- Promote 16-bit floating-point `/` and `%` to 32-bit; we have to anyway. - Do not force result of integer binary operations to be the LHS type. There used to be a bug in pytorch that did this, which Triton matched, but that bug is fixed now. - When testing signed integer operations, use random numbers from the full range of the type. - Add an optional `seed` argument to `triton.testing.random` so binary operations are not tested with both sides equal when the LHS and RHS have the same type. - Fix a bad `CompilationError` invocation. - Fix a warning suppression that causes tests to fail if you run them with `-W error` on python 3.8.
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Triton
This is the development repository of Triton, a language and compiler for writing highly efficient custom Deep-Learning primitives. The aim of Triton is to provide an open-source environment to write fast code at higher productivity than CUDA, but also with higher flexibility than other existing DSLs.
The foundations of this project are described in the following MAPL2019 publication: Triton: An Intermediate Language and Compiler for Tiled Neural Network Computations. Please consider citing this work if you use Triton!
The official documentation contains installation instructions and tutorials.
Changelog
Version 1.1 is out! New features include:
- Many, many bugfixes
- More documentation
- Automatic on-disk caching of compiled binary objects
- Random Number Generation
- Faster (up to 2x on A100), cleaner blocksparse ops
Contributing
Community contributions are more than welcome, whether it be to fix bugs or to add new features. Feel free to open GitHub issues about your contribution ideas, and we will review them. A contributor's guide containing general guidelines is coming soon!
If you’re interested in joining our team and working on Triton & GPU kernels, we’re hiring!
Compatibility
Supported Platforms:
- Linux
Supported Hardware:
- NVIDIA GPUs (Compute Capability 7.0+)
- Under development: AMD GPUs, CPUs
Disclaimer
Triton is a fairly recent project, and it is under active development. We expect it to be pretty useful in a wide variety of cases, but don't be surprised if it's a bit rough around the edges :)