Tweak to the pretty type parser to recognize that `->` is a special token that
shouldn't be split into two characters. This change allows dialect
types to wrap function types as in `!my.ptr_type<(i32) -> i32>`.
Closestensorflow/mlir#105
COPYBARA_INTEGRATE_REVIEW=https://github.com/tensorflow/mlir/pull/105 from schweitzpgi:parse-arrow 8b2d768053f419daae5a1a864121a44c4319acbe
PiperOrigin-RevId: 265986240
Split out method into specialized instances + add an early exit. Should be NFC, but simplifies reading the logic slightly IMHO.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 264855529
This will allow for naming values the same as existing SSA values for regions attached to operations that are isolated from above. This fits in with how the system already allows separate name scopes for sibling regions. This name shadowing can be enabled in the custom parser of operations by setting the 'enableNameShadowing' flag to true when calling 'parseRegion'.
%arg = constant 10 : i32
foo.op {
%arg = constant 10 : i32
}
PiperOrigin-RevId: 264255999
Introduce an operation that defines global constants and variables in the LLVM
dialect, to reflect the corresponding LLVM IR capability. This operation is
expected to live in the top-level module and behaves similarly to
llvm.constant. It currently does not model many of the attributes supported by
the LLVM IR for global values (memory space, alignment, thread-local, linkage)
and will be extended as the relevant use cases appear.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 262539445
This changes the type of the function type-building callback from
(ArrayRef<Type>, ArrayRef<Type>, bool, string &) to (ArrayRef<Type>,
ArrayRef<Type>, VariadicFlag, String &) to make the intended use clear from the
callback signature alone.
Also rearrange type definitions in Parser.cpp to make them more sorted
alphabetically.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 262405851
LLVM function type has first-class support for variadic functions. In the
current lowering pipeline, it is emulated using an attribute on functions of
standard function type. In LLVMFuncOp that has LLVM function type, this can be
modeled directly. Introduce parsing support for variadic arguments to the
function and use it to support variadic function declarations in LLVMFuncOp.
Function definitions are currently not supported as that would require modeling
va_start/va_end LLVM intrinsics in the dialect and we don't yet have a
consistent story for LLVM intrinsics.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 262372651
Now that modules are also operations, nothing prevents one from defining SSA
values in the module. Doing so in an implicit top-level module, i.e. outside
of a `module` operation, was leading to a crash because the implicit module was
not associated with an SSA name scope. Create a name scope before parsing the
top-level module to fix this.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 262366891
Extend the recently introduced support for hexadecimal float literals to tensor
literals, which may also contain special floating point values such as
infinities and NaNs.
Modify TensorLiteralParser to store the list of tokens representing values
until the type is parsed instead of trying to guess the tensor element type
from the token kinds (hexadecimal values can be either integers or floats, and
can be mixed with both). Maintain the error reports as close as possible to
the existing implementation to avoid disturbing the tests. They can be
improved in a separate clean-up if deemed necessary.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 260794716
MLIR does not have support for parsing special floating point values such as
infinities and NaNs. If programmatically constructed, these values are printed
as NaN and (+-)Inf and cannot be parsed back. Add parser support for
hexadecimal literals in float attributes, following LLVM IR. The literal
corresponds to the in-memory representation of the floating point value.
IEEE 754 defines a range of possible values for NaNs, storing the bitwise
representation allows MLIR to properly roundtrip NaNs with different bit values
of significands.
The initial version of this commit was missing support for float literals that
used to be printed in decimal notation as a fallback, but ended up being
printed in hexadecimal format which became the fallback for special values.
The decimal fallback behavior was not exercised by tests. It is currently
reinstated and tested by the newly added test @f32_potential_precision_loss in
parser.mlir.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 260790900
MLIR does not have support for parsing special floating point values such as
infinities and NaNs. If programmatically constructed, these values are printed
as NaN and (+-)Inf and cannot be parsed back. Add parser support for
hexadecimal literals in float attributes, following LLVM IR. The literal
corresponds to the in-memory representation of the floating point value.
IEEE 754 defines a range of possible values for NaNs, storing the bitwise
representation allows MLIR to properly roundtrip NaNs with different bit values
of significands.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 260018802
- introduce parseRegionArgumentList (similar to parseOperandList) to parse a
list of region arguments with a delimiter
- allows defining custom parse for op's with multiple/variadic number of
region arguments
- use this on the gpu.launch op (although the latter has a fixed number
of region arguments)
- add a test dialect op to test region argument list parsing (with the
no delimiter case)
Signed-off-by: Uday Bondhugula <uday@polymagelabs.com>
Closestensorflow/mlir#40
PiperOrigin-RevId: 259442536
This cl standardizes the printing of the type of dialect attributes to work the same as other attribute kinds. The type of dialect attributes will trail the dialect specific portion:
`#` dialect-namespace `<` attr-data `>` `:` type
The attribute parsing hooks on Dialect have been updated to take an optionally null expected type for the attribute. This matches the respective parseAttribute hooks in the OpAsmParser.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 258661298
This allows for the attribute to hold symbolic references to other operations than FuncOp. This also allows for removing the dependence on FuncOp from the base Builder.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 257650017
This changes the top-level module parser to handle the case where the top-level module is defined with the module operation syntax, i.e:
module ... {
}
The printer is also updated to always print the top-level module in this form. This allows for cleanly round-tripping the location and attributes of the top-level module.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 257492069
This is an important step in allowing for the top-level of the IR to be extensible. FuncOp and ModuleOp contain all of the necessary functionality, while using the existing operation infrastructure. As an interim step, many of the usages of Function and Module, including the name, will remain the same. In the future, many of these will be relaxed to allow for many different types of top-level operations to co-exist.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 256427100
In most places, this is just a name change (with the exception of affine.dma_start swapping the operand positions of its tag memref and num_elements operands).
Significant code changes occur here:
*) Vectorization: LoopAnalysis.cpp, Vectorize.cpp
*) Affine Transforms: Transforms/Utils/Utils.cpp
PiperOrigin-RevId: 256395088
As Functions/Modules becomes operations, these methods will conflict with the 'verify' hook already on derived operation types.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 256246112
As with Functions, Module will soon become an operation, which are value-typed. This eases the transition from Module to ModuleOp. A new class, OwningModuleRef is provided to allow for owning a reference to a Module, and will auto-delete the held module on destruction.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 256196193
about the buffer size. This is needed to resolve the operand
correctly. Add that information to view op
serialization/deserialization
Also modify the parsing of buffer type by splitting at 'x' to
side-step issues with StringRef number parsing.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 256188319
Move the data members out of Function and into a new impl storage class 'FunctionStorage'. This allows for Function to become value typed, which will greatly simplify the transition of Function to FuncOp(given that FuncOp is also value typed).
PiperOrigin-RevId: 255983022
This functionality is now moved to a new class, ModuleManager. This class allows for inserting functions into a module, and will auto-rename them on insert to ensure a unique name. This now means that users adding new functions to a module must ensure that the function name is unique, as the Module will no longer do it automatically. This also means that Module::getNamedFunction now operates in O(N) instead of the O(c) time it did before. This simplifies the move of Modules to Operations as the ModuleOp will not be able to have this functionality.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 255846088
Split out class to command line parser for translate methods into standalone
class. Similar to splitting up mlir-opt to reuse functionality with different
initialization.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 255225790
Now that Locations are attributes, they have direct access to the MLIR context. This allows for simplifying error emission by removing unnecessary context lookups.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 255112791
The current syntax separates the name and value with ':', but ':' is already overloaded by several other things(e.g. trailing types). This makes the syntax difficult to parse in some situtations:
Old:
"foo: 10 : i32"
New:
"foo = 10 : i32"
PiperOrigin-RevId: 255097928
This is the standard syntax for types on operations, and is also already used by IntegerAttr and FloatAttr.
Example:
dense<5> : tensor<i32>
dense<[3]> : tensor<1xi32>
PiperOrigin-RevId: 255069157
The error would look like:
path/filename.mlir:32:23: error: use of value '%28' expects different type than prior uses: ''i32'' vs ''!_tf.control''
PiperOrigin-RevId: 254874859
The new operations affine.load and affine.store will take composed affine maps by construction.
These operations will eventually replace load and store operations currently used in affine regions and operated on by affine transformation and analysis passes.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 254754048
Now that Locations are Attributes they contain a direct reference to the MLIRContext, i.e. the context can be directly accessed from the given location instead of being explicitly passed in.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 254568329
This will allow for locations to be used in the same contexts as attributes. Given that attributes are nullable types, the 'Location' class now represents a non-nullable wrapper around a 'LocationAttr'. This preserves the desired semantics we have for non-optional locations.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 254505278