Adds `C10_UBSAN_ENABLED` macro and use it to disable `SymIntTest::Overflows` (fails under `signed-integer-overflow` UBSAN check).
Also cleans up UBSAN guard in `jit/test_misc.cpp` to use `C10_UBSAN_ENABLED` and the existing `C10_ASAN_ENABLED` instead of locally defining `HAS_ASANUBSAN`.
> NOTE: This should fix `SymIntTest::Overflows` failing under ubsan in fbcode too...
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/pytorch/pytorch/pull/127967
Approved by: https://github.com/atalman, https://github.com/d4l3k, https://github.com/malfet
Do not run test ConstantPropagation.CustomClassesCanBePropagated on a platform where QNNPACK is not supported.
For example, this test fails on M1 Mac because QNNPACK is not supported on M1 Mac:
[----------] 1 test from ConstantPropagation
[ RUN ] ConstantPropagation.CustomClassesCanBePropagated
unknown file: Failure
as described in more details in the issue #88613.
After the PR, test passes successfully as below:
[----------] 1 test from ConstantPropagation
[ RUN ] ConstantPropagation.CustomClassesCanBePropagated
[ OK ] ConstantPropagation.CustomClassesCanBePropagated (0 ms)
[----------] 1 test from ConstantPropagation (0 ms total)
Fixes#88613
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/pytorch/pytorch/pull/119139
Approved by: https://github.com/jcaip
This PR enables `-Winconsistent-missing-destructor-override` and `-Winconsistent-missing-override`
and fixes violations.
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### <samp>🤖 Generated by Copilot at 47e904e</samp>
This pull request updates the code of various classes and operators in the `caffe2` and `aten` subdirectories to use the `override` specifier instead of the `virtual` keyword for destructors and other virtual functions that override a base class function. This improves the code readability, quality, and consistency with C++ best practices. It also modifies the `./CMakeLists.txt` file to enable warnings for these specifiers, but disable errors.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/pytorch/pytorch/pull/104032
Approved by: https://github.com/malfet
Potential null dereference after dynamic cast was found during static analysis.
**Description:**
Dereference of `ctx` is performed in `TORCH_CHECK` on line 1176, while `ctx` pointer may equal `nullptr`.
Previous `TORCH_CHECK` on line 1175 checks the value of `ctx_ptr` pointer that may be of type that cannot be casted to `TestContext*`. In such case, `dynamic_cast` returns `nullptr` despite `ctx_ptr` is not equal to `nullptr`.
**Fix:**
- Check `ctx` instead of `ctx_ptr` for equality to zero.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/pytorch/pytorch/pull/97768
Approved by: https://github.com/kit1980
We have known for a while that we should in principle support SymBool as a separate concept from SymInt and SymFloat ( in particular, every distinct numeric type should get its own API). However, recent work with unbacked SymInts in, e.g., https://github.com/pytorch/pytorch/pull/90985 have made this a priority to implement. The essential problem is that our logic for computing the contiguity of tensors performs branches on the passed in input sizes, and this causes us to require guards when constructing tensors from unbacked SymInts. Morally, this should not be a big deal because, we only really care about the regular (non-channels-last) contiguity of the tensor, which should be guaranteed since most people aren't calling `empty_strided` on the tensor, however, because we store a bool (not a SymBool, prior to this PR it doesn't exist) on TensorImpl, we are forced to *immediately* compute these values, even if the value ends up not being used at all. In particular, even when a user allocates a contiguous tensor, we still must compute channels-last contiguity (as some contiguous tensors are also channels-last contiguous, but others are not.)
This PR implements SymBool, and makes TensorImpl use SymBool to store the contiguity information in ExtraMeta. There are a number of knock on effects, which I now discuss below.
* I introduce a new C++ type SymBool, analogous to SymInt and SymFloat. This type supports logical and, logical or and logical negation. I support the bitwise operations on this class (but not the conventional logic operators) to make it clear that logical operations on SymBool are NOT short-circuiting. I also, for now, do NOT support implicit conversion of SymBool to bool (creating a guard in this case). This does matter too much in practice, as in this PR I did not modify the equality operations (e.g., `==` on SymInt) to return SymBool, so all preexisting implicit guards did not need to be changed. I also introduced symbolic comparison functions `sym_eq`, etc. on SymInt to make it possible to create SymBool. The current implementation of comparison functions makes it unfortunately easy to accidentally introduce guards when you do not mean to (as both `s0 == s1` and `s0.sym_eq(s1)` are valid spellings of equality operation); in the short term, I intend to prevent excess guarding in this situation by unit testing; in the long term making the equality operators return SymBool is probably the correct fix.
* ~~I modify TensorImpl to store SymBool for the `is_contiguous` fields and friends on `ExtraMeta`. In practice, this essentially meant reverting most of the changes from https://github.com/pytorch/pytorch/pull/85936 . In particular, the fields on ExtraMeta are no longer strongly typed; at the time I was particularly concerned about the giant lambda I was using as the setter getting a desynchronized argument order, but now that I have individual setters for each field the only "big list" of boolean arguments is in the constructor of ExtraMeta, which seems like an acceptable risk. The semantics of TensorImpl are now that we guard only when you actually attempt to access the contiguity of the tensor via, e.g., `is_contiguous`. By in large, the contiguity calculation in the implementations now needs to be duplicated (as the boolean version can short circuit, but the SymBool version cannot); you should carefully review the duplicate new implementations. I typically use the `identity` template to disambiguate which version of the function I need, and rely on overloading to allow for implementation sharing. The changes to the `compute_` functions are particularly interesting; for most of the functions, I preserved their original non-symbolic implementation, and then introduce a new symbolic implementation that is branch-less (making use of our new SymBool operations). However, `compute_non_overlapping_and_dense` is special, see next bullet.~~ This appears to cause performance problems, so I am leaving this to an update PR.
* (Update: the Python side pieces for this are still in this PR, but they are not wired up until later PRs.) While the contiguity calculations are relatively easy to write in a branch-free way, `compute_non_overlapping_and_dense` is not: it involves a sort on the strides. While in principle we can still make it go through by using a data oblivious sorting network, this seems like too much complication for a field that is likely never used (because typically, it will be obvious that a tensor is non overlapping and dense, because the tensor is contiguous.) So we take a different approach: instead of trying to trace through the logic computation of non-overlapping and dense, we instead introduce a new opaque operator IsNonOverlappingAndDenseIndicator which represents all of the compute that would have been done here. This function returns an integer 0 if `is_non_overlapping_and_dense` would have returned `False`, and an integer 1 otherwise, for technical reasons (Sympy does not easily allow defining custom functions that return booleans). The function itself only knows how to evaluate itself if all of its arguments are integers; otherwise it is left unevaluated. This means we can always guard on it (as `size_hint` will always be able to evaluate through it), but otherwise its insides are left a black box. We typically do NOT expect this custom function to show up in actual boolean expressions, because we will typically shortcut it due to the tensor being contiguous. It's possible we should apply this treatment to all of the other `compute_` operations, more investigation necessary. As a technical note, because this operator takes a pair of a list of SymInts, we need to support converting `ArrayRef<SymNode>` to Python, and I also unpack the pair of lists into a single list because I don't know if Sympy operations can actually validly take lists of Sympy expressions as inputs. See for example `_make_node_sizes_strides`
* On the Python side, we also introduce a SymBool class, and update SymNode to track bool as a valid pytype. There is some subtlety here: bool is a subclass of int, so one has to be careful about `isinstance` checks (in fact, in most cases I replaced `isinstance(x, int)` with `type(x) is int` for expressly this reason.) Additionally, unlike, C++, I do NOT define bitwise inverse on SymBool, because it does not do the correct thing when run on booleans, e.g., `~True` is `-2`. (For that matter, they don't do the right thing in C++ either, but at least in principle the compiler can warn you about it with `-Wbool-operation`, and so the rule is simple in C++; only use logical operations if the types are statically known to be SymBool). Alas, logical negation is not overrideable, so we have to introduce `sym_not` which must be used in place of `not` whenever a SymBool can turn up. To avoid confusion with `__not__` which may imply that `operators.__not__` might be acceptable to use (it isn't), our magic method is called `__sym_not__`. The other bitwise operators `&` and `|` do the right thing with booleans and are acceptable to use.
* There is some annoyance working with booleans in Sympy. Unlike int and float, booleans live in their own algebra and they support less operations than regular numbers. In particular, `sympy.expand` does not work on them. To get around this, I introduce `safe_expand` which only calls expand on operations which are known to be expandable.
TODO: this PR appears to greatly regress performance of symbolic reasoning. In particular, `python test/functorch/test_aotdispatch.py -k max_pool2d` performs really poorly with these changes. Need to investigate.
Signed-off-by: Edward Z. Yang <ezyang@meta.com>
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/pytorch/pytorch/pull/92149
Approved by: https://github.com/albanD, https://github.com/Skylion007
This refactor was prompted by challenges handling mixed int/float
operations in C++. A previous version of this patch
added overloads for each permutation of int/float and was unwieldy
https://github.com/pytorch/pytorch/pull/87722/ This PR takes a different
approach.
The general outline of the patch is to combine the C++ types SymIntNode
and SymFloatNode into a single type, SymNode. This is type erased; we
no longer know statically at C++ if we have an int/float and have to test
it with the is_int()/is_float() virtual methods. This has a number of
knock on effects.
- We no longer have C++ classes to bind to Python. Instead, we take an
entirely new approach to our Python API, where we have a SymInt/SymFloat
class defined entirely in Python, which hold a SymNode (which corresponds
to the C++ SymNode). However, SymNode is not pybind11-bound; instead,
it lives as-is in Python, and is wrapped into C++ SymNode using PythonSymNode
when it goes into C++. This implies a userland rename.
In principle, it is also possible for the canonical implementation of SymNode
to be written in C++, and then bound to Python with pybind11 (we have
this code, although it is commented out.) However, I did not implement
this as we currently have no C++ implementations of SymNode.
Because we do return SymInt/SymFloat from C++ bindings, the C++ binding
code needs to know how to find these classes. Currently, this is done
just by manually importing torch and getting the attributes.
- Because SymInt/SymFloat are easy Python wrappers, __sym_dispatch__ now
takes SymInt/SymFloat, rather than SymNode, bringing it in line with how
__torch_dispatch__ works.
Some miscellaneous improvements:
- SymInt now has a constructor that takes SymNode. Note that this
constructor is ambiguous if you pass in a subclass of SymNode,
so an explicit downcast is necessary. This means toSymFloat/toSymInt
are no more. This is a mild optimization as it means rvalue reference
works automatically.
- We uniformly use the caster for c10::SymInt/SymFloat, rather than
going the long way via the SymIntNode/SymFloatNode.
- Removed some unnecessary toSymInt/toSymFloat calls in normalize_*
functions, pretty sure this doesn't do anything.
- guard_int is now a free function, since to guard on an int you cannot
assume the method exists. A function can handle both int and SymInt
inputs.
- We clean up the magic method definition code for SymInt/SymFloat/SymNode.
ONLY the user classes (SymInt/SymFloat) get magic methods; SymNode gets
plain methods; this is to help avoid confusion between the two types.
Signed-off-by: Edward Z. Yang <ezyang@fb.com>
cc @jansel @mlazos @soumith @voznesenskym @yanboliang @penguinwu @anijain2305
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/pytorch/pytorch/pull/87817
Approved by: https://github.com/albanD, https://github.com/anjali411
Summary: Split `quantized_linear_unpacked_weight_v2` into `linear_prepack` and `quantized_linear` so that the prepacking operation may be eliminated by constant folding.
Test Plan:
Fixes a huge regression in an internal model:
```
Before
89.6141 ms. 99.0923%. fb::quantized_linear_unpacked_weight_v2 (12 nodes)
After
0.806852 ms. 53.5365%. quantized::linear (12 nodes, out variant)
(prepacking eliminated)
```
Differential Revision: D39622530
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/pytorch/pytorch/pull/85289
Approved by: https://github.com/davidberard98
Due to implicit conversion shenanigans, having both IntArrayRef
and SymIntArrayRef overloads makes {} ambiguous. While we could
fix this by making a single unified type that accepts all the overloads
we want, an easier fix was to just push the SymIntArrayRef overload
to its own name.
Signed-off-by: Edward Z. Yang <ezyangfb.com>
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/pytorch/pytorch/pull/79281
Approved by: https://github.com/suo
Since we plan to have a bunch of code that is sensitive to whether or
not a SymInt contains a symbolic shape or not, it seems like a bad idea
to have an implicit constructor.
For example, code like:
```
sizes_and_strides_.stride_at_unchecked(dim) = 0;
```
would sail through, and the `0` would get implicitly promoted to a
SymInt.
This is a tradeoff though: it makes code that handles `SymInt`s more
clunky as `int64_t`s and integer literals need to be explicitly wrapped
in `SymInt` before being used.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/pytorch/pytorch/pull/77666
Approved by: https://github.com/ezyang
- Allow registering custom decompositions
- Add easier API for invoking decompositions
- Shorten API names (no users yet)
I am doing these as one pr because they are fairly short/simple and because github first does not support ghstack yet.
cc @Chillee @zou3519
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/pytorch/pytorch/pull/76252
Approved by: https://github.com/davidberard98
Moves jit shape function registration to python. Like jit decompositions, a script must be run after adding new definitions which serializes them in a c++ file.
This was a request so that torch-mlir could define functions in python and upstream their shape functions. cc @silvasean @makslevental
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/pytorch/pytorch/pull/75546
Approved by: https://github.com/davidberard98
Summary:
This PR introduces `SymInt` type to Pytorch which will be used by LTC and AOTAutograd for tracing size arithmetic and tests.
`SymInt` is a C++ union structure [int64_t, SymbolicIntNode*] that wraps around an int64_t field where the value of the field could be an index into a list of `shared_ptr<SymbolicIntNode>` or a real int.
This PR doesn't add any support for actually tracing symbolic ints. i.e. data_ for now can only contain real ints.
```
Goal 1: just to show we can add a type to PyTorch core. (wraps int) LANDEABLE
Finalize the naming - symint
Want the name to be short
Does invoke “size” - NO
SInt/SymInt/SymbolicInt
SInt could mean signed int
sym_int or symint or SymInt (originally it was “int”; capitalized implies object semantics, whereas lowercase implies value semantics)
JIT schema - symint
C++ - symint
```
See more details here: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1iiLNwR5ohAsw_ymfnOpDsyF6L9RTUaHMpD8 (d843f63f2a)YLw-jxEw
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/pytorch/pytorch/pull/74861
Reviewed By: qihqi, ngimel
Differential Revision: D35226230
Pulled By: Krovatkin
fbshipit-source-id: 34acf342bd50fcaa4d8d5dd49c2fd6a98823a5b3
(cherry picked from commit 218643f63ef181cabb92d13a6e837eb64f2dda3c)
This is a technical revert of 6d36bbde7e to reconcile it with e50478c02592597f12b8490ec5496f76c7d8b8cc (which is the same + lint changes applied)
Should be skipped during import
Summary:
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/pytorch/pytorch/pull/74186
Make the execution settings mutable on function_impl so that we can set it for running op decompositions. Add mapping to function objects and show example in test of executing op decompositions.
Test Plan: Imported from OSS
Reviewed By: gchanan
Differential Revision: D34938125
Pulled By: eellison
fbshipit-source-id: adf108b2f6c1bd166910c6d7b94245661d67ce0d
(cherry picked from commit 9957e33803002d9e71abe4ff802769270b6960d3)
Summary:
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/pytorch/pytorch/pull/74012
This allows setting an executor on a function. The first use case is use to decompositions in C++ without additional fusion passes etc which might not work with custom tensors like batched tensors/vmap. A subsequent use case might be taking advantage of invokees of JIT execution which guard on certain properties before invocation (such as complete shapes in AOT autograd, rank in lazy tensor).
Test Plan: Imported from OSS
Reviewed By: gchanan
Differential Revision: D34938124
Pulled By: eellison
fbshipit-source-id: cf7a45416457942b872322cab47d871a8336bdb5
(cherry picked from commit 9c600eb9ad0f2173f003e511268e97584edae36d)
Summary:
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/pytorch/pytorch/pull/73270
Together with open registration of NNC lowerings this should make possible to add support for custom operators, including internal fb-ops
Test Plan: Imported from OSS
Reviewed By: mrshenli
Differential Revision: D34451275
Pulled By: eellison
fbshipit-source-id: ae8ae2deb93caa6770e738217461e65853897b55
(cherry picked from commit ea6b7e8a6d8f970a20e68d02eefc5c951e32aa07)
Summary:
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/pytorch/pytorch/pull/70532
This adds profiling to Optional[Tensor] types
First, in profiling_record.cpp, profiling nodes are added to Optional[Tensor] inputs. The nodes record
(a) whether or not any `None` types are encountered, and
(b) of the Tensor types, what's the most specific type matching all of non-null tensors that were encoutered (shape, dtype, etc.)
In tensorexpr_fuser, when specializing types based on the profiled information, an Optional[Tensor] type will always be Optional[], but the Tensor type contained in the optional type can be specialized (e.g. `Optional[Float(2x2x2, cpu, etc)]`)
Test Plan: Imported from OSS
Reviewed By: albanD
Differential Revision: D33714748
Pulled By: davidberard98
fbshipit-source-id: 93c819054450de7ac84b112de1012c0c12e34120
(cherry picked from commit 21cfd80123)