This patch adds more precise side effects to the current ops with memory
effects, allowing us to determine which OpOperand/OpResult/BlockArgument
the
operation reads or writes, rather than just recording the reading and
writing
of values. This allows for convenient use of precise side effects to
achieve
analysis and optimization.
Related discussions:
https://discourse.llvm.org/t/rfc-add-operandindex-to-sideeffect-instance/79243
Transform interfaces are implemented, direction or via extensions, in
libraries belonging to multiple other dialects. Those dialects don't
need to depend on the non-interface part of the transform dialect, which
includes the growing number of ops and transitive dependency footprint.
Split out the interfaces into a separate library. This in turn requires
flipping the dependency from the interface on the dialect that has crept
in because both co-existed in one library. The interface shouldn't
depend on the transform dialect either.
As a consequence of splitting, the capability of the interpreter to
automatically walk the payload IR to identify payload ops of a certain
kind based on the type used for the entry point symbol argument is
disabled. This is a good move by itself as it simplifies the interpreter
logic. This functionality can be trivially replaced by a
`transform.structured.match` operation.
All `apply` functions now have a `TransformRewriter &` parameter. This rewriter should be used to modify the IR. It has a `TrackingListener` attached and updates the internal handle-payload mappings based on rewrites.
Implementations no longer need to create their own `TrackingListener` and `IRRewriter`. Error checking is integrated into `applyTransform`. Tracking listener errors are reported only for ops with the `ReportTrackingListenerFailuresOpTrait` trait attached, allowing for a gradual migration. Furthermore, errors can be silenced with an op attribute.
Additional API will be added to `TransformRewriter` in subsequent revisions. This revision just adds an "empty" `TransformRewriter` class and updates all `apply` implementations.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D152427
The transform dialect has been around for a while and is sufficiently
stable at this point. Add the first three chapters of the tutorial
describing its usage and extension.
Reviewed By: springerm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D151491