This is part of the larger effort to split the standard dialect. This will also allow for pruning some
additional dependencies on Standard (done in a followup).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D118202
This revision adds an implementation of 2-D vector.transpose for 4x8 and 8x8 for
AVX2 and surfaces it to the Linalg level of control.
Reviewed By: dcaballe
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D113347
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
This reverts commit b5d9a3c92358349d5444ab28de8ab5b2bee33a01.
The commit introduced a memory error in canonicalization/operation
walking that is exposed when compiled with ASAN. It leads to crashes in
some "release" configurations.
Two changes:
1) Change the canonicalizer to walk the function in top-down order instead of
bottom-up order. This composes well with the "top down" nature of constant
folding and simplification, reducing iterations and re-evaluation of ops in
simple cases.
2) Explicitly enter existing constants into the OperationFolder table before
canonicalizing. Previously we would "constant fold" them and rematerialize
them, wastefully recreating a bunch fo constants, which lead to pointless
memory traffic.
Both changes together provide a 33% speedup for canonicalize on some mid-size
CIRCT examples.
One artifact of this change is that the constants generated in normal pattern
application get inserted at the top of the function as the patterns are applied.
Because of this, we get "inverted" constants more often, which is an aethetic
change to the IR but does permute some testcases.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98609
Some of the lowering of vector.contract didn't support integer case. Since
reduction of integer cannot accumulate we always break up the reduction op, it
should be merged by a separate canonicalization if possible.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96461
In the overwhelmingly common case, enum attribute case strings represent valid identifiers in MLIR syntax. This revision updates the format generator to format as a keyword in these cases, removing the need to wrap values in a string. The parser still retains the ability to parse the string form, but the printer will use the keyword form when applicable.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D94575
When allowed, use 32-bit indices rather than 64-bit indices in the
SIMD computation of masks. This runs up to 2x and 4x faster on
a number of AVX2 and AVX512 microbenchmarks.
Reviewed By: bkramer
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87116
This new pattern mixes vector.transpose and direct lowering to vector.reduce.
This allows more progressive lowering than immediately going to insert/extract and
composes more nicely with other canonicalizations.
This has 2 use cases:
1. for very wide vectors the generated IR may be much smaller
2. when we have a custom lowering for transpose ops we can target it directly
rather than rely LLVM
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85428
Summary: Vector contract patterns were only parameterized by a `vectorTransformsOptions`. As a result, even if an mlir file was containing several occurrences of `vector.contract`, all of them would be lowered in the same way. More granularity might be required . This Diff adds a `constraint` argument to each of these patterns which allows the user to specify with more precision on which `vector.contract` should each of the lowering apply.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D83960
This specialization allows sharing more code where an AXPY follows naturally
in cases where an OUTERPRODUCT on a scalar would be generated.
Reviewed By: nicolasvasilache
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D83453
More efficient implementation of the multiply-reduce pair,
no need to add in a zero vector. Microbenchmarking on AVX2
yields the following difference in vector.contract speedup
(over strict-order scalar reduction).
SPEEDUP SIMD-fma SIMD-mul
4x4 1.45 2.00
8x8 1.40 1.90
32x32 5.32 5.80
Reviewed By: ftynse
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D82833
Use vector compares for the 1-D case. This approach scales much better
than generating insertion operations, and exposes SIMD directly to backend.
Reviewed By: ftynse
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D82402
Use direct vector constants for the 1-D case. This approach
scales much better than generating elaborate insertion operations
that are eventually folded into a constant. We could of course
generalize the 1-D case to higher ranks, but this simplification
already helps in scaling some microbenchmarks that would formerly
crash on the intermediate IR length.
Reviewed By: reidtatge
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D82144
This option avoids to accidentally reuse variable across -LABEL match,
it can be explicitly opted-in by prefixing the variable name with $
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D81531
Summary:
Even though this operation is intended for 1d/2d conversions currently,
leaving a semantic hole in the lowering prohibits proper testing of this
operation. This CL adds a straightforward reference implementation for the
missing cases.
Reviewers: nicolasvasilache, mehdi_amini, ftynse, reidtatge
Reviewed By: reidtatge
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, rriddle, jpienaar, shauheen, antiagainst, nicolasvasilache, arpith-jacob, mgester, lucyrfox, liufengdb, stephenneuendorffer, Joonsoo, grosul1, frgossen, Kayjukh, jurahul, msifontes
Tags: #mlir
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D81503
Having the input dumped on failure seems like a better
default: I debugged FileCheck tests for a while without knowing
about this option, which really helps to understand failures.
Remove `-dump-input-on-failure` and the environment variable
FILECHECK_DUMP_INPUT_ON_FAILURE which are now obsolete.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D81422
This simplifies a lot of handling of BoolAttr/IntegerAttr. For example, a lot of places currently have to handle both IntegerAttr and BoolAttr. In other places, a decision is made to pick one which can lead to surprising results for users. For example, DenseElementsAttr currently uses BoolAttr for i1 even if the user initialized it with an Array of i1 IntegerAttrs.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D81047
Summary:
Progressive lowering of vector.transpose into an operation that
is closer to an intrinsic, and thus the hardware ISA. Currently
under the common vector transform testing flag, as we prepare
deploying this transformation in the LLVM lowering pipeline.
Reviewers: nicolasvasilache, reidtatge, andydavis1, ftynse
Reviewed By: nicolasvasilache, ftynse
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, rriddle, jpienaar, shauheen, antiagainst, nicolasvasilache, arpith-jacob, mgester, lucyrfox, liufengdb, stephenneuendorffer, Joonsoo, grosul1, frgossen, Kayjukh, jurahul, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm, #mlir
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D80772
This revision expands the types of vector contractions that can be lowered to vector.outerproduct.
All 8 permutation cases are support.
The idiomatic manipulation of AffineMap written declaratively makes this straightforward.
In the process a bug with the vector.contract verifier was uncovered.
The vector shape verification part of the contract op is rewritten to use AffineMap composition.
One bug in the vector `ops.mlir` test is fixed and a new case not yet captured is added
to the vector`invalid.mlir` test.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D80393
This revision adds the additional lowering and exposes the patterns at a finer granularity for better programmatic reuse. The unit test makes use of the finer grained pattern for simpler checks.
As the ContractionOpLowering is exposed programmatically, cleanup opportunities appear and static class methods are turned into free functions with static visibility.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D80375
Summary:
First, compact implementation of lowering to LLVM IR. A bit more
challenging than the constant mask due to the dynamic indices, of course.
I like to hear if there are more efficient ways of doing this in LLVM,
but this for now at least gives us a functional reference implementation.
Reviewers: nicolasvasilache, ftynse, bkramer, reidtatge, andydavis1, mehdi_amini
Reviewed By: nicolasvasilache
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, rriddle, jpienaar, shauheen, antiagainst, nicolasvasilache, arpith-jacob, mgester, lucyrfox, liufengdb, stephenneuendorffer, Joonsoo, grosul1, frgossen, Kayjukh, jurahul, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79954
Summary:
Makes this operation runnable on CPU by generating MLIR instructions
that are eventually folded into an LLVM IR constant for the mask.
Reviewers: nicolasvasilache, ftynse, reidtatge, bkramer, andydavis1
Reviewed By: nicolasvasilache, ftynse, andydavis1
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, rriddle, jpienaar, shauheen, antiagainst, nicolasvasilache, arpith-jacob, mgester, lucyrfox, liufengdb, stephenneuendorffer, Joonsoo, grosul1, frgossen, Kayjukh, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79815
Summary:
Rather than having a full, recursive, lowering of vector.broadcast
to LLVM IR, it is much more elegant to have a progressive lowering
of each vector.broadcast into a lower dimensional vector.broadcast,
until only elementary vector operations remain. This results
in more elegant, step-wise code, that is easier to understand.
Also makes some optimizations in the generated code.
Reviewers: nicolasvasilache, mehdi_amini, andydavis1, grosul1
Reviewed By: nicolasvasilache
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, rriddle, jpienaar, burmako, shauheen, antiagainst, nicolasvasilache, arpith-jacob, mgester, lucyrfox, liufengdb, Joonsoo, grosul1, frgossen, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D78071
Summary:
LLVM matrix intrinsics recently introduced an option to support row-major mode.
This matches the MLIR vector model, this revision switches to row-major.
A corner case related to degenerate sizes was also fixed upstream.
This revision removes the guard against this corner case.
A bug was uncovered on the output vector construction which this revision also fixes.
Lastly, this has been tested on a small size and benchmarked independently: no visible performance regression is observed.
In the future, when matrix intrinsics support per op attribute, we can more aggressively translate to that and avoid inserting MLIR-level transposes.
This has been tested independently to work on small matrices.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D77761
Summary:
This revision restructures the calling of vector transforms to make it more flexible to ask for lowering through LLVM matrix intrinsics.
This also makes sure we bail out in degenerate cases (i.e. 1) in which LLVM complains about not being able to scalarize.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76266