After the MemRef has been split out of the Standard dialect, the
conversion to the LLVM dialect remained as a huge monolithic pass.
This is undesirable for the same complexity management reasons as having
a huge Standard dialect itself, and is even more confusing given the
existence of a separate dialect. Extract the conversion of the MemRef
dialect operations to LLVM into a separate library and a separate
conversion pass.
Reviewed By: herhut, silvas
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105625
Continue the convergence between LLVM dialect and built-in types by replacing
the bfloat, half, float and double LLVM dialect types with their built-in
counterparts. At the API level, this is a direct replacement. At the syntax
level, we change the keywords to `bf16`, `f16`, `f32` and `f64`, respectively,
to be compatible with the built-in type syntax. The old keywords can still be
parsed but produce a deprecation warning and will be eventually removed.
Depends On D94178
Reviewed By: mehdi_amini, silvas, antiagainst
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D94179
BEGIN_PUBLIC
[mlir] Remove LLVMType, LLVM dialect types now derive Type directly
This class has become a simple `isa` hook with no proper functionality.
Removing will allow us to eventually make the LLVM dialect type infrastructure
open, i.e., support non-LLVM types inside container types, which itself will
make the type conversion more progressive.
Introduce a call `LLVM::isCompatibleType` to be used instead of
`isa<LLVMType>`. For now, this is strictly equivalent.
END_PUBLIC
Depends On D93681
Reviewed By: mehdi_amini
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93713
LLVMType contains numerous static constructors that were initially introduced
for API compatibility with LLVM. Most of these merely forward to arguments to
`SpecificType::get` (MLIR defines classes for all types, unlike LLVM IR), while
some introduce subtle semantics differences due to different modeling of MLIR
types (e.g., structs are not auto-renamed in case of conflicts). Furthermore,
these constructors don't match MLIR idioms and actively prevent us from making
the LLVM dialect type system more open. Remove them and use `SpecificType::get`
instead.
Depends On D93680
Reviewed By: mehdi_amini
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93681
LLVMType contains multiple instance methods that were introduced initially for
compatibility with LLVM API. These methods boil down to `cast` followed by
type-specific call. Arguably, they are mostly used in an LLVM cast-follows-isa
anti-pattern. This doesn't connect nicely to the rest of the MLIR
infrastructure and actively prevents it from making the LLVM dialect type
system more open, e.g., reusing built-in types when appropriate. Remove such
instance methods and replaces their uses with apporpriate casts and methods on
derived classes. In some cases, the result may look slightly more verbose, but
most cases should actually use a stricter subtype of LLVMType anyway and avoid
the isa/cast.
Reviewed By: mehdi_amini
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93680
- use ConvertOpToLLVMPattern to avoid explicit casting and in most cases the
constructor can be reused to save a few lines of code.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92989
Historical modeling of the LLVM dialect types had been wrapping LLVM IR types
and therefore needed access to the instance of LLVMContext stored in the
LLVMDialect. The new modeling does not rely on that and only needs the
MLIRContext that is used for uniquing, similarly to other MLIR types. Change
LLVMType::get<Kind>Ty functions to take `MLIRContext *` instead of
`LLVMDialect *` as first argument. This brings the code base closer to
completely removing the dependence on LLVMContext from the LLVMDialect,
together with additional support for thread-safety of its use.
Depends On D85371
Reviewed By: rriddle
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85372
Summary:
The NVVM target only provides implementations for tanh etc. on f32 and
f64 operands. To also support f16, we now insert operations to extend to f32
and truncate back to f16 around the intrinsic call.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D81473
Summary: The current ConvertStandardToLLVM phase lowers the standard TanHOp to function calls to external tanh symbols. However, this leads to misunderstandings since these external symbols are not defined anywhere. This commit removes the TanHOp lowering functionality from ConvertStandardToLLVM, adapts the LowerGpuOpsToNVVMOps and LowerGpuOpsToROCDLOps passes and adjusts the affected test cases.
Reviewers: mravishankar, herhut
Subscribers: jholewinski, mehdi_amini, rriddle, jpienaar, burmako, shauheen, antiagainst, nicolasvasilache, csigg, arpith-jacob, mgester, lucyrfox, aartbik, liufengdb, Joonsoo, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75509
Summary:
NFC - Moved StandardOps/Ops.h to a StandardOps/IR dir to better match surrounding
directories. This is to match other dialects, and prepare for moving StandardOps
related transforms in out for Transforms and into StandardOps/Transforms.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74940
The existing name is an artifact dating back to the times when we did not have
a dedicated TypeConverter infrastructure. It is also confusing with with the
name of classes using it.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74707
Summary:
The lowering to NVVM and ROCm handles tanh operations differently by
mapping them to NVVM/ROCm specific intrinsics. This conflicts with
the lowering to LLVM, which uses the default llvm intrinsic. This change
declares the LLVM intrinsics to be illegal, hence disallowing the
correspondign rewrite.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74389
This is an initial step to refactoring the representation of OpResult as proposed in: https://groups.google.com/a/tensorflow.org/g/mlir/c/XXzzKhqqF_0/m/v6bKb08WCgAJ
This change will make it much simpler to incrementally transition all of the existing code to use value-typed semantics.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 286844725
A recent commit introduced the Linkage attribute to the LLVM dialect and used
it in the Global Op. Also use it in LLVMFuncOp. As per LLVM Language Reference,
if the linkage attribute is omitted, the function is assumed to have external
linkage.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 283493299