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[CK] [CK_Tile] Add GroupConv to Kernel Dispatcher ## Motivation This PR adds CK Tile group convolution (forward, backward-data, backward-weight) support to the kernel dispatcher, matching and unifying with the existing dispatcher GEMM infrastructure in architecture and usability. The dispatcher provides a unified kernel dispatch system with both C++ and Python frontends, and until now only supported GEMM operations. This PR enables framework integrators to use the same declarative kernel workflow for convolutions as they do for GEMM: declare kernels, build a registry JIT, select kernels within the registry at runtime, and dispatch to GPU. Future PRs will include runtime kernel selection heuristics for autotuning of kernel parameters based on (problem, hardware arch). ## Technical Details Grouped convolution support has been added to the CK Tile Dispatcher with generated_conv_backend.hpp enabling dispatcher.run(in, wei, out, problem) for all 6 conv variants (fwd/bwdd/bwdw x 2D/3D), runtime heuristic kernel selection, and GroupedConvKernelKey with full ConvConfigBase fields. Python side adds parallel JIT via registry.build(max_workers) and heuristic registry.select(). Includes 7 C++ and 6 Python examples covering all directions with CPU reference validation, and shared infrastructure improvements (BaseRegistry CRTP, structured exceptions). As a sanity check, JIT compile times for a single kernel remains the same and for multiple kernels there is better parallelism: Kernels | 1 worker | 8 workers 1 | 7.7 s | 7.7 s 2 | 15.9 s | 8.2 s 4 | 33.4 s | 9.7 s 6 | 52.3 s | 10.2 s ## Test Plan 145 ephemeral unit tests have been added to test basic functionality. All 30 examples/integration tests run end-to-end on gfx950 (MI350): 7 C++ conv, 7 C++ GEMM, 6 Python conv, 10 Python GEMM. CPU reference validation for forward, backward-data, and backward-weight (2D) in both C++ and Python examples pass. ## Test Result 30 examples pass. Peak performance: 132 TFLOPS (Batch-32 forward 56x56), 53 TFLOPS (pointwise 1x1). CPU reference accuracy: max_abs_diff < 0.002 for all directions (fp16 vs fp32 reference). ## Submission Checklist - [x] Look over the contributing guidelines at https://github.com/ROCm/ROCm/blob/develop/CONTRIBUTING.md#pull-requests.
GEMM Python Examples
CK Tile Dispatcher Python examples for GEMM (General Matrix Multiplication) operations.
Main Documentation: Dispatcher README | Examples Overview
Quick Start
Build Library
cd /path/to/composable_kernel/dispatcher
mkdir -p build && cd build
cmake .. \
-DCMAKE_PREFIX_PATH=/opt/rocm \
-DCMAKE_CXX_COMPILER=/opt/rocm/bin/hipcc \
-DBUILD_DISPATCHER_EXAMPLES=ON
# Build Python library (kernels generated automatically)
make dispatcher_gemm_lib -j$(nproc)
Run Examples
cd /path/to/composable_kernel/dispatcher
python3 examples/gemm/python/01_basic_gemm.py
python3 examples/gemm/python/04_validation.py
python3 examples/gemm/python/07_stress_test.py
python3 examples/gemm/python/08_heuristics.py
Examples
| Example | Description |
|---|---|
| 01_basic_gemm.py | Basic GEMM with multi-kernel support |
| 02_batch_gemm.py | Batched GEMM operations |
| 03_benchmark.py | Performance benchmarking |
| 04_validation.py | CPU reference validation |
| 05_numpy_integration.py | NumPy array integration |
| 06_json_export.py | Registry JSON export |
| 07_stress_test.py | Multi-kernel stress testing |
| 08_heuristics.py | Heuristic-based kernel selection |
| 09_multi_registry.py | Multiple registries |
| 10_advanced_benchmark.py | Advanced benchmark with full control |
| 11_json_import.py | Import kernels from JSON |
Example Details
01_basic_gemm.py - Basic GEMM
Demonstrates the Python API with multi-kernel support:
from ctypes_utils import KernelConfig, setup_gemm_dispatcher, print_kernel_config_table
# Define multiple kernel configurations
kernels = [
KernelConfig(
tile_m=128, tile_n=128, tile_k=32,
wave_m=2, wave_n=2, wave_k=1,
warp_tile_m=32, warp_tile_n=32, warp_tile_k=16,
pipeline="compv3", scheduler="intrawave"
),
KernelConfig(
tile_m=256, tile_n=256, tile_k=32,
wave_m=2, wave_n=2, wave_k=1,
warp_tile_m=32, warp_tile_n=32, warp_tile_k=16,
pipeline="compv4", scheduler="intrawave"
),
]
# Display configurations
print_kernel_config_table(kernels)
# Set up dispatcher with all kernels
lib, dispatcher, registry = setup_gemm_dispatcher(kernels)
# Run GEMM
elapsed_ms = run_gemm(lib, M, N, K, ...)
02_batch_gemm.py - Batch GEMM
Batched matrix multiplication:
- Multiple independent GEMM operations
- Batch dimension handling
03_benchmark.py - Benchmarking
Performance measurement:
- GPU timing
- TFLOPS calculation
- Multiple iterations
04_validation.py - Validation
Correctness verification:
- NumPy reference implementation
- Tolerance-based validation
- Error reporting
05_numpy_integration.py - NumPy Integration
Seamless NumPy integration:
- NumPy arrays to GPU buffers
- Results back to NumPy
- Automatic type conversion
06_json_export.py - JSON Export
Registry serialization for tool integration:
- Export kernel configurations
- Machine-readable format
07_stress_test.py - Stress Testing
Comprehensive multi-kernel stress testing:
from ctypes_utils import KernelConfig, setup_gemm_dispatcher, print_kernel_config_table
# Define 48 unique kernel configurations
kernels = [
KernelConfig(tile_m=128, tile_n=128, tile_k=32, pipeline="compv3", ...),
KernelConfig(tile_m=256, tile_n=256, tile_k=32, pipeline="compv4", ...),
KernelConfig(tile_m=128, tile_n=256, tile_k=64, pipeline="compv3", ...),
# ... many more configurations
]
# Test each kernel
for i, kernel in enumerate(kernels):
lib, dispatcher, registry = setup_gemm_dispatcher([kernel])
result = run_and_validate(lib, M, N, K, seed=42 + i) # Different seed per kernel
print(f"Kernel {i}: {result.max_err:.6e} {'PASS' if result.passed else 'FAIL'}")
Features:
- 48 unique kernel configurations
- Various tile sizes, pipelines, and schedulers
- Per-kernel validation with unique random seeds
- Performance reporting
08_heuristics.py - Heuristic Selection
Custom kernel selection based on problem characteristics:
# Define kernel pools for different strategies
SMALL_KERNELS = [KernelConfig(tile_m=64, tile_n=64, ...), ...]
LARGE_KERNELS = [KernelConfig(tile_m=256, tile_n=256, ...), ...]
COMPUTE_KERNELS = [KernelConfig(pipeline="compv4", ...), ...]
MEMORY_KERNELS = [KernelConfig(pipeline="compv3", ...), ...]
# Size-based heuristic
def size_based_heuristic(M, N, K):
if M * N < 512 * 512:
return SMALL_KERNELS
else:
return LARGE_KERNELS
# Strategy-based selection
def compute_strategy():
return COMPUTE_KERNELS # Optimized for compute-bound problems
def memory_strategy():
return MEMORY_KERNELS # Optimized for memory-bound problems
# Test different strategies
for strategy in [size_based_heuristic, compute_strategy, memory_strategy]:
kernels = strategy(M, N, K)
lib, dispatcher, registry = setup_gemm_dispatcher(kernels)
elapsed_ms = run_gemm(lib, M, N, K, ...)
Features:
- 24 kernel configurations across 6 categories
- Size-based heuristic (small vs large)
- Optimization strategies (compute, memory, latency)
- Performance comparison across strategies
09_multi_registry.py - Multiple Registries
Separate registries for different workloads:
- Compute-optimized registry
- Latency-optimized registry
- Dynamic registry selection
10_advanced_benchmark.py - Advanced Benchmark
Full control over benchmark parameters:
- Warmup iterations
- Benchmark iterations
- Statistical analysis
11_json_import.py - JSON Import
Import kernel configurations from JSON:
- External configuration files
- Dynamic kernel loading
Utility Module: ctypes_utils.py
from ctypes_utils import (
KernelConfig, # Single kernel configuration
setup_gemm_dispatcher, # Set up dispatcher with kernels
print_kernel_config_table, # Display kernel configurations
Dispatcher, # High-level dispatcher
Registry, # Kernel registry
Validator, # Validation utilities
)
KernelConfig
config = KernelConfig(
# Tile sizes
tile_m=256, tile_n=256, tile_k=32,
# Wave configuration
wave_m=2, wave_n=2, wave_k=1,
# Warp tile sizes
warp_tile_m=32, warp_tile_n=32, warp_tile_k=16,
# Pipeline and scheduler
pipeline="compv4", # "compv3" or "compv4"
scheduler="intrawave", # "intrawave" or "interwave"
# Optional
epilogue="default",
padding=True,
double_buffer=True,
)
setup_gemm_dispatcher
# Single kernel
lib, dispatcher, registry = setup_gemm_dispatcher(config)
# Multiple kernels
lib, dispatcher, registry = setup_gemm_dispatcher([config1, config2, ...])
# With auto-rebuild
lib, dispatcher, registry = setup_gemm_dispatcher(config, auto_rebuild=True)
print_kernel_config_table
kernels = [config1, config2, config3]
print_kernel_config_table(kernels)
# Output:
# +----+-------+-------+-------+--------+-----------+
# | # | Tile | Wave | Warp | Pipe | Scheduler |
# +----+-------+-------+-------+--------+-----------+
# | 1 | 128x128x32 | 2x2x1 | 32x32x16 | compv3 | intrawave |
# | 2 | 256x256x32 | 2x2x1 | 32x32x16 | compv4 | intrawave |
# | 3 | 128x256x64 | 2x2x1 | 32x32x16 | compv3 | interwave |
# +----+-------+-------+-------+--------+-----------+
GPU Memory Management
import ctypes
import numpy as np
# Load HIP library
hip = ctypes.CDLL("libamdhip64.so")
# Allocate GPU memory
gpu_ptr = ctypes.c_void_p()
hip.hipMalloc(ctypes.byref(gpu_ptr), size_in_bytes)
# Copy to GPU (1 = hipMemcpyHostToDevice)
hip.hipMemcpy(gpu_ptr, host_array.ctypes.data, size, 1)
# Copy back (2 = hipMemcpyDeviceToHost)
hip.hipMemcpy(host_array.ctypes.data, gpu_ptr, size, 2)
# Free
hip.hipFree(gpu_ptr)
Performance Testing
Test compilation performance with different kernel counts:
# Test with 10 kernels (~15s compile time)
python3 01_basic_gemm.py --num-kernels 10
# Test with 20 kernels (~25s compile time)
python3 01_basic_gemm.py --num-kernels 20
# Test with 48 kernels (~50s compile time)
python3 01_basic_gemm.py --num-kernels 48
Compilation time scales roughly linearly with kernel count.