7 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
wren romano
84cd51bb97 [mlir][sparse] Renaming "pointer/index" to "position/coordinate"
The old "pointer/index" names often cause confusion since these names clash with names of unrelated things in MLIR; so this change rectifies this by changing everything to use "position/coordinate" terminology instead.

In addition to the basic terminology, there have also been various conventions for making certain distinctions like: (1) the overall storage for coordinates in the sparse-tensor, vs the particular collection of coordinates of a given element; and (2) particular coordinates given as a `Value` or `TypedValue<MemRefType>`, vs particular coordinates given as `ValueRange` or similar.  I have striven to maintain these distinctions
as follows:

  * "p/c" are used for individual position/coordinate values, when there is no risk of confusion.  (Just like we use "d/l" to abbreviate "dim/lvl".)

  * "pos/crd" are used for individual position/coordinate values, when a longer name is helpful to avoid ambiguity or to form compound names (e.g., "parentPos").  (Just like we use "dim/lvl" when we need a longer form of "d/l".)

    I have also used these forms for a handful of compound names where the old name had been using a three-letter form previously, even though a longer form would be more appropriate.  I've avoided renaming these to use a longer form purely for expediency sake, since changing them would require a cascade of other renamings.  They should be updated to follow the new naming scheme, but that can be done in future patches.

  * "coords" is used for the complete collection of crd values associated with a single element.  In the runtime library this includes both `std::vector` and raw pointer representations.  In the compiler, this is used specifically for buffer variables with C++ type `Value`, `TypedValue<MemRefType>`, etc.

    The bare form "coords" is discouraged, since it fails to make the dim/lvl distinction; so the compound names "dimCoords/lvlCoords" should be used instead.  (Though there may exist a rare few cases where is is appropriate to be intentionally ambiguous about what coordinate-space the coords live in; in which case the bare "coords" is appropriate.)

    There is seldom the need for the pos variant of this notion.  In most circumstances we use the term "cursor", since the same buffer is reused for a 'moving' pos-collection.

  * "dcvs/lcvs" is used in the compiler as the `ValueRange` analogue of "dimCoords/lvlCoords".  (The "vs" stands for "`Value`s".)  I haven't found the need for it, but "pvs" would be the obvious name for a pos-`ValueRange`.

    The old "ind"-vs-"ivs" naming scheme does not seem to have been sustained in more recent code, which instead prefers other mnemonics (e.g., adding "Buf" to the end of the names for `TypeValue<MemRefType>`).  I have cleaned up a lot of these to follow the "coords"-vs-"cvs" naming scheme, though haven't done an exhaustive cleanup.

  * "positions/coordinates" are used for larger collections of pos/crd values; in particular, these are used when referring to the complete sparse-tensor storage components.

    I also prefer to use these unabbreviated names in the documentation, unless there is some specific reason why using the abbreviated forms helps resolve ambiguity.

In addition to making this terminology change, this change also does some cleanup along the way:
  * correcting the dim/lvl terminology in certain places.
  * adding `const` when it requires no other code changes.
  * miscellaneous cleanup that was entailed in order to make the proper distinctions.  Most of these are in CodegenUtils.{h,cpp}

Reviewed By: aartbik

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D144773
2023-03-06 12:23:33 -08:00
wren romano
794d347988 [mlir][sparse] Fixing bug in python test
This is a followup to D135004, to correct one of the tests that didn't get caught by the buildbot.

Reviewed By: aartbik

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D135336
2022-10-05 18:06:22 -07:00
Aart Bik
c48e90877f [mlir][sparse] introduce a higher-order tensor mapping
This extension to the sparse tensor type system in MLIR
opens up a whole new set of sparse storage schemes, such as
block sparse storage (e.g. BCSR) and ELL (aka jagged diagonals).

This revision merely introduces the type extension and
initial documentation. The actual interpretation of the type
(reading in tensors, lowering to code, etc.) will follow.

Reviewed By: Peiming

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D135206
2022-10-05 09:40:51 -07:00
Aart Bik
0baec207ea [mlir][sparse][python] improve sparse encoding test
Reviewed By: bixia

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D133971
2022-09-15 14:01:57 -07:00
Stella Laurenzo
a2c8aebd8f [mlir][Python] Finish adding RankedTensorType support for encoding.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D102184
2021-05-10 20:39:16 +00:00
Stella Laurenzo
f38633d1bb [mlir][Python] Re-export cext sparse_tensor module to the public namespace.
* This was left out of the previous commit accidentally.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D102183
2021-05-10 18:08:29 +00:00
Stella Laurenzo
f13893f66a [mlir][Python] Upstream the PybindAdaptors.h helpers and use it to implement sparse_tensor.encoding.
* The PybindAdaptors.h file has been evolving across different sub-projects (npcomp, circt) and has been successfully used for out of tree python API interop/extensions and defining custom types.
* Since sparse_tensor.encoding is the first in-tree custom attribute we are supporting, it seemed like the right time to upstream this header and use it to define the attribute in a way that we can support for both in-tree and out-of-tree use (prior, I had not wanted to upstream dead code which was not used in-tree).
* Adapted the circt version of `mlir_type_subclass`, also providing an `mlir_attribute_subclass`. As we get a bit of mileage on this, I would like to transition the builtin types/attributes to this mechanism and delete the old in-tree only `PyConcreteType` and `PyConcreteAttribute` template helpers (which cannot work reliably out of tree as they depend on internals).
* Added support for defaulting the MlirContext if none is passed so that we can support the same idioms as in-tree versions.

There is quite a bit going on here and I can split it up if needed, but would prefer to keep the first use and the header together so sending out in one patch.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D102144
2021-05-10 17:15:43 +00:00