This simplifies the vector to LLVM lowering. Previously, both vector.load/store and vector.transfer_read/write lowered directly to LLVM. With this commit, there is a single path to LLVM vector load/store instructions and vector.transfer_read/write ops must first be lowered to vector.load/store ops.
* Remove vector.transfer_read/write to LLVM lowering.
* Allow non-unit memref strides on all but the most minor dimension for vector.load/store ops.
* Add maxTransferRank option to populateVectorTransferLoweringPatterns.
* vector.transfer_reads with changing element type can no longer be lowered to LLVM. (This functionality is needed only for SPIRV.)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106118
The dialect-specific cast between builtin (ex-standard) types and LLVM
dialect types was introduced long time before built-in support for
unrealized_conversion_cast. It has a similar purpose, but is restricted
to compatible builtin and LLVM dialect types, which may hamper
progressive lowering and composition with types from other dialects.
Replace llvm.mlir.cast with unrealized_conversion_cast, and drop the
operation that became unnecessary.
Also make unrealized_conversion_cast legal by default in
LLVMConversionTarget as the majority of convesions using it are partial
conversions that actually want the casts to persist in the IR. The
standard-to-llvm conversion, which is still expected to run last, cleans
up the remaining casts standard-to-llvm conversion, which is still
expected to run last, cleans up the remaining casts
Reviewed By: nicolasvasilache
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105880
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
Simplify vector unrolling pattern to be more aligned with rest of the
patterns and be closer to vector distribution.
The new implementation uses ExtractStridedSlice/InsertStridedSlice
instead of the Tuple ops. After this change the ops based on Tuple don't
have any more used so they can be removed.
This allows removing signifcant amount of dead code and will allow
extending the unrolling code going forward.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105381
This commit moves the type translator from LLVM to MLIR to a public header for use by external projects or other code.
Unlike a previous attempt (https://reviews.llvm.org/D104726), this patch moves the type conversion into separate files which remedies the linker error which was only caught by CI.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104834
Lower a 1D vector transfer op to LLVM if the last dim stride is 1. Also fixes a bug in the original unit stride computation.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D102897
vector.transfer_read and vector.transfer_write operations are converted
to llvm intrinsics with specific alignment information, however there
doesn't seem to be a way in llvm to take information from llvm.assume
intrinsics and change this alignment information. In any
event, due the to the structure of the llvm.assume instrinsic, applying
this information at the llvm level is more cumbersome. Instead, let's
generate the masked vector load and store instrinsic with the right
alignment information from MLIR in the first place. Since
we're bothering to do this, lets just emit the proper alignment for
loads, stores, scatter, and gather ops too.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D100444
This is a hook that allows for providing custom initialization of the pattern, e.g. if it has bounded recursion, setting the debug name, etc., without needing to define a custom constructor. A non-virtual hook was chosen to avoid polluting the vtable with code that we really just want to be inlined when constructing the pattern. The alternative to this would be to just define a constructor for each pattern, this unfortunately creates a lot of otherwise unnecessary boiler plate for a lot of patterns and a hook provides a much simpler/cleaner interface for the very common case.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D102440
Move TransposeOp lowering in its own populate function as in some cases
it is better to keep it during ContractOp lowering to better
canonicalize it rather than emiting scalar insert/extract.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101647
ArmSVE dialect is behind the recent changes in how the Vector dialect
interacts with backend vector dialects and the MLIR -> LLVM IR
translation module. This patch cleans up ArmSVE initialization within
Vector and removes the need for an LLVMArmSVE dialect.
Reviewed By: ftynse
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D100171
We will soon be adding non-AVX512 operations to MLIR, such as AVX's rsqrt. In https://reviews.llvm.org/D99818 several possibilities were discussed, namely to (1) add non-AVX512 ops to the AVX512 dialect, (2) add more dialects (e.g. AVX dialect for AVX rsqrt), and (3) expand the scope of the AVX512 to include these SIMD x86 ops, thereby renaming the dialect to something more accurate such as X86Vector.
Consensus was reached on option (3), which this patch implements.
Reviewed By: aartbik, ftynse, nicolasvasilache
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D100119
The patch enables the use of index type in vectors. It is a prerequisite to support vectorization for indexed Linalg operations. This refactoring became possible due to the newly introduced data layout infrastructure. The data layout of a module defines the bitwidth of the index type needed to verify bitcasts and similar vector operations.
Reviewed By: nicolasvasilache
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99948
Also factors out out-of-bounds mask generation from vector.transfer_read/write into a new MaterializeTransferMask pattern.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D100001
This is in preparation for adding a new "mask" operand. The existing "masked" attribute was used to specify dimensions that may be out-of-bounds. Such transfers can be lowered to masked load/stores. The new "in_bounds" attribute is used to specify dimensions that are guaranteed to be within bounds. (Semantics is inverted.)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99639
This doesn't change APIs, this just cleans up the many in-tree uses of these
names to use the new preferred names. We'll keep the old names around for a
couple weeks to help transitions.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99127
This updates the codebase to pass the context when creating an instance of
OwningRewritePatternList, and starts removing extraneous MLIRContext
parameters. There are many many more to be removed.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99028
The Intel Advanced Matrix Extensions (AMX) provides a tile matrix
multiply unit (TMUL), a tile control register (TILECFG), and eight
tile registers TMM0 through TMM7 (TILEDATA). This new MLIR dialect
provides a bridge between MLIR concepts like vectors and memrefs
and the lower level LLVM IR details of AMX.
Reviewed By: nicolasvasilache
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98470
The dialect separation was introduced to demarkate ops operating in different
type systems. This is no longer the case after the LLVM dialect has migrated to
using built-in vector types, so the original reason for separation is no longer
valid. Squash the two dialects into one.
The code size decrease isn't quite large: the ops originally in LLVM_AVX512 are
preserved because they match LLVM IR intrinsics specialized for vector element
bitwidth. However, it is still conceptually beneficial to have only one
dialect. I originally considered to use Tablegen multiclasses to define both
the type-polymorphic op and its two intrinsic-related instantiations, but
decided against it given both the complexity of the required Tablegen input and
its dissimilarity with the rest of ODS-defined ops, both potentially resulting
in very poor maintainability.
Depends On D98327
Reviewed By: nicolasvasilache, springerm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98328
The two dialects are largely redundant. The former was introduced as a mirror
of the latter operating on LLVM dialect types. This is no longer necessary
since the LLVM dialect operates on built-in types. Combine the two dialects.
Reviewed By: mehdi_amini
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98060
There is no need for the interface implementations to be exposed, opaque
registration functions are sufficient for all users, similarly to passes.
Reviewed By: mehdi_amini
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97852
Just a pure method renaming.
It is a preparation step for replacing "memory space as raw integer"
with more generic "memory space as attribute", which will be done in
separate commit.
The `MemRefType::getMemorySpace` method will return `Attribute` and
become the main API, while `getMemorySpaceAsInt` will be declared as
deprecated and will be replaced in all in-tree dialects (also in separate
commits).
Reviewed By: mehdi_amini, rriddle
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97476
Similar to mask-load/store and compress/expand, the gather and
scatter operation now allow for higher dimension uses. Note that
to support the mixed-type index, the new syntax is:
vector.gather %base [%i,%j] [%kvector] ....
The first client of this generalization is the sparse compiler,
which needs to define scatter and gathers on dense operands
of higher dimensions too.
Reviewed By: bixia
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97422
It's not necessarily the case on all architectures that all memory is
addressable in addrspace 0, so casting the pointer to addrspace 0 is
liable to cause problems.
Reviewed By: aartbik, ftynse, nicolasvasilache
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96380
Align the vector gather/scatter/expand/compress API with
the vector load/store/maskedload/maskedstore API.
Reviewed By: aartbik
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96396
This patch adds the 'vector.load' and 'vector.store' ops to the Vector
dialect [1]. These operations model *contiguous* vector loads and stores
from/to memory. Their semantics are similar to the 'affine.vector_load' and
'affine.vector_store' counterparts but without the affine constraints. The
most relevant feature is that these new vector operations may perform a vector
load/store on memrefs with a non-vector element type, unlike 'std.load' and
'std.store' ops. This opens the representation to model more generic vector
load/store scenarios: unaligned vector loads/stores, perform scalar and vector
memory access on the same memref, decouple memory allocation constraints from
memory accesses, etc [1]. These operations will also facilitate the progressive
lowering of both Affine vector loads/stores and Vector transfer reads/writes
for those that read/write contiguous slices from/to memory.
In particular, this patch adds the 'vector.load' and 'vector.store' ops to the
Vector dialect, implements their lowering to the LLVM dialect, and changes the
lowering of 'affine.vector_load' and 'affine.vector_store' ops to the new vector
ops. The lowering of Vector transfer reads/writes will be implemented in the
future, probably as an independent pass. The API of 'vector.maskedload' and
'vector.maskedstore' has also been changed slightly to align it with the
transfer read/write ops and the vector new ops. This will improve reusability
among all these operations. For example, the lowering of 'vector.load',
'vector.store', 'vector.maskedload' and 'vector.maskedstore' to the LLVM dialect
is implemented with a single template conversion pattern.
[1] https://llvm.discourse.group/t/memref-type-and-data-layout/
Reviewed By: nicolasvasilache
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96185
This reverts commit 511dd4f438 along with
a couple fixes.
Original message:
Now the context is the first, rather than the last input.
This better matches the rest of the infrastructure and makes
it easier to move these types to being declaratively specified.
Phabricator: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96111
Now the context is the first, rather than the last input.
This better matches the rest of the infrastructure and makes
it easier to move these types to being declaratively specified.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96111
This makes ignoring a result explicit by the user, and helps to prevent accidental errors with dropped results. Marking LogicalResult as no discard was always the intention from the beginning, but got lost along the way.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95841
Historically, the Vector to LLVM dialect conversion subsumed the Standard to
LLVM dialect conversion patterns. This was necessary because the conversion
infrastructure did not have sufficient support for reconciling type
conversions. This support is now available. Only keep the patterns related to
the Vector dialect in the Vector to LLVM conversion and require type casts
operations to be inserted if necessary. These casts will be removed by
following conversions if possible. Update integration tests to also run the
Standard to LLVM conversion.
There is a significant amount of test churn, which is due to (a) unnecessarily
strict tests in VectorToLLVM and (b) many patterns actually targeting Standard
dialect ops instead of LLVM dialect ops leading to tests actually exercising a
Vector->Standard->LLVM conversion. This churn is a good illustration of the
reason to make the conversion partial: now the tests only check the code in the
Vector to LLVM conversion and will not be randomly broken by changes in
Standard to LLVM conversion.
Arguably, it may be possible to extract Vector to Standard patterns into a
separate pass, but given the ongoing splitting of the Standard dialect, such
pass will be short-lived and will require further refactoring.
Depends On D95626
Reviewed By: nicolasvasilache, aartbik
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95685
Add the conversion pattern for vector.bitcast to lower it to
the LLVM Dialect.
Reviewed By: ThomasRaoux, aartbik
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95579
Continue the convergence between LLVM dialect and built-in types by using the
built-in vector type whenever possible, that is for fixed vectors of built-in
integers and built-in floats. LLVM dialect vector type is still in use for
pointers, less frequent floating point types that do not have a built-in
equivalent, and scalable vectors. However, the top-level `LLVMVectorType` class
has been removed in favor of free functions capable of inspecting both built-in
and LLVM dialect vector types: `LLVM::getVectorElementType`,
`LLVM::getNumVectorElements` and `LLVM::getFixedVectorType`. Additional work is
necessary to design an implemented the extensions to built-in types so as to
remove the `LLVMFixedVectorType` entirely.
Note that the default output format for the built-in vectors does not have
whitespace around the `x` separator, e.g., `vector<4xf32>` as opposed to the
LLVM dialect vector type format that does, e.g., `!llvm.vec<4 x fp128>`. This
required changing the FileCheck patterns in several tests.
Reviewed By: mehdi_amini, silvas
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D94405
Adding the ability to index the base address brings these operations closer
to the transfer read and write semantics (with lowering advantages), ensures
more consistent use in vector MLIR code (easier to read), and reduces the
amount of code duplication to lower memrefs into base addresses considerably
(making codegen less error-prone).
Reviewed By: ThomasRaoux
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D94278
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
The LLVM dialect type system has been closed until now, i.e. did not support
types from other dialects inside containers. While this has had obvious
benefits of deriving from a common base class, it has led to some simple types
being almost identical with the built-in types, namely integer and floating
point types. This in turn has led to a lot of larger-scale complexity: simple
types must still be converted, numerous operations that correspond to LLVM IR
intrinsics are replicated to produce versions operating on either LLVM dialect
or built-in types leading to quasi-duplicate dialects, lowering to the LLVM
dialect is essentially required to be one-shot because of type conversion, etc.
In this light, it is reasonable to trade off some local complexity in the
internal implementation of LLVM dialect types for removing larger-scale system
complexity. Previous commits to the LLVM dialect type system have adapted the
API to support types from other dialects.
Replace LLVMIntegerType with the built-in IntegerType plus additional checks
that such types are signless (these are isolated in a utility function that
replaced `isa<LLVMType>` and in the parser). Temporarily keep the possibility
to parse `!llvm.i32` as a synonym for `i32`, but add a deprecation notice.
Reviewed By: mehdi_amini, silvas, antiagainst
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D94178
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
Implement Bug 46698, making ODS synthesize a getType() method that returns a
specific C++ class for OneResult methods where we know that class. This eliminates
a common source of casts in things like:
myOp.getType().cast<FIRRTLType>().getPassive()
because we know that myOp always returns a FIRRTLType. This also encourages
op authors to type their results more tightly (which is also good for
verification).
I chose to implement this by splitting the OneResult trait into itself plus a
OneTypedResult trait, given that many things are using `hasTrait<OneResult>`
to conditionalize various logic.
While this changes makes many many ops get more specific getType() results, it
is generally drop-in compatible with the previous behavior because 'x.cast<T>()'
is allowed when x is already known to be a T. The one exception to this is that
we need declarations of the types used by ops, which is why a couple headers
needed additional #includes.
I updated a few things in tree to remove the now-redundant `.cast<>`'s, but there
are probably many more than can be removed.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93790
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
Transfer_ops can now work on both buffers and tensor. Right now, lowering of
the tensor case is not supported yet.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93500
- 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
This is part of a larger refactoring the better congregates the builtin structures under the BuiltinDialect. This also removes the problematic "standard" naming that clashes with the "standard" dialect, which is not defined within IR/. A temporary forward is placed in StandardTypes.h to allow time for downstream users to replaced references.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92435
A separate AVX512 lowering pass does not compose well with the regular
vector lowering pass. As such, it is at risk of code duplication and
lowering inconsistencies. This change removes the separate AVX512 lowering
pass and makes it an "option" in the regular vector lowering pass
(viz. vector dialect "augmented" with AVX512 dialect).
Reviewed By: rriddle
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92614