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README.mdH A D25-Apr-202524.9 KiB428325

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backends.cmakeH A D25-Apr-20251.1 KiB3025

README.md

1# Backend developer guide
2
3Arm NN allows adding new backends through the 'Pluggable Backend' mechanism.
4
5## How to add a new backend
6
7Backends reside under [src/backends](./), in separate subfolders. For Linux builds they must have a ```backend.cmake``` file,
8which is read automatically by [src/backends/backends.cmake](backends.cmake). The ```backend.cmake``` file
9under the backend-specific folder is then included by the main CMakeLists.txt file at the root of the
10Arm NN source tree.
11
12### The backend.cmake file
13
14The ```backend.cmake``` has three main purposes:
15
161. It makes sure the artifact (a cmake OBJECT library) is linked into the Arm NN shared library by appending the name of the library to the ```armnnLibraries``` list.
172. It makes sure that the subdirectory where backend sources reside gets included into the build.
183. To include backend-specific unit tests, the object library for the unit tests needs to be added to the ```armnnUnitTestLibraries``` list.
19
20Example ```backend.cmake``` file taken from [reference/backend.cmake](reference/backend.cmake):
21
22```cmake
23#
24# Make sure the reference backend is included in the build.
25# By adding the subdirectory, cmake requires the presence of CMakeLists.txt
26# in the reference (backend) folder.
27#
28add_subdirectory(${PROJECT_SOURCE_DIR}/src/backends/reference)
29
30#
31# Add the cmake OBJECT libraries built by the reference backend to the
32# list of libraries linked against the Arm NN shared library.
33#
34list(APPEND armnnLibraries armnnRefBackend armnnRefBackendWorkloads)
35
36#
37# Backend specific unit tests can be integrated through the
38# armnnUnitTestLibraries variable. This makes sure that the
39# UnitTests executable can run the backend-specific unit
40# tests.
41#
42list(APPEND armnnUnitTestLibraries armnnRefBackendUnitTests)
43```
44
45### The CMakeLists.txt file
46
47As described in the previous section, adding a new backend will require creating a ```CMakeLists.txt``` in
48the backend folder. This follows the standard cmake conventions, and is required to build a static cmake OBJECT library
49to be linked into the Arm NN shared library. As with any cmake build, the code can be structured into
50subfolders and modules as the developer sees fit.
51
52Example can be found under [reference/CMakeLists.txt](reference/CMakeLists.txt).
53
54### The backend.mk file
55
56Arm NN on Android uses the native Android build system. New backends are integrated by creating a
57```backend.mk``` file, which has a single variable called ```BACKEND_SOURCES``` listing all cpp
58files to be built by the Android build system for the Arm NN shared library.
59
60Optionally, backend-specific unit tests can be added similarly, by
61appending the list of cpp files to the ```BACKEND_TEST_SOURCES``` variable.
62
63Example taken from [reference/backend.mk](reference/backend.mk):
64
65```make
66BACKEND_SOURCES := \
67        RefLayerSupport.cpp \
68        RefWorkloadFactory.cpp \
69        workloads/Activation.cpp \
70        workloads/ElementwiseFunction.cpp \
71        workloads/Broadcast.cpp \
72        ...
73
74BACKEND_TEST_SOURCES := \
75        test/RefCreateWorkloadTests.cpp \
76        test/RefEndToEndTests.cpp \
77        test/RefJsonPrinterTests.cpp \
78        ...
79```
80
81## How to add common code across backends
82
83For multiple backends that need common code, there is support for including them in the build
84similarly to the backend code. This requires adding three files under a subfolder at the same level
85as the backends folders. These are:
86
871. common.cmake
882. common.mk
893. CMakeLists.txt
90
91They work the same way as the backend files. The only difference between them is that
92common code is built first, so the backend code can depend on them.
93
94[aclCommon](aclCommon) is an example for this concept and you can find the corresponding files:
95
961. [aclCommon/common.cmake](aclCommon/common.cmake)
972. [aclCommon/common.mk](aclCommon/common.mk)
983. [aclCommon/CMakeLists.txt](aclCommon/CMakeLists.txt)
99
100## Identifying backends
101
102Backends are identified by a string that must be unique across backends. This string is
103wrapped in the [BackendId](../../include/armnn/BackendId.hpp) object for backward compatibility
104with previous Arm NN versions.
105
106## The IBackendInternal interface
107
108All backends need to implement the [IBackendInternal](../../include/armnn/backends/IBackendInternal.hpp) interface.
109The interface functions to be implemented are:
110
111```c++
112    virtual IMemoryManagerUniquePtr CreateMemoryManager() const = 0;
113    virtual IWorkloadFactoryPtr CreateWorkloadFactory(
114            const IMemoryManagerSharedPtr& memoryManager = nullptr) const = 0;
115    virtual IBackendContextPtr CreateBackendContext(const IRuntime::CreationOptions&) const = 0;
116    virtual IBackendProfilingContextPtr CreateBackendProfilingContext(const IRuntime::CreationOptions& creationOptions,
117            arm::pipe::IBackendProfiling& backendProfiling) const = 0;
118    virtual ILayerSupportSharedPtr GetLayerSupport() const = 0;
119    virtual Optimizations GetOptimizations() const = 0;
120    virtual SubgraphUniquePtr OptimizeSubgraph(const SubgraphView& subgraph, bool& optimizationAttempted) const;
121    virtual OptimizationViews OptimizeSubgraphView(const SubgraphView& subgraph) const;
122```
123
124Note that ```GetOptimizations()``` and ```SubgraphViewUniquePtr OptimizeSubgraphView(const SubgraphView& subgraph, bool& optimizationAttempted)```
125have been deprecated.
126The method ```OptimizationViews OptimizeSubgraph(const SubgraphView& subgraph)``` should be used instead to
127apply specific optimizations to a given sub-graph.
128
129The Arm NN framework then creates instances of the IBackendInternal interface with the help of the
130[BackendRegistry](../../include/armnn/BackendRegistry.hpp) singleton.
131
132**Important:** the ```IBackendInternal``` object is not guaranteed to have a longer lifetime than
133the objects it creates. It is only intended to be a single entry point for the factory functions it has.
134The best use of this is to be a lightweight, stateless object and make no assumptions between
135its lifetime and the lifetime of the objects it creates.
136
137For each backend one needs to register a factory function that can
138be retrieved using a [BackendId](../../include/armnn/BackendId.hpp).
139The Arm NN framework creates the backend interfaces dynamically when
140it sees fit and it keeps these objects for a short period of time. Examples:
141
142* During optimization Arm NN needs to decide which layers are supported by the backend.
143  To do this, it creates a backends and calls the ```GetLayerSupport()``` function and creates
144  an ```ILayerSupport``` object to help deciding this.
145* During optimization Arm NN can run backend-specific optimizations. After splitting the graph into
146  sub-graphs based on backends, it calls the ```OptimizeSubgraphView()``` function on each of them and, if possible,
147  substitutes the corresponding sub-graph in the original graph with its optimized version.
148* When the Runtime is initialized it creates an optional ```IBackendContext``` object and keeps this context alive
149  for the Runtime's lifetime. It notifies this context object before and after a network is loaded or unloaded.
150* When the LoadedNetwork creates the backend-specific workloads for the layers, it creates a backend
151  specific workload factory and calls this to create the workloads.
152
153## The BackendRegistry
154
155As mentioned above, all backends need to be registered through the BackendRegistry so Arm NN knows
156about them. Registration requires a unique backend ID string and a lambda function that
157returns a unique pointer to the [IBackendInternal interface](../../include/armnn/backends/IBackendInternal.hpp).
158
159For registering a backend only this lambda function needs to exist, not the actual backend. This
160allows dynamically creating the backend objects when they are needed.
161
162The BackendRegistry has a few convenience functions, like we can query the registered backends and
163are able to tell if a given backend is registered or not.
164
165Dynamic backends are registered during the runtime creation.
166
167## The ILayerSupport interface
168
169Arm NN uses the [ILayerSupport](../../include/armnn/backends/ILayerSupport.hpp) interface to decide if a layer
170with a set of parameters (i.e. input and output tensors, descriptor, weights, filter, kernel if any) are
171supported on a given backend. The backends need a way to communicate this information by implementing
172the ```GetLayerSupport()``` function on the ```IBackendInternal``` interface.
173
174Examples of this can be found in the [RefLayerSupport header](reference/RefLayerSupport.hpp)
175and the [RefLayerSupport implementation](reference/RefLayerSupport.cpp).
176
177## The IWorkloadFactory interface
178
179The [IWorkloadFactory interface](backendsCommon/WorkloadFactory.hpp) is used for creating the backend
180specific workloads. The factory function that creates the IWorkloadFactory object in the IBackendInterface
181takes an IMemoryManager object.
182
183To create a workload object the ```IWorkloadFactory``` takes a ```WorkloadInfo``` object that holds
184the input and output tensor information and a workload specific queue descriptor.
185
186## The IMemoryManager interface
187
188Backends may choose to implement custom memory management. Arm NN supports this concept through the following
189mechanism:
190
191* the ```IBackendInternal``` interface has a ```CreateMemoryManager()``` function, which is called before
192  creating the workload factory
193* the memory manager is passed to the ```CreateWorkloadFactory(...)``` function so the workload factory can
194  use it for creating the backend-specific workloads
195* the LoadedNetwork calls ```Acquire()``` on the memory manager before it starts executing the network and
196  it calls ```Release()``` in its destructor
197
198## The Optimizations
199
200The backends may choose to implement backend-specific optimizations.
201This is supported through the method ```OptimizationViews OptimizeSubgraph(const SubgraphView& subgraph)``` of
202the backend interface that allows the backends to apply their specific optimizations to a given sub-graph.
203
204The ```OptimizeSubgraph(...)``` method returns an OptimizationViews object containing three lists:
205
206* A list of the sub-graph substitutions: a "substitution" is a pair of sub-graphs, the first is the "substitutable" sub-graph,
207  representing the part of the original graph that has been optimized by the backend, while the second is the "replacement" sub-graph,
208  containing the actual optimized layers that will be replaced in the original graph correspondingly to the "substitutable" sub-graph
209* A list of the failed sub-graphs: these are the parts of the original sub-graph that are not supported by the backend,
210  thus have been rejected. Arm NN will try to re-allocate these parts on other backends if available.
211* A list of the untouched sub-graphs: these are the parts of the original sub-graph that have not been optimized,
212  but that can run (unoptimized) on the backend.
213
214The previous way backends had to provide a list optimizations to the Optimizer (through the ```GetOptimizations()``` method)
215is still in place for backward compatibility, but it's now considered deprecated and will be remove in a future release.
216
217## The IBackendContext interface
218
219Backends may need to be notified whenever a network is loaded or unloaded. To support that, one can implement the optional
220[IBackendContext](../../include/armnn/backends/IBackendContext.hpp) interface. The framework calls the ```CreateBackendContext(...)```
221method for each backend in the Runtime. If the backend returns a valid unique pointer to a backend context, then the
222runtime will hold this for its entire lifetime. It then calls the following interface functions for each stored context:
223
224* ```BeforeLoadNetwork(NetworkId networkId)```
225* ```AfterLoadNetwork(NetworkId networkId)```
226* ```BeforeUnloadNetwork(NetworkId networkId)```
227* ```AfterUnloadNetwork(NetworkId networkId)```
228
229## The UseCustomMemoryAllocator interface
230
231Backends can also have an associated CustomMemoryAllocator registered with them that ArmNN will use to allocate
232intra/inter-layer memory. This particular feature is required if you want a backend to use ProtectedContentAllocation.
233To support this on your own backend you must implement the UseCustomMemoryAllocator interface.
234
235This interface returns a boolean value which indicates if the provided allocator is supported by
236the backend. This interface is also used by the lambda function returned by the Backend Registry to configure
237the CustomMemoryAllocator. Within the backend itself there should be a wrapper class to convert the generic
238CustomMemoryAllocator provided by the interface into something that is more suitable for your own backend.
239
240Examples of how this can be done are in the [ClBackend header](cl/ClBackend.hpp) and the
241[ClRegistryInitializer header](cl/ClRegistryInitializer.cpp)
242
243## The GetCapabilities interface
244
245This is a list of BackendCapabilities currently supported by the backend. It consists of a constant list of
246Name/Value pairs, each containing a string name, and a boolean value to indicate support. For example to
247indicate support for ProtectedContentAllocation you would return {"ProtectedContentAllocation", true}
248
249An example can be found at the top of [ClBackend header](cl/ClBackend.hpp)
250
251## Dynamic backends
252
253Backends can also be loaded by Arm NN dynamically at runtime.
254To be properly loaded and used, the backend instances must comply to the standard interface for dynamic backends and to the versioning
255rules that enforce ABI compatibility.
256
257## Dynamic backends base interface
258
259The dynamic backend shared object must expose the following interface for Arm NN to handle it correctly:
260
261```c++
262extern "C"
263{
264const char* GetBackendId();
265void GetVersion(uint32_t* outMajor, uint32_t* outMinor);
266void* BackendFactory();
267}
268```
269
270Interface details:
271
272* ```extern "C"``` is needed to use avoid C++ name mangling, necessary to allow Arm NN to dynamically load the symbols.
273* ```GetBackendId()```: must return the unique id of the dynamic backends.
274  If at the time of the loading the id already exists in the internal Arm NN's backend registry, the backend will be skipped and
275  not loaded in Arm NN
276* ```GetVersion()```: must return the version of the dynamic backend.
277  The version must indicate the version of the Backend API the dynamic backend has been built with.
278  The current Backend API version can be found by inspecting the IBackendInternal interface.
279  At the time of loading, the version of the backend will be checked against the version of the Backend API Arm NN is built with.
280  If the backend version is not compatible with the current Backend API, the backend will not be loaded as it will be assumed that
281  it is not ABI compatible with the current Arm NN build.
282* ```BackendFactory()```: must return a valid instance of the backend.
283  The backend instance is an object that must inherit from the version of the IBackendInternal interface declared by GetVersion().
284  It is the backend developer's responsibility to ensure that the backend implementation correctly reflects the version declared by
285  GetVersion(), and that the object returned by the BackendFactory() function is a valid and well-formed instance of the IBackendInternal
286  interface.
287
288## Dynamic backend versioning and ABI compatibility
289
290Dynamic backend versioning policy:
291
292Updates to Arm NN's Backend API follow these rules: changes to the Backend API (the IBackendInternal interface) that break
293ABI compatibility with the previous API version will be indicated by a change of the API's major version, while changes
294that guarantee ABI compatibility with the previous API version will be indicated by a change in API's the minor version.
295
296For example:
297
298* Dynamic backend version 2.4 (i.e. built with Backend API version 2.4) is compatible with Arm NN's Backend API version 2.4
299  (same version, backend built against the same Backend API)
300* Dynamic backend version 2.1 (i.e. built with Backend API version 2.1) is compatible with Arm NN's Backend API version 2.4
301  (same major version, backend built against earlier compatible API)
302* Dynamic backend version 2.5 (i.e. built with Backend API version 2.5) is not compatible with Arm NN's Backend API version 2.4
303  (same major version, backend built against later incompatible API, backend might require update to the latest compatible backend API)
304* Dynamic backend version 2.0 (i.e. built with Backend API version 2.0) is not compatible with Arm NN's Backend API version 1.0
305  (backend requires a completely new API version)
306* Dynamic backend version 2.0 (i.e. built with Backend API version 2.0) is not compatible with Arm NN's Backend API version 3.0
307  (backward compatibility in the Backend API is broken)
308
309## Dynamic backend loading paths
310
311During the creation of the Runtime, Arm NN will scan a given set of paths searching for suitable dynamic backend objects to load.
312A list of (absolute) paths can be specified at compile-time by setting a define named ```DYNAMIC_BACKEND_PATHS``` in the form of a colon-separated list of strings.
313
314```shell
315-DDYNAMIC_BACKEND_PATHS="PATH_1:PATH_2...:PATH_N"
316```
317
318The paths will be processed in the same order as they are indicated in the macro.
319
320It is also possible to override those paths at runtime when creating the Runtime object by setting the value of the ```m_DynamicBackendsPath``` member in the CreationOptions class.
321Only one path is allowed for the override via the CreationOptions class.
322By setting the value of the ```m_DynamicBackendsPath``` to a path in the filesystem, Arm NN will entirely ignore the list of paths passed via the
323```DYNAMIC_BACKEND_PATHS``` compiler directive.
324
325All the specified paths are validated before processing (they must exist, must be directories, and must be absolute paths),
326in case of error a warning message will be added to the log, but Arm NN's execution will not be stopped.
327If all paths are not valid, then no dynamic backends will be loaded in the Arm NN's runtime.
328
329Passing an empty list of paths at compile-time and providing no path override at runtime will effectively disable the
330dynamic backend loading feature, and no dynamic backends will be loaded into Arm NN's runtime.
331
332## Dynamic backend file naming convention
333
334During the creation of a Runtime object, Arm NN will scan the paths specified for dynamic backend loading searching for suitable backend objects.
335Arm NN will try to load only the files that match the following accepted naming scheme:
336
337```shell
338<vendor>_<name>_backend.so[<version>] (e.g. "Arm_GpuAcc_backend.so" or "Arm_GpuAcc_backend.so.1.2.3")
339```
340
341Only alphanumeric characters are allowed for both the `<vendor>` and the `<name>` fields, namely lowercase and/or uppercase characters,
342and/or numerical digits (see the table below for examples).
343Only dots and numbers are allowed for the optional `<version>` field.
344
345Symlinks to other files are allowed to support the standard linux shared object versioning:
346
347```shell
348Arm_GpuAcc_backend.so -> Arm_GpuAcc_backend.so.1.2.3
349Arm_GpuAcc_backend.so.1 -> Arm_GpuAcc_backend.so.1.2.3
350Arm_GpuAcc_backend.so.1.2 -> Arm_GpuAcc_backend.so.1.2.3
351Arm_GpuAcc_backend.so.1.2.3
352```
353
354Files are identified by their full canonical path, so it is allowed to have files with the same name in different directories.
355However, if those are actually the same dynamic backend, only the first in order of parsing will be loaded.
356
357Examples:
358
359| Filename                                                 | Description                                       |
360| -------------------------------------------------------- | ------------------------------------------------- |
361| Arm_GpuAcc_backend.so                                    | valid: basic backend name                         |
362| Arm_GpuAcc_backend.so.1                                  | valid: single field version number                |
363| Arm_GpuAcc_backend.so.1.2                                | valid: multiple field version number              |
364| Arm_GpuAcc_backend.so.1.2.3                              | valid: multiple field version number              |
365| Arm_GpuAcc_backend.so.10.1.27                            | valid: Multiple digit version                     |
366| Arm_GpuAcc_backend.so.10.1.33.                           | not valid: dot not followed by version number     |
367| Arm_GpuAcc_backend.so.3.4..5                             | not valid: dot not followed by version number     |
368| Arm_GpuAcc_backend.so.1,1.1                              | not valid: comma instead of dot in the version    |
369| Arm123_GpuAcc_backend.so                                 | valid: digits in vendor name are allowed          |
370| Arm_GpuAcc456_backend.so                                 | valid: digits in backend id are allowed           |
371| Arm%Co_GpuAcc_backend.so                                 | not valid: invalid character in vendor name       |
372| Arm_Gpu.Acc_backend.so                                   | not valid: invalid character in backend id        |
373| GpuAcc_backend.so                                        | not valid: missing vendor name                    |
374| _GpuAcc_backend.so                                       | not valid: missing vendor name                    |
375| Arm__backend.so                                          | not valid: missing backend id                     |
376| Arm_GpuAcc.so                                            | not valid: missing "backend" at the end           |
377| __backend.so                                             | not valid: missing vendor name and backend id     |
378| __.so                                                    | not valid: missing all fields                     |
379| Arm_GpuAcc_backend                                       | not valid: missing at least ".so" at the end      |
380| Arm_GpuAcc_backend_v1.2.so                               | not valid: extra version info at the end          |
381| Arm_CpuAcc_backend.so                                    | valid: basic backend name                         |
382| Arm_CpuAcc_backend.so.1 -> Arm_CpuAcc_backend.so         | valid: symlink to valid backend file              |
383| Arm_CpuAcc_backend.so.1.2 -> Arm_CpuAcc_backend.so.1     | valid: symlink to valid symlink                   |
384| Arm_CpuAcc_backend.so.1.2.3 -> Arm_CpuAcc_backend.so.1.2 | valid: symlink to valid symlink                   |
385| Arm_no_backend.so -> nothing                             | not valid: symlink resolves to non-existent file  |
386| pathA/Arm_GpuAcc_backend.so                              | valid: basic backend name                         |
387| pathB/Arm_GpuAcc_backend.so                              | valid: but duplicated from pathA/                 |
388
389Arm NN will try to load the dynamic backends in the same order as they are parsed from the filesystem.
390
391## Dynamic backend examples
392
393The source code includes an example that is used to generate some mock dynamic backends for testing purposes. The source files are:
394
395[TestDynamicBackend.hpp](backendsCommon/test/TestDynamicBackend.hpp)
396[TestDynamicBackend.cpp](backendsCommon/test/TestDynamicBackend.cpp)
397
398This example is useful for going through all the use cases that constitute an invalid dynamic backend object, such as
399an invalid/malformed implementation of the shared object interface, or an invalid value returned by any of the interface methods
400that would prevent Arm NN from making use of the dynamic backend.
401
402A dynamic implementation of the reference backend is also provided. The source files are:
403
404[RefDynamicBackend.hpp](dynamic/reference/RefDynamicBackend.hpp)
405[RefDynamicBackend.cpp](dynamic/reference/RefDynamicBackend.cpp)
406
407The implementation itself is quite simple and straightforward. Since an implementation of this particular backend was already available,
408the dynamic version is just a wrapper around the original code that simply returns the backend id, version and an instance of the
409backend itself via the factory function.
410For the sake of the example, the source code of the reference backend is used to build the dynamic version (as you would for any new
411dynamic backend), while all the other symbols needed are provided by linking the dynamic backend against Arm NN.
412
413The makefile used for building the reference dynamic backend is also provided: [CMakeLists.txt](dynamic/reference/CMakeLists.txt)
414
415A unit test that loads the reference backend dynamically and that exercises it is also included in the file
416[DynamicBackendTests.cpp](dynamic/backendsCommon/test/DynamicBackendTests.cpp), by the test case ```CreateReferenceDynamicBackend```.
417In the test, a path on the filesystem is scanned for valid dynamic backend files (using the override option in ```CreationOptions```)
418where only the reference dynamic backend is.
419In this example the file is named ```Arm_CpuRef_backend.so```, which is compliant with the expected naming scheme for dynamic backends.
420A ```DynamicBackend``` is created in the runtime to represent the newly loaded backend, then the backend is registered in the Backend
421Registry with the id "CpuRef" (returned by ```GetBackendId()```).
422The unit test makes sure that the backend is actually registered in Arm NN, before trying to create an instance of the backend by
423calling the factory function provided through the shared object interface (```BackendFactory()```).
424The backend instance is used to verify that everything is in order, testing basic 2D convolution support by making use of the
425Layer Support API and the Workload Factory.
426At the end of test, the runtime object goes out of scope and the dynamic backend instance is automatically destroyed, and the handle to
427the shared object is closed.
428

README.md.license

1#
2# Copyright © 2018-2022 Arm Ltd and Contributors. All rights reserved.
3# SPDX-License-Identifier: MIT
4#
5