Details:
- Moved amaxv from being a utility operation to being a level-1v operation.
This includes the establishment of a new amaxv kernel to live beside all
of the other level-1v kernels.
- Added two new functions to bli_part.c:
bli_acquire_mij()
bli_acquire_vi()
The first acquires a scalar object for the (i,j) element of a matrix,
and the second acquires a scalar object for the ith element of a vector.
- Added integer support to bli_getsc level-0 operation. This involved
adding integer support to the bli_*gets level-0 scalar macros.
- Added a new test module to test amaxv as a level-1v operation. The test
module works by comparing the value identified by bli_amaxv() to the
the value found from a reference-like code local to the test module
source file. In other words, it (intentionally) does not guarantee the
same index is found; only the same value. This allows for different
implementations in the case where a vector contains two or more elements
containing exactly the same floating point value (or values, in the case
of the complex domain).
- Removed the directory frame/include/old/.
Details:
- Implemented Ricardo Magana's distributed thread info/communicator
management. Rather that fully construct the thrinfo_t structures, from
root to leaf, prior to spawning threads, the threads individually
construct their thrinfo_t trees (or, chains), and do so incrementally,
as needed, reusing the same structure nodes during subsequent blocked
variant iterations. This required moving the initial creation of the
thrinfo_t structure (now, the root nodes) from the _front() functions
to the bli_l3_thread_decorator(). The incremental "growing" of the tree
is performed in the internal back-end (ie: _int()) function, and so
mostly invisible. Also, the incremental growth of the thrinfo_t tree is
done as a function of the current and parent control tree nodes (as well
as the parent thrinfo_t node), further reinforcing the parallel
relationship between the two data structures.
- Removed the "inner" communicator from thrinfo_t structure definition,
as well as its id. Changed all APIs accordingly. Renamed
bli_thrinfo_needs_free_comms() to bli_thrinfo_needs_free_comm().
- Defined bli_l3_thrinfo_print_paths(), which prints the information
in an array of thrinfo_t* structure pointers. (Used only as a
debugging/verification tool.)
- Deprecated the following thrinfo_t creation functions:
bli_packm_thrinfo_create()
bli_l3_thrinfo_create()
because they are no longer used. bli_thrinfo_create() is now called
directly when creating thrinfo_t nodes.
Details:
- Changed the configure script so that the expected string argument to the
-t (or --enable-threading=) option that enables OpenMP multithreading is
'openmp'. The previous expected string, 'omp', is still supported but
should be considered deprecated.
Details:
- Added optional printf() statements to print out thread communicator
info as the thrinfo_t structure is built in bli_l3_thrinfo.c.
- Minor changes to frame/thread/bli_thrinfo.h.
Details:
- Defined cgemm (3x8) and zgemm (3x4) micro-kernels for haswell-based
architectures. As with their real domain brethren, these kernels perfer
row storage, (though this doesn't affect most users due to high-level
optimizations in most level-3 operations that induce a transpose to
whatever storage preference the kernel may have).
Details:
- Removed thread barriers from the end of the loop bodies of
bli_gemm_blk_var1(), bli_gemm_blk_var2(), bli_trsm_blk_var1(),
and bli_trsm_blk_var2().
- Moved the thread barrier at the end of bli_packm_int() to the
end of bli_l3_packm(), and added missing barriers to that function.
- Removed the no longer necessary (and now incorrect) ochief guard
in bli_gemm3m3_packa() on the bli_obj_scalar_reset() on C.
- Thanks to Tyler Smith for help with these changes.
Details:
- Altered control tree node struct definitions so that all nodes have the
same struct definition, whose primary fields consist of a blocksize id,
a variant function pointer, a pointer to an optional parameter struct,
and a pointer to a (single) sub-node. This unified control tree type is
now named cntl_t.
- Changed the way control tree nodes are connected, and what computation
they represent, such that, for example, packing operations are now
associated with nodes that are "inline" in the tree, rather than off-
shoot braches. The original tree for the classic Goto gemm algorithm was
expressed (roughly) as:
blk_var2 -> blk_var3 -> blk_var1 -> ker_var2
| |
-> packb -> packa
and now, the same tree would look like:
blk_var2 -> blk_var3 -> packb -> blk_var1 -> packa -> ker_var2
Specifically, the packb and packa nodes perform their respective packing
operations and then recurse (without any loop) to a subproblem. This means
there are now two kinds of level-3 control tree nodes: partitioning and
non-partitioning. The blocked variants are members of the former, because
they iteratively partition off submatrices and perform suboperations on
those partitions, while the packing variants belong to the latter group.
(This change has the effect of allowing greatly simplified initialization
of the nodes, which previously involved setting many unused node fields to
NULL.)
- Changed the way thrinfo_t tree nodes are arranged to mirror the new
connective structure of control trees. That is, packm nodes are no longer
off-shoot branches of the main algorithmic nodes, but rather connected
"inline".
- Simplified control tree creation functions. Partitioning nodes are created
concisely with just a few fields needing initialization. By contrast, the
packing nodes require additional parameters, which are stored in a
packm-specific struct that is tracked via the optional parameters pointer
within the control tree struct. (This parameter struct must always begin
with a uint64_t that contains the byte size of the struct. This allows
us to use a generic function to recursively copy control trees.) gemm,
herk, and trmm control tree creation continues to be consolidated into
a single function, with the operation family being used to select
among the parameter-agnostic macro-kernel wrappers. A single routine,
bli_cntl_free(), is provided to free control trees recursively, whereby
the chief thread within a groups release the blocks associated with
mem_t entries back to the memory broker from which they were acquired.
- Updated internal back-ends, e.g. bli_gemm_int(), to query and call the
function pointer stored in the current control tree node (rather than
index into a local function pointer array). Before being invoked, these
function pointers are first cast to a gemm_voft (for gemm, herk, or trmm
families) or trsm_voft (for trsm family) type, which is defined in
frame/3/bli_l3_var_oft.h.
- Retired herk and trmm internal back-ends, since all execution now flows
through gemm or trsm blocked variants.
- Merged forwards- and backwards-moving variants by querying the direction
from routines as a function of the variant's matrix operands. gemm and
herk always move forward, while trmm and trsm move in a direction that
is dependent on which operand (a or b) is triangular.
- Added functions bli_thread_get_range_mdim(), bli_thread_get_range_ndim(),
each of which takes additional arguments and hides complexity in managing
the difference between the way ranges are computed for the four families
of operations.
- Simplified level-3 blocked variants according to the above changes, so that
the only steps taken are:
1. Query partitioning direction (forwards or backwards).
2. Prune unreferenced regions, if they exist.
3. Determine the thread partitioning sub-ranges.
<begin loop>
4. Determine the partitioning blocksize (passing in the partitioning
direction)
5. Acquire the curren iteration's partitions for the matrices affected
by the current variants's partitioning dimension (m, k, n).
6. Call the subproblem.
<end loop>
- Instantiate control trees once per thread, per operation invocation.
(This is a change from the previous regime in which control trees were
treated as stateless objects, initialized with the library, and shared
as read-only objects between threads.) This once-per-thread allocation
is done primarily to allow threads to use the control tree as as place
to cache certain data for use in subsequent loop iterations. Presently,
the only application of this caching is a mem_t entry for the packing
blocks checked out from the memory broker (allocator). If a non-NULL
control tree is passed in by the (expert) user, then the tree is copied
by each thread. This is done in bli_l3_thread_decorator(), in
bli_thrcomm_*.c.
- Added a new field to the context, and opid_t which tracks the "family"
of the operation being executed. For example, gemm, hemm, and symm are
all part of the gemm family, while herk, syrk, her2k, and syr2k are
all part of the herk family. Knowing the operation's family is necessary
when conditionally executing the internal (beta) scalar reset on on
C in blocked variant 3, which is needed for gemm and herk families,
but must not be performed for the trmm family (because beta has only
been applied to the current row-panel of C after the first rank-kc
iteration).
- Reexpressed 3m3 induced method blocked variant in frame/3/gemm/ind
to comform with the new control tree design, and renamed the macro-
kernel codes corresponding to 3m2 and 4m1b.
- Renamed bli_mem.c (and its APIs) to bli_memsys.c, and renamed/relocated
bli_mem_macro_defs.h from frame/include to frame/base/bli_mem.h.
- Renamed/relocated bli_auxinfo_macro_defs.h from frame/include to
frame/base/bli_auxinfo.h.
- Fixed a minor bug whereby the storage-to-ukr-preference matching
optimization in the various level-3 front-ends was not being applied
properly when the context indicated that execution would be via an
induced method. (Before, we always checked the native micro-kernel
corresponding to the datatype being executed, whereas now we check
the native micro-kernel corresponding to the datatype's real projection,
since that is the micro-kernel that is actually used by induced methods.
- Added an option to the testsuite to skip the testing of native level-3
complex implementations. Previously, it was always tested, provided that
the c/z datatypes were enabled. However, some configurations use
reference micro-kernels for complex datatypes, and testing these
implementations can slow down the testsuite considerably.
Details:
- Updated the top-level Makefile, build/config.mk.in template, and
configure script so that object files corresponding to source files
belonging to the BLAS compatibility layer are not compiled (or archived)
when the compatibility layer is disabled. (Same for CBLAS.) Thanks
to Devin Matthews for suggesting this optimization.
- Slight change to the way configure handles internal variables. Instead
of converting (overwriting) some, such as enable_blas2blis and
enable_cblas, from a "yes" or "no" to a "1" or "0" value, the latter are
now stored in new variables that live alongside the originals (with the
suffix "_01"). This is convenient since some values need to be
sed-substituted into the config.mk.in template, which requires "yes" or
"no", while some need to be written to the bli_config.h.in template,
which requires "0" or "1".
Details:
- Fixed a couple of bugs that affected OpenMP and POSIX threads
configurations that resulted in compiler errors and warnings due
to type mismatch, and in the case of pthreads, a missing function
argument. The bugs are fairly recent, introduced in a017062.
Details:
- Relaxed the base pointer and leading dimension alignment restrictions
in the sandybridge gemm microkernels, allowing the use of vmovups/vmovupd
instead of vmovaps/vmovapd. These change mimic those made to the haswell
microkernels in e0d2fa0 and ee2c139.
- Updated testsuite modules as well as standalone test drivers in 'test'
directory to use DBL_MAX as the initial time candidate. Thanks to Devin
Matthews for suggesting this change.
- Inserted #include "float.h" into bli_system.h (to gain access to DBL_MAX).
- Minor update (vis-a-vis contexts) to driver code in test/3m4m.
Details:
- Integrated a patch originally authored and submitted by Ricardo Magana
of HP Enterprise. The changeset inserts use of a new object type, membrk_t,
(memory broker) that allows multiple sets of memory pools on, for example,
separate NUMA nodes, each of which has a separate memory space.
- Added membrk field to cntx_t and defined corresponding accessor macros.
- Added membrk field to mem_t object and defined corresponding accessor macros.
- Created new bli_membrk.c file, which contains the new memory broker API,
including:
bli_membrk_init(), bli_membrk_finalize()
bli_membrk_acquire_[mv](), bli_membrk_release(),
bli_membrk_init_pools(), bli_membrk_reinit_pools(),
bli_membrk_finalize_pools(),
bli_membrk_pool_size()
- In bli_mem.c, changed function calls to
bli_mem_init_pools() -> bli_membrk_init()
bli_mem_reinit_pools() -> bli_membrk_reinit()
bli_mem_finalize_pools() -> bli_membrk_finalize()
- In bli_packv_init.c, bli_packm_init.c, changed function calls to:
bli_mem_acquire_[mv]() -> bli_membrk_acquire_[mv]()
bli_mem_release() -> bli_membrk_release()
- Added bli_mutex.c and related files to frame/thread. These files define
abstract mutexes (locks) and corresponding APIs for pthreads, openmp, or
single-threaded execution. This new API is employed within functions
such as bli_membrk_acquire_[mv]() and bli_membrk_release().
Details:
- These changes constitute the first set of changes in preparation to
revamping the structure and use of control trees in BLIS. Modifications
in this commit don't affect the control tree code yet, but rather lay
the groundwork.
- Defined wrappers for the following functions, where the the wrappers
each take a direction parameter of a new enumerated type (BLIS_BWD or
BLIS_FWD), dir_t, and executes the correct underlying function.
- bli_acquire_mpart_*() and _vpart_*()
- bli_*_determine_kc_[fb]()
- bli_thread_get_range_*() and bli_thread_get_range_weighted_*()
- Consolidated all 'f' (forwards-moving) and 'b' (backwards-moving)
blocked variants for trmm and trsm, and renamed gemm and herk variants
accordingly. The direction is now queried via routines such as
bli_trmm_direct(), which deterines the direction from the implied side
and uplo parameters. For gemm and herk, it is uncondtionally BLIS_FWD.
- Defined wrappers to parameter-specific macrokernels for herk, trmm, and
trsm, e.g. bli_trmm_xx_ker_var2(), that execute the correct underlying
macrokernel based on the implied parameters. The same logic used to
choose the dir_t in _direct() functions is used here.
- Simplified the function pointer arrays in _int() functions given the
consolidation and dir_t querying mentioned above.
- Function signature (whitespace) reformatting for various functions.
- Removed old code in various 'old' directories.
Details:
- Fixed compiler warnings about unused variables related to the disabling
of normalization in the structured cases of the rand[vm] and randn[vm]
operations.
Details:
- Defined a new randomization operation, randn, on vectors and matrices.
The randnv and randnm operations randomize each element of the target
object with values from a narrow range of values. Presently, those
values are all integer powers of two, but they do not need to be powers
of two in order to achieve the primary goal, which is to initialize
objects that can be operated on with plenty of precision "slack"
available to allow computations that avoid roundoff. Using this method
of randomization makes it much more likely that testsuite residuals of
properly-functioning operations are close to zero, if not exactly zero.
- Updated existing randomization operations randv and randm to skip
special diagonal handling and normalization for matrices with structure.
This is now handled by the testsuite modules by explicitly calling a
testsuite function that loads the diagonal (and scales off-diagonal
elements).
- Added support for randnv and randnm in the testsuite with a new switch
in input.general that universally toggles between use of the classic
randv/randm, which use real values on the interval [-1,1], and
randnv/randnm, which use only values from a narrow range. Currently,
the narrow range is: +/-{2^0, 2^-1, 2^-2, 2^-3, 2^-4, 2^-5, 2^-6}, as
well as 0.0.
- Updated testsuite modules so that a testsutie wrapper function is called
instead of directly calling the randomization operations (such as
bli_randv() and bli_randm()). This wrapper also takes a bool_t that
indicates whether the object's elements should be normalized. (NOTE: As
alluded to above, in the test modules of triangular solve operations such
as trsv and trsm, we perform the extra step of loading the diagonal.)
- Defined a new level-0 operation, invertsc, which inverts a scalar.
- Updated the abval2ris and sqrt2ris level-0 macros to avoid an unlikely
but possible divide-by-zero.
- Updated function signature and prototype formatting in testsuite.
Details:
- Reorganized code and renamed files defining APIs related to multithreading.
All code that is not specific to a particular operation is now located in a
new directory: frame/thread. Code is now organized, roughly, by the
namespace to which it belongs (see below).
- Consolidated all operation-specific *_thrinfo_t object types into a single
thrinfo_t object type. Operation-specific level-3 *_thrinfo_t APIs were
also consolidated, leaving bli_l3_thrinfo_*() and bli_packm_thrinfo_*()
functions (aside from a few general purpose bli_thrinfo_*() functions).
- Renamed thread_comm_t object type to thrcomm_t.
- Renamed many of the routines and functions (and macros) for multithreading.
We now have the following API namespaces:
- bli_thrinfo_*(): functions related to thrinfo_t objects
- bli_thrcomm_*(): functions related to thrcomm_t objects.
- bli_thread_*(): general-purpose functions, such as initialization,
finalization, and computing ranges. (For now, some macros, such as
bli_thread_[io]broadcast() and bli_thread_[io]barrier() use the
bli_thread_ namespace prefix, even though bli_thrinfo_ may be more
appropriate.)
- Renamed thread-related macros so that they use a bli_ prefix.
- Renamed control tree-related macros so that they use a bli_ prefix (to be
consistent with the thread-related macros that were also renamed).
- Removed #undef BLIS_SIMD_ALIGN_SIZE from dunnington's bli_kernel.h. This
#undef was a temporary fix to some macro defaults which were being applied
in the wrong order, which was recently fixed.
Details:
- Replaced all instances of bli_malloc() and bli_free() with one of:
- bli_malloc_pool()/bli_free_pool()
- bli_malloc_user()/bli_free_user()
- bli_malloc_intl()/bli_free_intl()
each of which can be configured to call malloc()/free() substitutes,
so long as the substitute functions have the same function type
signatures as malloc() and free() defined by C's stdlib.h. The _pool()
function is called when allocating blocks for the memory pools (used
for packing buffers, primarily), the _user() function is called when
obj_t's are created (via bli_obj_create() and friends), and the _intl()
function is called for internal use by BLIS, such as when creating
control tree nodes or temporary buffers for manipulating internal data
structures. Substitutes for any of the three types of bli_malloc() may
be specified by #defining the following pairs of cpp macros in
bli_kernel.h:
- BLIS_MALLOC_POOL/BLIS_FREE_POOL
- BLIS_MALLOC_USER/BLIS_FREE_USER
- BLIS_MALLOC_INTL/BLIS_FREE_INTL
to be the name of the substitute functions. (Obviously, the object
code that contains these functions must be provided at link-time.)
These macros default to malloc() and free(). Subsitute functions are
also automatically prototyped by BLIS (in bli_malloc_prototypes.h).
- Removed definitions for bli_malloc() and bli_free().
- Note that bli_malloc_pool() and bli_malloc_user() are now defined in
terms of a new function, bli_malloc_align(), which aligns memory to an
arbitrary (power of two) alignment boundary, but does so manually,
whereas before alignment was performed behind the scenes by
posix_memalign(). Currently, bli_malloc_intl() is defined in terms
of bli_malloc_noalign(), which serves as a simple wrapper to the
designated function that is passed in (e.g. BLIS_MALLOC_INTL).
Similarly, there are bli_free_align() and bli_free_noalign(), which
are used in concert with their bli_malloc_*() counterparts.
Details:
- Added a new input parameter to input.general that globally toggles
whether testsuite tests are performed on objects whose buffers and
leading dimensions have been aligned, and changed the implementation
of libblis_test_mobj_create() to employ alignment (or not) regardless
of whether row, column, or general storage is being tested.
- Updated configure script's "--help" text to indicate default behavior
for internal integer type size and BLAS/CBLAS integer type size
options.
Details:
- Created template prototypes for packm kernels (in bli_l1m_ker.h), and
then redefined reference packm kernels' prototyping headers in terms of
this template, as is already done for level-1v, -1f, and -3 kernels.
- Automatically generate prototypes for user-defined packm kernels in
bli_kernel_prototypes.h (using the new template prototypes in
bli_l1m_ker.h).
- Defined packm kernel function types in bli_l1m_ft.h, including for
packm kernels specific to induced methods, which are now used in
bli_packm_cxk.c and friends rather than using a locally-defined
function type.
- In bli_packm_cxk.c, extended function pointer for packm kernels array
from out to index 31 (from previous maximum of 17). This allows us to
store the unrolled 30xk kernel in the array for use (on knc, for
example). Note: This should have been done a long time ago.
Details:
- Fixed incorrect calls to bli_get_range_*() from within trsm blocked
variants 1f, 2b, and 2f. The bug somehow went undetected since the
big commit (537a1f4), and, strangely, did not manifest via the BLIS
testsuite. The bug finally came to our attention when running thei
libflame test suite while linking to BLIS. Thanks to Kiran Varaganti
for submitting the initial report that led to this bug.
Details:
- Added #undef guards to certain #define statements in bli_f2c.h,
and renamed the file guard to BLIS_F2C_H. This helps when
#including "blis.h" from an application or library that already
#includes an "f2c.h" header.