Use the "main" transform-interpreter pass instead of the test pass.
This, along with the previously introduced debug extension, now allow
tutorials to no longer depend on test passes and extensions.
Rename and restructure tiling-related transform ops from the structured
extension to be more homogeneous. In particular, all ops now follow a
consistent naming scheme:
- `transform.structured.tile_using_for`;
- `transform.structured.tile_using_forall`;
- `transform.structured.tile_reduction_using_for`;
- `transform.structured.tile_reduction_using_forall`.
This drops the "_op" naming artifact from `tile_to_forall_op` that
shouldn't have been included in the first place, consistently specifies
the name of the control flow op to be produced for loops (instead of
`tile_reduction_using_scf` since `scf.forall` also belongs to `scf`),
and opts for the `using` connector to avoid ambiguity.
The loops produced by tiling are now systematically placed as *trailing*
results of the transform op. While this required changing 3 out of 4 ops
(except for `tile_using_for`), this is the only choice that makes sense
when producing multiple `scf.for` ops that can be associated with a
variadic number of handles. This choice is also most consistent with
*other* transform ops from the structured extension, in particular with
fusion ops, that produce the structured op as the leading result and the
loop as the trailing result.
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