26 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
wren romano
63bdcaf92a [mlir][sparse] Moving delete coo into codegen instead of runtime library
Prior to this change there were a number of places where the allocation and deallocation of SparseTensorCOO objects were not cleanly paired, leading to inconsistencies regarding whether each function released its tensor/coo arguments or not, as well as making it easy to run afoul of memory leaks, use-after-free, or double-free errors.  This change cleans up the codegen vs runtime boundary to resolve those issues.  Now, the only time the runtime library frees an object is either (a) because it's a function explicitly designed to do so, or (b) because the allocated object is entirely local to the function and would be a memory leak if not released.  Thus, now the codegen takes complete responsibility for releasing any objects it caused to be allocated.

Reviewed By: aartbik

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D122435
2022-04-01 11:08:52 -07:00
gysit
7294be2b8e [mlir][linalg] Replace linalg.fill by OpDSL variant.
The revision removes the linalg.fill operation and renames the OpDSL generated linalg.fill_tensor operation to replace it. After the change, all named structured operations are defined via OpDSL and there are no handwritten operations left.

A side-effect of the change is that the pretty printed form changes from:
```
%1 = linalg.fill(%cst, %0) : f32, tensor<?x?xf32> -> tensor<?x?xf32>
```
changes to
```
%1 = linalg.fill ins(%cst : f32) outs(%0 : tensor<?x?xf32>) -> tensor<?x?xf32>
```
Additionally, the builder signature now takes input and output value ranges as it is the case for all other OpDSL operations:
```
rewriter.create<linalg::FillOp>(loc, val, output)
```
changes to
```
rewriter.create<linalg::FillOp>(loc, ValueRange{val}, ValueRange{output})
```
All other changes remain minimal. In particular, the canonicalization patterns are the same and the `value()`, `output()`, and `result()` methods are now implemented by the FillOpInterface.

Depends On D120726

Reviewed By: nicolasvasilache

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D120728
2022-03-14 10:51:08 +00:00
Aart Bik
efa15f4178 [mlir][sparse] add ability for sparse tensor output
Rationale:
Although file I/O is a bit alien to MLIR itself, we provide two convenient ways
for sparse tensor I/O. The input part was already there (behind the swiss army
knife sparse_tensor.new). Now we have a sparse_tensor.out to write out data. As
before, the ops are kept vague and may change in the future. For now this
allows us to compare TACO vs MLIR very easily.

Reviewed By: bixia

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D117850
2022-01-21 15:43:29 -08:00
Aart Bik
4f2ec7f983 [mlir][sparse] finalize sparse output in the presence of reductions
This revision implements sparse outputs (from scratch) in all cases where
the loops can be reordered with all but one parallel loops outer. If the
inner parallel loop appears inside one or more reductions loops, then an
access pattern expansion is required (aka. workspaces in TACO speak).

Reviewed By: bixia

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D115091
2021-12-07 10:54:29 -08:00
Aart Bik
f66e5769d4 [mlir][sparse] first version of "truly" dynamic sparse tensors as outputs of kernels
This revision contains all "sparsification" ops and rewriting necessary to support sparse output tensors when the kernel has no reduction (viz. insertions occur in lexicographic order and are "injective"). This will be later generalized to allow reductions too. Also, this first revision only supports sparse 1-d tensors (viz. vectors) as output in the runtime support library. This will be generalized to n-d tensors shortly. But this way, the revision is kept to a manageable size.

Reviewed By: bixia

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D113705
2021-11-15 15:33:32 -08:00
Aart Bik
1b15160ef3 [mlir][sparse] lower trivial tensor.cast on identical sparse tensors
Even though tensor.cast is not part of the sparse tensor dialect,
it may be used to cast static dimension sizes to dynamic dimension
sizes for sparse tensors without changing the actual sparse tensor
itself. Those cases should be lowered properly when replacing sparse
tensor types with their opaque pointers. Likewise, no op sparse
conversions are handled by this revision in a similar manner.

Reviewed By: bixia

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D112173
2021-10-25 10:30:19 -07:00
Aart Bik
bd5494d127 [mlir][sparse] make index type explicit in public API of support library
The current implementation used explicit index->int64_t casts for some, but
not all instances of passing values of type "index" in and from the sparse
support library. This revision makes the situation more consistent by
using new "index_t" type at all such places  (which allows for less trivial
casting in the generated MLIR code).  Note that the current revision still
assumes that "index" is 64-bit wide. If we want to support targets with
alternative "index" bit widths, we need to build the support library different.
But the current revision is a step forward by making this requirement explicit
and more visible.

Reviewed By: wrengr

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D112122
2021-10-20 12:46:31 -07:00
Aart Bik
9d1db3d4a1 [mlir][sparse] generalize sparse_tensor.convert on static/dynamic dimension sizes
This revison lifts the artificial restriction on having exact matches between
source and destination type shapes. A static size may become dynamic. We still
reject changing a dynamic size into a static size to avoid the need for a
runtime "assert" on the conversion. This revision also refactors some of the
conversion code to share same-content buffers.

Reviewed By: bixia

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D111915
2021-10-18 13:54:03 -07:00
Aart Bik
b24788abd8 [mlir][sparse] implement sparse tensor init operation
Next step towards supporting sparse tensors outputs.
Also some minor refactoring of enum constants as well
as replacing tensor arguments with proper buffer arguments
(latter is required for more general sizes arguments for
the sparse_tensor.init operation, as well as more general
spares_tensor.convert operations later)

Reviewed By: wrengr

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D111771
2021-10-15 09:33:16 -07:00
Mogball
a54f4eae0e [MLIR] Replace std ops with arith dialect ops
Precursor: https://reviews.llvm.org/D110200

Removed redundant ops from the standard dialect that were moved to the
`arith` or `math` dialects.

Renamed all instances of operations in the codebase and in tests.

Reviewed By: rriddle, jpienaar

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D110797
2021-10-13 03:07:03 +00:00
Aart Bik
16b8f4ddae [mlir][sparse] add a "release" operation to sparse tensor dialect
We have several ways to materialize sparse tensors (new and convert) but no explicit operation to release the underlying sparse storage scheme at runtime (other than making an explicit delSparseTensor() library call). To simplify memory management, a sparse_tensor.release operation has been introduced that lowers to the runtime library call while keeping tensors, opague pointers, and memrefs transparent in the initial IR.

*Note* There is obviously some tension between the concept of immutable tensors and memory management methods. This tension is addressed by simply stating that after the "release" call, no further memref related operations are allowed on the tensor value. We expect the design to evolve over time, however, and arrive at a more satisfactory view of tensors and buffers eventually.

Bug:
http://llvm.org/pr52046

Reviewed By: bixia

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D111099
2021-10-05 09:35:59 -07:00
Bixia Zheng
fbd5821c6f Implement the conversion from sparse constant to sparse tensors.
The sparse constant provides a constant tensor in coordinate format. We first split the sparse constant into a constant tensor for indices and a constant tensor for values. We then generate a loop to fill a sparse tensor in coordinate format using the tensors for the indices and the values. Finally, we convert the sparse tensor in coordinate format to the destination sparse tensor format.

Add tests.

Reviewed By: aartbik

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D110373
2021-09-27 09:47:29 -07:00
Aart Bik
066d786ce0 [mlir][sparse] add folding to sparse_tensor.convert
folds conversion between identical types (with tests)

Reviewed By: ThomasRaoux

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D109545
2021-09-09 15:45:19 -07:00
Aart Bik
0a7b8cc5dd [mlir][sparse] fully implement sparse tensor to sparse tensor conversions
with rigorous integration test

Reviewed By: bixia

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108721
2021-08-27 15:08:18 -07:00
Aart Bik
236a90802d [mlir][sparse] replace support lib conversion with actual MLIR codegen
Rationale:
Passing in a pointer to the memref data in order to implement the
dense to sparse conversion was a bit too low-level. This revision
improves upon that approach with a cleaner solution of generating
a loop nest in MLIR code itself that prepares the COO object before
passing it to our "swiss army knife" setup.  This is much more
intuitive *and* now also allows for dynamic shapes.

Reviewed By: bixia

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108491
2021-08-23 14:26:05 -07:00
Aart Bik
758ccf8506 [mlir][sparse] add test for DimOp folding
Folding in the MLIR uses the order of the type directly
but folding in the underlying implementation must take
the dim ordering into account. These tests clarify that
behavior and verify it is done right.

Reviewed By: bixia

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108474
2021-08-20 11:24:09 -07:00
Aart Bik
d37d72eaf8 [mlir][sparse] use shared util for DimOp generation
This shares more code with existing utilities. Also, to be consistent,
we moved dimension permutation on the DimOp to the tensor lowering phase.
This way, both pre-existing DimOps on sparse tensors (not likely but
possible) as well as compiler generated DimOps are handled consistently.

Reviewed By: bixia

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108309
2021-08-18 17:12:32 -07:00
Aart Bik
05c7f450df [mlir][sparse] add dense to sparse conversion implementation
Implements lowering dense to sparse conversion, for static tensor types only.
First step towards general sparse_tensor.convert support.

Reviewed By: ThomasRaoux

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107681
2021-08-09 12:12:39 -07:00
Matthias Springer
c0a6318d96 [mlir][tensor] Add tensor.dim operation
* Split memref.dim into two operations: memref.dim and tensor.dim. Both ops have the same builder interface and op argument names, so that they can be used with templates in patterns that apply to both tensors and memrefs (e.g., some patterns in Linalg).
* Add constant materializer to TensorDialect (needed for folding in affine.apply etc.).
* Remove some MemRefDialect dependencies, make some explicit.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105165
2021-07-01 10:00:19 +09:00
Aart Bik
36b66ab9ed [mlir][sparse] add support for "simply dynamic" sparse tensor expressions
Slowly we are moving toward full support of sparse tensor *outputs*. First
step was support for all-dense annotated "sparse" tensors. This step adds
support for truly sparse tensors, but only for operations in which the values
of a tensor change, but not the nonzero structure (this was refered to as
"simply dynamic" in the [Bik96] thesis).

Some background text was posted on discourse:
https://llvm.discourse.group/t/sparse-tensors-in-mlir/3389/25

Reviewed By: gussmith23

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104577
2021-06-22 13:37:32 -07:00
Aart Bik
727a63e0d9 [mlir][sparse] allow all-dense annotated "sparse" tensor output
This is a very careful start with alllowing sparse tensors at the
left-hand-side of tensor index expressions (viz. sparse output).
Note that there is a subtle difference between non-annotated tensors
(dense, remain n-dim, handled by classic bufferization) and all-dense
annotated "sparse" tensors (linearized to 1-dim without overhead
storage, bufferized by sparse compiler, backed by runtime support library).
This revision gently introduces some new IR to facilitate annotated outputs,
to be generalized to truly sparse tensors in the future.

Reviewed By: gussmith23, bixia

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104074
2021-06-15 14:55:07 -07:00
Aart Bik
c194b49c9c [mlir][sparse] add full dimension ordering support
This revision completes the "dimension ordering" feature
of sparse tensor types that enables the programmer to
define a preferred order on dimension access (other than
the default left-to-right order). This enables e.g. selection
of column-major over row-major storage for sparse matrices,
but generalized to any rank, as in:

dimOrdering = affine_map<(i,j,k,l,m,n,o,p) -> (p,o,j,k,i,l,m,n)>

Reviewed By: bixia

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D102856
2021-05-21 12:35:13 -07:00
Aart Bik
56fd4c1cf8 [mlir][sparse] prepare runtime support lib for multiple dim level types
We are moving from just dense/compressed to more general dim level
types, so we need more than just an "i1" array for annotations.

Reviewed By: bixia

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D102520
2021-05-14 19:12:07 -07:00
Aart Bik
ca5d0a7310 [mlir][sparse] keep runtime support library signature consistent
Reviewed By: bixia

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D102285
2021-05-12 09:59:46 -07:00
Aart Bik
96a23911f6 [mlir][sparse] complete migration to sparse tensor type
A very elaborate, but also very fun revision because all
puzzle pieces are finally "falling in place".

1. replaces lingalg annotations + flags with proper sparse tensor types
2. add rigorous verification on sparse tensor type and sparse primitives
3. removes glue and clutter on opaque pointers in favor of sparse tensor types
4. migrates all tests to use sparse tensor types

NOTE: next CL will remove *all* obsoleted sparse code in Linalg

Reviewed By: bixia

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D102095
2021-05-10 12:55:22 -07:00
Aart Bik
a2c9d4bb04 [mlir][sparse] Introduce proper sparsification passes
This revision migrates more code from Linalg into the new permanent home of
SparseTensor. It replaces the test passes with proper compiler passes.

NOTE: the actual removal of the last glue and clutter in Linalg will follow

Reviewed By: bixia

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101811
2021-05-04 17:10:09 -07:00