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Registering a Dispatched Operator in C++

The dispatcher is an internal component of PyTorch which is responsible for figuring out what code should actually get run when you call a function like torch::add. This can be nontrivial, because PyTorch operations need to handle a lot of cross-cutting concerns that are “layered” on top of one of another. Here is a sampling of some of the things it handles:

  • Switching between the CPU and CUDA implementations of an operator, depending on the devices of the input tensors.
  • Switching between the autograd and backend implementations of an operator, depending on whether or not autograd handling is necessary.
  • Applying autocasting when necessary for automatic mixed precision.
  • Applying batching rules when an operator is run under a vmap call.
  • Tracing execution of operations, if you are tracing a model for export.

If in your custom operator code you find yourself manually writing if statements to handle these cases, the dispatcher APIs can help organize your code. (Conversely, if your custom operator is very simple and is only for CPU inference, you probably don’t need to use the dispatcher, just use the basic API.)

In this tutorial, we will describe how to structure a custom operator registration to use the dispatcher to organize various components. We’ll assume that you are familiar with how to register an operator and how to write a custom autograd function.

Defining schema and backend implementations

The general principle behind the dispatcher is that it divides the implementation of an operator into multiple kernels, each of which implements functionality for a specific dispatch key, e.g. CPU, CUDA. The dispatcher determines what the highest priority dispatch key is at the time you call an operator (this is done by looking at both the tensor arguments as well as some thread local state), and transfers control to the kernel for that dispatch key. The end effect is that when you call an operator, we first execute the Autograd kernel, and then we redispatch to the backend kernel depending on the device types of the passed in tensors.

Let’s take a look at the various parts involved in making this happen. First, we must define the schema for the operator in question. Unlike simple pybind11-style operator registration, we don’t actually provide an implementation of our operator at this point; we just provide a schema string specifying the type signature of the operator that all of our other kernels will abide by:

TORCH_LIBRARY(myops, m) {
  m.def("myadd(Tensor self, Tensor other) -> Tensor");
}

Next, we need to actually provide some implementations of this operator. For concreteness, here is a really simple implementation of addition on CPU:

Tensor myadd_cpu(const Tensor& self_, const Tensor& other_) {
  TORCH_CHECK(self_.sizes() == other_.sizes());
  TORCH_INTERNAL_ASSERT(self_.device().type() == DeviceType::CPU);
  TORCH_INTERNAL_ASSERT(other_.device().type() == DeviceType::CPU);
  Tensor self = self_.contiguous();
  Tensor other = other_.contiguous();
  Tensor result = torch::empty(self.sizes(), self.options());
  const float* self_ptr = self.data_ptr<float>();
  const float* other_ptr = other.data_ptr<float>();
  float* result_ptr = result.data_ptr<float>();
  for (int64_t i = 0; i < result.numel(); i++) {
    result_ptr[i] = self_ptr[i] + other_ptr[i];
  }
  return result;
}

We’d like to register this function as an implementation of myops::myadd. However, the simple way of registering it (def("myadd", myadd_cpu)) would register the kernel to run in all cases, even if the tensor is not a CPU tensor! (Internally, we refer to these as “catch-all” kernels, since they catch all cases.) To ensure that myadd_cpu is only run for CPU tensors, we can use the TORCH_LIBRARY_IMPL macro:

TORCH_LIBRARY_IMPL(myops, CPU, m) {
  m.impl("myadd", myadd_cpu);
}

The TORCH_LIBRARY_IMPL lets us register implementations for operators on a specific dispatch key (in this case, CPU). Each call to impl associates a CPU kernel with the corresponding operator (which we previously defined in the TORCH_LIBRARY block). If we also have a CUDA implementation myadd_cuda, we can register it in a separate TORCH_LIBRARY_IMPL block:

TORCH_LIBRARY_IMPL(myops, CUDA, m) {
  m.impl("myadd", myadd_cuda);
}

These registrations can be split across files or even across library boundaries; so for example, you could have these two TORCH_LIBRARY_IMPL blocks compiled into a separate myops_cpu and myops_cuda dynamic libraries. Generally, speaking, the structure of your registrations will look like this:

  1. A single TORCH_LIBRARY that lists every custom operator in your namespace in a centralized place.
  2. A TORCH_LIBRARY_IMPL per dispatch key that registers implementations for that key (e.g., CPU or CUDA). If you like, you can further subdivide TORCH_LIBRARY_IMPL blocks into a block per operator. This is convenient if you have a separate file per operator implementation, but don’t want to expose the operators in a header; you can just put the registration in the cpp file that defines your operator.

Note

Did you know that you can also write TORCH_LIBRARY_IMPL blocks for existing core operators in PyTorch? This is how XLA support for PyTorch is implemented: the torch_xla library contains a TORCH_LIBRARY_IMPL that provides implementations for all basic operators on the XLA dispatch key.

Adding autograd support

At this point, we have an operator with both CPU and CUDA implementations. How can we add autograd support to it? As you might guess, we will register an autograd kernel (similar to what’s described in the custom autograd function tutorial)! However, there is a twist: unlike the CPU and CUDA kernels, the autograd kernel needs to redispatch: it needs to call back into the dispatcher to get to the inference kernels, e.g. CPU or CUDA implementations.

Thus, before we write the autograd kernel, let’s write a dispatching function which calls into the dispatcher to find the right kernel for your operator. This function constitutes the public C++ API for your operators–in fact, all of the tensor functions in PyTorch’s C++ API all call the dispatcher in the same way under the hood. Here’s what the dispatching function looks like:

Tensor myadd(const Tensor& self, const Tensor& other) {
  static auto op = torch::Dispatcher::singleton()
    .findSchemaOrThrow("myops::myadd", "")
    .typed<decltype(myadd)>();
  return op.call(self, other);
}

Let’s break it down:

  • In the first line, we look up a typed operator handle from the dispatcher corresponding to the operator that we are going to dispatch to. findSchemaOrThrow takes two arguments: the (namespace qualified) name of the operator, and the overload name of the operator (typically just the empty string). typed casts the dynamically typed handle into a statically typed handle (doing a runtime test to make sure you’ve given the correct C++ type), so that we can do a normal C++ call on it. We pass it decltype(myadd) since the type of the dispatching function is the same as the type of the underlying kernels registered to the dispatcher.

    For performance, this computation is done in a static variable, so that we only need to do the (slow) lookup once. If you typoed the name of the operator you want to call, this lookup will error the first time you call this function.

  • In the second line, we simply call the operator handle with all of the arguments passed into the dispatching function. This will actually invoke the dispatcher and in the end control will be transferred to whatever kernel is appropriate for this call.

With the dispatch function in hand, we can now write the autograd kernel:

class MyAddFunction : public torch::autograd::Function<MyAddFunction> {
 public:
  static Tensor forward(
      AutogradContext *ctx, torch::Tensor self, torch::Tensor other) {
    at::AutoNonVariableTypeMode g;
    return myadd(self, other);
  }

  static tensor_list backward(AutogradContext *ctx, tensor_list grad_outputs) {
    auto grad_output = grad_outputs[0];
    return {grad_output, grad_output};
  }
};

Tensor myadd_autograd(const Tensor& self, const Tensor& other) {
  return MyAddFunction::apply(self, other)[0];
}

The autograd function is written as normal using torch::autograd::Function, except that instead of directly writing the implementation in forward(), we:

  1. Turn off autograd handling with the at::AutoNonVariableTypeMode RAII guard, and then
  2. Call the dispatch function myadd to call back into the dispatcher.

Without (1), your calls will infinite loop (and stack overflow), because myadd will send you back to this function (as the highest priority dispatch key would still be autograd.) With (1), autograd is excluded from the set of dispatch keys under consideration, and we will go to the next handlers, which will either be CPU and CUDA.

We can now register this function in the same way we registered the CPU/CUDA functions:

TORCH_LIBRARY_IMPL(myops, Autograd, m) {
  m.impl("myadd", myadd_autograd);
}

Note

In this example we register the kernel to Autograd, which installs it as the autograd kernel for all backends. You can also register optimized kernels for specific backends by using the corresponding backend-specific dispatch key - for example, AutogradCPU or AutogradCUDA. To explore these and other dispatch key options in more detail, check out the PythonDispatcher tool provided in torch/_python_dispatcher.py.

Going beyond autograd

In some sense, the dispatcher isn’t doing all that much: all it does is implement a glorified if-statement, along the lines of this:

class MyAddFunction : ... {
public:
  static Tensor forward(
    AutogradContext *ctx, torch::Tensor self, torch::Tensor other) {

    if (self.device().type() == DeviceType::CPU) {
      return add_cpu(self, other);
    } else if (self.device().type() == DeviceType::CUDA) {
      return add_cuda(self, other);
    } else {
      TORCH_CHECK(0, "Unsupported device ", self.device().type());
    }
  }
  ...
}

So why use the dispatcher? There are a few reasons:

  1. It is decentralized. You can assemble all of the pieces of an operator (CPU, CUDA, Autograd) without having to write a single, centralized if statement that refers to all of them. Importantly, third parties can register extra implementations for other aspects without having to patch the original definition of an operator. We’ll talk more about extending the dispatcher in extending dispatcher for a new backend.
  2. It supports more dispatch keys than CPU, CUDA and Autograd. You can see a full list of dispatch keys that are currently implemented in PyTorch in c10/core/DispatchKey.h. These dispatch keys implement a variety of optional functionality for operators, and if you decide you want your custom operator to support this functionality, all you have to register a kernel for the appropriate key.
  3. The dispatcher implements support for boxed fallback functions, which are functions that can be implemented once and apply to all operators in the system. Boxed fallbacks can be used to provide default behavior for a dispatch key; if you use the dispatcher to implement your operator, you also opt into the fallbacks for all of these operations.

Here are some particular dispatch keys which you may need to define an operator for.

Autocast

The Autocast dispatch key implements support for automatic mixed precision (AMP). An autocast wrapper kernel typically casts incoming float16 or float32 CUDA tensors to some preferred precision before running the op. For example, matmuls and convolutions on floating-point CUDA tensors usually run faster and use less memory in float16 without impairing convergence. Autocast wrappers only have an effect in autocast-enabled contexts.

Here’s an autocast wrapper for a hypothetical custom matmul, along with its registration:

// Autocast-specific helper functions
#include <ATen/autocast_mode.h>

Tensor mymatmul_autocast(const Tensor& self, const Tensor& other) {
  c10::impl::ExcludeDispatchKeyGuard no_autocast(c10::DispatchKey::Autocast);
  return mymatmul(at::autocast::cached_cast(at::kHalf, self),
                  at::autocast::cached_cast(at::kHalf, other));
}

TORCH_LIBRARY_IMPL(myops, Autocast, m) {
  m.impl("mymatmul", mymatmul_autocast);
}

cached_cast(kHalf, tensor) casts tensor to float16 if tensor is CUDA and float32, otherwise, it leaves tensor unchanged (c.f. the eligibility policy for natively autocasted ops). This ensures if the network calls mymatmul on any mixture of float16 and float32 CUDA tensors, mymatmul runs in float16. Meanwhile, calls to mymatmul with non-CUDA, integer-type, or float64 inputs are unaffected. Using cached_cast to follow the native eligibility policy in your own autocast wrapper is recommended, but not required. For example, if you wanted to force float16 execution for all input types, you could return mymatmul(self.half(), other.half()); instead of using cached_cast.

Notice that, like our autograd kernels, we exclude the Autocast key from dispatch before redispatching.

By default, if no autocast wrapper is provided, we fallthrough directly to the regular operator implementation (no autocasting occurs). (We didn’t use myadd for this example, since pointwise addition doesn’t need autocasting and should just fall through.)

When should an autocast wrapper be registered? Unfortunately, there aren’t cut-and-dried rules for an op’s preferred precision. You can get a sense for some native ops’ preferred precisions by looking at the cast lists. General guidance:

  • Ops that do reductions should probably execute in float32,
  • Any op that does a convolution or gemm under the hood should probably execute in float16, and
  • Other ops with multiple floating-point tensor inputs should standardize them to a common precision (unless the implementation supports inputs with different precisions).

If your custom op falls into the third category, the promote_type template helps figure out the widest floating-point type present among input tensors, which is the safest choice for the execution type:

#include <ATen/autocast_mode.h>

Tensor my_multiple_input_op_autocast(const Tensor& t0, const Tensor& t1) {
  c10::impl::ExcludeDispatchKeyGuard no_autocast(c10::DispatchKey::Autocast);
  // The required at::kHalf argument is an optimistic initial guess.
  auto exec_type = at::autocast::promote_type(at::kHalf, t0, t1);
  return my_multiple_input_op(at::autocast::cached_cast(exec_type, t0),
                              at::autocast::cached_cast(exec_type, t1));
}

If your custom op is autograd-enabled, you only need to write and register an autocast wrapper for the same name onto which the autograd wrapper is registered. For example, if you wanted an autocast wrapper for the myadd function shown in the autograd section, all you’d need is

Tensor myadd_autocast(const Tensor& self, const Tensor& other) {
  c10::impl::ExcludeDispatchKeyGuard no_autocast(c10::DispatchKey::Autocast);
  return myadd(at::autocast::cached_cast(<desired dtype>, self),
               at::autocast::cached_cast(<desired dtype>, other));
}

TORCH_LIBRARY_IMPL(myops, Autocast, m) {
  m.impl("myadd", myadd_autocast);
}

There are no separate gymnastics to make the backward method autocast compatible. However, the backward method defined in your custom autograd function will run in the same dtype as autocast sets for the forward method, so you should choose a <desired dtype> suitable for both your forward and backward methods.

Batched

Batched tensors allow you to write your code in a per-example manner, and then have them be automatically batched when run under a vmap invocation. The API for writing batching rules is currently under development, but once it is stabilized, you can add support for vmap for your operators by registering a kernel at the Batched dispatch key.

Tracer

The Tracer dispatch key implements support for recording invocations of operators into a trace when you run torch.jit.trace. We intend to provide a boxed fallback that will implement tracing for arbitrary operations, see issue #41478 to track progress.

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