Emily Martins 329b680447 [CK Tile] Stream K GEMM Kernel HostArgs and Kernel Classes (#2681)
* CK Tile Stream K Device Ops

Implementation of CK Tile StreamKHostArgs and StreamKKernel classes. The
StreamKKernel class injects Universal Gemm and includes functions to
facilitate kernel preparation for the GPU.

* Stream K Device Ops Fixes

- Update GetWorkSpaceSize to call TilePartitioner's GetWorkSpaceSize to
  ensure we get size needed for accumulation buffers and semaphores.
- Pass in num_sk_blocks into TilePartitioner constructor
- Update documentation

* Add WarpTile dimensions to GetName function in StreamKKernel class

* Fix typos in StreamKHostArgs class description.

Co-authored-by: Christopher Millette <63608002+cgmillette@users.noreply.github.com>

* Apply clang format on updated comment for StreamKHostArgs

* Explicitly specify type for StreamKReductionStrategy enum

* Remove unecessary scopes

* Unify the commenting style to inline comments

* Add explicit casts for occupancy and num_cu in MakeKernelArgs function

Both the static functions Occupancy and NumCU in the StreamKKernel class
use functions from the HIP API that result in the returned occupancy and
num_cu types being type int. The TilePartitioner interface for stream K will
have occupancy and num_cu being type ck_tile::index_t which is int32_t.
Thus, to be safe, this change ensures that both occupancy and num_cu are
cast to int32_t.

* Fix use of kentry due to interface update
PR #2594 updated the interface for the kentry function in
include/ck_tile/host/kernel_launch.hpp. As a result, the static function
Occupancy was updated to work correctly with the new interface.
PR #2594 also changed UniversalGemmKernel's KernelBlockSize static
variable to kBlockSize, so the StreamKKernel class was updated to
reflect this change.

* Switch type of num_sk_blocks from uint32_t to int32_t

This change switches the type of num_sk_blocks to type ck_tile::index_t
which is int32_t. This was done because parallel work for the CK Tile
StreamK TilePartitioner's constructor will have num_sk_blocks as
ck_tile::index_t. Thus, this change will help unify the interfaces to
avoid any type conversion errors.

---------

Co-authored-by: Christopher Millette <63608002+cgmillette@users.noreply.github.com>

[ROCm/composable_kernel commit: 071165919f]
2025-08-19 15:08:52 -06:00
2025-07-16 07:58:23 -07:00
2025-08-19 00:23:07 -07:00
2018-10-08 22:49:58 -05:00
2025-01-07 08:29:40 -08:00
2025-07-24 12:38:24 -07:00

Composable Kernel

Note

The published documentation is available at Composable Kernel in an organized, easy-to-read format, with search and a table of contents. The documentation source files reside in the docs folder of this repository. As with all ROCm projects, the documentation is open source. For more information on contributing to the documentation, see Contribute to ROCm documentation.

The Composable Kernel (CK) library provides a programming model for writing performance-critical kernels for machine learning workloads across multiple architectures (GPUs, CPUs, etc.). The CK library uses general purpose kernel languages, such as HIP C++.

CK uses two concepts to achieve performance portability and code maintainability:

  • A tile-based programming model
  • Algorithm complexity reduction for complex machine learning (ML) operators. This uses an innovative technique called Tensor Coordinate Transformation.

ALT

The current CK library is structured into four layers:

  • Templated Tile Operators
  • Templated Kernel and Invoker
  • Instantiated Kernel and Invoker
  • Client API

ALT

General information

CK is released under the MIT license.

Building CK

We recommend building CK inside Docker containers, which include all necessary packages. Pre-built Docker images are available on DockerHub.

  1. To build a new Docker image, use the Dockerfile provided with the source code:

    DOCKER_BUILDKIT=1 docker build -t ck:latest -f Dockerfile .
    
  2. Launch the Docker container:

    docker run                                     \
    -it                                            \
    --privileged                                   \
    --group-add sudo                               \
    -w /root/workspace                             \
    -v ${PATH_TO_LOCAL_WORKSPACE}:/root/workspace  \
    ck:latest                                      \
    /bin/bash
    
  3. Clone CK source code from the GitHub repository and start the build:

    git clone https://github.com/ROCm/composable_kernel.git && \
    cd composable_kernel && \
    mkdir build && \
    cd build
    

    You must set the GPU_TARGETS macro to specify the GPU target architecture(s) you want to run CK on. You can specify single or multiple architectures. If you specify multiple architectures, use a semicolon between each; for example, gfx908;gfx90a;gfx942.

    cmake                                                                                             \
    -D CMAKE_PREFIX_PATH=/opt/rocm                                                                    \
    -D CMAKE_CXX_COMPILER=/opt/rocm/bin/hipcc                                                         \
    -D CMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release                                                                       \
    -D GPU_TARGETS="gfx908;gfx90a"                                                                    \
    ..
    

    If you don't set GPU_TARGETS on the cmake command line, CK is built for all GPU targets supported by the current compiler (this may take a long time). Tests and examples will only get built if the GPU_TARGETS is set by the user on the cmake command line.

    NOTE: If you try setting GPU_TARGETS to a list of architectures, the build will only work if the architectures are similar, e.g., gfx908;gfx90a, or gfx1100;gfx1101;gfx11012. Otherwise, if you want to build the library for a list of different architectures, you should use the GPU_ARCHS build argument, for example GPU_ARCHS=gfx908;gfx1030;gfx1100;gfx942.

  4. Build the entire CK library:

    make -j"$(nproc)"
    
  5. Install CK:

    make -j install
    

    See Note on -j

Optional post-install steps

  • Build examples and tests:

    make -j examples tests
    
  • Build and run all examples and tests:

    make -j check
    

    You can find instructions for running each individual example in example.

  • Build and run smoke/regression examples and tests:

    make -j smoke # tests and examples that run for < 30 seconds each
    
    make -j regression # tests and examples that run for >= 30 seconds each
    
  • Build ckProfiler:

    make -j ckProfiler
    

    You can find instructions for running ckProfiler in profiler.

  • Build our documentation locally:

    cd docs
    pip3 install -r sphinx/requirements.txt
    python3 -m sphinx -T -E -b html -d _build/doctrees -D language=en . _build/html
    

Notes

The -j option for building with multiple threads in parallel, which speeds up the build significantly. However, -j launches unlimited number of threads, which can cause the build to run out of memory and crash. On average, you should expect each thread to use ~2Gb of RAM. Depending on the number of CPU cores and the amount of RAM on your system, you may want to limit the number of threads. For example, if you have a 128-core CPU and 128 Gb of RAM it's advisable to use -j32.

Additional cmake flags can be used to significantly speed-up the build:

  • DTYPES (default is not set) can be set to any subset of "fp64;fp32;fp16;fp8;bf16;int8" to build instances of select data types only. The main default data types are fp32 and fp16; you can safely skip other data types.

  • DISABLE_DL_KERNELS (default is OFF) must be set to ON in order not to build instances, such as gemm_dl or batched_gemm_multi_d_dl. These instances are useful on architectures like the NAVI2x, as most other platforms have faster instances, such as xdl or wmma, available.

  • DISABLE_DPP_KERNELS (default is OFF) must be set to ON in order not to build instances, such as gemm_dpp. These instances offer a slightly better performance of fp16 gemms on NAVI2x. But on other architectures faster alternatives are available.

  • CK_USE_FP8_ON_UNSUPPORTED_ARCH (default is OFF) must be set to ON in order to build instances, such as gemm_universal, gemm_universal_streamk and gemm_multiply_multiply for fp8 data type for GPU targets which do not have native support for fp8 data type, such as gfx908 or gfx90a. These instances are useful on architectures like the MI100/MI200 for the functional support only.

Using sccache for building

The default CK Docker images come with a pre-installed version of sccache, which supports clang being used as hip-compiler (" -x hip"). Using sccache can help reduce the time to re-build code from hours to 1-2 minutes. In order to invoke sccache, you need to run:

 sccache --start-server

then add the following flags to the cmake command line:

 -DCMAKE_CXX_COMPILER_LAUNCHER=sccache -DCMAKE_C_COMPILER_LAUNCHER=sccache

You may need to clean up the build folder and repeat the cmake and make steps in order to take advantage of the sccache during subsequent builds.

Using CK as pre-built kernel library

You can find instructions for using CK as a pre-built kernel library in client_example.

Contributing to CK

When you contribute to CK, make sure you run clang-format on all changed files. We highly recommend using git hooks that are managed by the pre-commit framework. To install hooks, run:

sudo script/install_precommit.sh

With this approach, pre-commit adds the appropriate hooks to your local repository and automatically runs clang-format (and possibly additional checks) before any commit is created.

If you need to uninstall hooks from the repository, you can do so by running the following command:

script/uninstall_precommit.sh

If you need to temporarily disable pre-commit hooks, you can add the --no-verify option to the git commit command.

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[DEPRECATED] Moved to ROCm/rocm-libraries repo. NOTE: develop branch is maintained as a read-only mirror
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