| # Operation Definition Specification (ODS) |
| |
| In addition to specializing the `mlir::Op` C++ template, MLIR also supports |
| defining operations in a table-driven manner. This is achieved via |
| [TableGen][TableGen], which is both a generic language and its tooling to |
| maintain records of domain-specific information. Facts regarding an operation |
| are specified concisely into a TableGen record, which will be expanded into an |
| equivalent `mlir::Op` C++ template specialization at compiler build time. |
| |
| This manual explains in detail all the available mechanisms for defining |
| operations in such a table-driven manner. It aims to be a specification instead |
| of a tutorial. Please refer to [Quickstart tutorial to adding MLIR graph |
| rewrite](Tutorials/QuickstartRewrites.md) for the latter. |
| |
| In addition to detailing each mechanism, this manual also tries to capture |
| best practices. They are rendered as quoted bullet points. |
| |
| ## Motivation |
| |
| MLIR allows pluggable dialects, and dialects contain, among others, a list of |
| operations. This open and extensible ecosystem leads to the "stringly" type IR |
| problem, e.g., repetitive string comparisons during optimization and analysis |
| passes, unintuitive accessor methods (e.g., generic/error prone `getOperand(3)` |
| vs self-documenting `getStride()`) with more generic return types, verbose and |
| generic constructors without default arguments, verbose textual IR dump, and |
| so on. Furthermore, operation verification is: |
| |
| 1. best case: a central string-to-verification-function map, |
| 1. middle case: duplication of verification across the code base, or |
| 1. worst case: no verification functions. |
| |
| The fix is to support defining ops in a table-driven manner. Then for each |
| dialect, we can have a central place that contains everything you need to know |
| about each op, including its constraints, custom assembly form, etc. This |
| description is also used to generate helper functions and classes to allow |
| building, verification, parsing, printing, analysis, and many more. |
| |
| ## Benefits |
| |
| Compared to the C++ template, this table-driven approach has several benefits |
| including but not limited to: |
| |
| * **Single source of truth**: We strive to encode all facts regarding an |
| operation into the record, so that readers don't need to jump among code |
| snippets to fully understand an operation. |
| * **Removing boilerplate**: We can automatically generate |
| operand/attribute/result getter methods, operation build methods, operation |
| verify methods, and many more utilities from the record. This greatly reduces |
| the boilerplate needed for defining a new op. |
| * **Facilitating auto-generation**: The usage of these operation information |
| records are by no means limited to op definition itself. We can use them to |
| drive the auto-generation of many other components, like computation graph |
| serialization. |
| |
| ## TableGen Syntax |
| |
| We use TableGen as the language for specifying operation information. TableGen |
| itself just provides syntax for writing records; the syntax and constructs |
| allowed in a TableGen file (typically with filename suffix `.td`) can be found |
| [here][TableGenIntro]. The formal language specification can be found |
| [here][TableGenRef]. _Roughly_ speaking, |
| |
| * TableGen `class` is similar to C++ class; it can be templated and |
| subclassed. |
| * TableGen `def` is similar to C++ object; it can be declared by specializing |
| a TableGen `class` (e.g., `def MyDef : MyClass<...>;`) or completely |
| independently (e.g., `def MyDef;`). It cannot be further templated or |
| subclassed. |
| * TableGen `dag` is a dedicated type for directed acyclic graph of elements. A |
| `dag` has one operator and zero or more arguments. Its syntax is `(operator |
| arg0, arg1, argN)`. The operator can be any TableGen `def`; an argument can |
| be anything, including `dag` itself. We can have names attached to both the |
| operator and the arguments like `(MyOp:$op_name MyArg:$arg_name)`. |
| |
| Please see the [language introduction][TableGenIntro] to learn about all the |
| types and expressions supported by TableGen. |
| |
| ## Operation Definition |
| |
| MLIR defines several common constructs to help operation definition and provide |
| their semantics via a special [TableGen backend][TableGenBackend]: |
| [`OpDefinitionsGen`][OpDefinitionsGen]. These constructs are defined in |
| [`OpBase.td`][OpBase]. The main ones are |
| |
| * The `Op` class: It is the main construct for defining operations. All facts |
| regarding the operation are specified when specializing this class, with the |
| help of the following constructs. |
| * The `Dialect` class: Operations belonging to one logical group are placed in |
| the same dialect. The `Dialect` class contains dialect-level information. |
| * The `OpTrait` class hierarchy: They are used to specify special properties |
| and constraints of the operation, including whether the operation has side |
| effect or whether its output has the same shape as the input. |
| * The `ins`/`outs` marker: These are two special makers builtin to the |
| `OpDefinitionsGen` backend. They lead the definitions of operands/attributes |
| and results respectively. |
| * The `TypeConstraint` class hierarchy: They are used to specify the |
| constraints over operands or results. A notable subclass hierarchy is |
| `Type`, which stands for constraints for common C++ types. |
| * The `AttrConstraint` class hierarchy: They are used to specify the |
| constraints over attributes. A notable subclass hierarchy is `Attr`, which |
| stands for constraints for attributes whose values are of common types. |
| |
| An operation is defined by specializing the `Op` class with concrete contents |
| for all the fields it requires. For example, `tf.AvgPool` is defined as |
| |
| ```tablegen |
| def TF_AvgPoolOp : TF_Op<"AvgPool", [NoSideEffect]> { |
| let summary = "Performs average pooling on the input."; |
| |
| let description = [{ |
| Each entry in `output` is the mean of the corresponding size `ksize` |
| window in `value`. |
| }]; |
| |
| let arguments = (ins |
| TF_FpTensor:$value, |
| |
| Confined<I64ArrayAttr, [ArrayMinCount<4>]>:$ksize, |
| Confined<I64ArrayAttr, [ArrayMinCount<4>]>:$strides, |
| TF_AnyStrAttrOf<["SAME", "VALID"]>:$padding, |
| DefaultValuedAttr<TF_ConvertDataFormatAttr, "NHWC">:$data_format |
| ); |
| |
| let results = (outs |
| TF_FpTensor:$output |
| ); |
| |
| TF_DerivedOperandTypeAttr T = TF_DerivedOperandTypeAttr<0>; |
| } |
| ``` |
| |
| In the following we describe all the fields needed. Please see the definition |
| of the `Op` class for the complete list of fields supported. |
| |
| ### Operation name |
| |
| The operation name is a unique identifier of the operation within MLIR, e.g., |
| `tf.Add` for addition operation in the TensorFlow dialect. This is the |
| equivalent of the mnemonic in assembly language. It is used for parsing and |
| printing in the textual format. It is also used for pattern matching in graph |
| rewrites. |
| |
| The full operation name is composed of the dialect name and the op name, with |
| the former provided via the dialect and the latter provided as the second |
| template parameter to the `Op` class. |
| |
| ### Operation documentation |
| |
| This includes both a one-line `summary` and a longer human-readable |
| `description`. They will be used to drive automatic generation of dialect |
| documentation. They need to be provided in the operation's definition body: |
| |
| ```tablegen |
| let summary = "..."; |
| |
| let description = [{ |
| ... |
| }]; |
| ``` |
| |
| `description` should be written in Markdown syntax. |
| |
| Placing the documentation at the beginning is recommended since |
| it helps in understanding the operation. |
| |
| > * Place documentation at the beginning of the operation definition |
| > * The summary should be short and concise. It should be a one-liner without |
| > trailing punctuation. Put expanded explanation in description. |
| |
| ### Operation arguments |
| |
| There are two kinds of arguments: operands and attributes. Operands are runtime |
| values produced by other ops; while attributes are compile-time known constant |
| values, including two categories: |
| |
| 1. Natural attributes: these attributes affect the behavior of the operations |
| (e.g., padding for convolution); |
| 1. Derived attributes: these attributes are not needed to define the operation |
| but are instead derived from information of the operation. E.g., the output |
| shape of type. This is mostly used for convenience interface generation or |
| interaction with other frameworks/translation. |
| |
| All derived attributes should be materializable as an Attribute. That is, |
| even though they are not materialized, it should be possible to store as |
| an attribute. |
| |
| Both operands and attributes are specified inside the `dag`-typed `arguments`, |
| led by `ins`: |
| |
| ```tablegen |
| let arguments = (ins |
| <type-constraint>:$<operand-name>, |
| ... |
| <attr-constraint>:$<attr-name>, |
| ... |
| ); |
| ``` |
| |
| Here `<type-constraint>` is a TableGen `def` from the `TypeConstraint` class |
| hierarchy. Similarly, `<attr-constraint>` is a TableGen `def` from the |
| `AttrConstraint` class hierarchy. See [Constraints](#constraints) for more |
| information. |
| |
| There is no requirements on the relative order of operands and attributes; they |
| can mix freely. The relative order of operands themselves matters. From each |
| named argument a named getter will be generated that returns the argument with |
| the return type (in the case of attributes the return type will be |
| constructed from the storage type, while for operands it will be `Value`). Each |
| attribute's raw value (e.g., as stored) can also be accessed via generated |
| `<name>Attr` getters for use in transformation passes where the more user |
| friendly return type is less suitable. |
| |
| All the arguments should be named to 1) provide documentation, 2) drive |
| auto-generation of getter methods, 3) provide a handle to reference for other |
| places like constraints. |
| |
| #### Variadic operands |
| |
| To declare a variadic operand, wrap the `TypeConstraint` for the operand with |
| `Variadic<...>`. |
| |
| Normally operations have no variadic operands or just one variadic operand. For |
| the latter case, it is easy to deduce which dynamic operands are for the static |
| variadic operand definition. Though, if an operation has more than one variable |
| length operands (either optional or variadic), it would be impossible to |
| attribute dynamic operands to the corresponding static variadic operand |
| definitions without further information from the operation. Therefore, either |
| the `SameVariadicOperandSize` or `AttrSizedOperandSegments` trait is needed to |
| indicate that all variable length operands have the same number of dynamic |
| values. |
| |
| #### Optional operands |
| |
| To declare an optional operand, wrap the `TypeConstraint` for the operand with |
| `Optional<...>`. |
| |
| Normally operations have no optional operands or just one optional operand. For |
| the latter case, it is easy to deduce which dynamic operands are for the static |
| operand definition. Though, if an operation has more than one variable length |
| operands (either optional or variadic), it would be impossible to attribute |
| dynamic operands to the corresponding static variadic operand definitions |
| without further information from the operation. Therefore, either the |
| `SameVariadicOperandSize` or `AttrSizedOperandSegments` trait is needed to |
| indicate that all variable length operands have the same number of dynamic |
| values. |
| |
| #### Optional attributes |
| |
| To declare an optional attribute, wrap the `AttrConstraint` for the attribute |
| with `OptionalAttr<...>`. |
| |
| #### Attributes with default values |
| |
| To declare an attribute with a default value, wrap the `AttrConstraint` for the |
| attribute with `DefaultValuedAttr<..., "...">`. |
| |
| The second parameter to `DefaultValuedAttr` should be a string containing the |
| C++ default value. For example, a float default value should be specified as |
| like `"0.5f"`, and an integer array default value should be specified as like |
| `"{1, 2, 3}"`. |
| |
| #### Confining attributes |
| |
| `Confined` is provided as a general mechanism to help modelling further |
| constraints on attributes beyond the ones brought by value types. You can use |
| `Confined` to compose complex constraints out of more primitive ones. For |
| example, a 32-bit integer attribute whose minimum value must be 10 can be |
| expressed as `Confined<I32Attr, [IntMinValue<10>]>`. |
| |
| Right now, the following primitive constraints are supported: |
| |
| * `IntMinValue<N>`: Specifying an integer attribute to be greater than or |
| equal to `N` |
| * `IntMaxValue<N>`: Specifying an integer attribute to be less than or equal |
| to `N` |
| * `ArrayMinCount<N>`: Specifying an array attribute to have at least `N` |
| elements |
| * `IntArrayNthElemEq<I, N>`: Specifying an integer array attribute's `I`-th |
| element to be equal to `N` |
| * `IntArrayNthElemMinValue<I, N>`: Specifying an integer array attribute's |
| `I`-th element to be greater than or equal to `N` |
| |
| TODO: Design and implement more primitive constraints |
| |
| ### Operation regions |
| |
| The regions of an operation are specified inside of the `dag`-typed `regions`, |
| led by `region`: |
| |
| ```tablegen |
| let regions = (region |
| <region-constraint>:$<region-name>, |
| ... |
| ); |
| ``` |
| |
| #### Variadic regions |
| |
| Similar to the `Variadic` class used for variadic operands and results, |
| `VariadicRegion<...>` can be used for regions. Variadic regions can currently |
| only be specified as the last region in the regions list. |
| |
| ### Operation results |
| |
| Similar to operands, results are specified inside the `dag`-typed `results`, led |
| by `outs`: |
| |
| ```tablegen |
| let results = (outs |
| <type-constraint>:$<result-name>, |
| ... |
| ); |
| ``` |
| |
| #### Variadic results |
| |
| Similar to variadic operands, `Variadic<...>` can also be used for results. |
| And similarly, `SameVariadicResultSize` for multiple variadic results in the |
| same operation. |
| |
| ### Operation successors |
| |
| For terminator operations, the successors are specified inside of the |
| `dag`-typed `successors`, led by `successor`: |
| |
| ```tablegen |
| let successors = (successor |
| <successor-constraint>:$<successor-name>, |
| ... |
| ); |
| ``` |
| |
| #### Variadic successors |
| |
| Similar to the `Variadic` class used for variadic operands and results, |
| `VariadicSuccessor<...>` can be used for successors. Variadic successors can |
| currently only be specified as the last successor in the successor list. |
| |
| ### Operation traits and constraints |
| |
| Traits are operation properties that affect syntax or semantics. MLIR C++ |
| models various traits in the `mlir::OpTrait` namespace. |
| |
| Both operation traits, [interfaces](#operation-interfaces), and constraints |
| involving multiple operands/attributes/results are provided as the second |
| template parameter to the `Op` class. They should be deriving from the `OpTrait` |
| class. See [Constraints](#constraints) for more information. |
| |
| ### Interfaces |
| |
| [Interfaces](Interfaces.md#attribute-operation-type-interfaces) allow for |
| attributes, operations, and types to expose method calls without the caller |
| needing to know the derived type. Operation interfaces defined in C++ can be |
| accessed in the ODS framework via the `OpInterfaceTrait` class. Aside from using |
| pre-existing interfaces in the C++ API, the ODS framework also provides a |
| simplified mechanism for defining such interfaces which removes much of the |
| boilerplate necessary. |
| |
| Providing a definition of the `AttrInterface`, `OpInterface`, or `TypeInterface` |
| class will auto-generate the C++ classes for the interface. An interface |
| includes a name, for the C++ class, a description, and a list of interface |
| methods. |
| |
| ```tablegen |
| def MyInterface : OpInterface<"MyInterface"> { |
| let description = ...; |
| let methods = [...]; |
| } |
| ``` |
| |
| There are two types of methods that can be used with an interface, |
| `InterfaceMethod` and `StaticInterfaceMethod`. They are both comprised of the |
| same core components, with the distinction that `StaticInterfaceMethod` models a |
| static method on the derived operation. |
| |
| An `InterfaceMethod` is comprised of the following components: |
| |
| * Description |
| - A string description of what this method does and its invariants. |
| * ReturnType |
| - A string corresponding to the C++ return type of the method. |
| * MethodName |
| - A string corresponding to the desired name of the method. |
| * Arguments (Optional) |
| - A dag of strings that correspond to a C++ type and variable name |
| respectively. |
| * MethodBody (Optional) |
| - An optional explicit implementation of the interface method. |
| - `ConcreteOp` is an implicitly defined typename that can be used to refer |
| to the type of the derived operation currently being operated on. |
| - In non-static methods, a variable 'ConcreteOp op' is defined and may be |
| used to refer to an instance of the derived operation. |
| * DefaultImplementation (Optional) |
| - An optional explicit default implementation of the interface method. |
| - This method is placed within the `Trait` class that is attached to the |
| operation. As such, this method has the same characteristics as any |
| other [`Trait`](Traits.md) method. |
| - `ConcreteOp` is an implicitly defined typename that can be used to refer |
| to the type of the derived operation currently being operated on. |
| |
| ODS also allows generating the declarations for the `InterfaceMethod` of the op |
| if one specifies the interface with `DeclareOpInterfaceMethods` (see example |
| below). |
| |
| Examples: |
| |
| ```tablegen |
| def MyInterface : OpInterface<"MyInterface"> { |
| let description = [{ |
| My interface is very interesting. ... |
| }]; |
| |
| let methods = [ |
| // A simple non-static method with no inputs. |
| InterfaceMethod<"'foo' is a non-static method with no inputs.", |
| "unsigned", "foo" |
| >, |
| |
| // A new non-static method accepting an input argument. |
| InterfaceMethod<"/*insert doc here*/", |
| "Value ", "bar", (ins "unsigned":$i) |
| >, |
| |
| // Query a static property of the derived operation. |
| StaticInterfaceMethod<"'fooStatic' is a static method with no inputs.", |
| "unsigned", "fooStatic" |
| >, |
| |
| // Provide the definition of a static interface method. |
| // Note: `ConcreteOp` corresponds to the derived operation typename. |
| StaticInterfaceMethod<"/*insert doc here*/", |
| "Operation *", "create", (ins "OpBuilder &":$builder, "Location":$loc), [{ |
| return builder.create<ConcreteOp>(loc); |
| }]>, |
| |
| // Provide a definition of the non-static method. |
| // Note: `op` corresponds to the derived operation variable. |
| InterfaceMethod<"/*insert doc here*/", |
| "unsigned", "getNumInputsAndOutputs", (ins), [{ |
| return op.getNumInputs() + op.getNumOutputs(); |
| }]>, |
| |
| // Provide only a default definition of the method. |
| // Note: `ConcreteOp` corresponds to the derived operation typename. |
| InterfaceMethod<"/*insert doc here*/", |
| "unsigned", "getNumWithDefault", (ins), /*methodBody=*/[{}], [{ |
| ConcreteOp op = cast<ConcreteOp>(this->getOperation()); |
| return op.getNumInputs() + op.getNumOutputs(); |
| }]>, |
| ]; |
| } |
| |
| // Operation interfaces can optionally be wrapped inside |
| // DeclareOpInterfaceMethods. This would result in autogenerating declarations |
| // for members `foo`, `bar` and `fooStatic`. Methods with bodies are not |
| // declared inside the op declaration but instead handled by the op interface |
| // trait directly. |
| def OpWithInferTypeInterfaceOp : Op<... |
| [DeclareOpInterfaceMethods<MyInterface>]> { ... } |
| |
| // Methods that have a default implementation do not have declarations |
| // generated. If an operation wishes to override the default behavior, it can |
| // explicitly specify the method that it wishes to override. This will force |
| // the generation of a declaration for those methods. |
| def OpWithOverrideInferTypeInterfaceOp : Op<... |
| [DeclareOpInterfaceMethods<MyInterface, ["getNumWithDefault"]>]> { ... } |
| ``` |
| |
| Operation interfaces may also provide a verification method on `OpInterface` by |
| setting `verify`. Setting `verify` results in the generated trait having a |
| `verifyTrait` method that is applied to all operations implementing the trait. |
| |
| ### Builder methods |
| |
| For each operation, there are a few builders automatically generated based on |
| the arguments and returns types. For example, given the following op definition: |
| |
| ```tablegen |
| def MyOp : ... { |
| let arguments = (ins |
| I32:$i32_operand, |
| F32:$f32_operand, |
| ..., |
| |
| I32Attr:$i32_attr, |
| F32Attr:$f32_attr, |
| ... |
| ); |
| |
| let results = (outs |
| I32:$i32_result, |
| F32:$f32_result, |
| ... |
| ); |
| } |
| ``` |
| |
| The following builders are generated: |
| |
| ```c++ |
| // All result-types/operands/attributes have one aggregate parameter. |
| static void build(OpBuilder &odsBuilder, OperationState &odsState, |
| ArrayRef<Type> resultTypes, |
| ValueRange operands, |
| ArrayRef<NamedAttribute> attributes); |
| |
| // Each result-type/operand/attribute has a separate parameter. The parameters |
| // for attributes are of mlir::Attribute types. |
| static void build(OpBuilder &odsBuilder, OperationState &odsState, |
| Type i32_result, Type f32_result, ..., |
| Value i32_operand, Value f32_operand, ..., |
| IntegerAttr i32_attr, FloatAttr f32_attr, ...); |
| |
| // Each result-type/operand/attribute has a separate parameter. The parameters |
| // for attributes are raw values unwrapped with mlir::Attribute instances. |
| // (Note that this builder will not always be generated. See the following |
| // explanation for more details.) |
| static void build(OpBuilder &odsBuilder, OperationState &odsState, |
| Type i32_result, Type f32_result, ..., |
| Value i32_operand, Value f32_operand, ..., |
| APInt i32_attr, StringRef f32_attr, ...); |
| |
| // Each operand/attribute has a separate parameter but result type is aggregate. |
| static void build(OpBuilder &odsBuilder, OperationState &odsState, |
| ArrayRef<Type> resultTypes, |
| Value i32_operand, Value f32_operand, ..., |
| IntegerAttr i32_attr, FloatAttr f32_attr, ...); |
| |
| // All operands/attributes have aggregate parameters. |
| // Generated if return type can be inferred. |
| static void build(OpBuilder &odsBuilder, OperationState &odsState, |
| ValueRange operands, ArrayRef<NamedAttribute> attributes); |
| |
| // (And manually specified builders depending on the specific op.) |
| ``` |
| |
| The first form provides basic uniformity so that we can create ops using the |
| same form regardless of the exact op. This is particularly useful for |
| implementing declarative pattern rewrites. |
| |
| The second and third forms are good for use in manually written code given that |
| they provide better guarantee via signatures. |
| |
| The third form will be generated if any of the op's attribute has different |
| `Attr.returnType` from `Attr.storageType` and we know how to build an attribute |
| from an unwrapped value (i.e., `Attr.constBuilderCall` is defined.) |
| Additionally, for the third form, if an attribute appearing later in the |
| `arguments` list has a default value, the default value will be supplied in the |
| declaration. This works for `BoolAttr`, `StrAttr`, `EnumAttr` for now and the |
| list can grow in the future. So if possible, default valued attribute should be |
| placed at the end of the `arguments` list to leverage this feature. (This |
| behavior is essentially due to C++ function parameter default value placement |
| restrictions.) Otherwise, the builder of the third form will still be generated |
| but default values for the attributes not at the end of the `arguments` list |
| will not be supplied in the builder's signature. |
| |
| ODS will generate a builder that doesn't require return type specified if |
| |
| * Op implements InferTypeOpInterface interface; |
| * All return types are either buildable types or are the same as a given |
| operand (e.g., `AllTypesMatch` constraint between operand and result); |
| |
| And there may potentially exist other builders depending on the specific op; |
| please refer to the |
| [generated C++ file](#run-mlir-tblgen-to-see-the-generated-content) for the |
| complete list. |
| |
| #### Custom builder methods |
| |
| However, if the above cases cannot satisfy all needs, you can define additional |
| convenience build methods with `OpBuilder`. |
| |
| `OpBuilder` is a class that takes the parameter list and the optional `build()` |
| method body. They are separated because we need to generate op declaration and |
| definition into separate files. The parameter list should _include_ `Builder |
| *builder, OperationState &state`. If the `body` is not provided, _only_ the |
| builder declaration will be generated; this provides a way to define complicated |
| builders entirely in C++ files. |
| |
| For example, for the following op: |
| |
| ```tablegen |
| def MyOp : Op<"my_op", []> { |
| let arguments = (ins F32Attr:$attr); |
| |
| let results = (outs); |
| } |
| ``` |
| |
| If we want to define a builder with a default value for the only attribute, we |
| can add into `MyOp`: |
| |
| ```tablegen |
| def MyOp : ... { |
| ... |
| |
| let builders = [ |
| OpBuilder<"OpBuilder &builder, OperationState &state, float val = 0.5f", [{ |
| state.addAttribute("attr", builder.getF32FloatAttr(val)); |
| }]> |
| ]; |
| } |
| ``` |
| |
| The generated builder will look like: |
| |
| ```c++ |
| static void build(OpBuilder &builder, OperationState &state, float val = 0.5f) { |
| state.addAttribute("attr", builder.getF32FloatAttr(val)); |
| } |
| ``` |
| |
| ### Custom parser and printer methods |
| |
| Functions to parse and print the operation's custom assembly form. |
| |
| ### Custom verifier code |
| |
| Verification code will be automatically generated for |
| [constraints](#constraints) specified on various entities of the op. To |
| perform _additional_ verification, you can use |
| |
| ```tablegen |
| let verifier = [{ |
| ... |
| }]; |
| ``` |
| |
| Code placed in `verifier` will be called after the auto-generated verification |
| code. The order of trait verification excluding those of `verifier` should not |
| be relied upon. |
| |
| ### Declarative Assembly Format |
| |
| The custom assembly form of the operation may be specified in a declarative |
| string that matches the operations operands, attributes, etc. With the ability |
| to express additional information that needs to be parsed to build the |
| operation: |
| |
| ```tablegen |
| def CallOp : Std_Op<"call", ...> { |
| let arguments = (ins FlatSymbolRefAttr:$callee, Variadic<AnyType>:$args); |
| let results = (outs Variadic<AnyType>); |
| |
| let assemblyFormat = [{ |
| $callee `(` $args `)` attr-dict `:` functional-type($args, results) |
| }]; |
| } |
| ``` |
| |
| The format is comprised of three components: |
| |
| #### Directives |
| |
| A directive is a type of builtin function, with an optional set of arguments. |
| The available directives are as follows: |
| |
| * `attr-dict` |
| |
| - Represents the attribute dictionary of the operation. |
| |
| * `attr-dict-with-keyword` |
| |
| - Represents the attribute dictionary of the operation, but prefixes the |
| dictionary with an `attributes` keyword. |
| |
| * `functional-type` ( inputs , results ) |
| |
| - Formats the `inputs` and `results` arguments as a |
| [function type](LangRef.md#function-type). |
| - The constraints on `inputs` and `results` are the same as the `input` of |
| the `type` directive. |
| |
| * `operands` |
| |
| - Represents all of the operands of an operation. |
| |
| * `results` |
| |
| - Represents all of the results of an operation. |
| |
| * `successors` |
| |
| - Represents all of the successors of an operation. |
| |
| * `type` ( input ) |
| |
| - Represents the type of the given input. |
| - `input` must be either an operand or result [variable](#variables), the |
| `operands` directive, or the `results` directive. |
| |
| #### Literals |
| |
| A literal is either a keyword or punctuation surrounded by \`\`. |
| |
| The following are the set of valid punctuation: |
| `:`, `,`, `=`, `<`, `>`, `(`, `)`, `[`, `]`, `->` |
| |
| #### Variables |
| |
| A variable is an entity that has been registered on the operation itself, i.e. |
| an argument(attribute or operand), result, successor, etc. In the `CallOp` |
| example above, the variables would be `$callee` and `$args`. |
| |
| Attribute variables are printed with their respective value type, unless that |
| value type is buildable. In those cases, the type of the attribute is elided. |
| |
| #### Optional Groups |
| |
| In certain situations operations may have "optional" information, e.g. |
| attributes or an empty set of variadic operands. In these situations a section |
| of the assembly format can be marked as `optional` based on the presence of this |
| information. An optional group is defined by wrapping a set of elements within |
| `()` followed by a `?` and has the following requirements: |
| |
| * The first element of the group must either be a literal, attribute, or an |
| operand. |
| - This is because the first element must be optionally parsable. |
| * Exactly one argument variable within the group must be marked as the anchor |
| of the group. |
| - The anchor is the element whose presence controls whether the group |
| should be printed/parsed. |
| - An element is marked as the anchor by adding a trailing `^`. |
| - The first element is *not* required to be the anchor of the group. |
| * Literals, variables, and type directives are the only valid elements within |
| the group. |
| - Any attribute variable may be used, but only optional attributes can be |
| marked as the anchor. |
| - Only variadic or optional operand arguments can be used. |
| - The operands to a type directive must be defined within the optional |
| group. |
| |
| An example of an operation with an optional group is `std.return`, which has a |
| variadic number of operands. |
| |
| ``` |
| def ReturnOp : ... { |
| let arguments = (ins Variadic<AnyType>:$operands); |
| |
| // We only print the operands and types if there are a non-zero number |
| // of operands. |
| let assemblyFormat = "attr-dict ($operands^ `:` type($operands))?"; |
| } |
| ``` |
| |
| #### Requirements |
| |
| The format specification has a certain set of requirements that must be adhered |
| to: |
| |
| 1. The output and operation name are never shown as they are fixed and cannot be |
| altered. |
| 1. All operands within the operation must appear within the format, either |
| individually or with the `operands` directive. |
| 1. All operand and result types must appear within the format using the various |
| `type` directives, either individually or with the `operands` or `results` |
| directives. |
| 1. The `attr-dict` directive must always be present. |
| 1. Must not contain overlapping information; e.g. multiple instances of |
| 'attr-dict', types, operands, etc. |
| - Note that `attr-dict` does not overlap with individual attributes. These |
| attributes will simply be elided when printing the attribute dictionary. |
| |
| ##### Type Inference |
| |
| One requirement of the format is that the types of operands and results must |
| always be present. In certain instances, the type of a variable may be deduced |
| via type constraints or other information available. In these cases, the type of |
| that variable may be elided from the format. |
| |
| * Buildable Types |
| |
| Some type constraints may only have one representation, allowing for them to |
| be directly buildable; for example the `I32` or `Index` types. Types in `ODS` |
| may mark themselves as buildable by setting the `builderCall` field or |
| inheriting from the `BuildableType` class. |
| |
| * Trait Equality Constraints |
| |
| There are many operations that have known type equality constraints registered |
| as traits on the operation; for example the true, false, and result values of a |
| `select` operation often have the same type. The assembly format may inspect |
| these equal constraints to discern the types of missing variables. The currently |
| supported traits are: `AllTypesMatch`, `TypesMatchWith`, `SameTypeOperands`, |
| and `SameOperandsAndResultType`. |
| |
| ### `hasCanonicalizer` |
| |
| This boolean field indicate whether canonicalization patterns have been defined |
| for this operation. If it is `1`, then `::getCanonicalizationPatterns()` should |
| be defined. |
| |
| ### `hasFolder` |
| |
| This boolean field indicate whether general folding rules have been defined |
| for this operation. If it is `1`, then `::fold()` should be defined. |
| |
| ### Extra declarations |
| |
| One of the goals of table-driven op definition is to auto-generate as much logic |
| and methods needed for each op as possible. With that said, there will always be |
| long-tail cases that won't be covered. For such cases, you can use |
| `extraClassDeclaration`. Code in `extraClassDeclaration` will be copied |
| literally to the generated C++ op class. |
| |
| Note that `extraClassDeclaration` is a mechanism intended for long-tail cases |
| by power users; for not-yet-implemented widely-applicable cases, improving the |
| infrastructure is preferable. |
| |
| ### Generated C++ code |
| |
| [OpDefinitionsGen][OpDefinitionsGen] processes the op definition spec file and |
| generates two files containing the corresponding C++ code: one for declarations, |
| the other for definitions. The former is generated via the `-gen-op-decls` |
| command-line option, while the latter is via the `-gen-op-defs` option. |
| |
| The definition file contains all the op method definitions, which can be |
| included and enabled by defining `GET_OP_CLASSES`. For each operation, |
| OpDefinitionsGen generates an operation class and an |
| [operand adaptor](#operand-adaptors) class. Besides, it also contains a |
| comma-separated list of all defined ops, which can be included and enabled by |
| defining `GET_OP_LIST`. |
| |
| #### Class name and namespaces |
| |
| For each operation, its generated C++ class name is the symbol `def`ed with |
| TableGen with dialect prefix removed. The first `_` serves as the delimiter. |
| For example, for `def TF_AddOp`, the C++ class name would be `AddOp`. |
| We remove the `TF` prefix because it is for scoping ops; other dialects |
| may as well define their own `AddOp`s. |
| |
| The namespaces of the generated C++ class will come from the dialect's |
| `cppNamespace` field. For example, if a dialect's `cppNamespace` is `A::B`, |
| then an op of that dialect will be placed in |
| `namespace A { namespace B { ... } }`. If a dialect does not specify a |
| `cppNamespace`, we then use the dialect's name as the namespace. |
| |
| This means the qualified name of the generated C++ class does not necessarily |
| match exactly with the operation name as explained in |
| [Operation name](#operation-name). This is to allow flexible naming to satisfy |
| coding style requirements. |
| |
| #### Operand adaptors |
| |
| For each operation, we automatically generate an _operand adaptor_. This class |
| solves the problem of accessing operands provided as a list of `Value`s without |
| using "magic" constants. The operand adaptor takes a reference to an array of |
| `Value` and provides methods with the same names as those in the operation class |
| to access them. For example, for a binary arithmetic operation, it may provide |
| `.lhs()` to access the first operand and `.rhs()` to access the second operand. |
| |
| The operand adaptor class lives in the same namespace as the operation class, |
| and has the name of the operation followed by `Adaptor` as well as an alias |
| `Adaptor` inside the op class. |
| |
| Operand adaptors can be used in function templates that also process operations: |
| |
| ```c++ |
| template <typename BinaryOpTy> |
| std::pair<Value, Value> zip(BinaryOpTy &&op) { |
| return std::make_pair(op.lhs(), op.rhs());; |
| } |
| |
| void process(AddOp op, ArrayRef<Value> newOperands) { |
| zip(op); |
| zip(Adaptor<AddOp>(newOperands)); |
| /*...*/ |
| } |
| ``` |
| |
| ## Constraints |
| |
| Constraint is a core concept in table-driven operation definition: operation |
| verification and graph operation matching are all based on satisfying |
| constraints. So both the operation definition and rewrite rules specification |
| significantly involve writing constraints. We have the `Constraint` class in |
| [`OpBase.td`][OpBase] has the common base class for all constraints. |
| |
| An operation's constraint can cover different range; it may |
| |
| * Only concern a single attribute (e.g. being a 32-bit integer greater than 5), |
| * Multiple operands and results (e.g., the 1st result's shape must be the same |
| as the 1st operand), or |
| * Intrinsic to the operation itself (e.g., having no side effect). |
| |
| We call them as single-entity constraint, multi-entity constraint, and traits, |
| respectively. |
| |
| ### Single-entity constraint |
| |
| Constraints scoped to a single operand, attribute, or result are specified at |
| the entity's declaration place as described in |
| [Operation arguments](#operation-arguments) and |
| [Operation results](#operation-results). |
| |
| To help modelling constraints of common types, a set of `TypeConstraint`s are |
| created; they are the `Type` subclass hierarchy. It includes `F32` for the |
| constraints of being a float, `TensorOf<[F32]>` for the constraints of being |
| a float tensor, and so on. |
| |
| Similarly, a set of `AttrConstraint`s are created for helping modelling |
| constraints of common attribute kinds. They are the `Attr` subclass hierarchy. |
| It includes `F32Attr` for the constraints of being a float attribute, |
| `F32ArrayAttr` for the constraints of being a float array attribute, and so on. |
| |
| ### Multi-entity constraint |
| |
| Constraints involving more than one operand/attribute/result are quite common |
| on operations, like the element type and shape relation between operands and |
| results. These constraints should be specified as the `Op` class template |
| parameter as described in |
| [Operation traits and constraints](#operation-traits-and-constraints). |
| |
| Multi-entity constraints are modeled as `PredOpTrait` (a subclass of `OpTrait`) |
| in [`OpBase.td`][OpBase].A bunch of constraint primitives are provided to help |
| specification. See [`OpBase.td`][OpBase] for the complete list. |
| |
| ### Trait |
| |
| Traits are intrinsic properties of the operation like having side effect or not, |
| commutative or not, whether is a terminator, etc. These constraints should be |
| specified as the `Op` class template parameter as described in |
| [Operation traits and constraints](#operation-traits-and-constraints). |
| |
| Traits are modeled as `NativeOpTrait` (a subclass of `OpTrait`) in |
| [`OpBase.td`][OpBase]. They are backed and will be translated into the |
| corresponding C++ `mlir::OpTrait` classes. |
| |
| ### How to specify new constraint |
| |
| To write a constraint, you need to provide its predicates and give it a |
| descriptive name. Predicates, modeled with the `Pred` class, are the workhorse |
| for composing constraints. The predicate for a constraint is typically built up |
| in a nested manner, using the two categories of predicates: |
| |
| 1. `CPred`: the primitive leaf predicate. |
| 2. Compound predicate: a predicate composed from child predicates using |
| predicate combiners (conjunction: `And`, disjunction: `Or`, negation: `Neg`, |
| substitution: `SubstLeaves`, concatenation: `Concat`). |
| |
| `CPred` is the basis for composing more complex predicates. It is the "atom" |
| predicate from the perspective of TableGen and the "interface" between |
| TableGen and C++. What is inside is already C++ code, which will be treated |
| as opaque strings with special placeholders to be substituted. |
| |
| You can put any C++ code that returns a boolean value inside a `CPred`, |
| including evaluating expressions, calling functions, calling class methods, |
| and so on. |
| |
| To help interaction with the C++ environment, there are a few special |
| placeholders provided to refer to entities in the context where this predicate |
| is used. They serve as "hooks" to the enclosing environment. This includes |
| `$_builder`, `$_op`, and `$_self`: |
| |
| * `$_builder` will be replaced by a `mlir::Builder` instance so that you can |
| access common build methods. |
| * `$_op` will be replaced by the current operation so that you can access |
| information of the current operation. |
| * `$_self` will be replaced with the entity this predicate is attached to. |
| E.g., `BoolAttr` is an attribute constraint that wraps a |
| `CPred<"$_self.isa<BoolAttr>()">`. Then for `F32:$attr`,`$_self` will be |
| replaced by `$attr`. For type constraints, it's a little bit special since |
| we want the constraints on each type definition reads naturally and we want |
| to attach type constraints directly to an operand/result, `$_self` will be |
| replaced by the operand/result's type. E.g., for `F32` in `F32:$operand`, its |
| `$_self` will be expanded as `getOperand(...).getType()`. |
| |
| TODO: Reconsider the leading symbol for special placeholders. Eventually we want |
| to allow referencing operand/result $-names; such $-names can start with |
| underscore. |
| |
| For example, to write an attribute `attr` is an `IntegerAttr`, in C++ you can |
| just call `attr.isa<IntegerAttr>()`. The code can be wrapped in a `CPred` as |
| `$_self.isa<IntegerAttr>()`, with `$_self` as the special placeholder to be |
| replaced by the current attribute `attr` at expansion time. |
| |
| For more complicated predicates, you can wrap it in a single `CPred`, or you |
| can use predicate combiners to combine them. For example, to write the |
| constraint that an attribute `attr` is a 32-bit or 64-bit integer, you can |
| write it as |
| |
| ```tablegen |
| And<[ |
| CPred<"$_self.isa<IntegerAttr>()">, |
| Or<[ |
| CPred<"$_self.cast<IntegerAttr>().getType().isInteger(32)">, |
| CPred<"$_self.cast<IntegerAttr>().getType().isInteger(64)"> |
| ]> |
| ]> |
| ``` |
| |
| (Note that the above is just to show with a familiar example how you can use |
| `CPred` and predicate combiners to write complicated predicates. For integer |
| attributes specifically, [`OpBase.td`][OpBase] already defines `I32Attr` and |
| `I64Attr`. So you can actually reuse them to write it as `Or<[I32Attr.predicate, |
| I64Attr.predicate]>`.) |
| |
| TODO: Build up a library of reusable primitive constraints |
| |
| If the predicate is very complex to write with `CPred` together with predicate |
| combiners, you can also write it as a normal C++ function and use the `CPred` |
| as a way to "invoke" the function. For example, to verify an attribute `attr` |
| has some property, you can write a C++ function like |
| |
| ```cpp |
| bool HasSomeProperty(Attribute attr) { ... } |
| ``` |
| |
| and then define the op as: |
| |
| ```tablegen |
| def HasSomeProperty : AttrConstraint<CPred<"HasSomeProperty($_self)">, |
| "has some property">; |
| |
| def MyOp : Op<...> { |
| let arguments = (ins |
| ... |
| HasSomeProperty:$attr |
| ); |
| } |
| ``` |
| |
| As to whether we should define the predicate using a single `CPred` wrapping |
| the whole expression, multiple `CPred`s with predicate combiners, or a single |
| `CPred` "invoking" a function, there are no clear-cut criteria. Defining using |
| `CPred` and predicate combiners is preferable since it exposes more information |
| (instead hiding all the logic behind a C++ function) into the op definition spec |
| so that it can potentially drive more auto-generation cases. But it will |
| require a nice library of common predicates as the building blocks to avoid the |
| duplication, which is being worked on right now. |
| |
| ## Attribute Definition |
| |
| An attribute is a compile-time known constant of an operation. |
| |
| ODS provides attribute wrappers over C++ attribute classes. There are a few |
| common C++ [attribute classes][AttrClasses] defined in MLIR's core IR library |
| and one is free to define dialect-specific attribute classes. ODS allows one |
| to use these attributes in TableGen to define operations, potentially with |
| more fine-grained constraints. For example, `StrAttr` directly maps to |
| `StringAttr`; `F32Attr`/`F64Attr` requires the `FloatAttr` to additionally |
| be of a certain bitwidth. |
| |
| ODS attributes are defined as having a storage type (corresponding to a backing |
| `mlir::Attribute` that _stores_ the attribute), a return type (corresponding to |
| the C++ _return_ type of the generated of the helper getters) as well as method |
| to convert between the internal storage and the helper method. |
| |
| ### Attribute decorators |
| |
| There are a few important attribute adapters/decorators/modifers that can be |
| applied to ODS attributes to specify common additional properties like |
| optionality, default values, etc.: |
| |
| * `DefaultValuedAttr`: specifies the |
| [default value](#attributes-with-default-values) for an attribute. |
| * `OptionalAttr`: specifies an attribute as [optional](#optional-attributes). |
| * `Confined`: adapts an attribute with |
| [further constraints](#confining-attributes). |
| |
| ### Enum attributes |
| |
| Some attributes can only take values from a predefined enum, e.g., the |
| comparison kind of a comparison op. To define such attributes, ODS provides |
| several mechanisms: `StrEnumAttr`, `IntEnumAttr`, and `BitEnumAttr`. |
| |
| * `StrEnumAttr`: each enum case is a string, the attribute is stored as a |
| [`StringAttr`][StringAttr] in the op. |
| * `IntEnumAttr`: each enum case is an integer, the attribute is stored as a |
| [`IntegerAttr`][IntegerAttr] in the op. |
| * `BitEnumAttr`: each enum case is a bit, the attribute is stored as a |
| [`IntegerAttr`][IntegerAttr] in the op. |
| |
| All these `*EnumAttr` attributes require fully specifying all of the allowed |
| cases via their corresponding `*EnumAttrCase`. With this, ODS is able to |
| generate additional verification to only accept allowed cases. To facilitate the |
| interaction between `*EnumAttr`s and their C++ consumers, the |
| [`EnumsGen`][EnumsGen] TableGen backend can generate a few common utilities: a |
| C++ enum class, `llvm::DenseMapInfo` for the enum class, conversion functions |
| from/to strings. This is controlled via the `-gen-enum-decls` and |
| `-gen-enum-defs` command-line options of `mlir-tblgen`. |
| |
| For example, given the following `EnumAttr`: |
| |
| ```tablegen |
| def Case15: I32EnumAttrCase<"Case15", 15>; |
| def Case20: I32EnumAttrCase<"Case20", 20>; |
| |
| def MyIntEnum: I32EnumAttr<"MyIntEnum", "An example int enum", |
| [Case15, Case20]> { |
| let cppNamespace = "Outer::Inner"; |
| let stringToSymbolFnName = "ConvertToEnum"; |
| let symbolToStringFnName = "ConvertToString"; |
| } |
| ``` |
| |
| The following will be generated via `mlir-tblgen -gen-enum-decls`: |
| |
| ```c++ |
| namespace Outer { |
| namespace Inner { |
| // An example int enum |
| enum class MyIntEnum : uint32_t { |
| Case15 = 15, |
| Case20 = 20, |
| }; |
| |
| llvm::Optional<MyIntEnum> symbolizeMyIntEnum(uint32_t); |
| llvm::StringRef ConvertToString(MyIntEnum); |
| llvm::Optional<MyIntEnum> ConvertToEnum(llvm::StringRef); |
| inline constexpr unsigned getMaxEnumValForMyIntEnum() { |
| return 20; |
| } |
| |
| } // namespace Inner |
| } // namespace Outer |
| |
| namespace llvm { |
| template<> struct DenseMapInfo<Outer::Inner::MyIntEnum> { |
| using StorageInfo = llvm::DenseMapInfo<uint32_t>; |
| |
| static inline Outer::Inner::MyIntEnum getEmptyKey() { |
| return static_cast<Outer::Inner::MyIntEnum>(StorageInfo::getEmptyKey()); |
| } |
| |
| static inline Outer::Inner::MyIntEnum getTombstoneKey() { |
| return static_cast<Outer::Inner::MyIntEnum>(StorageInfo::getTombstoneKey()); |
| } |
| |
| static unsigned getHashValue(const Outer::Inner::MyIntEnum &val) { |
| return StorageInfo::getHashValue(static_cast<uint32_t>(val)); |
| } |
| |
| static bool isEqual(const Outer::Inner::MyIntEnum &lhs, const Outer::Inner::MyIntEnum &rhs) { |
| return lhs == rhs; |
| } |
| }; |
| } |
| ``` |
| |
| The following will be generated via `mlir-tblgen -gen-enum-defs`: |
| |
| ```c++ |
| namespace Outer { |
| namespace Inner { |
| llvm::StringRef ConvertToString(MyIntEnum val) { |
| switch (val) { |
| case MyIntEnum::Case15: return "Case15"; |
| case MyIntEnum::Case20: return "Case20"; |
| } |
| return ""; |
| } |
| |
| llvm::Optional<MyIntEnum> ConvertToEnum(llvm::StringRef str) { |
| return llvm::StringSwitch<llvm::Optional<MyIntEnum>>(str) |
| .Case("Case15", MyIntEnum::Case15) |
| .Case("Case20", MyIntEnum::Case20) |
| .Default(llvm::None); |
| } |
| llvm::Optional<MyIntEnum> symbolizeMyIntEnum(uint32_t value) { |
| switch (value) { |
| case 15: return MyIntEnum::Case15; |
| case 20: return MyIntEnum::Case20; |
| default: return llvm::None; |
| } |
| } |
| |
| } // namespace Inner |
| } // namespace Outer |
| ``` |
| |
| Similarly for the following `BitEnumAttr` definition: |
| |
| ```tablegen |
| def None: BitEnumAttrCase<"None", 0x0000>; |
| def Bit1: BitEnumAttrCase<"Bit1", 0x0001>; |
| def Bit2: BitEnumAttrCase<"Bit2", 0x0002>; |
| def Bit3: BitEnumAttrCase<"Bit3", 0x0004>; |
| |
| def MyBitEnum: BitEnumAttr<"MyBitEnum", "An example bit enum", |
| [None, Bit1, Bit2, Bit3]>; |
| ``` |
| |
| We can have: |
| |
| ```c++ |
| // An example bit enum |
| enum class MyBitEnum : uint32_t { |
| None = 0, |
| Bit1 = 1, |
| Bit2 = 2, |
| Bit3 = 4, |
| }; |
| |
| llvm::Optional<MyBitEnum> symbolizeMyBitEnum(uint32_t); |
| std::string stringifyMyBitEnum(MyBitEnum); |
| llvm::Optional<MyBitEnum> symbolizeMyBitEnum(llvm::StringRef); |
| inline MyBitEnum operator|(MyBitEnum lhs, MyBitEnum rhs) { |
| return static_cast<MyBitEnum>(static_cast<uint32_t>(lhs) | static_cast<uint32_t>(rhs)); |
| } |
| inline MyBitEnum operator&(MyBitEnum lhs, MyBitEnum rhs) { |
| return static_cast<MyBitEnum>(static_cast<uint32_t>(lhs) & static_cast<uint32_t>(rhs)); |
| } |
| inline bool bitEnumContains(MyBitEnum bits, MyBitEnum bit) { |
| return (static_cast<uint32_t>(bits) & static_cast<uint32_t>(bit)) != 0; |
| } |
| |
| namespace llvm { |
| template<> struct DenseMapInfo<::MyBitEnum> { |
| using StorageInfo = llvm::DenseMapInfo<uint32_t>; |
| |
| static inline ::MyBitEnum getEmptyKey() { |
| return static_cast<::MyBitEnum>(StorageInfo::getEmptyKey()); |
| } |
| |
| static inline ::MyBitEnum getTombstoneKey() { |
| return static_cast<::MyBitEnum>(StorageInfo::getTombstoneKey()); |
| } |
| |
| static unsigned getHashValue(const ::MyBitEnum &val) { |
| return StorageInfo::getHashValue(static_cast<uint32_t>(val)); |
| } |
| |
| static bool isEqual(const ::MyBitEnum &lhs, const ::MyBitEnum &rhs) { |
| return lhs == rhs; |
| } |
| }; |
| ``` |
| |
| ```c++ |
| std::string stringifyMyBitEnum(MyBitEnum symbol) { |
| auto val = static_cast<uint32_t>(symbol); |
| // Special case for all bits unset. |
| if (val == 0) return "None"; |
| |
| llvm::SmallVector<llvm::StringRef, 2> strs; |
| if (1u & val) { strs.push_back("Bit1"); val &= ~1u; } |
| if (2u & val) { strs.push_back("Bit2"); val &= ~2u; } |
| if (4u & val) { strs.push_back("Bit3"); val &= ~4u; } |
| |
| if (val) return ""; |
| return llvm::join(strs, "|"); |
| } |
| |
| llvm::Optional<MyBitEnum> symbolizeMyBitEnum(llvm::StringRef str) { |
| // Special case for all bits unset. |
| if (str == "None") return MyBitEnum::None; |
| |
| llvm::SmallVector<llvm::StringRef, 2> symbols; |
| str.split(symbols, "|"); |
| |
| uint32_t val = 0; |
| for (auto symbol : symbols) { |
| auto bit = llvm::StringSwitch<llvm::Optional<uint32_t>>(symbol) |
| .Case("Bit1", 1) |
| .Case("Bit2", 2) |
| .Case("Bit3", 4) |
| .Default(llvm::None); |
| if (bit) { val |= *bit; } else { return llvm::None; } |
| } |
| return static_cast<MyBitEnum>(val); |
| } |
| |
| llvm::Optional<MyBitEnum> symbolizeMyBitEnum(uint32_t value) { |
| // Special case for all bits unset. |
| if (value == 0) return MyBitEnum::None; |
| |
| if (value & ~(1u | 2u | 4u)) return llvm::None; |
| return static_cast<MyBitEnum>(value); |
| } |
| ``` |
| |
| ## Debugging Tips |
| |
| ### Run `mlir-tblgen` to see the generated content |
| |
| TableGen syntax sometimes can be obscure; reading the generated content can be |
| a very helpful way to understand and debug issues. To build `mlir-tblgen`, run |
| `cmake --build . --target mlir-tblgen` in your build directory and find the |
| `mlir-tblgen` binary in the `bin/` subdirectory. All the supported generators |
| can be found via `mlir-tblgen --help`. For example, `--gen-op-decls` and |
| `--gen-op-defs` as explained in [Generated C++ code](#generated-c++-code). |
| |
| To see the generated code, invoke `mlir-tblgen` with a specific generator by |
| providing include paths via `-I`. For example, |
| |
| ```sh |
| # To see op C++ class declaration |
| mlir-tblgen --gen-op-decls -I /path/to/mlir/include /path/to/input/td/file |
| # To see op C++ class definition |
| mlir-tblgen --gen-op-defs -I /path/to/mlir/include /path/to/input/td/file |
| # To see op documentation |
| mlir-tblgen --gen-dialect-doc -I /path/to/mlir/include /path/to/input/td/file |
| |
| # To see op interface C++ class declaration |
| mlir-tblgen --gen-op-interface-decls -I /path/to/mlir/include /path/to/input/td/file |
| # To see op interface C++ class definition |
| mlir-tblgen --gen-op-interface-defs -I /path/to/mlir/include /path/to/input/td/file |
| # To see op interface documentation |
| mlir-tblgen --gen-op-interface-doc -I /path/to/mlir/include /path/to/input/td/file |
| ``` |
| |
| ## Appendix |
| |
| ### Requirements and existing mechanisms analysis |
| |
| The op description should as declarative as possible to allow a wide range of |
| tools to work with them and query methods generated from them. In particular |
| this means specifying traits, constraints and shape inference information in |
| a way that is easily analyzable (e.g., avoid opaque calls to C++ functions where |
| possible). |
| |
| We considered the approaches of several contemporary systems and focused on |
| requirements that were desirable: |
| |
| * Ops registered using a registry separate from C++ code. |
| * Unknown ops are allowed in MLIR, so ops need not be registered. The |
| ability of the compiler to optimize those ops or graphs containing those |
| ops is constrained but correct. |
| * The current proposal does not include a runtime op description, but it |
| does not preclude such description, it can be added later. |
| * The op registry is essential for generating C++ classes that make |
| manipulating ops, verifying correct construction etc. in C++ easier by |
| providing a typed representation and accessors. |
| * The op registry will be defined in |
| [TableGen](https://llvm.org/docs/TableGen/index.html) and be used to |
| generate C++ classes and utility functions |
| (builder/verifier/parser/printer). |
| * TableGen is a modelling specification language used by LLVM's backends |
| and fits in well with trait-based modelling. This is an implementation |
| decision and there are alternative ways of doing this. But the |
| specification language is good for the requirements of modelling the |
| traits (as seen from usage in LLVM processor backend modelling) and easy |
| to extend, so a practical choice. If another good option comes up, we |
| will consider it. |
| * MLIR allows both defined and undefined ops. |
| * Defined ops should have fixed semantics and could have a corresponding |
| reference implementation defined using, for example, EDSC. |
| * Dialects are under full control of the dialect owner and normally live |
| with the framework of the dialect. |
| * The op's traits (e.g., commutative) are modelled along with the op in the |
| registry. |
| * The op's operand/return type constraints are modelled along with the op in |
| the registry (see [Shape inference](ShapeInference.md) discussion below), |
| this allows (e.g.) optimized concise syntax in textual dumps. |
| * Behavior of the op is documented along with the op with a summary and a |
| description. The description is written in markdown and extracted for |
| inclusion in the generated LangRef section of the dialect. |
| * The generic assembly form of printing and parsing is available as normal, |
| but a custom parser and printer can either be specified or automatically |
| generated from an optional string representation showing the mapping of the |
| "assembly" string to operands/type. |
| * Parser-level remappings (e.g., `eq` to enum) will be supported as part |
| of the parser generation. |
| * Matching patterns are specified separately from the op description. |
| * Contrasted with LLVM there is no "base" set of ops that every backend |
| needs to be aware of. Instead there are many different dialects and the |
| transformations/legalizations between these dialects form a graph of |
| transformations. |
| * Reference implementation may be provided along with the op definition. |
| |
| * The reference implementation may be in terms of either standard ops or |
| other reference implementations. |
| |
| TODO: document expectation if the dependent op's definition changes. |
| |
| [TableGen]: https://llvm.org/docs/TableGen/index.html |
| [TableGenIntro]: https://llvm.org/docs/TableGen/LangIntro.html |
| [TableGenRef]: https://llvm.org/docs/TableGen/LangRef.html |
| [TableGenBackend]: https://llvm.org/docs/TableGen/BackEnds.html#introduction |
| [OpBase]: https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/blob/master/mlir/include/mlir/IR/OpBase.td |
| [OpDefinitionsGen]: https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/blob/master/mlir/tools/mlir-tblgen/OpDefinitionsGen.cpp |
| [EnumsGen]: https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/blob/master/mlir/tools/mlir-tblgen/EnumsGen.cpp |
| [StringAttr]: LangRef.md#string-attribute |
| [IntegerAttr]: LangRef.md#integer-attribute |
| [AttrClasses]: https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/blob/master/mlir/include/mlir/IR/Attributes.h |