mlir.dialects._tensor_ops_gen

Attributes

Classes

_Dialect

BitcastOp

Bitcast a tensor from one type to another type of equivalent element width.

CastOp

Convert a tensor from one type to an equivalent type without changing any

CollapseShapeOp

The tensor.collapse_shape op produces a new tensor of lower (or equal)

ConcatOp

The "concat" operation constructs a tensor out of a variadic list of input

DimOp

The tensor.dim operation takes a tensor and a dimension operand of type

EmptyOp

tensor.empty is an operation that defines a tensor of a particular shape.

ExpandShapeOp

The tensor.expand_shape op produces a tensor of higher (or equal)

ExtractOp

The tensor.extract op reads a ranked tensor and returns one element as

ExtractSliceOp

The "extract_slice" operation extract a tensor from another tensor as

FromElementsOp

Create a N-D tensor from a range of same-type arguments. The number of

GatherOp

The gather operation extracts a subset of the elements from a source

GenerateOp

This operation creates a dynamically sized tensor with elements of any type.

InsertOp

The tensor.insert op inserts a scalar into a ranked tensor dest as

InsertSliceOp

The "insert_slice" operation insert a tensor source into another

PadOp

tensor.pad is an operation that pads the source tensor

ParallelInsertSliceOp

The parallel_insert_slice yields a subset tensor value to its parent

RankOp

The tensor.rank operation takes a tensor operand and returns its rank.

ReshapeOp

The reshape operation converts a tensor from one type to an equivalent

ScatterOp

The scatter operation inserts a source tensor into a dest tensor at

SplatOp

Broadcast the operand to all elements of the result tensor.

YieldOp

This operation is used to yield a single value from a within a region. It

Functions

bitcast(→ _ods_ir)

cast(→ _ods_ir)

collapse_shape(→ _ods_ir)

concat(→ _ods_ir)

dim(→ _ods_ir)

empty(→ _ods_ir)

expand_shape(→ _ods_ir)

extract(→ _ods_ir)

extract_slice(→ _ods_ir)

from_elements(→ _ods_ir)

gather(→ _ods_ir)

generate(→ _ods_ir)

insert(→ _ods_ir)

insert_slice(→ _ods_ir)

pad(→ _ods_ir)

parallel_insert_slice(→ ParallelInsertSliceOp)

rank(→ _ods_ir)

reshape(→ _ods_ir)

scatter(→ _ods_ir)

splat(→ _ods_ir)

yield_(→ YieldOp)

Module Contents

mlir.dialects._tensor_ops_gen._ods_ir
class mlir.dialects._tensor_ops_gen._Dialect(descriptor: object)

Bases: _ods_ir

DIALECT_NAMESPACE = 'tensor'
class mlir.dialects._tensor_ops_gen.BitcastOp(dest, source, *, loc=None, ip=None)

Bases: _ods_ir

Bitcast a tensor from one type to another type of equivalent element width. If both are ranked, then the rank should be the same and static dimensions should match.

Example:

// Bitcast from unsigned to signed or signless integer.
%2 = tensor.bitcast %1 : tensor<4xui32> to tensor<4xi32>
OPERATION_NAME = 'tensor.bitcast'
_ODS_REGIONS = (0, True)
source() _ods_ir
dest() _ods_ir
mlir.dialects._tensor_ops_gen.bitcast(dest, source, *, loc=None, ip=None) _ods_ir
class mlir.dialects._tensor_ops_gen.CastOp(dest, source, *, loc=None, ip=None)

Bases: _ods_ir

Convert a tensor from one type to an equivalent type without changing any data elements. The source and destination types must both be tensor types with the same element type. If both are ranked, then the rank should be the same and static dimensions should match. The operation is invalid if converting to a mismatching constant dimension.

Example:

// Convert from unknown rank to rank 2 with unknown dimension sizes.
%2 = tensor.cast %1 : tensor<*xf32> to tensor<?x?xf32>

// Convert to a type with more known dimensions.
%3 = tensor.cast %2 : tensor<?x?xf32> to tensor<4x?xf32>

// Discard static dimension and rank information.
%4 = tensor.cast %3 : tensor<4x?xf32> to tensor<?x?xf32>
%5 = tensor.cast %4 : tensor<?x?xf32> to tensor<*xf32>
OPERATION_NAME = 'tensor.cast'
_ODS_REGIONS = (0, True)
source() _ods_ir
dest() _ods_ir
mlir.dialects._tensor_ops_gen.cast(dest, source, *, loc=None, ip=None) _ods_ir
class mlir.dialects._tensor_ops_gen.CollapseShapeOp(result, src, reassociation, *, loc=None, ip=None)

Bases: _ods_ir

The tensor.collapse_shape op produces a new tensor of lower (or equal) rank whose dimension sizes are a reassociation of the original src dimensions.

A reassociation is defined as a continuous grouping of dimensions and is represented by an array of DenseI64ArrayAttr attribute. The reassociation maps are applied to the operand shape to obtain the result shape.

Example:

// Dimension collapse (i, j) -> i' and k -> k'
%b = tensor.collapse_shape %a [[0, 1], [2]]
    : tensor<?x?x?xf32> into tensor<?x?xf32>
OPERATION_NAME = 'tensor.collapse_shape'
_ODS_REGIONS = (0, True)
src() _ods_ir
reassociation() _ods_ir
result() _ods_ir

Shortcut to get an op result if it has only one (throws an error otherwise).

mlir.dialects._tensor_ops_gen.collapse_shape(result, src, reassociation, *, loc=None, ip=None) _ods_ir
class mlir.dialects._tensor_ops_gen.ConcatOp(result, dim, inputs, *, loc=None, ip=None)

Bases: _ods_ir

The “concat” operation constructs a tensor out of a variadic list of input tensors, concatenated along a static dimension number. All inputs and the result type must share the same rank.

dim specifies the dimension along which to concatenate. The size of the concatenated dimension in the result must be equal to the sum of the sizes of the inputs along that dimension. All other dimensions in both the inputs and result must be the same size.

Example:

%0 = tensor.concat dim(0) %0, %1, %2 :
    (tensor<3x6xf32>, tensor<3x6xf32>, tensor<1x6xf32) -> tensor<7x6xf32>

// Dynamic + dynamic -> static
%0 = tensor.concat dim(1) %0, %1, %2 :
    (tensor<3x?xf32>, tensor<3x2xf32>, tensor<3x?xf32) -> tensor<3x10xf32>
OPERATION_NAME = 'tensor.concat'
_ODS_REGIONS = (0, True)
inputs() _ods_ir
dim() _ods_ir
result() _ods_ir

Shortcut to get an op result if it has only one (throws an error otherwise).

mlir.dialects._tensor_ops_gen.concat(result, dim, inputs, *, loc=None, ip=None) _ods_ir
class mlir.dialects._tensor_ops_gen.DimOp(source, index, *, results=None, loc=None, ip=None)

Bases: _ods_ir

The tensor.dim operation takes a tensor and a dimension operand of type index. It returns the size of the requested dimension of the given tensor. If the dimension index is out of bounds, the behavior is undefined.

The specified tensor type is that of the first operand.

Example:

// Always returns 4, can be constant folded:
%c0 = arith.constant 0 : index
%x = tensor.dim %A, %c0 : tensor<4x?xf32>

// Return the dynamic dimension of %A.
%c1 = arith.constant 1 : index
%y = tensor.dim %A, %c1 : tensor<4x?xf32>

// Equivalent generic form:
%x = "tensor.dim"(%A, %c0) : (tensor<4x?xf32>, index) -> index
%y = "tensor.dim"(%A, %c1) : (tensor<4x?xf32>, index) -> index
OPERATION_NAME = 'tensor.dim'
_ODS_REGIONS = (0, True)
source() _ods_ir
index() _ods_ir
result() _ods_ir

Shortcut to get an op result if it has only one (throws an error otherwise).

mlir.dialects._tensor_ops_gen.dim(source, index, *, results=None, loc=None, ip=None) _ods_ir
class mlir.dialects._tensor_ops_gen.EmptyOp(result, dynamicSizes, *, loc=None, ip=None)

Bases: _ods_ir

tensor.empty is an operation that defines a tensor of a particular shape. The shape could be dynamic or static. The contents of the tensor are unspecified and the only purpose of the op result is to materialize the specified shape in IR and make it available to other transformations.

tensor.empty is useful in transformations that expect destination style ops. I.e., ops that implement DestinationStyleOpInterface. Ops that are not in destination style can be made compatible with such transformations with a tensor.empty destination.

Note: This op can be lowered to a bufferization.alloc_tensor, at which point it turns into an explicit buffer allocation.

OPERATION_NAME = 'tensor.empty'
_ODS_REGIONS = (0, True)
dynamicSizes() _ods_ir
result() _ods_ir

Shortcut to get an op result if it has only one (throws an error otherwise).

mlir.dialects._tensor_ops_gen.empty(result, dynamic_sizes, *, loc=None, ip=None) _ods_ir
class mlir.dialects._tensor_ops_gen.ExpandShapeOp(result, src, reassociation, output_shape, static_output_shape, *, loc=None, ip=None)

Bases: _ods_ir

The tensor.expand_shape op produces a tensor of higher (or equal) rank than the operand src whose dimension sizes are a reassociation of src.

A reassociation is defined as a continuous grouping of dimensions and is represented with an array of DenseI64ArrayAttr attribute. The reassociation maps applied to the result tensor with the higher rank must result in the operand tensor with the smaller rank.

The representation for the output shape supports a partially-static specification via attributes specified through the static_output_shape argument. A special sentinel value ShapedType::kDynamic encodes that the corresponding entry has a dynamic value. There must be exactly as many SSA inputs in output_shape as there are ShapedType::kDynamic entries in static_output_shape.

Example:

// Dimension expansion i -> (i', j') and (k) -> (k')
%b = tensor.expand_shape %a [[0, 1], [2]] output_shape [%sz0, %sz1, 32]
    : tensor<?x32xf32> into tensor<?x?x32xf32>
OPERATION_NAME = 'tensor.expand_shape'
_ODS_REGIONS = (0, True)
src() _ods_ir
output_shape() _ods_ir
reassociation() _ods_ir
static_output_shape() _ods_ir
result() _ods_ir

Shortcut to get an op result if it has only one (throws an error otherwise).

mlir.dialects._tensor_ops_gen.expand_shape(result, src, reassociation, output_shape, static_output_shape, *, loc=None, ip=None) _ods_ir
class mlir.dialects._tensor_ops_gen.ExtractOp(tensor, indices, *, results=None, loc=None, ip=None)

Bases: _ods_ir

The tensor.extract op reads a ranked tensor and returns one element as specified by the given indices. The result of the op is a value with the same type as the elements of the tensor. The arity of indices must match the rank of the accessed value. All indices should all be of index type.

Example:

%4 = tensor.extract %t[%1, %2] : tensor<4x4xi32>
%5 = tensor.extract %rt[%1, %2] : tensor<?x?xi32>
OPERATION_NAME = 'tensor.extract'
_ODS_REGIONS = (0, True)
tensor() _ods_ir
indices() _ods_ir
result() _ods_ir

Shortcut to get an op result if it has only one (throws an error otherwise).

mlir.dialects._tensor_ops_gen.extract(tensor, indices, *, results=None, loc=None, ip=None) _ods_ir
class mlir.dialects._tensor_ops_gen.ExtractSliceOp(result, source, offsets, sizes, strides, static_offsets, static_sizes, static_strides, *, loc=None, ip=None)

Bases: _ods_ir

The “extract_slice” operation extract a tensor from another tensor as specified by the operation’s offsets, sizes and strides arguments.

The extract_slice operation supports the following arguments:

  • source: the “base” tensor from which to extract a slice.

  • offsets: tensor-rank number of offsets into the “base” tensor from which

to extract the slice. * sizes: tensor-rank number of sizes which specify the sizes of the result tensor type. * strides: tensor-rank number of strides specifying subsampling in each dimension.

The representation based on offsets, sizes and strides support a partially-static specification via attributes specified through the static_offsets, static_sizes and static_strides arguments. A special sentinel value ShapedType::kDynamic encodes that the corresponding entry has a dynamic value.

After buffer allocation, the “extract_slice” op is expected to lower into a memref.subview op.

An extract_slice operation may additionally reduce the rank of the resulting tensor by removing dimensions that are statically known to be of size 1. This rank-reduction behavior is not required by the op semantics: this flexibility allows to progressively drop unit dimensions while lowering between different flavors of ops on that operate on tensors.

Verification vs Inference in the rank-reduced case

Note that there may be multiple ways to infer a resulting rank-reduced type. e.g. 1x6x1 could potentially rank-reduce to either 1x6 or 6x1 2-D shapes.

To disambiguate, the inference helpers inferCanonicalRankReducedResultType only drop the first unit dimensions, in order: e.g. 1x6x1 rank-reduced to 2-D will infer the 6x1 2-D shape, but not 1x6.

Verification however has access to result type and does not need to infer. The verifier calls isRankReducedType(getSource(), getResult()) to determine whether the result type is rank-reduced from the source type. This computes a so-called rank-reduction mask, consisting of dropped unit dims, to map the rank-reduced type to the source type by dropping ones: e.g. 1x6 is a rank-reduced version of 1x6x1 by mask {2} 6x1 is a rank-reduced version of 1x6x1 by mask {0} 1x2x1x4 is a rank-reduced version of 1x1x2x1x1x4x1 by mask {1, 4, 6} (remaining common 1 dimensions are matched eagerly)

Example:

// Rank-reducing extract_slice.
%1 = tensor.extract_slice %0[0, 0, 0][1, 16, 4][1, 1, 1] :
  tensor<8x16x4xf32> to tensor<16x4xf32>
%3 = tensor.extract_slice %2[%o0, 4, %o2][1, %sz1, 1][1, %st1, 1] :
  tensor<8x16x4xf32> to tensor<1x?xf32>
OPERATION_NAME = 'tensor.extract_slice'
_ODS_OPERAND_SEGMENTS
_ODS_REGIONS = (0, True)
source() _ods_ir
offsets() _ods_ir
sizes() _ods_ir
strides() _ods_ir
static_offsets() _ods_ir
static_sizes() _ods_ir
static_strides() _ods_ir
result() _ods_ir

Shortcut to get an op result if it has only one (throws an error otherwise).

mlir.dialects._tensor_ops_gen.extract_slice(result, source, offsets, sizes, strides, static_offsets, static_sizes, static_strides, *, loc=None, ip=None) _ods_ir
class mlir.dialects._tensor_ops_gen.FromElementsOp(result, elements, *, loc=None, ip=None)

Bases: _ods_ir

Create a N-D tensor from a range of same-type arguments. The number of provided elements should equal to the number of the elements in the result type. The elements correspond to a flattened tensor.

Example:

tensor.from_elements %a, %b, %c, %d, %e, %f :  tensor<2x3xindex>

will result in a tensor

[[%a, %b, %c] [%d, %e, %f]]

OPERATION_NAME = 'tensor.from_elements'
_ODS_REGIONS = (0, True)
elements() _ods_ir
result() _ods_ir

Shortcut to get an op result if it has only one (throws an error otherwise).

mlir.dialects._tensor_ops_gen.from_elements(result, elements, *, loc=None, ip=None) _ods_ir
class mlir.dialects._tensor_ops_gen.GatherOp(result, source, indices, gather_dims, *, unique=None, loc=None, ip=None)

Bases: _ods_ir

The gather operation extracts a subset of the elements from a source tensor at the given indices.

In its most general form, the tensor of indices specifies all the coordinates of every element to extract (i.e. COO format, without the payload). The indices are expected to be confined to coordinate values that fit the range of the source tensor, otherwise the behavior is undefined.

The leading dimensions of the index tensor give the result tensor its leading dimensions. The trailing dimensions of the result tensor are obtained from the source tensor by omitting the dimensions specified in gather_dims (rank-reducing semantics) or setting them to 1 (rank-preserving semantics) (see examples). The trailing dimension of the index tensor contains the coordinates and is expected to have its size equal to the number of dimensions being gathered. This convention allows an idiomatic specification and lowering of “gathering multiple N-D slices from the source tensor”.

Note: in the examples below, we separate out the indexing part of the tensor type by a whitespace for readability purposes.

Example:

// For each 1x2 triple of coordinates in %indices, extract the
// element (i.e. 0-D subset) at the coordinates triple in %source.
//
%out = tensor.gather %source[%indices] gather_dims([0, 1, 2]) :
  (tensor<4x4x4xf32>, tensor<1x2x 3xindex>) -> tensor<1x2x 1x1x1xf32>

// Note: result type may be further rank-reduced to tensor<1x2x f32>.

A slice variant is provided to allow specifying whole slices of the source tensor.

Example:

// For each 5x6 singleton of coordinates in %indices, extract the 2-D
// slice %source[*, %indices[...]:%indices[...] + 1, *] with the indices
// corresponding to the `gather_dims` attribute specified by %indices.
//
%out = tensor.gather %source[%indices] gather_dims([1]) :
  (tensor<3x4x5xf32>, tensor<6x7x 1xindex>) -> tensor<6x7x 3x1x5xf32>

// Note: result type may be further rank-reduced to tensor<6x7x 3x5xf32>.

The dimensions specified in the gather_dims attribute are ones for which the result tensor has size 1. I.e. if the source type is axbxcxd and the coordinates are [1, 3], then the shape suffix is ax1xcx1. Gather also allows rank-reducing semantics where the shape ax1xcx1 can be further simplified to axc.

The elemental type of the indices tensor can be any integer type. In the absence of target-specific or problem specific information the default type one should use is index.

This operation does not support unranked tensors.

An optional unique unit attribute may be specified to indicate that the coordinates in indices are statically guaranteed to be unique at runtime. Incorrectly setting the unique attribute when the coordinates are not truly unique is undefined behavior.

Only full slices are meant to be supported by this op, if one desires partial slices (e.g. strided windows) one should compose this op with other tensor ops (e.g. tensor.extract_slice). This is to avoid a slippery slope of complexity that would make the op unusable in practice.

At the tensor-level, the index tensor is specified in an AoS form (i.e. coordinate tuple is the most minor). It is the responsibility of further lowerings and bufferization to implement various concrete layouts.

Note: As currently specified, the operation must lower to an abstraction that performs copies to the output tensor. This is because the buffer type system is currently not rich enough to allow multiple non-contiguous views in the same type. This is visible more clearly in a notional buffer version of the op:

// memref<?x4x1xf32> is a contiguous buffer of ?x4x1 elements.
// gather from random source slices must copy to the contiguous output.
%out = memref.gather %source[%indices] gather_dims([1]) :
  (memref<4x4xf32>, memref<?x 1xindex>) -> memref<?x 4x1xf32>

// Nested buffer support would allow gather to directly index into the
// source buffer (i.e. represent a jagged view into the source).
%out = memref.gather %source[%indices] gather_dims([1]) :
  (memref<4x4xf32>, memref<?x 1xindex>) -> memref<? x memref<4x1xf32>>
OPERATION_NAME = 'tensor.gather'
_ODS_REGIONS = (0, True)
source() _ods_ir
indices() _ods_ir
gather_dims() _ods_ir
unique() bool
result() _ods_ir

Shortcut to get an op result if it has only one (throws an error otherwise).

mlir.dialects._tensor_ops_gen.gather(result, source, indices, gather_dims, *, unique=None, loc=None, ip=None) _ods_ir
class mlir.dialects._tensor_ops_gen.GenerateOp(result, dynamicExtents, *, loc=None, ip=None)

Bases: _ods_ir

This operation creates a dynamically sized tensor with elements of any type. It expects one index operand per dynamic extent of the result tensor.

The body region defines the tensor’s elements. It takes index operands as its region arguments that span the index space. The element at the given position is yielded with the yield operation (see YieldOp). There is no defined ordering to the invocations of the body. It is conceptually a “parallel map” operation.

Example:

%tnsr = tensor.generate %m, %n {
^bb0(%i : index, %j : index, %k : index):
  ...
  yield %elem : f32
} : tensor<?x3x?f32>
OPERATION_NAME = 'tensor.generate'
_ODS_REGIONS = (1, True)
dynamicExtents() _ods_ir
result() _ods_ir

Shortcut to get an op result if it has only one (throws an error otherwise).

body() _ods_ir
mlir.dialects._tensor_ops_gen.generate(result, dynamic_extents, *, loc=None, ip=None) _ods_ir
class mlir.dialects._tensor_ops_gen.InsertOp(scalar, dest, indices, *, results=None, loc=None, ip=None)

Bases: _ods_ir

The tensor.insert op inserts a scalar into a ranked tensor dest as specified by the operation’s indices.

It returns a copy of dest with the indexed position updated to the value of scalar.

The arity of indices ``must match the rank of the tensor ``dest. All indices should be of index type.

Example:

%4 = tensor.insert %t into %dest[%1, %2] : tensor<4x4xi32>
%5 = tensor.insert %rt into %dest[%1, %2] : tensor<?x?xi32>
OPERATION_NAME = 'tensor.insert'
_ODS_REGIONS = (0, True)
scalar() _ods_ir
dest() _ods_ir
indices() _ods_ir
result() _ods_ir

Shortcut to get an op result if it has only one (throws an error otherwise).

mlir.dialects._tensor_ops_gen.insert(scalar, dest, indices, *, results=None, loc=None, ip=None) _ods_ir
class mlir.dialects._tensor_ops_gen.InsertSliceOp(source, dest, offsets, sizes, strides, static_offsets, static_sizes, static_strides, *, results=None, loc=None, ip=None)

Bases: _ods_ir

The “insert_slice” operation insert a tensor source into another tensor dest as specified by the operation’s offsets, sizes and strides arguments.

It returns a copy of dest with the proper slice updated with the value of source.

The insert_slice operation supports the following arguments:

  • source: the tensor that is inserted.

  • dest: the tensor into which the source tensor is inserted.

  • offsets: tensor-rank number of offsets into the dest tensor into which

the slice is inserted. * sizes: tensor-rank number of sizes which specify the sizes of the source tensor type. * strides: tensor-rank number of strides that specify subsampling in each dimension.

The representation based on offsets, sizes and strides support a partially-static specification via attributes specified through the static_offsets, static_sizes and static_strides arguments. A special sentinel value ShapedType::kDynamic encodes that the corresponding entry has a dynamic value.

After buffer allocation, the “insert_slice” op is expected to lower into a memref.subview op.

An insert_slice operation may additionally specify insertion into a tensor of higher rank than the source tensor, along dimensions that are statically known to be of size 1. This rank-altering behavior is not required by the op semantics: this flexibility allows to progressively drop unit dimensions while lowering between different flavors of ops on that operate on tensors. The rank-altering behavior of tensor.insert_slice matches the rank-reducing behavior of tensor.extract_slice.

Verification in the rank-reduced case

The same verification discussion and mechanisms apply as for ExtractSliceOp. Unlike ExtractSliceOp however, there is no need for a specific inference.

Example:

// Rank-altering insert_slice.
%1 = tensor.insert_slice %t into %0[0, 0, 0][1, 16, 4][1, 1, 1] :
  tensor<16x4xf32> into tensor<8x16x4xf32>
%3 = tensor.insert_slice %tt into %2[%o0, 4, %o2][1, %sz1, 1][1, %st1, 1] :
  tensor<1x?xf32> into tensor<8x16x4xf32>
OPERATION_NAME = 'tensor.insert_slice'
_ODS_OPERAND_SEGMENTS
_ODS_REGIONS = (0, True)
source() _ods_ir
dest() _ods_ir
offsets() _ods_ir
sizes() _ods_ir
strides() _ods_ir
static_offsets() _ods_ir
static_sizes() _ods_ir
static_strides() _ods_ir
result() _ods_ir

Shortcut to get an op result if it has only one (throws an error otherwise).

mlir.dialects._tensor_ops_gen.insert_slice(source, dest, offsets, sizes, strides, static_offsets, static_sizes, static_strides, *, results=None, loc=None, ip=None) _ods_ir
class mlir.dialects._tensor_ops_gen.PadOp(result, source, low, high, static_low, static_high, *, nofold=None, loc=None, ip=None)

Bases: _ods_ir

tensor.pad is an operation that pads the source tensor with given low and high padding config.

The PadOp operation supports the following arguments:

  • source: the “base” tensor on which to pad.

  • low: A list contains the padding along the start of each

dimension, i.e., how many padded values are prepended to the beginning of the tensor in each dimension. * high: A list contains the padding along the end of each dimension, i.e., how many padded values are appended to the end of the tensor in each dimension. * nofold: indicates that the operation should not be folded when source and result types are equal.

The result tensor dimensions are low[i] + dim[i] + high[i] for each dimension i. The number of elements of low and high must match the rank of the input tensor. They can be either a constant or a dynamic value.

The region of the tensor.pad operation returns the value to use for the padding. The arguments of the region represent the index of the source being accessed. There should be as many arguments as the rank of the source tensor. The value yield-ed by the region is used as the value of the view at the given position.

If nofold is set, the padding operation will not be folded away even if the source type and the padded type have the same static shape. This can be used, e.g., for packing or promotion to faster memory.

Example 1: add 3 zeros to the beginning and 5 zeros to the end of a 1D tensor.

%arg0 = ... : tensor<10xi32>
%c0_i32 = arith.constant 0 : i32
%padded = tensor.pad %arg0 low[3] high[5] {
^bb0(%arg1: index):
  tensor.yield %c0_i32 : i32
} : tensor<10xi32> to tensor<18xi32>

Example 2: add 1 value to the beginning of dimension 0, 2 values to the end of dimension 0, 2 values to the start of dimension 1, and 3 values to the end of dimension 1.

%pad_value = ... : f32
%0 = tensor.pad %0 low[1, 2] high[2, 3] {
^bb0(%arg0 : index, %arg1 : index):
  tensor.yield %pad_value : f32
} : tensor<?x?xf32> to tensor<?x?xf32>

Example 3:

%pad_value = ... : f32
%0 = tensor.pad %arg0 low[2, %arg1, 3, 3] high[3, 3, %arg1, 2] {
^bb0(%arg2: index, %arg3: index, %arg4: index, %arg5: index):
    tensor.yield %pad_value : f32
} : tensor<1x2x2x?xf32> to tensor<6x?x?x?xf32>

Example 4:

%pad_value = ... : f32
%0 = tensor.pad %arg0 low[0, 0] high[%ub0, %ub1] {
^bb0(%arg1: index, %arg2: index):
  tensor.yield %pad_value : f32
} : tensor<2x3xf32> to tensor<?x?xf32>

Example 5: Force a padded value to be always exist with nofold, even though the padding config specifies that no new elements will be added to the tensor.

%pad_value = ... : f32
%0 = tensor.pad %arg0 nofold low[0, 0] high[0, 0] {
^bb0(%arg1: index, %arg2: index):
  tensor.yield %pad_value : f32
} : tensor<2x3xf32> to tensor<2x3xf32>
OPERATION_NAME = 'tensor.pad'
_ODS_OPERAND_SEGMENTS
_ODS_REGIONS = (1, True)
source() _ods_ir
low() _ods_ir
high() _ods_ir
static_low() _ods_ir
static_high() _ods_ir
nofold() bool
result() _ods_ir

Shortcut to get an op result if it has only one (throws an error otherwise).

region() _ods_ir
mlir.dialects._tensor_ops_gen.pad(result, source, low, high, static_low, static_high, *, nofold=None, loc=None, ip=None) _ods_ir
class mlir.dialects._tensor_ops_gen.ParallelInsertSliceOp(source, dest, offsets, sizes, strides, static_offsets, static_sizes, static_strides, *, loc=None, ip=None)

Bases: _ods_ir

The parallel_insert_slice yields a subset tensor value to its parent InParallelOpInterface. These subset tensor values are aggregated to in some unspecified order into a full tensor value returned by the parent parallel iterating op. The parallel_insert_slice is one such op allowed in the InParallelOpInterface op.

Conflicting writes result in undefined semantics, in that the indices written to by multiple parallel updates might contain data from any of the updates, or even a malformed bit pattern.

If an index is updated exactly once, the value contained at that index in the resulting tensor will be equal to the value at a corresponding index of a slice that was used for the updated. If an index is not updated at all, its value will be equal to the one in the original tensor.

This op does not create a new value, which allows maintaining a clean separation between the subset and full tensor.

Note that we cannot mark this operation as pure (Pures), even though it has no side effects, because it will get DCEd during canonicalization.

The parallel_insert_slice operation supports the following arguments:

  • source: the tensor that is inserted.

  • dest: the tensor into which the source tensor is inserted.

  • offsets: tensor-rank number of offsets into the dest tensor into which

the slice is inserted. * sizes: tensor-rank number of sizes which specify the sizes of the source tensor type. * strides: tensor-rank number of strides that specify subsampling in each dimension.

The representation based on offsets, sizes and strides support a partially-static specification via attributes specified through the static_offsets, static_sizes and static_strides arguments. A special sentinel value ShapedType::kDynamic encodes that the corresponding entry has a dynamic value.

After buffer allocation, the “parallel_insert_slice” op is expected to lower into a memref.subview op.

A parallel_insert_slice operation may additionally specify insertion into a tensor of higher rank than the source tensor, along dimensions that are statically known to be of size 1. This rank-altering behavior is not required by the op semantics: this flexibility allows to progressively drop unit dimensions while lowering between different flavors of ops on that operate on tensors. The rank-altering behavior of tensor.parallel_insert_slice matches the rank-reducing behavior of tensor.insert_slice and tensor.extract_slice.

Verification in the rank-reduced case

The same verification discussion and mechanisms apply as for ExtractSliceOp. Unlike ExtractSliceOp however, there is no need for a specific inference.

OPERATION_NAME = 'tensor.parallel_insert_slice'
_ODS_OPERAND_SEGMENTS
_ODS_REGIONS = (0, True)
source() _ods_ir
dest() _ods_ir
offsets() _ods_ir
sizes() _ods_ir
strides() _ods_ir
static_offsets() _ods_ir
static_sizes() _ods_ir
static_strides() _ods_ir
mlir.dialects._tensor_ops_gen.parallel_insert_slice(source, dest, offsets, sizes, strides, static_offsets, static_sizes, static_strides, *, loc=None, ip=None) ParallelInsertSliceOp
class mlir.dialects._tensor_ops_gen.RankOp(tensor, *, results=None, loc=None, ip=None)

Bases: _ods_ir

The tensor.rank operation takes a tensor operand and returns its rank.

Example:

%0 = tensor.rank %arg0 : tensor<*xf32>
%1 = tensor.rank %arg1 : tensor<?x?xf32>
OPERATION_NAME = 'tensor.rank'
_ODS_REGIONS = (0, True)
tensor() _ods_ir
mlir.dialects._tensor_ops_gen.rank(tensor, *, results=None, loc=None, ip=None) _ods_ir
class mlir.dialects._tensor_ops_gen.ReshapeOp(result, source, shape, *, loc=None, ip=None)

Bases: _ods_ir

The reshape operation converts a tensor from one type to an equivalent type with a provided shape. The source and destination types are compatible if both have the same element type, same number of elements. The following combinations are possible:

a. Source type is ranked or unranked. Shape argument has static size. Result type is ranked.

// Reshape statically-shaped tensor.
%dst = tensor.reshape %src(%shape)
         : (tensor<4x1xf32>, tensor<1xi32>) -> tensor<4xf32>
%dst0 = tensor.reshape %src(%shape0)
         : (tensor<4x1xf32>, tensor<2xi32>) -> tensor<2x2xf32>
// Flatten unranked tensor.
%dst = tensor.reshape %src(%shape)
         : (tensor<*xf32>, tensor<1xi32>) -> tensor<?xf32>

b. Source type is ranked or unranked. Shape argument has dynamic size. Result type is unranked.

// Reshape dynamically-shaped 1D tensor.
%dst = tensor.reshape %src(%shape)
         : (tensor<?xf32>, tensor<?xi32>) -> tensor<*xf32>
// Reshape unranked tensor.
%dst = tensor.reshape %src(%shape)
         : (tensor<*xf32>, tensor<?xi32>) -> tensor<*xf32>
OPERATION_NAME = 'tensor.reshape'
_ODS_REGIONS = (0, True)
source() _ods_ir
shape() _ods_ir
result() _ods_ir

Shortcut to get an op result if it has only one (throws an error otherwise).

mlir.dialects._tensor_ops_gen.reshape(result, source, shape, *, loc=None, ip=None) _ods_ir
class mlir.dialects._tensor_ops_gen.ScatterOp(result, source, dest, indices, scatter_dims, *, unique=None, loc=None, ip=None)

Bases: _ods_ir

The scatter operation inserts a source tensor into a dest tensor at the given indices.

In its most general form, the tensor of indices specifies all the coordinates of every element to insert (i.e. COO format, without the payload). The indices are expected to be confined to coordinate values that fit the range of the dest tensor, otherwise the behavior is undefined.

The leading dimensions of the index tensor must match that of the dest tensor. The trailing dimensions of the dest tensor must match those of the source tensor by omitting the dimensions specified in scatter_dims (rank-reducing semantics) or setting them to 1 (rank-preserving semantics) (see examples). This convention allows an idiomatic specification and lowering of “scattering multiple N-D slices into the dest tensor”. The result type must match the type of the dest tensor.

Note: in the examples below, we separate out the indexing part of the tensor type by a whitespace for readability purposes.

Example:

// For each 1x2 triple of coordinates in %indices, insert the
// element (i.e. 0-D subset) at the coordinates triple in %dest.
//
%out = tensor.scatter %source into %dest[%indices]
    scatter_dims([0, 1, 2]) unique :
  (tensor<1x2x 1x1x1xf32>, tensor<4x4x4xf32>, tensor<1x2x 3xindex>)
    -> tensor<4x4x4xf32>

// Note: source type may be further rank-reduced to tensor<1x2x f32>.

A slice variant is provided to allow specifying insertion of whole tensor slices into the dest tensor.

Example:

// For each 3 singleton of coordinates in %indices, insert the 2-D
// slice into %dest[*, %indices[...]:%indices[...] + 1, *] with the
// indices corresponding to the scatter_dims attribute specified by
// %indices.
//
%out = tensor.scatter %source into %dest[%indices] scatter_dims([1]) unique :
  (tensor<3x 4x1x6xf32>, tensor<4x5x6xf32>, tensor<3x 1xindex>)
    -> tensor<4x5x6xf32>

The dimensions specified in the scatter_dims attribute are ones for which the source tensor has size 1. I.e. if the dest type is axbxcxd and the coordinates are [1, 3], then the source type suffix is ax1xcx1. Scatter also allows rank-reducing semantics where the shape ax1xcx1 can be further simplified to axc.

The elemental type of the indices tensor can be any integer type. In the absence of target-specific or problem specific information the default type one should use is index.

This operation does not support unranked tensors.

A unique unit attribute must be be specified to indicate that the coordinates are statically guaranteed to be unique at runtime. If coordinates are not truly unique at runtime, the behavior is undefined.

Only full slices are meant to be supported by this op, if one desires partial slices (e.g. strided windows) one should compose this op with other tensor ops (e.g. tensor.insert_slice). This is to avoid a slippery slope of complexity that would make the op unusable in practice.

At the tensor-level, the index tensor is specified in an AoS form (i.e. coordinate tuple is the most minor). It is the responsibility of further lowerings and bufferization to implement various concrete layouts.

Note: As currently specified, the operation must lower to an abstraction that performs copies to the output tensor. This is because the buffer type system is currently not rich enough to allow multiple non-contiguous views in the same type. This is visible more clearly in a notional buffer version of the op:

// memref<?x 4xf32> is a contiguous buffer of ?x4 elements, scatter into
// random dest slices must copy to the contiguous dest.
//
some_side_effecting_op_writing_into %source, ...: memref<3x 4xf32>
memref.scatter %source into %dest[%indices] scatter_dims([1]) unique :
  (memref<3x 4xf32>, memref<?x 4xf32>, memref<?x 1xindex>)

// Nested buffer support in the producing op would allow writing directly
// into the dest buffer.
%v = some_nested_buffer_view_op %dest[%indices] scatter_dims([1]) unique :
  memref<? x memref<4xf32>>
some_side_effecting_op_writing_into %v, ...: memref<? x memref<4xf32>>
OPERATION_NAME = 'tensor.scatter'
_ODS_REGIONS = (0, True)
source() _ods_ir
dest() _ods_ir
indices() _ods_ir
scatter_dims() _ods_ir
unique() bool
result() _ods_ir

Shortcut to get an op result if it has only one (throws an error otherwise).

mlir.dialects._tensor_ops_gen.scatter(result, source, dest, indices, scatter_dims, *, unique=None, loc=None, ip=None) _ods_ir
class mlir.dialects._tensor_ops_gen.SplatOp(aggregate, input, dynamicSizes, *, loc=None, ip=None)

Bases: _ods_ir

Broadcast the operand to all elements of the result tensor.

An additional argument of type index must be provided for each dynamic dimension present in the result type.

Example for a statically shaped tensor:

%s = arith.constant 1.0 : f32
%t = tensor.splat %s : tensor<8x16xf32>

Example for a tensor containing dynamic dimensions:

// Broadcasts %s to a 3D dynamically shaped tensor, with %m and %n binding
// to dimensions 0 and 2 of the resulting tensor, respectively.
%m = arith.constant 10 : index
%n = arith.constant 30 : index
%t = tensor.splat %s[%m, %n] : tensor<?x20x?xf32>
OPERATION_NAME = 'tensor.splat'
_ODS_REGIONS = (0, True)
input() _ods_ir
dynamicSizes() _ods_ir
aggregate() _ods_ir
mlir.dialects._tensor_ops_gen.splat(aggregate, input, dynamic_sizes, *, loc=None, ip=None) _ods_ir
class mlir.dialects._tensor_ops_gen.YieldOp(value, *, loc=None, ip=None)

Bases: _ods_ir

This operation is used to yield a single value from a within a region. It is used to create dynamically sized tensors (see tensor.generate and tensor.pad ops).

OPERATION_NAME = 'tensor.yield'
_ODS_REGIONS = (0, True)
value() _ods_ir
mlir.dialects._tensor_ops_gen.yield_(value, *, loc=None, ip=None) YieldOp