The MLIR classes Type/Attribute/Operation/Op/Value support
cast/dyn_cast/isa/dyn_cast_or_null functionality through llvm's doCast
functionality in addition to defining methods with the same name.
This change begins the migration of uses of the method to the
corresponding function call as has been decided as more consistent.
Note that there still exist classes that only define methods directly,
such as AffineExpr, and this does not include work currently to support
a functional cast/isa call.
Caveats include:
- This clang-tidy script probably has more problems.
- This only touches C++ code, so nothing that is being generated.
Context:
- https://mlir.llvm.org/deprecation/ at "Use the free function variants
for dyn_cast/cast/isa/…"
- Original discussion at https://discourse.llvm.org/t/preferred-casting-style-going-forward/68443
Implementation:
This first patch was created with the following steps. The intention is
to only do automated changes at first, so I waste less time if it's
reverted, and so the first mass change is more clear as an example to
other teams that will need to follow similar steps.
Steps are described per line, as comments are removed by git:
0. Retrieve the change from the following to build clang-tidy with an
additional check:
https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/compare/main...tpopp:llvm-project:tidy-cast-check
1. Build clang-tidy
2. Run clang-tidy over your entire codebase while disabling all checks
and enabling the one relevant one. Run on all header files also.
3. Delete .inc files that were also modified, so the next build rebuilds
them to a pure state.
4. Some changes have been deleted for the following reasons:
- Some files had a variable also named cast
- Some files had not included a header file that defines the cast
functions
- Some files are definitions of the classes that have the casting
methods, so the code still refers to the method instead of the
function without adding a prefix or removing the method declaration
at the same time.
```
ninja -C $BUILD_DIR clang-tidy
run-clang-tidy -clang-tidy-binary=$BUILD_DIR/bin/clang-tidy -checks='-*,misc-cast-functions'\
-header-filter=mlir/ mlir/* -fix
rm -rf $BUILD_DIR/tools/mlir/**/*.inc
git restore mlir/lib/IR mlir/lib/Dialect/DLTI/DLTI.cpp\
mlir/lib/Dialect/Complex/IR/ComplexDialect.cpp\
mlir/lib/**/IR/\
mlir/lib/Dialect/SparseTensor/Transforms/SparseVectorization.cpp\
mlir/lib/Dialect/Vector/Transforms/LowerVectorMultiReduction.cpp\
mlir/test/lib/Dialect/Test/TestTypes.cpp\
mlir/test/lib/Dialect/Transform/TestTransformDialectExtension.cpp\
mlir/test/lib/Dialect/Test/TestAttributes.cpp\
mlir/unittests/TableGen/EnumsGenTest.cpp\
mlir/test/python/lib/PythonTestCAPI.cpp\
mlir/include/mlir/IR/
```
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D150123
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
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.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D141742
Currently memory attributions are not supported for gpu::LaunchOp, this patch implements memory attributions for gpu::LaunchOp and modifies the KernelOutlining pass to make the attributions available in GPUFuncOp.
Reviewed By: makslevental
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D147809
This patch supports the processing of dialect attributes attached to top-level
module-type operations during MLIR-to-LLVMIR lowering.
This approach modifies the `mlir::translateModuleToLLVMIR()` function to call
`ModuleTranslation::convertOperation()` on the top-level operation, after its
body has been lowered. This, in turn, will get the
`LLVMTranslationDialectInterface` object associated to that operation's dialect
before trying to use it for lowering prior to processing dialect attributes
attached to the operation.
Since there are no `LLVMTranslationDialectInterface`s for the builtin and GPU
dialects, which define their own module-type operations, this patch also adds
and registers them. The requirement for always calling
`mlir::registerBuiltinDialectTranslation()` before any translation of MLIR to
LLVM IR where builtin module operations are present is introduced. The purpose
of these new translation interfaces is to succeed when processing module-type
operations, allowing the lowering process to continue and to prevent the
introduction of failures related to not finding such interfaces.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D145932
Remapping memory spaces is a function often needed in type
conversions, most often when going to LLVM or to/from SPIR-V (a future
commit), and it is possible that such remappings may become more
common in the future as dialects take advantage of the more generic
memory space infrastructure.
Currently, memory space remappings are handled by running a
special-purpose conversion pass before the main conversion that
changes the address space attributes. In this commit, this approach is
replaced by adding a notion of type attribute conversions
TypeConverter, which is then used to convert memory space attributes.
Then, we use this infrastructure throughout the *ToLLVM conversions.
This has the advantage of loosing the requirements on the inputs to
those passes from "all address spaces must be integers" to "all
memory spaces must be convertible to integer spaces", a looser
requirement that reduces the coupling between portions of MLIR.
ON top of that, this change leads to the removal of most of the calls
to getMemorySpaceAsInt(), bringing us closer to removing it.
(A rework of the SPIR-V conversions to use this new system will be in
a folowup commit.)
As a note, one long-term motivation for this change is that I would
eventually like to add an allocaMemorySpace key to MLIR data layouts
and then call getMemRefAddressSpace(allocaMemorySpace) in the
relevant *ToLLVM in order to ensure all alloca()s, whether incoming or
produces during the LLVM lowering, have the correct address space for
a given target.
I expect that the type attribute conversion system may be useful in
other contexts.
Reviewed By: ftynse
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D142159
This commit restructures the sub element infrastructure to be a core part
of attributes and types, instead of being relegated to an interface. This
establishes sub element walking/replacement as something "always there",
which makes it easier to rely on for correctness/etc (which various bits of
infrastructure want, such as Symbols).
Attribute/Type now have `walk` and `replace` methods directly
accessible, which provide power API for interacting with sub elements. As
part of this, a new AttrTypeWalker class is introduced that supports caching
walked attributes/types, and a friendlier API (see the simplification of symbol
walking in SymbolTable.cpp).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D142272
This is a purely mechanical change that introduces an enum attribute in the GPU
dialect to represent the various memref memory spaces as opposed to the
hard-coded integer attributes that are currently used.
The following steps were taken to make the transition across the codebase:
1. Introduce a pass "gpu-lower-memory-space-attributes":
The pass updates all memref types that have a memory space attribute that is a
`gpu::AddressSpaceAttr`. These attributes are changed to `IntegerAttr`'s using a
mapping that is given by the caller. This pass is based on the
"map-memref-spirv-storage-class" pass and the common functions can probably
be refactored into a set of utilities under the MemRef dialect.
2. Update the verifiers of GPU/NVGPU dialect operations.
If a verifier currently checks the address space of an operand using
e.g.`getWorkspaceAddressSpace`, then it can continue to do so. However, the
checks are changed to only fail if the memory space is either missing or a wrong
value of type `gpu::AddressSpaceAttr`. Otherwise, it just assumes the address
space is correct because it was specifically lowered to something other than a
`gpu::AddressSpaceAttr`.
3. Update existing gpu-to-llvm conversion infrastructure.
In the existing gpu-to-X passes, we add a full conversion equivalent to
`gpu-lower-memory-space-attributes` just before doing the conversion to the
LLVMDialect. This is done because currently both the gpu-to-llvm passes
(rocdl,nvvm) run gpu-to-gpu rewrites within the pass, which introduce
`AddressSpaceAttr` memory space annotations. Therefore, I inserted the
memory space conversion between the gpu-to-gpu rewrites and the LLVM
conversion.
For more context see the below discourse discussion:
https://discourse.llvm.org/t/gpu-workgroup-shared-memory-address-space-is-hard-coded/
Reviewed By: ftynse
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D140644
The patch adds operations to `BlockAndValueMapping` and renames it to `IRMapping`. When operations are cloned, old operations are mapped to the cloned operations. This allows mapping from an operation to a cloned operation. Example:
```
Operation *opWithRegion = ...
Operation *opInsideRegion = &opWithRegion->front().front();
IRMapping map
Operation *newOpWithRegion = opWithRegion->clone(map);
Operation *newOpInsideRegion = map.lookupOrNull(opInsideRegion);
```
Migration instructions:
All includes to `mlir/IR/BlockAndValueMapping.h` should be replaced with `mlir/IR/IRMapping.h`. All uses of `BlockAndValueMapping` need to be renamed to `IRMapping`.
Reviewed By: rriddle, mehdi_amini
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D139665
In many cases, the the number of workgroups (the grid size) and the
number of workitems within each group (the block size) that a GPU
kernel will be launched with are known. For example, if gpu.launch is
called with constant block and grid sizes, we know that those are the
only possible sizes that will be used to launch that kernel. In other
cases, a custom code-generation pipeline that eventually produces GPU
kernels may know the launch dimensions of those kernels, or at least
may be able to provide an upper bound on them.
Other GPU programming systems, such as OpenCL, allow capturing such
information to enable compiler optimizations - see
reqd_work_group_size, but MLIR currently has no mechanism for doing so.
This set of attributes is the first step in enabling optimizations
based on the known launch dimensions of kernels. It extends the kernel
outline pass to set these bounds on kernels with constant launch
dimensions and extends integer range inference for GPU index
operations to account for the bounds when they are known.
Subsequent revisions will use this data when lowering GPU operations
to the ROCDL dialect.
Reviewed By: antiagainst
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D139865
This is part of an effort to migrate from llvm::Optional to
std::optional. 22426110c5 changed the way mlir-tblgen generates .inc
files, emitting std::optional when an Optional attribute is specified in
a .td file. It also changed several .td files hard-coding llvm::Optional
to use std::optional. However, the patch excluded a few .td files in
SPIRV and Bufferization hard-coding llvm::Optional. This patch fixes
that defect, and after this patch, references to llvm::Optional in .cpp
and .h files can be replaced mechanically.
See also: https://discourse.llvm.org/t/deprecating-llvm-optional-x-hasvalue-getvalue-getvalueor/63716
Signed-off-by: Ramkumar Ramachandra <r@artagnon.com>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D140329
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
std::optional::value() has undesired exception checking semantics and is
unavailable in older Xcode (see _LIBCPP_AVAILABILITY_BAD_OPTIONAL_ACCESS). The
call sites block std::optional migration.
This patch mechanically replaces None with std::nullopt where the
compiler would warn if None were deprecated. The intent is to reduce
the amount of manual work required in migrating from Optional to
std::optional.
This is part of an effort to migrate from llvm::Optional to
std::optional:
https://discourse.llvm.org/t/deprecating-llvm-optional-x-hasvalue-getvalue-getvalueor/63716
The methods in `SideEffectUtils.h` (and their implementations in
`SideEffectUtils.cpp`) seem to have similar intent to methods already
existing in `SideEffectInterfaces.h`. Move the decleration (and
implementation) from `SideEffectUtils.h` (and `SideEffectUtils.cpp`)
into `SideEffectInterfaces.h` (and `SideEffectInterface.cpp`).
Also drop the `SideEffectInterface::hasNoEffect` method in favor of
`mlir::isMemoryEffectFree` which actually recurses into the operation
instead of just relying on the `hasRecursiveMemoryEffectTrait`
exclusively.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D137857
This allows for incrementally updating the old API usages without
needing to update everything at once. These will be left on Both
for a little bit and then flipped to prefixed when all APIs have been
updated.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D134386
The patch introduces the required changes to update the pass declarations and definitions to use the new autogenerated files and allow dropping the old infrastructure.
Reviewed By: mehdi_amini, rriddle
Differential Review: https://reviews.llvm.org/D132838
The patch introduces the required changes to update the pass declarations and definitions to use the new autogenerated files and allow dropping the old infrastructure.
Reviewed By: mehdi_amini, rriddle
Differential Review: https://reviews.llvm.org/D132838
The current Parser library is solely focused on providing API for
the textual MLIR format, but MLIR will soon also provide a binary
format. This commit renames the current Parser library to AsmParser to
better correspond to what the library is actually intended for. A new
Parser library is added which will act as a unified parser interface
between both text and binary formats. Most parser clients are
unaffected, given that the unified interface is essentially the same as
the current interface. Only clients that rely on utilizing the
AsmParserState, or those that want to parse Attributes/Types need to be
updated to point to the AsmParser library.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D129605
This aligns the SCF dialect file layout with the majority of the dialects.
Reviewed By: jpienaar
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D128049
Currently, linking the device libraries requires setting a constant
that indicates the code object ABI version the compilation is
targeting.
This fixes the MLIR linking process by setting this constant to 400,
which is the value corresponding to the current code object ABI
default, version 4.
Reviewed By: Mogball
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D126913
It was a StructAttr. Also adds a FieldParser for AffineMap.
Depends on D127348
Reviewed By: rriddle
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D127350