Verification of the LLVM IR produced when translating various MLIR dialects was
only active when calling the translation programmatically. This has led to
several cases of invalid LLVM IR being generated that could not be caught with
textual mlir-translate tests. Add verifiers for these cases and fix the tests
in preparation for enforcing the validation of LLVM IR.
Reviewed By: nicolasvasilache
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96774
After the LLVM dialect types were ported to use built-in types, the parser kept
supporting the old syntax for LLVM dialect types to produce built-in types for
compatibility. Drop this support.
Reviewed By: mehdi_amini
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96275
Historically, the Vector to LLVM dialect conversion subsumed the Standard to
LLVM dialect conversion patterns. This was necessary because the conversion
infrastructure did not have sufficient support for reconciling type
conversions. This support is now available. Only keep the patterns related to
the Vector dialect in the Vector to LLVM conversion and require type casts
operations to be inserted if necessary. These casts will be removed by
following conversions if possible. Update integration tests to also run the
Standard to LLVM conversion.
There is a significant amount of test churn, which is due to (a) unnecessarily
strict tests in VectorToLLVM and (b) many patterns actually targeting Standard
dialect ops instead of LLVM dialect ops leading to tests actually exercising a
Vector->Standard->LLVM conversion. This churn is a good illustration of the
reason to make the conversion partial: now the tests only check the code in the
Vector to LLVM conversion and will not be randomly broken by changes in
Standard to LLVM conversion.
Arguably, it may be possible to extract Vector to Standard patterns into a
separate pass, but given the ongoing splitting of the Standard dialect, such
pass will be short-lived and will require further refactoring.
Depends On D95626
Reviewed By: nicolasvasilache, aartbik
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95685
It is no longer necessary to also convert other "standard" ops along with the
complex dialect: the element types are now built-in integers or floating point
types, and the top-level cast between complex and struct is automatically
inserted and removed in progressive lowering.
Reviewed By: herhut
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95625
This corrects the last 2 issues caught by tests when causing dialect
conversion rollbacks to occur.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D94623
Continue the convergence between LLVM dialect and built-in types by using the
built-in vector type whenever possible, that is for fixed vectors of built-in
integers and built-in floats. LLVM dialect vector type is still in use for
pointers, less frequent floating point types that do not have a built-in
equivalent, and scalable vectors. However, the top-level `LLVMVectorType` class
has been removed in favor of free functions capable of inspecting both built-in
and LLVM dialect vector types: `LLVM::getVectorElementType`,
`LLVM::getNumVectorElements` and `LLVM::getFixedVectorType`. Additional work is
necessary to design an implemented the extensions to built-in types so as to
remove the `LLVMFixedVectorType` entirely.
Note that the default output format for the built-in vectors does not have
whitespace around the `x` separator, e.g., `vector<4xf32>` as opposed to the
LLVM dialect vector type format that does, e.g., `!llvm.vec<4 x fp128>`. This
required changing the FileCheck patterns in several tests.
Reviewed By: mehdi_amini, silvas
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D94405
Continue the convergence between LLVM dialect and built-in types by replacing
the bfloat, half, float and double LLVM dialect types with their built-in
counterparts. At the API level, this is a direct replacement. At the syntax
level, we change the keywords to `bf16`, `f16`, `f32` and `f64`, respectively,
to be compatible with the built-in type syntax. The old keywords can still be
parsed but produce a deprecation warning and will be eventually removed.
Depends On D94178
Reviewed By: mehdi_amini, silvas, antiagainst
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D94179
The LLVM dialect type system has been closed until now, i.e. did not support
types from other dialects inside containers. While this has had obvious
benefits of deriving from a common base class, it has led to some simple types
being almost identical with the built-in types, namely integer and floating
point types. This in turn has led to a lot of larger-scale complexity: simple
types must still be converted, numerous operations that correspond to LLVM IR
intrinsics are replicated to produce versions operating on either LLVM dialect
or built-in types leading to quasi-duplicate dialects, lowering to the LLVM
dialect is essentially required to be one-shot because of type conversion, etc.
In this light, it is reasonable to trade off some local complexity in the
internal implementation of LLVM dialect types for removing larger-scale system
complexity. Previous commits to the LLVM dialect type system have adapted the
API to support types from other dialects.
Replace LLVMIntegerType with the built-in IntegerType plus additional checks
that such types are signless (these are isolated in a utility function that
replaced `isa<LLVMType>` and in the parser). Temporarily keep the possibility
to parse `!llvm.i32` as a synonym for `i32`, but add a deprecation notice.
Reviewed By: mehdi_amini, silvas, antiagainst
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D94178
LLVM dialect type parsing and printing have been using a local stack object
forwarded between recursive functions responsible for parsing or printing
specific types. This stack is necessary to intercept (mutually) recursive
structure types and avoid inifinite recursion. This approach works only thanks
to the closedness of the LLVM dialect type system: types that don't belong to
the dialect are not allowed. Switch the approach to using a `thread_local`
stack inside the functions parsing the structure types. This makes the code
slightly cleaner by avoiding the need to pass the stack object around and, more
importantly, makes it possible to reconsider the closedness of the LLVM dialect
type system. As a nice side effect of this change, container LLVM dialect types
now support type aliases in their body (although it is currently impossible to
also use the alises when printing).
Depends On D93713
Reviewed By: mehdi_amini
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93714
BEGIN_PUBLIC
[mlir] Remove LLVMType, LLVM dialect types now derive Type directly
This class has become a simple `isa` hook with no proper functionality.
Removing will allow us to eventually make the LLVM dialect type infrastructure
open, i.e., support non-LLVM types inside container types, which itself will
make the type conversion more progressive.
Introduce a call `LLVM::isCompatibleType` to be used instead of
`isa<LLVMType>`. For now, this is strictly equivalent.
END_PUBLIC
Depends On D93681
Reviewed By: mehdi_amini
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93713
LLVMType contains numerous static constructors that were initially introduced
for API compatibility with LLVM. Most of these merely forward to arguments to
`SpecificType::get` (MLIR defines classes for all types, unlike LLVM IR), while
some introduce subtle semantics differences due to different modeling of MLIR
types (e.g., structs are not auto-renamed in case of conflicts). Furthermore,
these constructors don't match MLIR idioms and actively prevent us from making
the LLVM dialect type system more open. Remove them and use `SpecificType::get`
instead.
Depends On D93680
Reviewed By: mehdi_amini
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93681
LLVMType contains multiple instance methods that were introduced initially for
compatibility with LLVM API. These methods boil down to `cast` followed by
type-specific call. Arguably, they are mostly used in an LLVM cast-follows-isa
anti-pattern. This doesn't connect nicely to the rest of the MLIR
infrastructure and actively prevents it from making the LLVM dialect type
system more open, e.g., reusing built-in types when appropriate. Remove such
instance methods and replaces their uses with apporpriate casts and methods on
derived classes. In some cases, the result may look slightly more verbose, but
most cases should actually use a stricter subtype of LLVMType anyway and avoid
the isa/cast.
Reviewed By: mehdi_amini
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93680
This is a temporary fix until figuring out how to correct the forward
declare in mlir/include/mlir/Support/LLVM.h
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93666
This class used to serve a few useful purposes:
* Allowed containing a null DictionaryAttr
* Provided some simple mutable API around a DictionaryAttr
The first of which is no longer an issue now that there is much better caching support for attributes in general, and a cache in the context for empty dictionaries. The second results in more trouble than it's worth because it mutates the internal dictionary on every action, leading to a potentially large number of dictionary copies. NamedAttrList is a much better alternative for the second use case, and should be modified as needed to better fit it's usage as a DictionaryAttrBuilder.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93442
This better matches the rest of the infrastructure, is much simpler, and makes it easier to move these types to being declaratively specified.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93432
The LLVM IR 'switch' instruction allows control flow to be transferred
to one of any number of branches depending on an integer control value,
or a default value if the control does not match any branch values. This patch
adds `llvm.switch` to the MLIR LLVMIR dialect, as well as translation routines
for lowering it to LLVM IR.
To store a variable number of operands for a variable number of branch
destinations, the new op makes use of the `AttrSizedOperandSegments`
trait. It stores its default branch operands as one segment, and all
remaining case branches' operands as another. It also stores pairs of
begin and end offset values to delineate the sub-range of each case branch's
operands. There's probably a better way to implement this, since the
offset computation complicates several parts of the op definition. This is the
approach I settled on because in doing so I was able to delegate to the default
op builder member functions. However, it may be preferable to instead specify
`skipDefaultBuilders` in the op's ODS, or use a completely separate
approach; feedback is welcome!
Another contentious part of this patch may be the custom printer and
parser functions for the op. Ideally I would have liked the MLIR to be
printed in this way:
```
llvm.switch %0, ^bb1(%1 : !llvm.i32) [
1: ^bb2,
2: ^bb3(%2, %3 : !llvm.i32, !llvm.i32)
]
```
The above would resemble how LLVM IR is formatted for the 'switch'
instruction. But I found it difficult to print and parse something like
this, whether I used the declarative assembly format or custom functions.
I also was not sure a multi-line format would be welcome -- it seems
like most MLIR ops do not use newlines. Again, I'd be happy to hear any
feedback here as well, or on any other aspect of the patch.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93005
This operation is designed to support partial conversion, more specifically the
IR state in which some operations expect or produce built-in types and some
operations produce and expect LLVM dialect types. It is reasonable for it to
support cast between built-in types and any equivalent that could be produced
by the type conversion. (At the same time, we don't want the dialect to depend
on the type conversion as it could lead to a dependency cycle). Introduce
support for casting from index to any integer type and back, and from memref to
bare pointer or memref descriptor type and back.
Contrary to what the TODO in the code stated, there are no particular
precautions necessary to handle the bare pointer conversion for memerfs. This
conversion applies exclusively to statically-shaped memrefs, so we can always
recover the full descriptor contents from the type.
This patch simultaneously tightens the verification for other types to only
accept matching pairs of types, e.g., i64 and !llvm.i64, as opposed to the
previous implementation that only checked if the types were generally allowed
byt not for matching, e.g. i64 could be "casted" to !llvm.bfloat, which is not
the intended semantics.
Move the relevant test under test/Dialect/LLVMIR because it is not specific to
the conversion pass, but rather exercises an op in the dialect. If we decide
this op does not belong to the LLVM dialect, both the dialect and the op should
move together.
Reviewed By: silvas, ezhulenev
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93405
Now that we have predicates for LLVM dialect types in ODS, we can use them to
restrict the types allowed in results of LLVM dialect operations. This also
serves as additional documentation for these operations.
Reviewed By: rriddle
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93329
This is part of a larger refactoring the better congregates the builtin structures under the BuiltinDialect. This also removes the problematic "standard" naming that clashes with the "standard" dialect, which is not defined within IR/. A temporary forward is placed in StandardTypes.h to allow time for downstream users to replaced references.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92435
These includes have been deprecated in favor of BuiltinDialect.h, which contains the definitions of ModuleOp and FuncOp.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91572
This adds getters for `llvm.align` and `llvm.noalias` strings that are used
as attribute names in the llvm dialect.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91166
The alignment attribute in the 'alloca' op treats the '0' value as 'unset'.
When parsing the custom form of the 'alloca' op, ignore the alignment attribute
with if its value is '0' instead of actually creating it and producing a
slightly different textually yet equivalent semantically form in the output.
Reviewed By: rriddle
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D90179
The build of MLIR occasionally fails (especially on Windows) because there is missing dependency between MLIRLLVMIR and MLIROpenMPOpsIncGen.
1) LLVMDialect.cpp includes LLVMDialect.h
2) LLVMDialect.h includes OpenMPDialect.h
3) OpenMPDialect.h includes OpenMPOpsDialect.h.inc, OpenMPOpsEnums.h.inc and OpenMPOps.h.inc
The OpenMP .inc files are generated by MLIROpenMPOpsIncGen, so MLIRLLVMIR which builds LLVMDialect.cpp should depend on MLIROpenMPOpsIncGen
Reviewed By: mehdi_amini
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89275
This aligns the behavior with the standard call as well as the LLVM verifier.
Reviewed By: ftynse, dcaballe
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88362
The OmpDialect is in practice optional during translation to LLVM IR: the code is tolerant
to have a "nullptr" when not present / needed.
The dependency still exists on the export to LLVMIR.
Reviewed By: ftynse
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88351
- Use TypeRange instead of ArrayRef<Type> where possible.
- Change some of the custom builders to also use TypeRange
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87944
Now backends spell out which namespace they want to be in, instead of relying on
clients #including them inside already-opened namespaces. This also means that
cppNamespaces should be fully qualified, and there's no implicit "::mlir::"
prepended to them anymore.
Reviewed By: mehdi_amini
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86811
Historically, the operations in the MLIR's LLVM dialect only checked that the
operand are of LLVM dialect type without more detailed constraints. This was
due to LLVM dialect types wrapping LLVM IR types and having clunky verification
methods. With the new first-class modeling, it is possible to define type
constraints similarly to other dialects and use them to enforce some
correctness rules in verifiers instead of having LLVM assert during translation
to LLVM IR. This hardening discovered several issues where MLIR was producing
LLVM dialect operations that cannot exist in LLVM IR.
Depends On D85900
Reviewed By: rriddle
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85901
Unsigned and Signless attributes use uintN_t and signed attributes use intN_t, where N is the fixed width. The 1-bit variants use bool.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86739
This greatly simplifies a large portion of the underlying infrastructure, allows for lookups of singleton classes to be much more efficient and always thread-safe(no locking). As a result of this, the dialect symbol registry has been removed as it is no longer necessary.
For users broken by this change, an alert was sent out(https://llvm.discourse.group/t/removing-kinds-from-attributes-and-types) that helps prevent a majority of the breakage surface area. All that should be necessary, if the advice in that alert was followed, is removing the kind passed to the ::get methods.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86121
This function is available on llvm::Type and has been used by some clients of
the LLVM dialect before the transition. Implement the MLIR counterpart.
Reviewed By: schweitz
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85847
Legacy implementation of the LLVM dialect in MLIR contained an instance of
llvm::Module as it was required to parse LLVM IR types. The access to the data
layout of this module was exposed to the users for convenience, but in practice
this layout has always been the default one obtained by parsing an empty layout
description string. Current implementation of the dialect no longer relies on
wrapping LLVM IR types, but it kept an instance of DataLayout for
compatibility. This effectively forces a single data layout to be used across
all modules in a given MLIR context, which is not desirable. Remove DataLayout
from the LLVM dialect and attach it as a module attribute instead. Since MLIR
does not yet have support for data layouts, use the LLVM DataLayout in string
form with verification inside MLIR. Introduce the layout when converting a
module to the LLVM dialect and keep the default "" description for
compatibility.
This approach should be replaced with a proper MLIR-based data layout when it
becomes available, but provides an immediate solution to compiling modules with
different layouts, e.g. for GPUs.
This removes the need for LLVMDialectImpl, which is also removed.
Depends On D85650
Reviewed By: aartbik
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85652