Summary: Capture the timing for the remote fx graph cache get and put operations and add them to the logger logging.
Test Plan:
1) Landed D64483593 and waited for logger actualization.
2) Ran test script on devserver: `buck2 run mode/opt scripts/slarsen/torch_compile_model:run`
3) Queried dynamo_compile/sandbox:
```
(pytorch-3.10_4) devvm2296:~/local/pytorch-3.10_4 $ scuba -e="select time,co_filename,remote_fx_graph_cache_get_time_s,remote_fx_graph_cache_put_time_s from \`dynamo_compile/sandbox\` where remote_fx_graph_cache_put_time_s is not null"
+------------+-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+----------------------------------+----------------------------------+
| time | co_filename | remote_fx_graph_cache_get_time_s | remote_fx_graph_cache_put_time_s |
+------------+-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+----------------------------------+----------------------------------+
| 1729136266 | null | 0.05652284622192383 | 0.9691152572631836 |
| 1729136263 | /data/users/slarsen/fbsource/buck-out/v2/gen/fbcode/289bb46b326874c6/scripts/slarsen/torch_compile_model/__run__/run-inplace#link-tree/scripts/slarsen/torch_compile_model/run.py | 0.8298435211181641 | 0.18642282485961914 |
+------------+-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+----------------------------------+----------------------------------+
```
Reviewed By: oulgen
Differential Revision: D64484025
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/pytorch/pytorch/pull/138164
Approved by: https://github.com/jamesjwu, https://github.com/ezyang
This diff does a few things:
## Add metadata to events in progress
Adds the ability to add extra metadata to Chromium Events via `add_event_data`.
Metadata can only be added to chromium events that have started, but not ended (so, in progress events)
- When you add the data, the metadata is appended to the metadata when you call log_event_end().
- The metadata appears in chromium events in tlparse. It also gets logged to scuba.
## New `dynamo` chromium event
We add a new `dynamo` chromium event to the top of the stack, where we collect various metadata found in dynamo_compile. So the new order of events goes:
```
__start__
-> dynamo (dynamo compile metrics)
-> entire_frame_compile (compile.inner)
-> backend_compile (i.e. aotdispatch)
-> create_aot_dispatch_function
-> inductor_compile
-> ...
```
BackwardCompilationMetrics doesn't have any dynamo specific information (as it's mostly inductor timings). So we don't include that here.
*FAQ: Why can't we use `entire_frame_compile` as the event?*
This is mostly due to backward compatibility with `dynamo_compile`. `dynamo_compile` collects CompilationMetrics outside of `compile.compile_inner`, and uses `dynamo_timed` to grab timings from phases of the compiler, including `entire_frame_compile`. So we don't have a CompilationMetric object until after an `entire_frame_compile` event ends! Separately, `dynamo` as a name for all of dynamo compile is more descriptive than `entire_frame_compile`, imo.
## Log metadata as separate columns
(Meta only): Separately, this also changes the `metadata` column in PT2 Compile Events. Instead of logging a single metadata column in JSON, it separates the JSON into separate columns. This is much better for data analysis. Now that this table is more mature, I think logging keys to separate columns is a better system.Differential Revision: [D64696287](https://our.internmc.facebook.com/intern/diff/D64696287/)
**NOTE FOR REVIEWERS**: This PR has internal Meta-specific changes or comments, please review them on [Phabricator](https://our.internmc.facebook.com/intern/diff/D64696287/)!
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/pytorch/pytorch/pull/138477
Approved by: https://github.com/aorenste
## The problem
In a typical debugger, `repr()` is used to display variables and not `str()`.
Several classes in Dynamo have a `__str__()` method that returns useful information and a `__repr__()` that does not. Having to call `str(x)` or `[str(i) for i in x]` in the debugger all the time is a chore.
`str()` should be ["informal, nicely printable"](https://docs.python.org/3/library/stdtypes.html#str) and `repr()` should ["attempt to return a string that would yield an object with the same value when passed to eval()](https://docs.python.org/3/library/functions.html#repr)".
## The solution
In the Python object model, if there is no `__str__` method, `__repr__` is used instead (but not the other way around).
So renaming `__str__` to `__repr__` in a few cases where no `__repr__` method exists now should not change observable behavior, and should make debugging easier.
The specific classes changed were all in `torch._dynamo.variables`:
* `builtin.BuiltinVariable`
* `constant.ConstantVariable`
* `constant.EnumVariable`
* `functions.UserMethodVariable`
* `lazy.LazyVariableTracker`
* `lazy.LazySymNodeFormatString`
* `misc.GetAttrVariable`
* `misc.NullVariable`
* `user_defined.UserDefinedObjectVariable`
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/pytorch/pytorch/pull/136316
Approved by: https://github.com/XuehaiPan, https://github.com/jansel
Type annotations for compile_fx.
- Some of the stuff here is pretty complicated (functions which return functions that take functions) so I bailed on those and used `Any` just to get the rest landed.
- There are also changes to type signatures in other files which I did just to let mypy know more about the types in compile_fx.py.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/pytorch/pytorch/pull/138033
Approved by: https://github.com/Skylion007
This diff is the starting steps of https://docs.google.com/document/u/2/d/1kAEBt4AyW7HTAhXHbjoz8FBFHNyyEA2Qo2mPn7v3WUQ/edit?usp=drive_web&ouid=113555078003219714709
It implements the following changes:
- Only log spans to scuba, so no start events are ever logged
- Log events as the full event name, without "START" or "END"
- Only log to scuba major phases from chromium events. These are:
- entire_frame_compile (dynamo)
- backend_compile (aotdispatch)
- inductor_compile (inductor)
- codegen (inductor codegen)
Tlparse chromium events stay basically the same. But I implemented a few changes to clean that up as well:
- When there's a phase name available, log the phase name instead of the function name as the event name. This simplifies the trace to not have two identical rows. The fn_name is avaliable as metadata on the chromium event, if interested
- Log new events for pre and post grad passes. These do *not* log to scuba.
By making the phases much simpler in Scuba, with only categories for major phases of PT2 Compilation, we pave the way to add **much** more metadata and information to each individual event type. Diffs for that will come later.
**IMPLEMENTATION NOTES:**
- The logic for `log_chromium_event_internal` (which is the function that logs to Scuba) lives in chromium_events for now, but in the future as we add more metadata, it may belong independently in dynamo_timed or even outside of dynamo_timed. I haven't explored in detail what the refactor will look like. Once we start logging metadata for dynamo, aotdispatch, inductor, I suspect we will call log_pt2_compile_event directly, instead of making chromium event logger handle the pt2_compile_event logic. But that refactor is left for another PR on top of this one.
- There's an interesting space after pre grad passes within AOT autograd logic, that's between create_aot_dispatcher_function and pre grad passes. I'm not sure what we're spending time doing in that time, but I'll find out with a profile later.
Differential Revision: [D64479033](https://our.internmc.facebook.com/intern/diff/D64479033/)
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/pytorch/pytorch/pull/138093
Approved by: https://github.com/ezyang
This reverts commit 7743149b2b.
Reverts
* https://github.com/pytorch/pytorch/pull/135503
* https://github.com/pytorch/pytorch/pull/135502
* https://github.com/pytorch/pytorch/pull/135422
This passes this test. Earlier, the getitem would stay like a getitem in the Fx graph. But now the fake tensor propagations fails saying that .item is called. It seems that torch function is not getting triggered while fake tensor propagation.
```
import torch
from torch.nn.attention.flex_attention import BlockMask, _mask_mod_signature, _score_mod_signature, flex_attention
from torch._inductor.lowering import make_pointwise, register_lowering
from torch._inductor.virtualized import ops
from torch.nn.attention.flex_attention import create_block_mask
torch.set_default_device('cuda')
flex_attention = torch.compile(flex_attention, dynamic=False)
prefix_lengths = torch.arange(8)
def prefix_lm(b, h, q, kv):
return prefix_lengths[b] >= kv
mask = create_block_mask(prefix_lm, 8, None, 512, 512, _compile=True)
```
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/pytorch/pytorch/pull/136590
Approved by: https://github.com/Chillee
Summary:
X-link: https://github.com/pytorch/benchmark/pull/2454
This adds structured logging overhead at a per compile basis to compilation metrics.
To do so, we track the frame_id_frame_compile_id that trace_structured uses to categorize compiles, and use that as the key in our timing table.
Implementation notes:
- If there's times we call trace_structured without a compile id, the time won't be measured. Not really a good way around that today given the compile id framework of compilation metrics. Strobelight is still the best way to measure on a per job basis.
- We don't actually measure the time it takes to log the compilation metrics itself. Fundamentally, it's not possible to log this properly if we're storing the logging number *in* compilation metrics, since there's no way to measure it before we do it(unless we want discrepancies between dynamo_compile and tlparse, which seems suboptimal). Hopefully for a large job, the cost of structured_logging compilation metrics itself is small.
- I wanted to use frame_phase_timing here, but there's a bunch of ids to iron out, and I don't really want to deal with that headache. compilation_time_metrics is sort of what I want, but that isn't by frame/compile id, so it's also a bit off. Putting it into torch.logging as a separate thing so logging tracks its own overhead seems fine, though.
Test Plan:
Run benchmarks/nanogpt and staging logger. See that the new compilation metric is logged to the staged dynamo_compile table:
https://fburl.com/scuba/logger_staging_jjwu_30582a48f1ff9cf5f4ac50a4c40af/xazjg5xq
Note that the sum(structured_logging_overhead_s) / sum(entire_frame_compile_time) = 8.387 / 124.278 = 6%, which seems reasonable as the overhead for a small compilation like this.
You can also look at samples for a more detailed log of this.
Reviewed By: oulgen
Differential Revision: D62643611
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/pytorch/pytorch/pull/136142
Approved by: https://github.com/bobrenjc93
Summary:
Record remote cache time saved via frame_phase_timing
We add to the "phase" when remote cache hits and saves us time, so that we have a 1:1 correspondence between a frame and time saved.
Test Plan:
Internally run benchmark, see that it's populated in sandbox table after previous diff lands and logger config is actualized.
Show that column exists in table:
https://fburl.com/scuba/logger_staging_jjwu_30582a48f1ff9cf5f4ac50a4c40af/fp2te0ff
Note that an earlier version of D62105258 had the column as a string so the staging table is a bit messed up. But you can see the most recent samples have the column populates as a float.
Reviewed By: aorenste
Differential Revision: D62106921
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/pytorch/pytorch/pull/135490
Approved by: https://github.com/aorenste