This is commit 1 of 4 for the multi-root matching in PDL, discussed in https://llvm.discourse.group/t/rfc-multi-root-pdl-patterns-for-kernel-matching/4148 (topic flagged for review).
These operations are:
* pdl.get_accepting_ops: Returns a list of operations accepting the given value or a range of values at the specified position. Thus if there are two operations `%op1 = "foo"(%val)` and `%op2 = "bar"(%val)` accepting a value at position 0, `%ops = pdl_interp.get_accepting_ops of %val : !pdl.value at 0` will return both of them. This allows us to traverse upwards from a value to operations accepting the value.
* pdl.choose_op: Iteratively chooses one operation from a range of operations. Therefore, writing `%op = pdl_interp.choose_op from %ops` in the example above will select either `%op1`or `%op2`.
Testing: Added the corresponding test cases to mlir/test/Dialect/PDLInterp/ops.mlir.
Reviewed By: rriddle
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108543
This revision extends the PDL Interpreter dialect to add support for variadic operands and results, with ranges of these values represented via the recently added !pdl.range type. To support this extension, three new operations have been added that closely match the single variant:
* pdl_interp.check_types : Compare a range of types with a known range.
* pdl_interp.create_types : Create a constant range of types.
* pdl_interp.get_operands : Get a range of operands from an operation.
* pdl_interp.get_results : Get a range of results from an operation.
* pdl_interp.switch_types : Switch on a range of types.
This revision handles adding support in the interpreter dialect and the conversion from PDL to PDLInterp. Support for variadic operands and results in the bytecode will be added in a followup revision.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95722
The PDL Interpreter dialect provides a lower level abstraction compared to the PDL dialect, and is targeted towards low level optimization and interpreter code generation. The dialect operations encapsulates low-level pattern match and rewrite "primitives", such as navigating the IR (Operation::getOperand), creating new operations (OpBuilder::create), etc. Many of the operations within this dialect also fuse branching control flow with some form of a predicate comparison operation. This type of fusion reduces the amount of work that an interpreter must do when executing.
An example of this representation is shown below:
```mlir
// The following high level PDL pattern:
pdl.pattern : benefit(1) {
%resultType = pdl.type
%inputOperand = pdl.input
%root, %results = pdl.operation "foo.op"(%inputOperand) -> %resultType
pdl.rewrite %root {
pdl.replace %root with (%inputOperand)
}
}
// May be represented in the interpreter dialect as follows:
module {
func @matcher(%arg0: !pdl.operation) {
pdl_interp.check_operation_name of %arg0 is "foo.op" -> ^bb2, ^bb1
^bb1:
pdl_interp.return
^bb2:
pdl_interp.check_operand_count of %arg0 is 1 -> ^bb3, ^bb1
^bb3:
pdl_interp.check_result_count of %arg0 is 1 -> ^bb4, ^bb1
^bb4:
%0 = pdl_interp.get_operand 0 of %arg0
pdl_interp.is_not_null %0 : !pdl.value -> ^bb5, ^bb1
^bb5:
%1 = pdl_interp.get_result 0 of %arg0
pdl_interp.is_not_null %1 : !pdl.value -> ^bb6, ^bb1
^bb6:
pdl_interp.record_match @rewriters::@rewriter(%0, %arg0 : !pdl.value, !pdl.operation) : benefit(1), loc([%arg0]), root("foo.op") -> ^bb1
}
module @rewriters {
func @rewriter(%arg0: !pdl.value, %arg1: !pdl.operation) {
pdl_interp.replace %arg1 with(%arg0)
pdl_interp.return
}
}
}
```
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84579