### Description
Upgrade python from 3.9 to 3.10 in ROCm and MigraphX docker files and CI
pipelines. Upgrade ROCm version to 6.2.3 in most places except ROCm CI,
see comment below.
Some improvements/upgrades on ROCm/Migraphx docker or pipeline:
* rocm 6.0/6.1.3 => 6.2.3
* python 3.9 => 3.10
* Ubuntu 20.04 => 22.04
* Also upgrade ml_dtypes, numpy and scipy packages.
* Fix message "ROCm version from ..." with correct file path in
CMakeList.txt
* Exclude some NHWC tests since ROCm EP lacks support for NHWC
convolution.
#### ROCm CI Pipeline:
ROCm 6.1.3 is kept in the pipeline for now.
- Failed after upgrading to ROCm 6.2.3: `HIPBLAS_STATUS_INVALID_VALUE ;
GPU=0 ; hostname=76123b390aed ;
file=/onnxruntime_src/onnxruntime/core/providers/rocm/rocm_execution_provider.cc
; line=170 ; expr=hipblasSetStream(hipblas_handle_, stream);` . It need
further investigation.
- cupy issues:
(1) It currently supports numpy < 1.27, might not work with numpy 2.x.
So we locked numpy==1.26.4 for now.
(2) cupy support of ROCm 6.2 is still in progress:
https://github.com/cupy/cupy/issues/8606.
Note that miniconda issues: its libstdc++.so.6 and libgcc_s.so.1 might
have conflict with the system ones. So we created links to use the
system ones.
#### MigraphX CI pipeline
MigraphX CI does not use cupy, and we are able to use ROCm 6.2.3 and
numpy 2.x in the pipeline.
#### Other attempts
Other things that I've tried which might help in the future:
Attempt to use a single docker file for both ROCm and Migraphx:
https://github.com/microsoft/onnxruntime/pull/22478
Upgrade to ubuntu 24.04 and python 3.12, and use venv like
[this](27903e7ff1/tools/ci_build/github/linux/docker/rocm-ci-pipeline-env.Dockerfile).
### Motivation and Context
In 1.20 release, ROCm nuget packaging pipeline will use 6.2:
https://github.com/microsoft/onnxruntime/pull/22461.
This upgrades rocm to 6.2.3 in CI pipelines to be consistent.
1. Update google benchmark from 1.8.3 to 1.8.5
2. Update google test from commit in main branch to tag 1.15.0
3. Update pybind11 from 2.12.0 to 2.13.1
4. Update pytorch cpuinfo to include the support for Arm Neoverse V2,
Cortex X4, A720 and A520.
5. Update re2 from 2024-05-01 to 2024-07-02
6. Update cmake to 3.30.1
7. Update Linux docker images
8. Fix a warning in test/perftest/ort_test_session.cc:826:37: error:
implicit conversion loses integer precision: 'streamoff' (aka 'long
long') to 'const std::streamsize' (aka 'const long')
[-Werror,-Wshorten-64-to-32]
### Description
Version 41.0.0 currently used has vulnerabilities.
### Motivation and Context
See [Vulnerable OpenSSL included in cryptography
wheels](https://github.com/advisories/GHSA-v8gr-m533-ghj9)
- Update ROCm and MIGraphX CI to ROCm5.7
- Simplify test exculde file. Some tests will output `registered
execution providers ROCMExecutionProvider were unable to run the model.`
if they cannot run.
- Add `enable_training` build argument for MIGraphX pipeline.
### Description
1. Update docker files and their build instructions.
ARM64 and x86_64 can use the same docker file.
2. Upgrade Linux CUDA pipeline's base docker image from CentOS7 to UBI8
AB#18990
MIGraphX CI
- Change docker container user name to `onnxruntimedev`
ROCm CI
- Build docker image every job instead of using prebuild image.
- Every job create a container with only one GPU with command `docker
run -it --device=/dev/kfd --device=/dev/dri/renderDxxx`
- Remove tests that are unstable or use outdated interfaces.
- Enable training ortmodule test.
update ROCm/MIGraphX CI to ROC5.5.
TODO:
two PR to fix failure on
orttraining/orttraining/test/python/orttraining_test_ortmodule_api.py
-
test_gradient_correctness_minmax/test_gradient_correctness_argmax_unfold/test_gradient_correctness_argmax_diagonal
(https://github.com/microsoft/onnxruntime/pull/15903)
- test_ortmodule_attribute_name_collision_warning
(https://github.com/microsoft/onnxruntime/pull/15884)
### Description
Update the MIGraphX version used in ORT to rocm-5.4.0
### Motivation and Context
The previous branch migraphx_for_ort has stopped updating, it is too far
away from the MIgraphX latest release branch. More discussion here:
https://github.com/microsoft/onnxruntime/issues/14126#issuecomment-1373201049
Co-authored-by: peixuanzuo <peixuanzuo@linmif39a000004.zvflicr54joexhdgnhvmxrxygg.phxx.internal.cloudapp.net>
## Description
1. Convert some git submodules to cmake external projects
2. Update nsync from
[1.23.0](https://github.com/google/nsync/releases/tag/1.23.0) to
[1.25.0](https://github.com/google/nsync/releases/tag/1.25.0)
3. Update re2 from 2021-06-01 to 2022-06-01
4. Update wil from an old commit to 1.0.220914.1 tag
5. Update gtest to a newer commit so that it can optionally leverage
absl/re2 for parsing command line flags.
The following git submodules are deleted:
1. FP16
2. safeint
3. XNNPACK
4. cxxopts
5. dlpack
7. flatbuffers
8. googlebenchmark
9. json
10. mimalloc
11. mp11
12. pthreadpool
More will come.
## Motivation and Context
There are 3 ways of integrating 3rd party C/C++ libraries into ONNX
Runtime:
1. Install them to a system location, then use cmake's find_package
module to locate them.
2. Use git submodules
6. Use cmake's external projects(externalproject_add).
At first when this project was just started, we considered both option 2
and option 3. We preferred option 2 because:
1. It's easier to handle authentication. At first this project was not
open source, and it had some other non-public dependencies. If we use
git submodule, ADO will handle authentication smoothly. Otherwise we
need to manually pass tokens around and be very careful on not exposing
them in build logs.
2. At that time, cmake fetched dependencies after "cmake" finished
generating vcprojects/makefiles. So it was very difficult to make cflags
consistent. Since cmake 3.11, it has a new command: FetchContent, which
fetches dependencies when it generates vcprojects/makefiles just before
add_subdirectories, so the parent project's variables/settings can be
easily passed to the child projects.
And when the project went on, we had some new concerns:
1. As we started to have more and more EPs and build configs, the number
of submodules grew quickly. For more developers, most ORT submodules are
not relevant to them. They shouldn't need to download all of them.
2. It is impossible to let two different build configs use two different
versions of the same dependency. For example, right now we have protobuf
3.18.3 in the submodules. Then every EP must use the same version.
Whenever we have a need to upgrade protobuf, we need to coordinate
across the whole team and many external developers. I can't manage it
anymore.
3. Some projects want to manage the dependencies in a different way,
either because of their preference or because of compliance
requirements. For example, some Microsoft teams want to use vcpkg, but
we don't want to force every user of onnxruntime using vcpkg.
7. Someone wants to dynamically link to protobuf, but our build script
only does static link.
8. Hard to handle security vulnerabilities. For example, whenever
protobuf has a security patch, we have a lot of things to do. But if we
allowed people to build ORT with a different version of protobuf without
changing ORT"s source code, the customer who build ORT from source will
be able to act on such things in a quicker way. They will not need to
wait ORT having a patch release.
9. Every time we do a release, github will also publish a source file
zip file and a source file tarball for us. But they are not usable,
because they miss submodules.
### New features
After this change, users will be able to:
1. Build the dependencies in the way they want, then install them to
somewhere(for example, /usr or a temp folder).
2. Or download the dependencies by using cmake commands from these
dependencies official website
3. Similar to the above, but use your private mirrors to migrate supply
chain risks.
4. Use different versions of the dependencies, as long as our source
code is compatible with them. For example, you may use you can't use
protobuf 3.20.x as they need code changes in ONNX Runtime.
6. Only download the things the current build needs.
10. Avoid building external dependencies again and again in every build.
### Breaking change
The onnxruntime_PREFER_SYSTEM_LIB build option is removed you could think from now
it is default ON. If you don't like the new behavior, you can set FETCHCONTENT_TRY_FIND_PACKAGE_MODE to NEVER.
Besides, for who relied on the onnxruntime_PREFER_SYSTEM_LIB build
option, please be aware that this PR will change find_package calls from
Module mode to Config mode. For example, in the past if you have
installed protobuf from apt-get from ubuntu 20.04's official repo,
find_package can find it and use it. But after this PR, it won't. This
is because that protobuf version provided by Ubuntu 20.04 is too old to
support the "config mode". It can be resolved by getting a newer version
of protobuf from somewhere.
2022-12-01 09:51:59 -08:00
Renamed from tools/ci_build/github/pai/migraphx-ci-pipeline-env.Dockerfile (Browse further)