mobile

This blog post talks about how to generate performant code for convolution ops using MLIR’s multiple levels of abstractions and transformations. I initially created it for targeting ARM Mali GPUs in IREE. But given it is just direct tiling and vectorization, it should be widely applicable. I will walk through the lowering steps, so if you are interested to know how to organize MLIR’s various dialects/patterns together to achieve similar tasks, this blog post might also be useful.
Nowadays GPUs are utilized for both graphics rendering and general-purpose compute (GPGPU). For the latter, CUDA is the indisputable leading solution. Though, with so many other GPU vendors, the quest for a GPGPU standard never stops. OpenCL was a great attempt and is used widely; but still it falls short on many aspects. Given the success of Vulkan in graphics and it being both a graphics and compute API, one would wonder whether it can actually be the next-generation GPGPU standard. I certainly believe so; but the road is not full of roses.
These days if you would like to learn about machine learning, there are abundant great resources on the web discussing model architectures and how to code and train them. Materials about inference, though, are generally much harder to find, especially for edge and mobile. You might ask, inference is just the forward pass of training, so how hard can it be? Actually, it faces lots of unique challenges, to the extent that we are basically solving completely different major problems. I have been working on inference at the edge for a while, so let me capture them in this blog post, by contrasting training and inference in the cloud.
2021-07-17
11 min read