the FunctionLike trait into an interface (FunctionOpInterface).
FunctionLike as it is today is already a pseudo-interface, with many users checking the
presence of the trait and then manually into functionality implemented in the
function_like_impl namespace. By transitioning to an interface, these accesses are much
cleaner (ideally with no direct calls to the impl namespace outside of the implementation
of the derived function operations, e.g. for parsing/printing utilities).
I've tried to maintain as much compatability with the current state as possible, while
also trying to clean up as much of the cruft as possible. The general migration plan for
current users of FunctionLike is as follows:
* function_like_impl -> function_interface_impl
Realistically most user calls should remove references to functions within this namespace
outside of a vary narrow set (e.g. parsing/printing utilities). Calls to the attribute name
accessors should be migrated to the `FunctionOpInterface::` equivalent, most everything
else should be updated to be driven through an instance of the interface.
* OpTrait::FunctionLike -> FunctionOpInterface
`hasTrait` checks will need to be moved to isa, along with the other various Trait vs
Interface API differences.
* populateFunctionLikeTypeConversionPattern -> populateFunctionOpInterfaceTypeConversionPattern
Fixes#52917
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D117272
Each attribute has two accessor: one suffixed with `Attr` which returns the attribute itself
and one without the suffix which unwrap the attribute.
For example for a StringAttr attribute with a field named `kind`, we'll generate:
StringAttr getKindAttr();
StringRef getKind();
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D116466
- Define a gpu.printf op, which can be lowered to any GPU printf() support (which is present in CUDA, HIP, and OpenCL). This op only supports constant format strings and scalar arguments
- Define the lowering of gpu.pirntf to a call to printf() (which is what is required for AMD GPUs when using OpenCL) as well as to the hostcall interface present in the AMD Open Compute device library, which is the interface present when kernels are running under HIP.
- Add a "runtime" enum that allows specifying which of the possible runtimes a ROCDL kernel will be executed under or that the runtime is unknown. This enum controls how gpu.printf is lowered
This change does not enable lowering for Nvidia GPUs, but such a lowering should be possible in principle.
And:
[MLIR][AMDGPU] Always set amdgpu-implicitarg-num-bytes=56 on kernels
This is something that Clang always sets on both OpenCL and HIP kernels, and failing to include it causes mysterious crashes with printf() support.
In addition, revert the max-flat-work-group-size to (1, 256) to avoid triggering bugs in the AMDGPU backend.
Reviewed By: mehdi_amini
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D110448
NamedAttribute is currently represented as an std::pair, but this
creates an extremely clunky .first/.second API. This commit
converts it to a class, with better accessors (getName/getValue)
and also opens the door for more convenient API in the future.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D113956
This commits updates the remaining usages of the ArrayRef<Value> based
matchAndRewrite/rewrite methods in favor of the new OpAdaptor
overload.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D110360
This patch brings support for setting runtime preemption specifiers of
LLVM's GlobalValues. In LLVM semantics, if the `dso_local` attribute
is not explicitly requested, then it is inferred based on linkage and
visibility. We model this same behavior with a UnitAttribute: if it is
present, then we explicitly request the GlobalValue to marked as
`dso_local`, otherwise we rely on the GlobalValue itself to make this
decision.
Reviewed By: ftynse
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104983
First step in adding alignment as an attribute to MLIR global definitions. Alignment can be specified for global objects in LLVM IR. It can also be specified as a named attribute in the LLVMIR dialect of MLIR. However, this attribute has no standing and is discarded during translation from MLIR to LLVM IR. This patch does two things: First, it adds the attribute to the syntax of the llvm.mlir.global operation, and by doing this it also adds accessors and verifications. The syntax is "align=XX" (with XX being an integer), placed right after the value of the operation. Second, it allows transforming this operation to and from LLVM IR. It is checked whether the value is an integer power of 2.
Reviewed By: ftynse, mehdi_amini
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101492
The current design uses a unique entry for each argument/result attribute, with the name of the entry being something like "arg0". This provides for a somewhat sparse design, but ends up being much more expensive (from a runtime perspective) in-practice. The design requires building a string every time we lookup the dictionary for a specific arg/result, and also requires N attribute lookups when collecting all of the arg/result attribute dictionaries.
This revision restructures the design to instead have an ArrayAttr that contains all of the attribute dictionaries for arguments and another for results. This design reduces the number of attribute name lookups to 1, and allows for O(1) lookup for individual element dictionaries. The major downside is that we can end up with larger memory usage, as the ArrayAttr contains an entry for each element even if that element has no attributes. If the memory usage becomes too problematic, we can experiment with a more sparse structure that still provides a lot of the wins in this revision.
This dropped the compilation time of a somewhat large TensorFlow model from ~650 seconds to ~400 seconds.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D102035
'getAttrs' has been explicitly marked deprecated. This patch refactors
to use Operation::getAttrs().
Reviewed By: csigg
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97546
Until now, the GPU translation to NVVM or ROCDL intrinsics relied on the
presence of the generic `gpu.kernel` attribute to attach additional LLVM IR
metadata to the relevant functions. This would be problematic if each dialect
were to handle the conversion of its own options, which is the intended
direction for the translation infrastructure. Introduce `nvvm.kernel` and
`rocdl.kernel` in addition to `gpu.kernel` and base translation on these new
attributes instead.
Reviewed By: herhut
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96591