This dialect provides a powerful abstraction for affine operations and analyses.
MLIR uses techniques from polyhedral compilation to make dependence analysis and loop transformations efficient and reliable. This section introduces some of the core concepts that are used throughout the document.
Dimensions and symbols are the two kinds of identifiers that can appear in the polyhedral structures, and are always of index
type. Dimensions are declared in parentheses and symbols are declared in square brackets.
Examples:
// A 2d to 3d affine mapping. // d0/d1 are dimensions, s0 is a symbol #affine_map2to3 = affine_map<(d0, d1)[s0] -> (d0, d1 + s0, d1 - s0)>
Dimensional identifiers correspond to the dimensions of the underlying structure being represented (a map, set, or more concretely a loop nest or a tensor); for example, a three-dimensional loop nest has three dimensional identifiers. Symbol identifiers represent an unknown quantity that can be treated as constant for a region of interest.
Dimensions and symbols are bound to SSA values by various operations in MLIR and use the same parenthesized vs square bracket list to distinguish the two.
Syntax:
// Uses of SSA values that are passed to dimensional identifiers. dim-use-list ::= `(` ssa-use-list? `)` // Uses of SSA values that are used to bind symbols. symbol-use-list ::= `[` ssa-use-list? `]` // Most things that bind SSA values bind dimensions and symbols. dim-and-symbol-use-list ::= dim-use-list symbol-use-list?
SSA values bound to dimensions and symbols must always have ‘index’ type.
Example:
#affine_map2to3 = affine_map<(d0, d1)[s0] -> (d0, d1 + s0, d1 - s0)> // Binds %N to the s0 symbol in affine_map2to3. %x = memref.alloc()[%N] : memref<40x50xf32, #affine_map2to3>
The affine dialect imposes certain restrictions on dimension and symbolic identifiers to enable powerful analysis and transformation. An SSA value‘s use can be bound to a symbolic identifier if that SSA value is either 1. a region argument for an op with trait AffineScope
(eg. FuncOp
), 2. a value defined at the top level of an AffineScope
op (i.e., immediately enclosed by the latter), 3. a value that dominates the AffineScope
op enclosing the value’s use, 4. the result of a constant
operation, 5. the result of an affine.apply
operation that recursively takes as arguments any valid symbolic identifiers, or 6. the result of a dim
operation on either a memref that is an argument to a AffineScope
op or a memref where the corresponding dimension is either static or a dynamic one in turn bound to a valid symbol. Note: if the use of an SSA value is not contained in any op with the AffineScope
trait, only the rules 4-6 can be applied.
Note that as a result of rule (3) above, symbol validity is sensitive to the location of the SSA use. Dimensions may be bound not only to anything that a symbol is bound to, but also to induction variables of enclosing affine.for
and affine.parallel
operations, and the result of an affine.apply
operation (which recursively may use other dimensions and symbols).
Syntax:
affine-expr ::= `(` affine-expr `)` | affine-expr `+` affine-expr | affine-expr `-` affine-expr | `-`? integer-literal `*` affine-expr | affine-expr `ceildiv` integer-literal | affine-expr `floordiv` integer-literal | affine-expr `mod` integer-literal | `-`affine-expr | bare-id | `-`? integer-literal multi-dim-affine-expr ::= `(` `)` | `(` affine-expr (`,` affine-expr)* `)`
ceildiv
is the ceiling function which maps the result of the division of its first argument by its second argument to the smallest integer greater than or equal to that result. floordiv
is a function which maps the result of the division of its first argument by its second argument to the largest integer less than or equal to that result. mod
is the modulo operation: since its second argument is always positive, its results are always positive in our usage. The integer-literal
operand for ceildiv, floordiv, and mod is always expected to be positive. bare-id
is an identifier which must have type index. The precedence of operations in an affine expression are ordered from highest to lowest in the order: (1) parenthesization, (2) negation, (3) modulo, multiplication, floordiv, and ceildiv, and (4) addition and subtraction. All of these operators associate from left to right.
A multidimensional affine expression is a comma separated list of one-dimensional affine expressions, with the entire list enclosed in parentheses.
Context: An affine function, informally, is a linear function plus a constant. More formally, a function f defined on a vector $\vec{v} \in \mathbb{Z}^n$ is a multidimensional affine function of $\vec{v}$ if $f(\vec{v})$ can be expressed in the form $M \vec{v} + \vec{c}$ where $M$ is a constant matrix from $\mathbb{Z}^{m \times n}$ and $\vec{c}$ is a constant vector from $\mathbb{Z}$. $m$ is the dimensionality of such an affine function. MLIR further extends the definition of an affine function to allow ‘floordiv’, ‘ceildiv’, and ‘mod’ with respect to positive integer constants. Such extensions to affine functions have often been referred to as quasi-affine functions by the polyhedral compiler community. MLIR uses the term ‘affine map’ to refer to these multidimensional quasi-affine functions. As examples, $(i+j+1, j)$, $(i \mod 2, j+i)$, $(j, i/4, i \mod 4)$, $(2i+1, j)$ are two-dimensional affine functions of $(i, j)$, but $(i \cdot j, i^2)$, $(i \mod j, i/j)$ are not affine functions of $(i, j)$.
Syntax:
affine-map-inline ::= dim-and-symbol-id-lists `->` multi-dim-affine-expr
The identifiers in the dimensions and symbols lists must be unique. These are the only identifiers that may appear in ‘multi-dim-affine-expr’. Affine maps with one or more symbols in its specification are known as “symbolic affine maps”, and those with no symbols as “non-symbolic affine maps”.
Context: Affine maps are mathematical functions that transform a list of dimension indices and symbols into a list of results, with affine expressions combining the indices and symbols. Affine maps distinguish between indices and symbols because indices are inputs to the affine map when the map is called (through an operation such as affine.apply), whereas symbols are bound when the map is established (e.g. when a memref is formed, establishing a memory layout map).
Affine maps are used for various core structures in MLIR. The restrictions we impose on their form allows powerful analysis and transformation, while keeping the representation closed with respect to several operations of interest.
Syntax:
affine-map-id ::= `#` suffix-id // Definitions of affine maps are at the top of the file. affine-map-def ::= affine-map-id `=` affine-map-inline module-header-def ::= affine-map-def // Uses of affine maps may use the inline form or the named form. affine-map ::= affine-map-id | affine-map-inline
Affine mappings may be defined inline at the point of use, or may be hoisted to the top of the file and given a name with an affine map definition, and used by name.
Examples:
// Affine map out-of-line definition and usage example. #affine_map42 = affine_map<(d0, d1)[s0] -> (d0, d0 + d1 + s0 floordiv 2)> // Use an affine mapping definition in an alloc operation, binding the // SSA value %N to the symbol s0. %a = memref.alloc()[%N] : memref<4x4xf32, #affine_map42> // Same thing with an inline affine mapping definition. %b = memref.alloc()[%N] : memref<4x4xf32, affine_map<(d0, d1)[s0] -> (d0, d0 + d1 + s0 floordiv 2)>>
Semi-affine maps are extensions of affine maps to allow multiplication, floordiv
, ceildiv
, and mod
with respect to symbolic identifiers. Semi-affine maps are thus a strict superset of affine maps.
Syntax of semi-affine expressions:
semi-affine-expr ::= `(` semi-affine-expr `)` | semi-affine-expr `+` semi-affine-expr | semi-affine-expr `-` semi-affine-expr | symbol-or-const `*` semi-affine-expr | semi-affine-expr `ceildiv` symbol-or-const | semi-affine-expr `floordiv` symbol-or-const | semi-affine-expr `mod` symbol-or-const | bare-id | `-`? integer-literal symbol-or-const ::= `-`? integer-literal | symbol-id multi-dim-semi-affine-expr ::= `(` semi-affine-expr (`,` semi-affine-expr)* `)`
The precedence and associativity of operations in the syntax above is the same as that for affine expressions.
Syntax of semi-affine maps:
semi-affine-map-inline ::= dim-and-symbol-id-lists `->` multi-dim-semi-affine-expr
Semi-affine maps may be defined inline at the point of use, or may be hoisted to the top of the file and given a name with a semi-affine map definition, and used by name.
semi-affine-map-id ::= `#` suffix-id // Definitions of semi-affine maps are at the top of file. semi-affine-map-def ::= semi-affine-map-id `=` semi-affine-map-inline module-header-def ::= semi-affine-map-def // Uses of semi-affine maps may use the inline form or the named form. semi-affine-map ::= semi-affine-map-id | semi-affine-map-inline
An integer set is a conjunction of affine constraints on a list of identifiers. The identifiers associated with the integer set are separated out into two classes: the set‘s dimension identifiers, and the set’s symbolic identifiers. The set is viewed as being parametric on its symbolic identifiers. In the syntax, the list of set's dimension identifiers are enclosed in parentheses while its symbols are enclosed in square brackets.
Syntax of affine constraints:
affine-constraint ::= affine-expr `>=` `0` | affine-expr `==` `0` affine-constraint-conjunction ::= affine-constraint (`,` affine-constraint)*
Integer sets may be defined inline at the point of use, or may be hoisted to the top of the file and given a name with an integer set definition, and used by name.
integer-set-id ::= `#` suffix-id integer-set-inline ::= dim-and-symbol-id-lists `:` '(' affine-constraint-conjunction? ')' // Declarations of integer sets are at the top of the file. integer-set-decl ::= integer-set-id `=` integer-set-inline // Uses of integer sets may use the inline form or the named form. integer-set ::= integer-set-id | integer-set-inline
The dimensionality of an integer set is the number of identifiers appearing in dimension list of the set. The affine-constraint non-terminals appearing in the syntax above are only allowed to contain identifiers from dims and symbols. A set with no constraints is a set that is unbounded along all of the set's dimensions.
Example:
// A example two-dimensional integer set with two symbols. #set42 = affine_set<(d0, d1)[s0, s1] : (d0 >= 0, -d0 + s0 - 1 >= 0, d1 >= 0, -d1 + s1 - 1 >= 0)> // Inside a Region affine.if #set42(%i, %j)[%M, %N] { ... }
d0
and d1
correspond to dimensional identifiers of the set, while s0
and s1
are symbol identifiers.
[include “Dialects/AffineOps.md”]
Syntax:
operation ::= ssa-id `=` `affine.load` ssa-use `[` multi-dim-affine-map-of-ssa-ids `]` `:` memref-type
The affine.load
op reads an element from a memref, where the index for each memref dimension is an affine expression of loop induction variables and symbols. The output of ‘affine.load’ is a new value with the same type as the elements of the memref. An affine expression of loop IVs and symbols must be specified for each dimension of the memref. The keyword ‘symbol’ can be used to indicate SSA identifiers which are symbolic.
Example:
Example 1: %1 = affine.load %0[%i0 + 3, %i1 + 7] : memref<100x100xf32> Example 2: Uses 'symbol' keyword for symbols '%n' and '%m'. %1 = affine.load %0[%i0 + symbol(%n), %i1 + symbol(%m)] : memref<100x100xf32>
Syntax:
operation ::= ssa-id `=` `affine.store` ssa-use, ssa-use `[` multi-dim-affine-map-of-ssa-ids `]` `:` memref-type
The affine.store
op writes an element to a memref, where the index for each memref dimension is an affine expression of loop induction variables and symbols. The ‘affine.store’ op stores a new value which is the same type as the elements of the memref. An affine expression of loop IVs and symbols must be specified for each dimension of the memref. The keyword ‘symbol’ can be used to indicate SSA identifiers which are symbolic.
Example:
Example 1: affine.store %v0, %0[%i0 + 3, %i1 + 7] : memref<100x100xf32> Example 2: Uses 'symbol' keyword for symbols '%n' and '%m'. affine.store %v0, %0[%i0 + symbol(%n), %i1 + symbol(%m)] : memref<100x100xf32>
Syntax:
operation ::= `affine.dma_Start` ssa-use `[` multi-dim-affine-map-of-ssa-ids `]`, `[` multi-dim-affine-map-of-ssa-ids `]`, `[` multi-dim-affine-map-of-ssa-ids `]`, ssa-use `:` memref-type
The affine.dma_start
op starts a non-blocking DMA operation that transfers data from a source memref to a destination memref. The source and destination memref need not be of the same dimensionality, but need to have the same elemental type. The operands include the source and destination memref's each followed by its indices, size of the data transfer in terms of the number of elements (of the elemental type of the memref), a tag memref with its indices, and optionally at the end, a stride and a number_of_elements_per_stride arguments. The tag location is used by an AffineDmaWaitOp to check for completion. The indices of the source memref, destination memref, and the tag memref have the same restrictions as any affine.load/store. In particular, index for each memref dimension must be an affine expression of loop induction variables and symbols. The optional stride arguments should be of ‘index’ type, and specify a stride for the slower memory space (memory space with a lower memory space id), transferring chunks of number_of_elements_per_stride every stride until %num_elements are transferred. Either both or no stride arguments should be specified. The value of ‘num_elements’ must be a multiple of ‘number_of_elements_per_stride’.
Example:
For example, a DmaStartOp operation that transfers 256 elements of a memref '%src' in memory space 0 at indices [%i + 3, %j] to memref '%dst' in memory space 1 at indices [%k + 7, %l], would be specified as follows: %num_elements = arith.constant 256 %idx = arith.constant 0 : index %tag = memref.alloc() : memref<1xi32, 4> affine.dma_start %src[%i + 3, %j], %dst[%k + 7, %l], %tag[%idx], %num_elements : memref<40x128xf32, 0>, memref<2x1024xf32, 1>, memref<1xi32, 2> If %stride and %num_elt_per_stride are specified, the DMA is expected to transfer %num_elt_per_stride elements every %stride elements apart from memory space 0 until %num_elements are transferred. affine.dma_start %src[%i, %j], %dst[%k, %l], %tag[%idx], %num_elements, %stride, %num_elt_per_stride : ...
Syntax:
operation ::= `affine.dma_Start` ssa-use `[` multi-dim-affine-map-of-ssa-ids `]`, `[` multi-dim-affine-map-of-ssa-ids `]`, `[` multi-dim-affine-map-of-ssa-ids `]`, ssa-use `:` memref-type
The affine.dma_start
op blocks until the completion of a DMA operation associated with the tag element ‘%tag[%index]’. %tag is a memref, and %index has to be an index with the same restrictions as any load/store index. In particular, index for each memref dimension must be an affine expression of loop induction variables and symbols. %num_elements is the number of elements associated with the DMA operation. For example:
Example:
affine.dma_start %src[%i, %j], %dst[%k, %l], %tag[%index], %num_elements : memref<2048xf32, 0>, memref<256xf32, 1>, memref<1xi32, 2> ... ... affine.dma_wait %tag[%index], %num_elements : memref<1xi32, 2>