This change contains the initial support of FastMath flag in complex dialect. Similar to what we did in [Arith dialect](https://reviews.llvm.org/rGb56e65d31825fe4a1ae02fdcbad58bb7993d63a7), `fastmath` attributes in the complex dialect are directly mapped to the corresponding LLVM fastmath flags.
In this diff,
- Definition of FastMathAttr as a custom attribute in the Complex dialect that inherits from the EnumAttr class.
- Definition of ComplexFastMathInterface, which is an interface that is implemented by operations that have a complex::fastmath attribute.
- Declaration of a default-valued fastmath attribute for unary and arithmetic operations in the Complex dialect.
- Conversion code to lower arithmetic fastmath flags to LLVM fastmath flags
NOT in this diff (but planned and progressively implemented):
- Documentation of flag meanings
- Support the fastmath flag conversion to Arith dialect
- Folding/rewrite implementations that are enabled by fastmath flags (although it's the original motivation to support the flag)
RFC: https://discourse.llvm.org/t/rfc-fastmath-flags-support-in-complex-dialect/71981
Reviewed By: kiranchandramohan
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D156310
Also a new pass option `ConvertToLLVMPass` to populate only patterns from the specified dialects. This is needed because the existing test cases expect that only ops from certain dialects are lowered. (E.g., "arith-to-llvm" expects that only "arith" ops are lowered but not "func" ops.)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D157627
This is a resubmit of the original D157391 change, which was reverted
because it needed special handling for the async dialect. (I removed it
from this change.)
Implement ConvertToLLVMPatternInterface for more dialects: arith,
complex, cf.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D157391
This is required for D126305 code to propagate fastmath attributes
for Arith operations that are converted to LLVM IR intrinsics
operations.
LLVM IR intrinsic operations are using custom assembly format now
to avoid printing {fastmathFlags = #llvm.fastmath<none>}, which
is too verbose.
Reviewed By: rriddle
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D136225
The current StandardToLLVM conversion patterns only really handle
the Func dialect. The pass itself adds patterns for Arithmetic/CFToLLVM, but
those should be/will be split out in a followup. This commit focuses solely
on being an NFC rename.
Aside from the directory change, the pattern and pass creation API have been renamed:
* populateStdToLLVMFuncOpConversionPattern -> populateFuncToLLVMFuncOpConversionPattern
* populateStdToLLVMConversionPatterns -> populateFuncToLLVMConversionPatterns
* createLowerToLLVMPass -> createConvertFuncToLLVMPass
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D120778
The current implementation invokes materializations
whenever an input operand does not have a mapping for the
desired type, i.e. it requires materialization at the earliest possible
point. This conflicts with goal of dialect conversion (and also the
current documentation) which states that a materialization is only
required if the materialization is supposed to persist after the
conversion process has finished.
This revision refactors this such that whenever a target
materialization "might" be necessary, we insert an
unrealized_conversion_cast to act as a temporary materialization.
This allows for deferring the invocation of the user
materialization hooks until the end of the conversion process,
where we actually have a better sense if it's actually
necessary. This has several benefits:
* In some cases a target materialization hook is no longer
necessary
When performing a full conversion, there are some situations
where a temporary materialization is necessary. Moving forward,
these users won't need to provide any target materializations,
as the temporary materializations do not require the user to
provide materialization hooks.
* getRemappedValue can now handle values that haven't been
converted yet
Before this commit, it wasn't well supported to get the remapped
value of a value that hadn't been converted yet (making it
difficult/impossible to convert multiple operations in many
situations). This commit updates getRemappedValue to properly
handle this case by inserting temporary materializations when
necessary.
Another code-health related benefit is that with this change we
can move a majority of the complexity related to materializations
to the end of the conversion process, instead of handling adhoc
while conversion is happening.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D111620
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
Conversion to the LLVM dialect is being refactored to be more progressive and
is now performed as a series of independent passes converting different
dialects. These passes may produce `unrealized_conversion_cast` operations that
represent pending conversions between built-in and LLVM dialect types.
Historically, a more monolithic Standard-to-LLVM conversion pass did not need
these casts as all operations were converted in one shot. Previous refactorings
have led to the requirement of running the Standard-to-LLVM conversion pass to
clean up `unrealized_conversion_cast`s even though the IR had no standard
operations in it. The pass must have been also run the last among all to-LLVM
passes, in contradiction with the partial conversion logic. Additionally, the
way it was set up could produce invalid operations by removing casts between
LLVM and built-in types even when the consumer did not accept the uncasted
type, or could lead to cryptic conversion errors (recursive application of the
rewrite pattern on `unrealized_conversion_cast` as a means to indicate failure
to eliminate casts).
In fact, the need to eliminate A->B->A `unrealized_conversion_cast`s is not
specific to to-LLVM conversions and can be factored out into a separate type
reconciliation pass, which is achieved in this commit. While the cast operation
itself has a folder pattern, it is insufficient in most conversion passes as
the folder only applies to the second cast. Without complex legality setup in
the conversion target, the conversion infra will either consider the cast
operations valid and not fold them (a separate canonicalization would be
necessary to trigger the folding), or consider the first cast invalid upon
generation and stop with error. The pattern provided by the reconciliation pass
applies to the first cast operation instead. Furthermore, having a separate
pass makes it clear when `unrealized_conversion_cast`s could not have been
eliminated since it is the only reason why this pass can fail.
Reviewed By: nicolasvasilache
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D109507
Historically the builtin dialect has had an empty namespace. This has unfortunately created a very awkward situation, where many utilities either have to special case the empty namespace, or just don't work at all right now. This revision adds a namespace to the builtin dialect, and starts to cleanup some of the utilities to no longer handle empty namespaces. For now, the assembly form of builtin operations does not require the `builtin.` prefix. (This should likely be re-evaluated though)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105149
The dialect-specific cast between builtin (ex-standard) types and LLVM
dialect types was introduced long time before built-in support for
unrealized_conversion_cast. It has a similar purpose, but is restricted
to compatible builtin and LLVM dialect types, which may hamper
progressive lowering and composition with types from other dialects.
Replace llvm.mlir.cast with unrealized_conversion_cast, and drop the
operation that became unnecessary.
Also make unrealized_conversion_cast legal by default in
LLVMConversionTarget as the majority of convesions using it are partial
conversions that actually want the casts to persist in the IR. The
standard-to-llvm conversion, which is still expected to run last, cleans
up the remaining casts standard-to-llvm conversion, which is still
expected to run last, cleans up the remaining casts
Reviewed By: nicolasvasilache
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105880
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