Add C and python bindings for InferShapedTypeOpInterface
and ShapedTypeComponents. This allows users to invoke
InferShapedTypeOpInterface for ops that implement it.
Reviewed By: ftynse
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D149494
Currently blocks are always created with UnknownLoc's for their arguments. This
adds an `arg_locs` argument to all block creation APIs, which takes an optional
sequence of locations to use, one per block argument. If no locations are
supplied, the current Location context is used.
Reviewed By: ftynse
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D150084
This new features enabled to dedicate custom storage inline within operations.
This storage can be used as an alternative to attributes to store data that is
specific to an operation. Attribute can also be stored inside the properties
storage if desired, but any kind of data can be present as well. This offers
a way to store and mutate data without uniquing in the Context like Attribute.
See the OpPropertiesTest.cpp for an example where a struct with a
std::vector<> is attached to an operation and mutated in-place:
struct TestProperties {
int a = -1;
float b = -1.;
std::vector<int64_t> array = {-33};
};
More complex scheme (including reference-counting) are also possible.
The only constraint to enable storing a C++ object as "properties" on an
operation is to implement three functions:
- convert from the candidate object to an Attribute
- convert from the Attribute to the candidate object
- hash the object
Optional the parsing and printing can also be customized with 2 extra
functions.
A new options is introduced to ODS to allow dialects to specify:
let usePropertiesForAttributes = 1;
When set to true, the inherent attributes for all the ops in this dialect
will be using properties instead of being stored alongside discardable
attributes.
The TestDialect showcases this feature.
Another change is that we introduce new APIs on the Operation class
to access separately the inherent attributes from the discardable ones.
We envision deprecating and removing the `getAttr()`, `getAttrsDictionary()`,
and other similar method which don't make the distinction explicit, leading
to an entirely separate namespace for discardable attributes.
Recommit d572cd1b06 after fixing python bindings build.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D141742
Can't return a well-formed IR output while enabling version to be bumped
up during emission. Previously it would return min version but
potentially invalid IR which was confusing, instead make it return
error and abort immediately instead.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D149569
Add method to set a desired bytecode file format to generate. Change
write method to be able to return status including the minimum bytecode
version needed by reader. This enables generating an older version of
the bytecode (not dialect ops, attributes or types). But this does not
guarantee that an older version can always be generated, e.g., if a
dialect uses a new encoding only available at later bytecode version.
This clamps setting to at most current version.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D146555
`compressed(hi)` is similar to `compressed`, but instead of reusing the previous position high as the current position low, it uses a pair of positions for each sparse index.
The patch only introduces the definition (syntax) but does not provide codegen implementation.
Reviewed By: aartbik
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D148664
This resolves some warnings when building with C++20, e.g.:
```
llvm-project/mlir/lib/Bindings/Python/IRAffine.cpp:545:60: warning: ISO C++20 considers use of overloaded operator '==' (with operand types 'mlir::python::PyAffineExpr' and 'mlir::python::PyAffineExpr') to be ambiguous despite there being a unique best viable function [-Wambiguous-reversed-operator]
PyAffineExpr &other) { return self == other; })
~~~~ ^ ~~~~~
llvm-project/mlir/lib/Bindings/Python/IRAffine.cpp:350:20: note: ambiguity is between a regular call to this operator and a call with the argument order reversed
bool PyAffineExpr::operator==(const PyAffineExpr &other) {
^
```
Reviewed By: ftynse
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D147018
X. Sun et al. (https://dl.acm.org/doi/10.5555/3454287.3454728) published
a paper showing that an FP format with 4 bits of exponent, 3 bits of
significand and an exponent bias of 11 would work quite well for ML
applications.
Google hardware supports a variant of this format where 0x80 is used to
represent NaN, as in the Float8E4M3FNUZ format. Just like the
Float8E4M3FNUZ format, this format does not support -0 and values which
would map to it will become +0.
This format is proposed for inclusion in OpenXLA's StableHLO dialect: https://github.com/openxla/stablehlo/pull/1308
As part of inclusion in that dialect, APFloat needs to know how to
handle this format.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D146441
Right now the bindings assume that all DenseElementsAttrs correspond to tensor values,
making it impossible to create vector-typed constants. I didn't want to change the API
significantly, so I opted for reusing the current signature of `.get`. Its `type` argument
now accepts both element types (in which case `shape` and `signless` can be specified too),
or a shaped type, which specifies the full type of the created attr (`shape` cannot be specified
in that case).
Reviewed By: ftynse
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D145053
This updates most (all?) error-diagnostic-emitting python APIs to
capture error diagnostics and include them in the raised exception's
message:
```
>>> Operation.parse('"arith.addi"() : () -> ()'))
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
mlir._mlir_libs.MLIRError: Unable to parse operation assembly:
error: "-":1:1: 'arith.addi' op requires one result
note: "-":1:1: see current operation: "arith.addi"() : () -> ()
```
The diagnostic information is available on the exception for users who
may want to customize the error message:
```
>>> try:
... Operation.parse('"arith.addi"() : () -> ()')
... except MLIRError as e:
... print(e.message)
... print(e.error_diagnostics)
... print(e.error_diagnostics[0].message)
...
Unable to parse operation assembly
[<mlir._mlir_libs._mlir.ir.DiagnosticInfo object at 0x7fed32bd6b70>]
'arith.addi' op requires one result
```
Error diagnostics captured in exceptions aren't propagated to diagnostic
handlers, to avoid double-reporting of errors. The context-level
`emit_error_diagnostics` option can be used to revert to the old
behaviour, causing error diagnostics to be reported to handlers instead
of as part of exceptions.
API changes:
- `Operation.verify` now raises an exception on verification failure,
instead of returning `false`
- The exception raised by the following methods has been changed to
`MLIRError`:
- `PassManager.run`
- `{Module,Operation,Type,Attribute}.parse`
- `{RankedTensorType,UnrankedTensorType}.get`
- `{MemRefType,UnrankedMemRefType}.get`
- `VectorType.get`
- `FloatAttr.get`
closes#60595
depends on D144804, D143830
Reviewed By: stellaraccident
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D143869
The old "pointer/index" names often cause confusion since these names clash with names of unrelated things in MLIR; so this change rectifies this by changing everything to use "position/coordinate" terminology instead.
In addition to the basic terminology, there have also been various conventions for making certain distinctions like: (1) the overall storage for coordinates in the sparse-tensor, vs the particular collection of coordinates of a given element; and (2) particular coordinates given as a `Value` or `TypedValue<MemRefType>`, vs particular coordinates given as `ValueRange` or similar. I have striven to maintain these distinctions
as follows:
* "p/c" are used for individual position/coordinate values, when there is no risk of confusion. (Just like we use "d/l" to abbreviate "dim/lvl".)
* "pos/crd" are used for individual position/coordinate values, when a longer name is helpful to avoid ambiguity or to form compound names (e.g., "parentPos"). (Just like we use "dim/lvl" when we need a longer form of "d/l".)
I have also used these forms for a handful of compound names where the old name had been using a three-letter form previously, even though a longer form would be more appropriate. I've avoided renaming these to use a longer form purely for expediency sake, since changing them would require a cascade of other renamings. They should be updated to follow the new naming scheme, but that can be done in future patches.
* "coords" is used for the complete collection of crd values associated with a single element. In the runtime library this includes both `std::vector` and raw pointer representations. In the compiler, this is used specifically for buffer variables with C++ type `Value`, `TypedValue<MemRefType>`, etc.
The bare form "coords" is discouraged, since it fails to make the dim/lvl distinction; so the compound names "dimCoords/lvlCoords" should be used instead. (Though there may exist a rare few cases where is is appropriate to be intentionally ambiguous about what coordinate-space the coords live in; in which case the bare "coords" is appropriate.)
There is seldom the need for the pos variant of this notion. In most circumstances we use the term "cursor", since the same buffer is reused for a 'moving' pos-collection.
* "dcvs/lcvs" is used in the compiler as the `ValueRange` analogue of "dimCoords/lvlCoords". (The "vs" stands for "`Value`s".) I haven't found the need for it, but "pvs" would be the obvious name for a pos-`ValueRange`.
The old "ind"-vs-"ivs" naming scheme does not seem to have been sustained in more recent code, which instead prefers other mnemonics (e.g., adding "Buf" to the end of the names for `TypeValue<MemRefType>`). I have cleaned up a lot of these to follow the "coords"-vs-"cvs" naming scheme, though haven't done an exhaustive cleanup.
* "positions/coordinates" are used for larger collections of pos/crd values; in particular, these are used when referring to the complete sparse-tensor storage components.
I also prefer to use these unabbreviated names in the documentation, unless there is some specific reason why using the abbreviated forms helps resolve ambiguity.
In addition to making this terminology change, this change also does some cleanup along the way:
* correcting the dim/lvl terminology in certain places.
* adding `const` when it requires no other code changes.
* miscellaneous cleanup that was entailed in order to make the proper distinctions. Most of these are in CodegenUtils.{h,cpp}
Reviewed By: aartbik
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D144773
The raw `OpView` classes are used to bypass the constructors of `OpView`
subclasses, but having a separate class can create some confusing
behaviour, e.g.:
```
op = MyOp(...)
# fails, lhs is 'MyOp', rhs is '_MyOp'
assert type(op) == type(op.operation.opview)
```
Instead we can use `__new__` to achieve the same thing without a
separate class:
```
my_op = MyOp.__new__(MyOp)
OpView.__init__(my_op, op)
```
Reviewed By: stellaraccident
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D143830
`PassManager.run` is currently restricted to running on `builtin.module`
ops, but this restriction doesn't exist on the C++ side. This updates it
to take `ir.Operation/OpView` instead of `ir.Module`.
Depends on D143354
Reviewed By: mehdi_amini
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D143356
`mlirPassManagerRun` is currently restricted to running on
`builtin.module` ops, but this restriction doesn't exist on the C++
side. This renames it to `mlirPassManagerRunOnOp` and updates it to take
`MlirOperation` instead of `MlirModule`.
Depends on D143352
Reviewed By: mehdi_amini
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D143354
Currently the bindings only allow for parsing IR with a top-level
`builtin.module` op, since the parse APIs insert an implicit module op.
This change adds `Operation.parse`, which returns whatever top-level op
is actually in the source.
To simplify parsing of specific operations, `OpView.parse` is also
added, which handles the error checking for `OpView` subclasses.
Reviewed By: ftynse, stellaraccident
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D143352
The asm printer grew the ability to automatically fall back to the
generic format for invalid ops, so this logic doesn't need to be in the
bindings anymore. The printer already handles supressing diagnostics
that get emitted while checking if the op is valid.
Reviewed By: mehdi_amini, stellaraccident
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D144805
Float8E5M2FNUZ and Float8E4M3FNUZ have been added to APFloat in D141863.
This change adds these types as MLIR builtin types alongside Float8E5M2
and Float8E4M3FN (added in D133823 and D138075).
Reviewed By: krzysz00
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D143744
Previously we only allowed the flattened list passed in, but the same
input provided here as to buildGeneric so flatten accordingly. We have
less info here than in buildGeneric so the error is more generic if
unpacking fails.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D143240
ssize_t is part of POSIX and not standard C/C++, so using ssize_t
without the necessary header files causes the build to fail on Windows
with the following error: 'ssize_t': undeclared identifier.
This patch includes llvm/Support/DataTypes.h to resolve the problem.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D141149
Previously this was incorrectly assigning py::none to where function was
expected which resulted in failure if one used a non-attribute for
attribute without registered builder.
For cases where we can automatically construct the Attribute allow for more
user-friendly input. This is consistent with C++ builder generation as well
choice of which single builder to generate here (most
specialized/user-friendly).
Registration of attribute builders from more pythonic input is all Python side.
The downside is that
* extra checking to see if user provided a custom builder in op builders,
* the ODS attribute name is load bearing
upside is that
* easily change these/register dialect specific ones in downstream projects,
* adding support/changing to different convenience builders are all along with
the rest of the convenience functions in Python (and no additional changes
to tablegen file or recompilation needed);
Allow for both building with Attributes as well as raw inputs. This change
should therefore be backwards compatible as well as allow for avoiding
recreating Attribute where already available.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D139568
This avoids the continuous API churn when upgrading things to use
std::optional and makes trivial string replace upgrades possible.
I tested this with GCC 7.5, the oldest supported GCC I had around.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D140332
This adds a simple PyOpOperand based on MlirOpOperand, which can has
properties for the owner op and operation number.
This also adds a PyOpOperandIterator that defines methods for __iter__
and __next__ so PyOpOperands can be iterated over using the the
MlirOpOperand C API.
Finally, a uses psuedo-container is added to PyValue so the uses can
generically be iterated.
Depends on D139596
Reviewed By: stellaraccident, jdd
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D139597
This allows us to hash Blocks and use them in sets or parts of larger
hashable objects. The implementation is the same as other core IR
constructs: the C API object's pointer is hashed.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D139599
This adds an `enable` flag to OpPrintingFlags::enableDebugInfo
that allows for overriding any command line flags for debug printing,
and matches the format that we use for other `enableBlah` API.
This adds a `PassManager.add` method which adds pipeline elements to the
pass manager. This allows for progressively building up a pipeline from
python without string manipulation.
Reviewed By: mehdi_amini
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D137344