stablehlo
tensorflow
stablehlo | tensorflow | |
---|---|---|
5 | 223 | |
333 | 182,575 | |
4.2% | 0.5% | |
9.8 | 10.0 | |
4 days ago | 4 days ago | |
MLIR | C++ | |
Apache License 2.0 | Apache License 2.0 |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
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stablehlo
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Nvidia H200 Tensor Core GPU
I am going to paste a cousin comment:
StableHLO[1] is an interesting project that might help AMD here:
> Our goal is to simplify and accelerate ML development by creating more interoperability between various ML frameworks (such as TensorFlow, JAX and PyTorch) and ML compilers (such as XLA and IREE).
From there, their goal would most likely be to work with XLA/OpenXLA teams on XLA[3] and IREE[2] to make RoCM a better backend.
[1] https://github.com/openxla/stablehlo
[2] https://github.com/openxla/iree
[3] https://www.tensorflow.org/xla
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Chrome Ships WebGPU
Also see the recently introduced StableHLO and its serialization format: https://github.com/openxla/stablehlo/blob/main/docs/bytecode...
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OpenXLA Is Available Now
If you mean StableHLO, then it has an MLIR dialect: https://github.com/openxla/stablehlo/blob/main/stablehlo/dia....
In the StableHLO spec, we are talking about this in more abstract terms - "StableHLO opset" - to be able to unambiguously reason about the semantics of StableHLO programs. However, in practice the StableHLO dialect is the primary implementation of the opset at the moment.
I wrote "primary implementation" because e.g. there is also ongoing work on adding StableHLO support to the TFLite flatbuffer schema: https://github.com/tensorflow/tensorflow/blob/master/tensorf.... Having an abstract notion of the StableHLO opset enables us to have a source of truth that all the implementations correspond to.
tensorflow
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Side Quest Devblog #1: These Fakes are getting Deep
# L2-normalize the encoding tensors image_encoding = tf.math.l2_normalize(image_encoding, axis=1) audio_encoding = tf.math.l2_normalize(audio_encoding, axis=1) # Find euclidean distance between image_encoding and audio_encoding # Essentially trying to detect if the face is saying the audio # Will return nan without the 1e-12 offset due to https://github.com/tensorflow/tensorflow/issues/12071 d = tf.norm((image_encoding - audio_encoding) + 1e-12, ord='euclidean', axis=1, keepdims=True) discriminator = keras.Model(inputs=[image_input, audio_input], outputs=[d], name="discriminator")
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Google lays off its Python team
[3]: https://github.com/tensorflow/tensorflow/graphs/contributors
- TensorFlow-metal on Apple Mac is junk for training
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🔥🚀 Top 10 Open-Source Must-Have Tools for Crafting Your Own Chatbot 🤖💬
To get up to speed with TensorFlow, check their quickstart Support TensorFlow on GitHub ⭐
- One .gitignore to rule them all
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10 Github repositories to achieve Python mastery
Explore here.
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GitHub and Developer Ecosystem Control
Part of the major userbase pull in GitHub revolves around hosting a considerable number of popular projects including Angular, React, Kubernetes, cpython, Ruby, tensorflow, and well even the software that powers this site Forem.
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Non-determinism in GPT-4 is caused by Sparse MoE
Right but that's not an inherent GPU determinism issue. It's a software issue.
https://github.com/tensorflow/tensorflow/issues/3103#issueco... is correct that it's not necessary, it's a choice.
Your line of reasoning appears to be "GPUs are inherently non-deterministic don't be quick to judge someone's code" which as far as I can tell is dead wrong.
Admittedly there are some cases and instructions that may result in non-determinism but they are inherently necessary. The author should thinking carefully before introducing non-determinism. There are many scenarios where it is irrelevant, but ultimately the issue we are discussing here isn't the GPU's fault.
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Can someone explain how keras code gets into the Tensorflow package?
and things like y = layers.ELU()(y) work as expected. I wanted to see a list of the available layers so I went to the Tensorflow GitHub repository and to the keras directory. There's a warning in that directory that says:
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Is it even possible to design a ML model without using Python or MATLAB? Like using C++, C or Java?
Exactly what language do you think TensorFlow is written in? :)
What are some alternatives?
wonnx - A WebGPU-accelerated ONNX inference run-time written 100% in Rust, ready for native and the web
PaddlePaddle - PArallel Distributed Deep LEarning: Machine Learning Framework from Industrial Practice (『飞桨』核心框架,深度学习&机器学习高性能单机、分布式训练和跨平台部署)
SHA256-WebGPU - Implementation of sha256 in WGSL
Prophet - Tool for producing high quality forecasts for time series data that has multiple seasonality with linear or non-linear growth.
wgpu-mm
Pandas - Flexible and powerful data analysis / manipulation library for Python, providing labeled data structures similar to R data.frame objects, statistical functions, and much more
iree - A retargetable MLIR-based machine learning compiler and runtime toolkit.
LightGBM - A fast, distributed, high performance gradient boosting (GBT, GBDT, GBRT, GBM or MART) framework based on decision tree algorithms, used for ranking, classification and many other machine learning tasks.
SHARK - SHARK - High Performance Machine Learning Distribution
scikit-learn - scikit-learn: machine learning in Python
glare-core - C++ code used in various Glare Tech Ltd products
LightFM - A Python implementation of LightFM, a hybrid recommendation algorithm.