c-extensions.texi 9.4 KB

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  1. @c -*-texinfo-*-
  2. @c This file is part of the StarPU Handbook.
  3. @c Copyright (C) 2011 Institut National de Recherche en Informatique et Automatique
  4. @c See the file starpu.texi for copying conditions.
  5. @node C Extensions
  6. @chapter C Extensions
  7. @cindex C extensions
  8. @cindex GCC plug-in
  9. When configured with @code{--enable-gcc-extensions}, StarPU builds a
  10. plug-in for the GNU Compiler Collection (GCC), which defines extensions
  11. to languages of the C family (C, C++, Objective-C) that make it easier
  12. to write StarPU code@footnote{This feature is only available for GCC 4.5
  13. and later.}. Those extensions include syntactic sugar for defining
  14. tasks and their implementations, invoking a task, and manipulating data
  15. buffers. Use of these extensions can be made conditional on the
  16. availability of the plug-in, leading to valid C sequential code when the
  17. plug-in is not used (@pxref{Conditional Extensions}).
  18. This section does not require detailed knowledge of the StarPU library.
  19. Note: as of StarPU @value{VERSION}, this is still an area under
  20. development and subject to change.
  21. @menu
  22. * Defining Tasks:: Defining StarPU tasks
  23. * Registered Data Buffers:: Manipulating data buffers
  24. * Conditional Extensions:: Using C extensions only when available
  25. @end menu
  26. @node Defining Tasks
  27. @section Defining Tasks
  28. @cindex task
  29. @cindex task implementation
  30. The StarPU GCC plug-in views @dfn{tasks} as ``extended'' C functions:
  31. @enumerate
  32. @item
  33. tasks may have several implementations---e.g., one for CPUs, one written
  34. in OpenCL, one written in CUDA;
  35. @item
  36. tasks may have several implementations of the same target---e.g.,
  37. several CPU implementations;
  38. @item
  39. when a task is invoked, it may run in parallel, and StarPU is free to
  40. choose any of its implementations.
  41. @end enumerate
  42. Tasks and their implementations must be @emph{declared}. These
  43. declarations are annotated with @dfn{attributes} (@pxref{Attribute
  44. Syntax, attributes in GNU C,, gcc, Using the GNU Compiler Collection
  45. (GCC)}): the declaration of a task is a regular C function declaration
  46. with an additional @code{task} attribute, and task implementations are
  47. declared with a @code{task_implementation} attribute.
  48. The following function attributes are provided:
  49. @table @code
  50. @item task
  51. @cindex @code{task} attribute
  52. Declare the given function as a StarPU task. Its return type must be
  53. @code{void}, and it must not be defined---instead, a definition will
  54. automatically be provided by the compiler.
  55. Under the hood, declaring a task leads to the declaration of the
  56. corresponding @code{codelet} (@pxref{Codelet and Tasks}). If one or
  57. more task implementations are declared in the same compilation unit,
  58. then the codelet and the function itself are also defined; they inherit
  59. the scope of the task.
  60. Scalar arguments to the task are passed by value and copied to the
  61. target device if need be---technically, they are passed as the
  62. @code{cl_arg} buffer (@pxref{Codelets and Tasks, @code{cl_arg}}).
  63. @cindex @code{output} type attribute
  64. Pointer arguments are assumed to be registered data buffers---the
  65. @code{buffers} argument of a task (@pxref{Codelets and Tasks,
  66. @code{buffers}}); @code{const}-qualified pointer arguments are viewed as
  67. read-only buffers (@code{STARPU_R}), and non-@code{const}-qualified
  68. buffers are assumed to be used read-write (@code{STARPU_RW}). In
  69. addition, the @code{output} type attribute can be as a type qualifier
  70. for output pointer or array parameters (@code{STARPU_W}).
  71. @item task_implementation (@var{target}, @var{task})
  72. @cindex @code{task_implementation} attribute
  73. Declare the given function as an implementation of @var{task} to run on
  74. @var{target}. @var{target} must be a string, currently one of
  75. @code{"cpu"} or @code{"cuda"}.
  76. @c FIXME: Update when OpenCL support is ready.
  77. @end table
  78. Here is an example:
  79. @example
  80. #define __output __attribute__ ((output))
  81. static void matmul (const float *A, const float *B,
  82. __output float *C,
  83. size_t nx, size_t ny, size_t nz)
  84. __attribute__ ((task));
  85. static void matmul_cpu (const float *A, const float *B,
  86. __output float *C,
  87. size_t nx, size_t ny, size_t nz)
  88. __attribute__ ((task_implementation ("cpu", matmul)));
  89. static void
  90. matmul_cpu (const float *A, const float *B, __output float *C,
  91. size_t nx, size_t ny, size_t nz)
  92. @{
  93. size_t i, j, k;
  94. for (j = 0; j < ny; j++)
  95. for (i = 0; i < nx; i++)
  96. @{
  97. for (k = 0; k < nz; k++)
  98. C[j * nx + i] += A[j * nz + k] * B[k * nx + i];
  99. @}
  100. @}
  101. @end example
  102. @noindent
  103. A @code{matmult} task is defined; it has only one implementation,
  104. @code{matmult_cpu}, which runs on the CPU. Variables @var{A} and
  105. @var{B} are input buffers, whereas @var{C} is considered an input/output
  106. buffer.
  107. CUDA and OpenCL implementations can be declared in a similar way:
  108. @example
  109. static void matmul_cuda (const float *A, const float *B, float *C,
  110. size_t nx, size_t ny, size_t nz)
  111. __attribute__ ((task_implementation ("cuda", matmul)));
  112. static void matmul_opencl (const float *A, const float *B, float *C,
  113. size_t nx, size_t ny, size_t nz)
  114. __attribute__ ((task_implementation ("opencl", matmul)));
  115. @end example
  116. @noindent
  117. The CUDA and OpenCL implementations typically either invoke a kernel
  118. written in CUDA or OpenCL (for similar code, @pxref{CUDA Kernel}, and
  119. @pxref{OpenCL Kernel}), or call a library function that uses CUDA or
  120. OpenCL under the hood, such as CUBLAS functions:
  121. @example
  122. static void
  123. matmul_cuda (const float *A, const float *B, float *C,
  124. size_t nx, size_t ny, size_t nz)
  125. @{
  126. cublasSgemm ('n', 'n', nx, ny, nz,
  127. 1.0f, A, 0, B, 0,
  128. 0.0f, C, 0);
  129. cudaStreamSynchronize (starpu_cuda_get_local_stream ());
  130. @}
  131. @end example
  132. A task can be invoked like a regular C function:
  133. @example
  134. matmul (&A[i * zdim * bydim + k * bzdim * bydim],
  135. &B[k * xdim * bzdim + j * bxdim * bzdim],
  136. &C[i * xdim * bydim + j * bxdim * bydim],
  137. bxdim, bydim, bzdim);
  138. @end example
  139. @noindent
  140. This leads to an @dfn{asynchronous invocation}, whereby @code{matmult}'s
  141. implementation may run in parallel with the continuation of the caller.
  142. The next section describes how memory buffers must be handled in
  143. StarPU-GCC code.
  144. @node Registered Data Buffers
  145. @section Registered Data Buffers
  146. Data buffers such as matrices and vectors that are to be passed to tasks
  147. must be @dfn{registered}. Registration allows StarPU to handle data
  148. transfers among devices---e.g., transferring an input buffer from the
  149. CPU's main memory to a task scheduled to run a GPU (@pxref{StarPU Data
  150. Management Library}).
  151. The following pragmas are provided:
  152. @table @code
  153. @item #pragma starpu register @var{ptr} [@var{size}]
  154. Register @var{ptr} as a @var{size}-element buffer.
  155. @item #pragma starpu unregister @var{ptr}
  156. @item #pragma starpu acquire @var{ptr}
  157. @end table
  158. FIXME: finish
  159. @node Conditional Extensions
  160. @section Using C Extensions Conditionally
  161. The C extensions described in this chapter are only available when GCC
  162. and its StarPU plug-in are in use. Yet, it is possible to make use of
  163. these extensions when they are available---leading to hybrid CPU/GPU
  164. code---and discard them when they are not available---leading to valid
  165. sequential code.
  166. To that end, the GCC plug-in defines a C preprocessor macro when it is
  167. being used:
  168. @defmac STARPU_GCC_PLUGIN
  169. Defined for code being compiled with the StarPU GCC plug-in. When
  170. defined, this macro expands to an integer denoting the version of the
  171. supported C extensions.
  172. @end defmac
  173. The code below illustrates how to define a task and its implementations
  174. in a way that allows it to be compiled without the GCC plug-in:
  175. @example
  176. /* The macros below abstract over the attributes specific to
  177. StarPU-GCC and the name of the CPU implementation. */
  178. #ifdef STARPU_GCC_PLUGIN
  179. # define __task __attribute__ ((task))
  180. # define CPU_TASK_IMPL(task) task ## _cpu
  181. #else
  182. # define __task
  183. # define CPU_TASK_IMPL(task) task
  184. #endif
  185. #include <stdlib.h>
  186. static void matmul (const float *A, const float *B, float *C,
  187. size_t nx, size_t ny, size_t nz) __task;
  188. #ifdef STARPU_GCC_PLUGIN
  189. static void matmul_cpu (const float *A, const float *B, float *C,
  190. size_t nx, size_t ny, size_t nz)
  191. __attribute__ ((task_implementation ("cpu", matmul)));
  192. #endif
  193. static void
  194. CPU_TASK_IMPL (matmul) (const float *A, const float *B, float *C,
  195. size_t nx, size_t ny, size_t nz)
  196. @{
  197. /* Code of the CPU kernel here... */
  198. @}
  199. int
  200. main (int argc, char *argv[])
  201. @{
  202. /* The pragmas below are simply ignored when StarPU-GCC
  203. is not used. */
  204. #pragma starpu initialize
  205. float A[123][42][7], B[123][42][7], C[123][42][7];
  206. #pragma starpu register A
  207. #pragma starpu register B
  208. #pragma starpu register C
  209. /* When StarPU-GCC is used, the call below is asynchronous;
  210. otherwise, it is synchronous. */
  211. matmul (A, B, C, 123, 42, 7);
  212. #pragma starpu wait
  213. #pragma starpu shutdown
  214. return EXIT_SUCCESS;
  215. @}
  216. @end example
  217. Note that attributes such as @code{task} are simply ignored by GCC when
  218. the StarPU plug-in is not loaded, so the @code{__task} macro could be
  219. omitted altogether. However, @command{gcc -Wall} emits a warning for
  220. unknown attributes, which can be inconvenient, and other compilers may
  221. be unable to parse the attribute syntax. Thus, using macros such as
  222. @code{__task} above is recommended.
  223. @c Local Variables:
  224. @c TeX-master: "../starpu.texi"
  225. @c ispell-local-dictionary: "american"
  226. @c End: