This patch simplifies the representation of OpenMP loop wrapper operations by introducing the `NoTerminator` trait and updating accordingly the verifier for the `LoopWrapperInterface`. Since loop wrappers are already limited to having exactly one region containing exactly one block, and this block can only hold a single `omp.loop_nest` or loop wrapper and an `omp.terminator` that does not return any values, it makes sense to simplify the representation of loop wrappers by removing the terminator. There is an extensive list of Lit tests that needed updating to remove the `omp.terminator`s adding some noise to this patch, but actual changes are limited to the definition of the `omp.wsloop`, `omp.simd`, `omp.distribute` and `omp.taskloop` loop wrapper ops, Flang lowering for those, `LoopWrapperInterface::verifyImpl()`, SCF to OpenMP conversion and OpenMP dialect documentation.
525 lines
25 KiB
Markdown
525 lines
25 KiB
Markdown
# 'omp' Dialect
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The `omp` dialect is for representing directives, clauses and other definitions
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of the [OpenMP programming model](https://www.openmp.org). This directive-based
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programming model, defined for the C, C++ and Fortran programming languages,
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provides abstractions to simplify the development of parallel and accelerated
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programs. All versions of the OpenMP specification can be found
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[here](https://www.openmp.org/specifications/).
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Operations in this MLIR dialect generally correspond to a single OpenMP
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directive, taking arguments that represent their supported clauses, though this
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is not always the case. For a detailed information of operations, types and
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other definitions in this dialect, refer to the automatically-generated
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[ODS Documentation](ODS.md).
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[TOC]
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## Operation Naming Conventions
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This section aims to standardize how dialect operation names are chosen, to
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ensure a level of consistency. There are two categories of names: tablegen names
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and assembly names. The former also corresponds to the C++ class that is
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generated for the operation, whereas the latter is used to represent it in MLIR
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text form.
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Tablegen names are CamelCase, with the first letter capitalized and an "Op"
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suffix, whereas assembly names are snake_case, with all lowercase letters and
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words separated by underscores.
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If the operation corresponds to a directive, clause or other kind of definition
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in the OpenMP specification, it must use the same name split into words in the
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same way. For example, the `target data` directive would become `TargetDataOp` /
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`omp.target_data`, whereas `taskloop` would become `TaskloopOp` /
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`omp.taskloop`.
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Operations intended to carry extra information for another particular operation
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or clause must be named after that other operation or clause, followed by the
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name of the additional information. The assembly name must use a period to
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separate both parts. For example, the operation used to define some extra
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mapping information is named `MapInfoOp` / `omp.map.info`. The same rules are
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followed if multiple operations are created for different variants of the same
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directive, e.g. `atomic` becomes `Atomic{Read,Write,Update,Capture}Op` /
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`omp.atomic.{read,write,update,capture}`.
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## Clause-Based Operation Definition
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One main feature of the OpenMP specification is that, even though the set of
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clauses that could be applied to a given directive is independent from other
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directives, these clauses can generally apply to multiple directives. Since
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clauses usually define which arguments the corresponding MLIR operation takes,
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it is possible (and preferred) to define OpenMP dialect operations based on the
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list of clauses taken by the corresponding directive. This makes it simpler to
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keep their representation consistent across operations and minimizes redundancy
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in the dialect.
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To achieve this, the base `OpenMP_Clause` tablegen class has been created. It is
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intended to be used to create clause definitions that can be then attached to
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multiple `OpenMP_Op` definitions, resulting in the latter inheriting by default
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all properties defined by clauses attached, similarly to the trait mechanism.
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This mechanism is implemented in
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[OpenMPOpBase.td](https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/blob/main/mlir/include/mlir/Dialect/OpenMP/OpenMPOpBase.td).
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### Adding a Clause
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OpenMP clause definitions are located in
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[OpenMPClauses.td](https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/blob/main/mlir/include/mlir/Dialect/OpenMP/OpenMPClauses.td).
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For each clause, an `OpenMP_Clause` subclass and a definition based on it must
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be created. The subclass must take a `bit` template argument for each of the
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properties it can populate on associated `OpenMP_Op`s. These must be forwarded
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to the base class. The definition must be an instantiation of the base class
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where all these template arguments are set to `false`. The definition's name
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must be `OpenMP_<Name>Clause`, whereas its base class' must be
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`OpenMP_<Name>ClauseSkip`. Following this pattern makes it possible to
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optionally skip the inheritance of some properties when defining operations:
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[more info](#overriding-clause-inherited-properties).
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Clauses can define the following properties:
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- `list<Traits> traits`: To be used when having a certain clause always
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implies some op trait, like the `map` clause and the `MapClauseOwningInterface`.
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- `dag(ins) arguments`: Mandatory property holding values and attributes
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used to represent the clause. Argument names use snake_case and should contain
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the clause name to avoid name clashes between clauses. Variadic arguments
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(non-attributes) must contain the "_vars" suffix.
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- `string {req,opt}AssemblyFormat`: Optional formatting strings to produce
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custom human-friendly printers and parsers for arguments associated with the
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clause. It will be combined with assembly formats for other clauses as explained
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[below](#adding-an-operation).
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- `string description`: Optional description text to describe the clause and
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its representation.
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- `string extraClassDeclaration`: Optional C++ declarations to be added to
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operation classes including the clause.
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For example:
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```tablegen
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class OpenMP_ExampleClauseSkip<
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bit traits = false, bit arguments = false, bit assemblyFormat = false,
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bit description = false, bit extraClassDeclaration = false
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> : OpenMP_Clause<traits, arguments, assemblyFormat, description,
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extraClassDeclaration> {
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let arguments = (ins
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Optional<AnyType>:$example_var
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);
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let optAssemblyFormat = [{
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`example` `(` $example_var `:` type($example_var) `)`
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}];
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let description = [{
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The `example_var` argument defines the variable to which the EXAMPLE clause
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applies.
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}];
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}
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def OpenMP_ExampleClause : OpenMP_ExampleClauseSkip<>;
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```
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### Adding an Operation
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Operations in the OpenMP dialect, located in
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[OpenMPOps.td](https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/blob/main/mlir/include/mlir/Dialect/OpenMP/OpenMPOps.td),
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can be defined like any other regular operation by just specifying a `mnemonic`
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and optional list of `traits` when inheriting from `OpenMP_Op`, and then
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defining the expected `description`, `arguments`, etc. properties inside of its
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body. However, in most cases, basing the operation definition on its list of
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accepted clauses is significantly simpler because some of the properties can
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just be inherited from these clauses.
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In general, the way to achieve this is to specify, in addition to the `mnemonic`
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and optional list of `traits`, a list of `clauses` where all the applicable
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`OpenMP_<Name>Clause` definitions are added. Then, the only properties that
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would have to be defined in the operation's body are the `summary` and
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`description`. For the latter, only the operation itself would have to be
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defined, and the description for its clause-inherited arguments is appended
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through the inherited `clausesDescription` property. By convention, the list of
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clauses for an operation must be specified in alphabetical order.
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If the operation is intended to have a single region, this is better achieved by
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setting the `singleRegion=true` template argument of `OpenMP_Op` rather manually
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populating the `regions` property of the operation, because that way the default
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`assemblyFormat` is also updated correspondingly.
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For example:
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```tablegen
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def ExampleOp : OpenMP_Op<"example", traits = [
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AttrSizedOperandSegments, ...
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], clauses = [
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OpenMP_AlignedClause, OpenMP_IfClause, OpenMP_LinearClause, ...
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], singleRegion = true> {
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let summary = "example construct";
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let description = [{
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The example construct represents...
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}] # clausesDescription;
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}
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```
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This is possible because the `arguments`, `assemblyFormat` and
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`extraClassDeclaration` properties of the operation are by default
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populated by concatenating the corresponding properties of the clauses on the
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list. In the case of the `assemblyFormat`, this involves combining the
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`reqAssemblyFormat` and the `optAssemblyFormat` properties. The
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`reqAssemblyFormat` of all clauses is concatenated first and separated using
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spaces, whereas the `optAssemblyFormat` is wrapped in an `oilist()` and
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interleaved with "|" instead of spaces. The resulting `assemblyFormat` contains
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the required assembly format strings, followed by the optional assembly format
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strings, optionally the `$region` and the `attr-dict`.
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### Overriding Clause-Inherited Properties
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Although the clause-based definition of operations can greatly reduce work, it's
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also somewhat restrictive, since there may be some situations where only part of
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the operation definition can be automated in that manner. For a fine-grained
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control over properties inherited from each clause two features are available:
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- Inhibition of properties. By using `OpenMP_<Name>ClauseSkip` tablegen
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classes, the list of properties copied from the clause to the operation can be
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selected. For example, `OpenMP_IfClauseSkip<assemblyFormat = true>` would result
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in every property defined for the `OpenMP_IfClause` except for the
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`assemblyFormat` being used to initially populate the properties of the
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operation.
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- Augmentation of properties. There are times when there is a need to add to
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a clause-populated operation property. Instead of overriding the property in the
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definition of the operation and having to manually replicate what would
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otherwise be automatically populated before adding to it, some internal
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properties are defined to hold this default value: `clausesArgs`,
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`clausesAssemblyFormat`, `clauses{Req,Opt}AssemblyFormat` and
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`clausesExtraClassDeclaration`.
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In the following example, assuming both the `OpenMP_InReductionClause` and the
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`OpenMP_ReductionClause` define a `getReductionVars` extra class declaration,
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we skip the conflicting `extraClassDeclaration`s inherited by both clauses and
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provide another implementation, without having to also re-define other
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declarations inherited from the `OpenMP_AllocateClause`:
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```tablegen
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def ExampleOp : OpenMP_Op<"example", traits = [
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AttrSizedOperandSegments, ...
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], clauses = [
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OpenMP_AllocateClause,
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OpenMP_InReductionClauseSkip<extraClassDeclaration = true>,
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OpenMP_ReductionClauseSkip<extraClassDeclaration = true>
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], singleRegion = true> {
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let summary = "example construct";
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let description = [{
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This operation represents...
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}] # clausesDescription;
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// Override the clause-populated extraClassDeclaration and add the default
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// back via appending clausesExtraClassDeclaration to it. This has the effect
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// of adding one declaration. Since this property is skipped for the
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// InReduction and Reduction clauses, clausesExtraClassDeclaration won't
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// incorporate the definition of this property for these clauses.
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let extraClassDeclaration = [{
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SmallVector<Value> getReductionVars() {
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// Concatenate inReductionVars and reductionVars and return the result...
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}
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}] # clausesExtraClassDeclaration;
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}
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```
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These features are intended for complex edge cases, but an effort should be made
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to avoid having to use them, since they may introduce inconsistencies and
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complexity to the dialect.
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### Tablegen Verification Pass
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As a result of the implicit way in which fundamental properties of MLIR
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operations are populated following this approach, and the ability to override
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them, forgetting to append clause-inherited values might result in hard to debug
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tablegen errors.
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For this reason, the `-verify-openmp-ops` tablegen pseudo-backend was created.
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It runs before any other tablegen backends are triggered for the
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[OpenMPOps.td](https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/blob/main/mlir/include/mlir/Dialect/OpenMP/OpenMPOps.td)
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file and warns any time a property defined for a clause is not found in the
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corresponding operation, except if it is explicitly skipped as described
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[above](#overriding-clause-inherited-properties). This way, in case of a later
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tablegen failure while processing OpenMP dialect operations, earlier messages
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triggered by that pass can point to a likely solution.
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### Operand Structures
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One consequence of basing the representation of operations on the set of values
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and attributes defined for each clause applicable to the corresponding OpenMP
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directive is that operation argument lists tend to be long. This has the effect
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of making C++ operation builders difficult to work with and easy to mistakenly
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pass arguments in the wrong order, which may sometimes introduce hard to detect
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problems.
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A solution provided to this issue are operand structures. The main idea behind
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them is that there is one defined for each clause, holding a set of fields that
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contain the data needed to initialize each of the arguments associated with that
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clause. Clause operand structures are aggregated into operation operand
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structures via class inheritance. Then, a custom builder is defined for each
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operation taking the corresponding operand structure as a parameter. Since each
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argument is a named member of the structure, it becomes much simpler to set up
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the desired arguments to create a new operation.
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Ad-hoc operand structures available for use within the ODS definition of custom
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operation builders might be defined in
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[OpenMPClauseOperands.h](https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/blob/main/mlir/include/mlir/Dialect/OpenMP/OpenMPClauseOperands.h).
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However, this is generally not needed for clause-based operation definitions.
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The `-gen-openmp-clause-ops` tablegen backend, triggered when building the 'omp'
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dialect, will automatically produce structures in the following way:
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- It will create a `<Name>ClauseOps` structure for each `OpenMP_Clause`
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definition with one field per argument.
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- The name of each field will match the tablegen name of the corresponding
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argument, except for replacing snake case with camel case.
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- The type of the field will be obtained from the corresponding tablegen
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argument's type:
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- Values are represented with `mlir::Value`, except for `Variadic`, which
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makes it an `llvm::SmallVector<mlir::Value>`.
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- `OptionalAttr` is represented by the translation of its `baseAttr`.
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- `TypedArrayAttrBase`-based attribute types are represented by wrapping the
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translation of their `elementAttr` in an `llvm::SmallVector`. The only
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exception for this case is if the `elementAttr` is a "scalar" (i.e. non
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array-like) attribute type, in which case the more generic `mlir::Attribute`
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will be used in place of its `storageType`.
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- For `ElementsAttrBase`-based attribute types a best effort is attempted to
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obtain an element type (`llvm::APInt`, `llvm::APFloat` or
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`DenseArrayAttrBase`'s `returnType`) to be wrapped in an `llvm::SmallVector`.
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If it cannot be obtained, which will happen with non-builtin direct subclasses
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of `ElementsAttrBase`, a warning will be emitted and the `storageType` (i.e.
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specific `mlir::Attribute` subclass) will be used instead.
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- Other attribute types will be represented with their `storageType`.
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- It will create `<Name>Operands` structure for each operation, which is an
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empty structure subclassing all operand structures defined for the corresponding
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`OpenMP_Op`'s clauses.
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### Entry Block Argument-Defining Clauses
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In their MLIR representation, certain OpenMP clauses introduce a mapping between
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values defined outside the operation they are applied to and entry block
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arguments for the region of that MLIR operation. This enables, for example, the
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introduction of private copies of the same underlying variable defined outside
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the MLIR operation the clause is attached to. Currently, clauses with this
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property can be classified into three main categories:
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- Map-like clauses: `map`, `use_device_addr` and `use_device_ptr`.
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- Reduction-like clauses: `in_reduction`, `reduction` and `task_reduction`.
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- Privatization clauses: `private`.
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All three kinds of entry block argument-defining clauses use a similar custom
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assembly format representation, only differing based on the different pieces of
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information attached to each kind. Below, one example of each is shown:
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```mlir
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omp.target map_entries(%x -> %x.m, %y -> %y.m : !llvm.ptr, !llvm.ptr) {
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// Use %x.m, %y.m in place of %x and %y...
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}
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omp.wsloop reduction(@add.i32 %x -> %x.r, byref @add.f32 %y -> %y.r : !llvm.ptr, !llvm.ptr) {
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// Use %x.r, %y.r in place of %x and %y...
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}
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omp.parallel private(@x.privatizer %x -> %x.p, @y.privatizer %y -> %y.p : !llvm.ptr, !llvm.ptr) {
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// Use %x.p, %y.p in place of %x and %y...
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}
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```
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As a consequence of parsing and printing the operation's first region entry
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block argument names together with the custom assembly format of these clauses,
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entry block arguments (i.e. the `^bb0(...):` line) must not be explicitly
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defined for these operations. Additionally, it is not possible to implement this
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feature while allowing each clause to be independently parsed and printed,
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because they need to be printed/parsed together with the corresponding
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operation's first region. They must have a well-defined ordering in which
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multiple of these clauses are specified for a given operation, as well.
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The parsing/printing of these clauses together with the region provides the
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ability to define entry block arguments directly after the `->`. Forcing a
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specific ordering between these clauses makes the block argument ordering
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well-defined, which is the property used to easily match each clause with the
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entry block arguments defined by it.
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Custom printers and parsers for operation regions based on the entry block
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argument-defining clauses they take are implemented based on the
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`{parse,print}BlockArgRegion` functions, which take care of the sorting and
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formatting of each kind of clause, minimizing code duplication resulting from
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this approach. One example of the custom assembly format of an operation taking
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the `private` and `reduction` clauses is the following:
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```tablegen
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let assemblyFormat = clausesAssemblyFormat # [{
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custom<PrivateReductionRegion>($region, $private_vars, type($private_vars),
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$private_syms, $reduction_vars, type($reduction_vars), $reduction_byref,
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$reduction_syms) attr-dict
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}];
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```
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The `BlockArgOpenMPOpInterface` has been introduced to simplify the addition and
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handling of these kinds of clauses. It holds `num<ClauseName>BlockArgs()`
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functions that by default return 0, to be overriden by each clause through the
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`extraClassDeclaration` property. Based on these functions and the expected
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alphabetical sorting between entry block argument-defining clauses, it
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implements `get<ClauseName>BlockArgs()` functions that are the intended method
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of accessing clause-defined block arguments.
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## Loop-Associated Directives
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Loop-associated OpenMP constructs are represented in the dialect as loop wrapper
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operations. These implement the `LoopWrapperInterface`, which enforces a series
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of restrictions upon the operation:
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- It has the `NoTerminator` and `SingleBlock` traits;
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- It contains a single region; and
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- Its only block contains exactly one operation, which must be another loop
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wrapper or `omp.loop_nest` operation.
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This approach splits the representation for a loop nest and the loop-associated
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constructs that specify how its iterations are executed, possibly across various
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SIMD lanes (`omp.simd`), threads (`omp.wsloop`), teams of threads
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(`omp.distribute`) or tasks (`omp.taskloop`). The ability to directly nest
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multiple loop wrappers to impact the execution of a single loop nest is used to
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represent composite constructs in a modular way.
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The `omp.loop_nest` operation represents a collapsed rectangular loop nest that
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must always be wrapped by at least one loop wrapper, which defines how it is
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intended to be executed. It serves as a simpler and more restrictive
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representation of OpenMP loops while a more general approach to support
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non-rectangular loop nests, loop transformations and non-perfectly nested loops
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based on a new `omp.canonical_loop` definition is developed.
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The following example shows how a `parallel {do,for}` construct would be
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represented:
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```mlir
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omp.parallel ... {
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...
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omp.wsloop ... {
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omp.loop_nest (%i) : index = (%lb) to (%ub) step (%step) {
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%a = load %a[%i] : memref<?xf32>
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%b = load %b[%i] : memref<?xf32>
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%sum = arith.addf %a, %b : f32
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store %sum, %c[%i] : memref<?xf32>
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omp.yield
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}
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}
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...
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omp.terminator
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}
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```
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### Loop Transformations
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In addition to the worksharing loop-associated constructs described above, the
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OpenMP specification also defines a set of loop transformation constructs. They
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replace the associated loop(s) before worksharing constructs are executed on the
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generated loop(s). Some examples of such constructs are `tile` and `unroll`.
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A general approach for representing these types of OpenMP constructs has not yet
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been implemented, but it is closely linked to the `omp.canonical_loop` work.
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Nevertheless, loop transformation that the `collapse` clause for loop-associated
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worksharing constructs defines can be represented by introducing multiple
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bounds, step and induction variables to the `omp.loop_nest` operation.
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## Compound Construct Representation
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The OpenMP specification defines certain shortcuts that allow specifying
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multiple constructs in a single directive, which are referred to as compound
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constructs (e.g. `parallel do` contains the `parallel` and `do` constructs).
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These can be further classified into [combined](#combined-constructs) and
|
|
[composite](#composite-constructs) constructs. This section describes how they
|
|
are represented in the dialect.
|
|
|
|
When clauses are specified for compound constructs, the OpenMP specification
|
|
defines a set of rules to decide to which leaf constructs they apply, as well as
|
|
potentially introducing some other implicit clauses. These rules must be taken
|
|
into account by those creating the MLIR representation, since it is a per-leaf
|
|
representation that expects these rules to have already been followed.
|
|
|
|
### Combined Constructs
|
|
|
|
Combined constructs are semantically equivalent to specifying one construct
|
|
immediately nested inside another. This property is used to simplify the dialect
|
|
by representing them through the operations associated to each leaf construct.
|
|
For example, `target teams` would be represented as follows:
|
|
|
|
```mlir
|
|
omp.target ... {
|
|
...
|
|
omp.teams ... {
|
|
...
|
|
omp.terminator
|
|
}
|
|
...
|
|
omp.terminator
|
|
}
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
### Composite Constructs
|
|
|
|
Composite constructs are similar to combined constructs in that they specify the
|
|
effect of one construct being applied immediately after another. However, they
|
|
group together constructs that cannot be directly nested into each other.
|
|
Specifically, they group together multiple loop-associated constructs that apply
|
|
to the same collapsed loop nest.
|
|
|
|
As of version 5.2 of the OpenMP specification, the list of composite constructs
|
|
is the following:
|
|
- `{do,for} simd`;
|
|
- `distribute simd`;
|
|
- `distribute parallel {do,for}`;
|
|
- `distribute parallel {do,for} simd`; and
|
|
- `taskloop simd`.
|
|
|
|
Even though the list of composite constructs is relatively short and it would
|
|
also be possible to create dialect operations for each, it was decided to
|
|
allow attaching multiple loop wrappers to a single loop instead. This minimizes
|
|
redundancy in the dialect and maximizes its modularity, since there is a single
|
|
operation for each leaf construct regardless of whether it can be part of a
|
|
composite construct. On the other hand, this means the `omp.loop_nest` operation
|
|
will have to be interpreted differently depending on how many and which loop
|
|
wrappers are attached to it.
|
|
|
|
To simplify the detection of operations taking part in the representation of a
|
|
composite construct, the `ComposableOpInterface` was introduced. Its purpose is
|
|
to handle the `omp.composite` discardable dialect attribute that can optionally
|
|
be attached to these operations. Operation verifiers will ensure its presence is
|
|
consistent with the context the operation appears in, so that it is valid when
|
|
the attribute is present if and only if it represents a leaf of a composite
|
|
construct.
|
|
|
|
For example, the `distribute simd` composite construct is represented as
|
|
follows:
|
|
|
|
```mlir
|
|
omp.distribute ... {
|
|
omp.simd ... {
|
|
omp.loop_nest (%i) : index = (%lb) to (%ub) step (%step) {
|
|
...
|
|
omp.yield
|
|
}
|
|
} {omp.composite}
|
|
} {omp.composite}
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
One exception to this is the representation of the
|
|
`distribute parallel {do,for}` composite construct. The presence of a
|
|
block-associated `parallel` leaf construct would introduce many problems if it
|
|
was allowed to work as a loop wrapper. In this case, the "hoisted `omp.parallel`
|
|
representation" is used instead. This consists in making `omp.parallel` the
|
|
parent operation, with a nested `omp.loop_nest` wrapped by `omp.distribute` and
|
|
`omp.wsloop` (and `omp.simd`, in the `distribute parallel {do,for} simd` case).
|
|
|
|
This approach works because `parallel` is a parallelism-generating construct,
|
|
whereas `distribute` is a worksharing construct impacting the higher level
|
|
`teams` construct, making the ordering between these constructs not cause
|
|
semantic mismatches. This property is also exploited by LLVM's SPMD-mode.
|
|
|
|
```mlir
|
|
omp.parallel ... {
|
|
...
|
|
omp.distribute ... {
|
|
omp.wsloop ... {
|
|
omp.loop_nest (%i) : index = (%lb) to (%ub) step (%step) {
|
|
...
|
|
omp.yield
|
|
}
|
|
} {omp.composite}
|
|
} {omp.composite}
|
|
...
|
|
omp.terminator
|
|
} {omp.composite}
|
|
```
|