This PR implements tracing of with contexts with TorchFunction modes which have the default enter/exit behavior (ie pushing/popping the mode)
Typically the bytecode for a context manager looks like this during a graph break:
1. graph call
2. enter context
3. unsupported code
4. exit context
5. resume call
resume fn structure:
1. enter context
2. jump
...
3. exit context
The issue with torch function modes is that side effects will replay any mutations to the torch function stack performed during tracing. So, we do not need to enter and exit around the unsupported code in the original function (doing so would result in a duplicate torch function mode entry during execution of the unsupported code), and we don't need to enter again in the resume function (the mode that was pushed from the side effects bytecode would still be on the stack).
So for torch function modes the structure of our output code is this:
1. graph call
2. mutate tf mode stack to replay mutations
4. unsupported code
5. on exception restore stack
6. resume function
Then our resume fn looks like this:
1. no-op enter torch function mode
2. jump
3. exit tf mode
To implement the no-op enter of the torch function mode I added torch function mode in polyfill which no-op enters, but normally exits. This is needed because we still want to trace the with context in the resume function, and exit properly (the exit instructions will still be in the function, so we need to generate instructions to set up the context).
Separately from the bytecode, dynamo also tracks contexts on the block stack, which is how the SETUP_* instructions are implemented. Naturally at a graph break, we exit these block stacks to properly reset the contexts entirely, so that we can re-enter around the unsupported code soundly. However once again, in the torch function mode case, in the event of a graph we do not want to perform any exit side effects because we want to preserve the state of the mode stack as is so that we will properly update the stack with bytecode mentioned in the first section. If we exited here, dynamo would pop the mode off of the symbolic stack, and not update the true python torch function mode stack with the suffix bytecode. All in all, for torch function modes we enter exactly once, update the global torch function mode stack with side effects bytecode, re-read this stack when compiling the resume function, and exit exactly once in the resume function. This matches the semantics of eager exactly.
Approved by: https://github.com/williamwen42
ghstack dependencies: #134732, #133137, #135443, #135444
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/pytorch/pytorch/pull/137114
Approved by: https://github.com/yanboliang
This reverts commit 7743149b2be4a9eba7e0997ccdc6abe552bec266.
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
This PR implements tracing of with contexts with TorchFunction modes which have the default enter/exit behavior (ie pushing/popping the mode)
Typically the bytecode for a context manager looks like this during a graph break:
1. graph call
2. enter context
3. unsupported code
4. exit context
5. resume call
resume fn structure:
1. enter context
2. jump
...
3. exit context
The issue with torch function modes is that side effects will replay any mutations to the torch function stack performed during tracing. So, we do not need to enter and exit around the unsupported code in the original function (doing so would result in a duplicate torch function mode entry during execution of the unsupported code), and we don't need to enter again in the resume function (the mode that was pushed from the side effects bytecode would still be on the stack).
So for torch function modes the structure of our output code is this:
1. graph call
2. mutate tf mode stack to replay mutations
4. unsupported code
5. on exception restore stack
6. resume function
Then our resume fn looks like this:
1. no-op enter torch function mode
2. jump
3. exit tf mode
To implement the no-op enter of the torch function mode I added torch function mode in polyfill which no-op enters, but normally exits. This is needed because we still want to trace the with context in the resume function, and exit properly (the exit instructions will still be in the function, so we need to generate instructions to set up the context).
Separately from the bytecode, dynamo also tracks contexts on the block stack, which is how the SETUP_* instructions are implemented. Naturally at a graph break, we exit these block stacks to properly reset the contexts entirely, so that we can re-enter around the unsupported code soundly. However once again, in the torch function mode case, in the event of a graph we do not want to perform any exit side effects because we want to preserve the state of the mode stack as is so that we will properly update the stack with bytecode mentioned in the first section. If we exited here, dynamo would pop the mode off of the symbolic stack, and not update the true python torch function mode stack with the suffix bytecode. All in all, for torch function modes we enter exactly once, update the global torch function mode stack with side effects bytecode, re-read this stack when compiling the resume function, and exit exactly once in the resume function. This matches the semantics of eager exactly.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/pytorch/pytorch/pull/135422
Approved by: https://github.com/williamwen42
ghstack dependencies: #134732, #133137, #135443, #135444
This PR implements tracing of with contexts with TorchFunction modes which have the default enter/exit behavior (ie pushing/popping the mode)
Typically the bytecode for a context manager looks like this during a graph break:
1. graph call
2. enter context
3. unsupported code
4. exit context
5. resume call
resume fn structure:
1. enter context
2. jump
...
3. exit context
The issue with torch function modes is that side effects will replay any mutations to the torch function stack performed during tracing. So, we do not need to enter and exit around the unsupported code in the original function (doing so would result in a duplicate torch function mode entry during execution of the unsupported code), and we don't need to enter again in the resume function (the mode that was pushed from the side effects bytecode would still be on the stack).
So for torch function modes the structure of our output code is this:
1. graph call
2. mutate tf mode stack to replay mutations
4. unsupported code
5. on exception restore stack
6. resume function
Then our resume fn looks like this:
1. no-op enter torch function mode
2. jump
3. exit tf mode
To implement the no-op enter of the torch function mode I added torch function mode in polyfill which no-op enters, but normally exits. This is needed because we still want to trace the with context in the resume function, and exit properly (the exit instructions will still be in the function, so we need to generate instructions to set up the context).
Separately from the bytecode, dynamo also tracks contexts on the block stack, which is how the SETUP_* instructions are implemented. Naturally at a graph break, we exit these block stacks to properly reset the contexts entirely, so that we can re-enter around the unsupported code soundly. However once again, in the torch function mode case, in the event of a graph we do not want to perform any exit side effects because we want to preserve the state of the mode stack as is so that we will properly update the stack with bytecode mentioned in the first section. If we exited here, dynamo would pop the mode off of the symbolic stack, and not update the true python torch function mode stack with the suffix bytecode. All in all, for torch function modes we enter exactly once, update the global torch function mode stack with side effects bytecode, re-read this stack when compiling the resume function, and exit exactly once in the resume function. This matches the semantics of eager exactly.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/pytorch/pytorch/pull/135422
Approved by: https://github.com/williamwen42
ghstack dependencies: #134732, #133137, #135443, #135444
This PR implements tracing of with contexts with TorchFunction modes which have the default enter/exit behavior (ie pushing/popping the mode)
Typically the bytecode for a context manager looks like this during a graph break:
1. graph call
2. enter context
3. unsupported code
4. exit context
5. resume call
resume fn structure:
1. enter context
2. jump
...
3. exit context
The issue with torch function modes is that side effects will replay any mutations to the torch function stack performed during tracing. So, we do not need to enter and exit around the unsupported code in the original function (doing so would result in a duplicate torch function mode entry during execution of the unsupported code), and we don't need to enter again in the resume function (the mode that was pushed from the side effects bytecode would still be on the stack).
So for torch function modes the structure of our output code is this:
1. graph call
2. mutate tf mode stack to replay mutations
4. unsupported code
5. on exception restore stack
6. resume function
Then our resume fn looks like this:
1. no-op enter torch function mode
2. jump
3. exit tf mode
To implement the no-op enter of the torch function mode I added torch function mode in polyfill which no-op enters, but normally exits. This is needed because we still want to trace the with context in the resume function, and exit properly (the exit instructions will still be in the function, so we need to generate instructions to set up the context).
Separately from the bytecode, dynamo also tracks contexts on the block stack, which is how the SETUP_* instructions are implemented. Naturally at a graph break, we exit these block stacks to properly reset the contexts entirely, so that we can re-enter around the unsupported code soundly. However once again, in the torch function mode case, in the event of a graph we do not want to perform any exit side effects because we want to preserve the state of the mode stack as is so that we will properly update the stack with bytecode mentioned in the first section. If we exited here, dynamo would pop the mode off of the symbolic stack, and not update the true python torch function mode stack with the suffix bytecode. All in all, for torch function modes we enter exactly once, update the global torch function mode stack with side effects bytecode, re-read this stack when compiling the resume function, and exit exactly once in the resume function. This matches the semantics of eager exactly.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/pytorch/pytorch/pull/135422
Approved by: https://github.com/williamwen42
ghstack dependencies: #134732, #133137, #135443, #135444
This PR adds support for tracing `torch._C._pop_torch_function_stack()` without graph breaking and in order to verify the state change also adds replay of mutations to the torch function mode stack via side_effects appending supplemental bytecode as we do for other python mutable objects.
Details:
To represent the torch function mode stack symbolically a deque field is added to the instruction translator. When the InstructionTranslator is initialized, all modes are read from the current torch function mode stack, and stashed in a global weak ref for later access (using existing sources) without needing to push/pop the python/cpp torch function mode stack.
During tracing, when `_pop_torch_function_stack` is encountered a value is popped from this deque and the variable tracker representing the mode is returned. To ensure the true torch function mode stack matches this state, `TorchFunctionModeStackVariable`, a singleton, is marked as mutated, this adds it to side effects, where during final codegen, side effects will codegen a call to a python helper which will update the python torch function mode stack.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/pytorch/pytorch/pull/133131
Approved by: https://github.com/jansel
ghstack dependencies: #133130, #133729
This PR adds a guard on the torch function mode stack state at the beginning of tracing. The way this is implemented is via a new leaf guard which is passed the initial stack state at construction and compares it to the stack state at the time the guard is run.
Details:
The stack state is extracted via popping all modes, appending them to a list, and pushing all modes back. This list is stored on the output graph and read during guard construction to pass to the stack mode guard. There the length and types of the modes are recorded. Next time the guard is run it compares this recorded state to the current mode stack state.
To implement this in python a helper function was added to utils.py and this is used if cpp guards are not enabled.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/pytorch/pytorch/pull/133130
Approved by: https://github.com/anijain2305
The original motivation for MYPYINDUCTOR was a faster type checking configuration that only checked a subset of files. With the removal of `follow_imports = ignore`, we are now able to use dmypy to do fast incremental typechecking, eliminating the need for this.
Perhaps erroneously, when I tee'ed up this PR I elected to delete the `follow_imports = skip` designations in the mypy-inductor.ini. This lead to a number of extra type error suppressions that I manually edited. You will need to review.
Signed-off-by: Edward Z. Yang <ezyang@meta.com>
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/pytorch/pytorch/pull/118432
Approved by: https://github.com/Skylion007
ghstack dependencies: #118414, #118418
We split install_global_once into two APIs:
- `install_global_by_id(prefix, value) -> name`: installs a global if it hasn't
been installed yet
- `install_global(prefix, value) -> name`: always installs the global (and
generates a unique name for it)
Then, we refactor most callsites of `install_global_unsafe` to one of
the previous. Some callsites cannot be refactored because we create the
global name first, do a lot of stuff with it, and then install it.
This fixes more test flakiness.
Test Plan:
- Existing tests; I can't reliably repro the flakiness
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/pytorch/pytorch/pull/118100
Approved by: https://github.com/ezyang, https://github.com/mlazos
Fixes https://github.com/pytorch/pytorch/issues/117851
In tests, we ran into an issue where:
- In frame A, Dynamo would install a global
- We call reset()
- reset() did not delete the installed global due to a refcycle
- In frame B, Dynamo would re-use the same global
- Python gc ran, deleting the installed global, leading to the compiled
version of frame B raising NameNotFound
This PR changes the following:
- module globals are now installed at a per-frame basis.
- renames install_global to install_global_unsafe: if the names are not
unique and end up being re-used across frames, then we've got trouble.
Test Plan:
- I tested that this got rid of the test flakiness locally. I'm not sure
how to easily write a test for this, because I don't actually know
what the refcycle in the above is.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/pytorch/pytorch/pull/117998
Approved by: https://github.com/ezyang, https://github.com/anijain2305
Previously, kwargs were incorrectly dispatched by passing them as the true kwargs to the torch function call. To fix, the kwargs of the original torch op need to be stored in a dictionary and passed as an argument to the torch function implementation.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/pytorch/pytorch/pull/117083
Approved by: https://github.com/drisspg