Elevate - A Language for Describing Optimization Strategies

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Slides of the Talk

Optimizing programs to run efficiently on modern parallel hardware is hard but crucial for many applications. The predominantly used imperative languages - like C or OpenCL - force the programmer to intertwine the code describing functionality and optimizations. This results in a nightmare for portability which is particularly problematic given the accelerating trend towards specialized hardware devices to further increase efficiency.

Many emerging DSLs used in performance demanding domains such as deep learning, automatic differentiation, or image processing attempt to simplify or even fully automate the optimization process. Using a high-level - often functional - language, programmers focus on describing functionality in a declarative way. In some systems such as Halide or TVM, a separate schedule specifies how the program should be optimized. Unfortunately, these schedules are not written in well-defined programming languages. Instead, they are implemented as a set of ad-hoc predefined APIs that the compiler writers have exposed.

In this talk, I’ll present Elevate: a functional language for describing optimization strategies. Elevate follows a tradition of prior systems used in different contexts that express optimization strategies as composition of rewrites. In contrast to systems with fixed scheduling APIs, in Elevate programmers are not restricted to a set of built-in optimizations but define their own optimization strategies freely in a composable way. We show how user-defined optimization strategies in Elevate enable the optimization of programs expressed in a functional data-parallel language demonstrating competitive performance with Halide and TVM.

This is joint work with Michel Steuwer (University of Glasgow)