This allows for proper forward declaration, as opposed to leaking the internal implementation via a using directive. This also allows for all pattern building to go through 'insert' methods on the OwningRewritePatternList, replacing uses of 'push_back' and 'RewriteListBuilder'.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 261816316
This mode analyzes which operations are legalizable to the given target if a conversion were to be applied, i.e. no rewrites are ever performed even on success. This mode is useful for device partitioning or other utilities that may want to analyze the effect of conversion to different targets before performing it.
The analysis method currently just fills a provided set with the operations that were found to be legalizable. This can be extended in the future to capture more information as necessary.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 259987105
This cl enforces that the conversion of the type signatures for regions, and thus their entry blocks, is handled via ConversionPatterns. A new hook 'applySignatureConversion' is added to the ConversionPatternRewriter to perform the desired conversion on a region. This also means that the handling of rewriting the signature of a FuncOp is moved to a pattern. A default implementation is provided via 'mlir::populateFuncOpTypeConversionPattern'. This removes the hacky implicit 'dynamically legal' status of FuncOp that was present previously, and leaves it up to the user to decide when/how to convert the signature of a function.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 259161999
This allows for providing specific handling for dynamically legal operations/dialects without overriding the general 'isDynamicallyLegal' hook. This also means that a derived ConversionTarget class need not always be defined when some operations are dynamically legal.
Example usage:
ConversionTarget target(...);
target.addDynamicallyLegalOp<ReturnOp>([](ReturnOp op) {
return ...
};
target.addDynamicallyLegalDialect<StandardOpsDialect>([](Operation *op) {
return ...
};
PiperOrigin-RevId: 258884753
This specific PatternRewriter will allow for exposing hooks in the future that are only useful for the conversion framework, e.g. type conversions.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 258818122
This cl begins a large refactoring over how signature types are converted in the DialectConversion infrastructure. The signatures of blocks are now converted on-demand when an operation held by that block is being converted. This allows for handling the case where a region is created as part of a pattern, something that wasn't possible previously.
This cl also generalizes the region signature conversion used by FuncOp to work on any region of any operation. This generalization allows for removing the 'apply*Conversion' functions that were specific to FuncOp/ModuleOp. The implementation currently uses a new hook on TypeConverter, 'convertRegionSignature', but this should ideally be removed in favor of using Patterns. That depends on adding support to the PatternRewriter used by ConversionPattern to allow applying signature conversions to regions, which should be coming in a followup.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 258645733
This explicit tag is useful is several ways:
*) This simplifies how to mark sub sections of a dialect as explicitly unsupported, e.g. my target supports all operations in the foo dialect except for these select few. This is useful for partial lowerings between dialects.
*) Partial conversions will now verify that operations that were explicitly marked as illegal must be converted. This provides some guarantee that the operations that need to be lowered by a specific pass will be.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 258582879
Users generally want several different modes of conversion. This cl refactors DialectConversion to provide two:
* Partial (applyPartialConversion)
- This mode allows for illegal operations to exist in the IR, and does not fail if an operation fails to be legalized.
* Full (applyFullConversion)
- This mode fails if any operation is not properly legalized to the conversion target. This allows for ensuring that the IR after a conversion only contains operations legal for the target.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 258412243
During conversion, if a type conversion has dangling uses a type conversion must persist after conversion has finished to maintain valid IR. In these cases, we now query the TypeConverter to materialize a conversion for us. This allows for the default case of a full conversion to continue working as expected, but also handle the degenerate cases more robustly.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 255637171