Change void*-typed function pointers to void_fp.
- Updated all instances of void* variables that store function pointers
to variables of a new type, void_fp. Originally, I wanted to define
the type of void_fp as "void (*void_fp)( void )"--that is, a pointer
to a function with no return value and no arguments. However, once
I did this, I realized that gcc complains with incompatible pointer
type (-Wincompatible-pointer-types) warnings every time any such a
pointer is being assigned to its final, type-accurate function
pointer type. That is, gcc will silently typecast a void* to
another defined function pointer type (e.g. dscalv_ker_ft) during
an assignment from the former to the latter, but the same statement
will trigger a warning when typecasting from a void_fp type. I suspect
an explicit typecast is needed in order to avoid the warning, which
I'm not willing to insert at this time.
- Added a typedef to bli_type_defs.h defining void_fp as void*, along
with a commented-out version of the aborted definition described
above. (Note that POSIX requires that void* and function pointers
be interchangeable; it is the C standard that does not provide this
guarantee.)
- Comment updates to various _oapi.c files.
Details:
- After merging PR #303, at Isuru's request, I removed the use of
BLIS_EXPORT_BLIS from all function prototypes *except* those that we
potentially wish to be exported in shared/dynamic libraries. In other
words, I removed the use of BLIS_EXPORT_BLIS from all prototypes of
functions that can be considered private or for internal use only.
This is likely the last big modification along the path towards
implementing the functionality spelled out in issue #248. Thanks
again to Isuru Fernando for his initial efforts of sprinkling the
export macros throughout BLIS, which made removing them where
necessary relatively painless. Also, I'd like to thank Tony Kelman,
Nathaniel Smith, Ian Henriksen, Marat Dukhan, and Matthew Brett for
participating in the initial discussion in issue #37 that was later
summarized and restated in issue #248.
- CREDITS file update.
Details:
- Removed explicit reference to The University of Texas at Austin in the
third clause of the license comment blocks of all relevant files and
replaced it with a more all-encompassing "copyright holder(s)".
- Removed duplicate words ("derived") from a few kernels' license
comment blocks.
- Homogenized license comment block in kernels/zen/3/bli_gemm_small.c
with format of all other comment blocks.
Details:
- Removed four trailing spaces after "BLIS" that occurs in most files'
commented-out license headers.
- Added UT copyright lines to some files. (These files previously had
only AMD copyright lines but were contributed to by both UT and AMD.)
- In some files' copyright lines, expanded 'The University of Texas' to
'The University of Texas at Austin'.
- Fixed various typos/misspellings in some license headers.
Details:
- Reworked the build system around a configuration registry file, named
config_registry', that identifies valid configuration targets, their
constituent sub-configurations, and the kernel sets that are needed by
those sub-configurations. The build system now facilitates the building
of a single library that can contains kernels and cache/register
blocksizes for multiple configurations (microarchitectures). Reference
kernels are also built on a per-configuration basis.
- Updated the Makefile to use new variables set by configure via the
config.mk.in template, such as CONFIG_LIST, KERNEL_LIST, and KCONFIG_MAP,
in determining which sub-configurations (CONFIG_LIST) and kernel sets
(KERNEL_LIST) are included in the library, and which make_defs.mk files'
CFLAGS (KCONFIG_MAP) are used when compiling kernels.
- Reorganized 'kernels' directory into a "flat" structure. Renamed kernel
functions into a standard format that includes the kernel set name
(e.g. 'haswell'). Created a "bli_kernels_<kernelset>.h" file in each
kernels sub-directory. These files exist to provide prototypes for the
kernels present in those directories.
- Reorganized reference kernels into a top-level 'ref_kernels' directory.
This directory includes a new source file, bli_cntx_ref.c (compiled on
a per-configuration basis), that defines the code needed to initialize
a reference context and a context for induced methods for the
microarchitecture in question.
- Rewrote make_defs.mk files in each configuration so that the compiler
variables (e.g. CFLAGS) are "stored" (renamed) on a per-configuration
basis.
- Modified bli_config.h.in template so that bli_config.h is generated with
#defines for the config (family) name, the sub-configurations that are
associated with the family, and the kernel sets needed by those
sub-configurations.
- Deprecated all kernel-related information in bli_kernel.h and transferred
what remains to new header files named "bli_arch_<configname>.h", which
are conditionally #included from a new header bli_arch.h. These files
are still needed to set library-wide parameters such as custom
malloc()/free() functions or SIMD alignment values.
- Added bli_cntx_init_<configname>.c files to each configuration directory.
The files contain a function, named the same as the file, that initializes
a "native" context for a particular configuration (microarchitecture). The
idea is that optimized kernels, if available, will be initialized into
these contexts. Other fields will retain pointers to reference functions,
which will be compiled on a per-configuration basis. These bli_cntx_init_*()
functions will be called during the initialization of the global kernel
structure. They are thought of as initializing for "native" execution, but
they also form the basis for contexts that use induced methods. These
functions are prototyped, along with their _ref() and _ind() brethren, by
prototype-generating macros in bli_arch.h.
- Added a new typedef enum in bli_type_defs.h to define an arch_t, which
identifies the various sub-configurations.
- Redesigned the global kernel structure (gks) around a 2D array of cntx_t
structures (pointers to cntx_t, actually). The first dimension is indexed
over arch_t and the inner dimension is the ind_t (induced method) for
each microarchitecture. When a microarchitecture (configuration) is
"registered" at init-time, the inner array for that configuration in the
2D array is initialized (and allocated, if it hasn't been already). The
cntx_t slot for BLIS_NAT is initialized immediately and those for other
induced method types are initialized and cached on-demand, as needed. At
cntx_t registration, we also store function pointers to cntx_init functions
that will initialize (a) "reference" contexts and (b) contexts for use with
induced methods. We don't cache the full contexts for reference contexts
since they are rarely needed. The functions that initialize these two kinds
of contexts are generated automatically for each targeted sub-configuration
from cpp-templatized code at compile-time. Induced method contexts that
need "stage" adjustments can still obtain them via functions in
bli_cntx_ind_stage.c.
- Added new functions and functionality to bli_cntx.c, such as for setting
the level-1f, level-1v, and packm kernels, and for converting a native
context into one for executing an induced method.
- Moved the checking of register/cache blocksize consistency from being cpp
macros in bli_kernel_macro_defs.h to being runtime checks defined in
bli_check.c and called from bli_gks_register_cntx() at the time that the
global kernel structure's internal context is initialized for a given
microarchitecture/configuration.
- Deprecated all of the old per-operation bli_*_cntx.c files and removed
the previous operation-level cntx_t_init()/_finalize() invocations.
Instead, we now query the gks for a suitable context, usually via
bli_gks_query_cntx().
- Deprecated support for the 3m2 and 3m3 induced methods. (They required
hackery that I was no longer willing to support.)
- Consolidated the 1e and 1r packm kernels for any given register blocksize
into a single kernel that will branch on the schema and support packing
to both formats.
- Added the cntx_t* argument to all packm kernel signatures.
- Deprecated the local function pointer array in all bli_packm_cxk*.c files
and instead obtain the packm kernel from the cntx_t.
- Added bli_calloc_intl(), which serves as the calloc-equivalent to to
bli_malloc_intl(). Useful when we wish to allocate and initialize to
zero/NULL.
- Converted existing cpp macro functions defined in bli_blksz.h, bli_func.h,
bli_cntx.h into static functions.
Details:
- Removed the family field inside the cntx_t struct and re-added it to the
cntl_t struct. Updated all accessor functions/macros accordingly, as well
as all consumers and intermediaries of the family parameter (such as
bli_l3_thread_decorator(), bli_l3_direct(), and bli_l3_prune_*()). This
change was motivated by the desire to keep the context limited, as much
as possible, to information about the computing environment. (The family
field, by contrast, is a descriptor about the operation being executed.)
- Added additional functions to bli_blksz_*() API.
- Added additional functions to bli_cntx_*() API.
- Minor updates to bli_func.c, bli_mbool.c.
- Removed 'obj' from bli_blksz_*() API names.
- Removed 'obj' from bli_cntx_*() API names.
- Removed 'obj' from bli_cntl_*(), bli_*_cntl_*() API names. Renamed routines
that operate only on a single struct to contain the "_node" suffix to
differentiate with those routines that operate on the entire tree.
- Added enums for packm and unpackm kernels to bli_type_defs.h.
- Removed BLIS_1F and BLIS_VF from bszid_t definition in bli_type_defs.h.
They weren't being used and probably never will be.
Details:
- Retrofitted a new data structure, known as a context, into virtually
all internal APIs for computational operations in BLIS. The structure
is now present within the type-aware APIs, as well as many supporting
utility functions that require information stored in the context. User-
level object APIs were unaffected and continue to be "context-free,"
however, these APIs were duplicated/mirrored so that "context-aware"
APIs now also exist, differentiated with an "_ex" suffix (for "expert").
These new context-aware object APIs (along with the lower-level, type-
aware, BLAS-like APIs) contain the the address of a context as a last
parameter, after all other operands. Contexts, or specifically, cntx_t
object pointers, are passed all the way down the function stack into
the kernels and allow the code at any level to query information about
the runtime, such as kernel addresses and blocksizes, in a thread-
friendly manner--that is, one that allows thread-safety, even if the
original source of the information stored in the context changes at
run-time; see next bullet for more on this "original source" of info).
(Special thanks go to Lee Killough for suggesting the use of this kind
of data structure in discussions that transpired during the early
planning stages of BLIS, and also for suggesting such a perfectly
appropriate name.)
- Added a new API, in frame/base/bli_gks.c, to define a "global kernel
structure" (gks). This data structure and API will allow the caller to
initialize a context with the kernel addresses, blocksizes, and other
information associated with the currently active kernel configuration.
The currently active kernel configuration within the gks cannot be
changed (for now), and is initialized with the traditional cpp macros
that define kernel function names, blocksizes, and the like. However,
in the future, the gks API will be expanded to allow runtime management
of kernels and runtime parameters. The most obvious application of this
new infrastructure is the runtime detection of hardware (and the
implied selection of appropriate kernels). With contexts in place,
kernels may even be "hot swapped" at runtime within the gks. Once
execution enters a level-3 _front() function, the memory allocator will
be reinitialized on-the-fly, if necessary, to accommodate the new
kernels' blocksizes. If another application thread is executing with
another (previously loaded) kernel, it will finish in a deterministic
fashion because its kernel information was loaded into its context
before computation began, and also because the blocks it checked out
from the internal memory pools will be unaffected by the newer threads'
reinitialization of the allocator.
- Reorganized and streamlined the 'ind' directory, which contains much of
the code enabling use of induced methods for complex domain matrix
multiplication; deprecated bli_bsv_query.c and bli_ukr_query.c, as
those APIs' functionality is now mostly subsumed within the global
kernel structure.
- Updated bli_pool.c to define a new function, bli_pool_reinit_if(),
that will reinitialize a memory pool if the necessary pool block size
has increased.
- Updated bli_mem.c to use bli_pool_reinit_if() instead of
bli_pool_reinit() in the definition of bli_mem_pool_init(), and placed
usage of contexts where appropriate to communicate cache and register
blocksizes to bli_mem_compute_pool_block_sizes().
- Simplified control trees now that much of the information resides in
the context and/or the global kernel structure:
- Removed blocksize object pointers (blksz_t*) fields from all control
tree node definitions and replaced them with blocksize id (bszid_t)
values instead, which may be passed into a context query routine in
order to extract the corresponding blocksize from the given context.
- Removed micro-kernel function pointers (func_t*) fields from all
control tree node definitions. Now, any code that needs these function
pointers can query them from the local context, as identified by a
level-3 micro-kernel id (l3ukr_t), level-1f kernel id, (l1fkr_t), or
level-1v kernel id (l1vkr_t).
- Removed blksz_t object creation and initialization, as well as kernel
function object creation and initialization, from all operation-
specific control tree initialization files (bli_*_cntl.c), since this
information will now live in the gks and, secondarily, in the context.
- Removed blocksize multiples from blksz_t objects. Now, we track
blocksize multiples for each blocksize id (bszid_t) in the context
object.
- Removed the bool_t's that were required when a func_t was initialized.
These bools are meant to allow one to track the micro-kernel's storage
preferences (by rows or columns). This preference is now tracked
separately within the gks and contexts.
- Merged and reorganized many separate-but-related functions into single
files. This reorganization affects frame/0, 1, 1d, 1m, 1f, 2, 3, and
util directories, but has the most obvious effect of allowing BLIS
to compile noticeably faster.
- Reorganized execution paths for level-1v, -1d, -1m, and -2 operations
in an attempt to reduce overhead for memory-bound operations. This
includes removal of default use of object-based variants for level-2
operations. Now, by default, level-2 operations will directly call a
low-level (non-object based) loop over a level-1v or -1f kernel.
- Converted many common query functions in blk_blksz.c (renamed from
bli_blocksize.c) and bli_func.c into cpp macros, now defined in their
respective header files.
- Defined bli_mbool.c API to create and query "multi-bools", or
heterogeneous bool_t's (one for each floating-point datatype), in the
same spirit as blksz_t and func_t.
- Introduced two key parameters of the hardware: BLIS_SIMD_NUM_REGISTERS
and BLIS_SIMD_SIZE. These values are needed in order to compute a third
new parameter, which may be set indirectly via the aforementioned
macros or directly: BLIS_STACK_BUF_MAX_SIZE. This value is used to
statically allocate memory in macro-kernels and the induced methods'
virtual kernels to be used as temporary space to hold a single
micro-tile. These values are now output by the testsuite. The default
value of BLIS_STACK_BUF_MAX_SIZE is computed as
"2 * BLIS_SIMD_NUM_REGISTERS * BLIS_SIMD_SIZE".
- Cleaned up top-level 'kernels' directory (for example, renaming the
embarrassingly misleading "avx" and "avx2" directories to "sandybridge"
and "haswell," respectively, and gave more consistent and meaningful
names to many kernel files (as well as updating their interfaces to
conform to the new context-aware kernel APIs).
- Updated the testsuite to query blocksizes from a locally-initialized
context for test modules that need those values: axpyf, dotxf,
dotxaxpyf, gemm_ukr, gemmtrsm_ukr, and trsm_ukr.
- Reformatted many function signatures into a standard format that will
more easily facilitate future API-wide changes.
- Updated many "mxn" level-0 macros (ie: those used to inline double loops
for level-1m-like operations on small matrices) in frame/include/level0
to use more obscure local variable names in an effort to avoid variable
shaddowing. (Thanks to Devin Matthews for pointing these gcc warnings,
which are only output using -Wshadow.)
- Added a conj argument to setm, so that its interface now mirrors that
of scalm. The semantic meaning of the conj argument is to optionally
allow implicit conjugation of the scalar prior to being populated into
the object.
- Deprecated all type-aware mixed domain and mixed precision APIs. Note
that this does not preclude supporting mixed types via the object APIs,
where it produces absolutely zero API code bloat.
Details:
- Added the ability for the kernel developer to indicate the gemm micro-
kernel as having a preference for accessing the micro-tile of C via
contiguous rows (as opposed to contiguous columns). This property may
be encoded in bli_kernel.h as BLIS_?GEMM_UKERNEL_PREFERS_CONTIG_ROWS,
which may be defined or left undefined. Leaving it undefined leads to
the default assumption of column preference.
- Changed conditionals in frame/3/*/*_front.c that induce transposition
of the operation so that the transposition is induced only if there
is disagreement between the storage of C and the preference of the
micro-kernel. Previously, the only conditional that needed to be met
was that C was row-stored, which is to say that we assumed the micro-
kernel preferred column-contiguous access on C.
- Added a "prefers_contig_rows" property to func_t objects, and updated
calls to bli_func_obj_create() in _cntl.c files in order to support
the above changes.
- Removed the row-storage optimization from bli_trsm_front.c because
it is actually ineffective. This is because the right-side case of
trsm flips the A and B micro-panel operands (since BLIS only requires
left-side gemmtrsm/trsm kernels), meaning any transposition done
at the high level is then undone at the low level.
- Tweaked trmm, trmm3 _front.c files to eliminate a possible redundant
invocation of the bli_obj_swap() macro.
Details:
- Updated copyright headers to include "at Austin" in the name of the
University of Texas.
- Updated the copyright years of a few headers to 2014 (from 2011 and
2012).
Details:
- Modified all control tree node definitions to include a new field of
type func_t*, which is similar to a blksz_t except that it contains
one function pointer (each typed simply as void*) for each datatype.
We use the func_t* to embed pointers to the micro-kernels to use for
the leaf-level nodes of each control tree. This change is a natural
extension of control trees and will allow more flexibility in the
future.
- Modified all macro-kernel wrappers to obtain the micro-kernel pointers
from the incomming (previously ignored) control tree node and then pass
the queried pointer into the datatype-specific macro-kernel code, which
then casts the pointer to the appropriate type (new typedefs residing
in bli_kernel_type_defs.h) and then uses the pointer to call the micro-
kernel. Thus, the micro-kernel function is no longer "hard-coded" (that
is, determined when the datatype-specific macro-kernel functions are
instantiated by the C preprocessor).
- Added macros to bli_kernel_macro_defs.h that build datatype-specific
base names if they do not exist already, and then uses those to build
datatype-specific micro-kernel function names. This will allow
developers extra flexibility if they wanted to, for example, name each
of their datatype-specific micro-kernels differently (e.g. double
real might be named bli_dgemm_opt_4x4() while double complex might be
named bli_zgemm_opt_2x2()).
- Inserted appropriate code into _cntl_init() functions that allocates
and initializes a func_t object for the corresponding micro-kernels.
The gemm ukernel func_t object is created once, in bli_gemm_cntl_init(),
and then reused via extern wherever possible.