| 123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960616263646566676869707172737475767778798081828384858687888990919293949596979899100101102103104105106107108109110111112113114115116117118119120121122123124125126127128129130131132133134 | /* * StarPU * Copyright (C) INRIA 2008-2009 (see AUTHORS file) * * This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify * it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public License as published by * the Free Software Foundation; either version 2.1 of the License, or (at * your option) any later version. * * This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but * WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of * MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. * * See the GNU Lesser General Public License in COPYING.LGPL for more details. *//* * This example demonstrates how to use StarPU to scale an array by a factor. * It shows how to manipulate data with StarPU's data management library. *  1- how to declare a piece of data to StarPU (starpu_register_vector_data) *  2- how to describe which data are accessed by a task (task->buffers[0]) *  3- how a kernel can manipulate the data (buffers[0].vector.ptr) */#include <stdio.h>#include <stdint.h>#include <starpu.h>#define	N	2048/* This kernel takes a buffer and scales it by a constant factor */static void scal_func(void *buffers[], void *cl_arg){	unsigned i;	float *factor = cl_arg;	/* 	 * The "buffers" array matches the task->buffers array: for instance	 * task->buffers[0].handle is a handle that corresponds to a data with	 * vector "interface", so that the first entry of the array in the	 * codelet  is a pointer to a structure describing such a vector (ie.	 * struct starpu_vector_interface_s *). Here, we therefore manipulate	 * the buffers[0] element as a vector: nx gives the number of elements	 * in the array, ptr gives the location of the array (that was possibly	 * migrated/replicated), and elemsize gives the size of each elements.	 */	starpu_vector_interface_t *vector = buffers[0];	/* length of the vector */	unsigned n = vector->nx;	/* get a pointer to the local copy of the vector : note that we have to	 * cast it in (float *) since a vector could contain any type of	 * elements so that the .ptr field is actually a uintptr_t */	float *val = (float *)vector->ptr;	/* scale the vector */	for (i = 0; i < n; i++)		val[i] *= *factor;}int main(int argc, char **argv){	/* We consider a vector of float that is initialized just as any of C 	 * data */	float tab[N];	unsigned i;	for (i = 0; i < N; i++)		tab[i] = 1.0f;	fprintf(stderr, "BEFORE : First element was %f\n", tab[0]);	/* Initialize StarPU with default configuration */	starpu_init(NULL);	/* Tell StaPU to associate the "tab" vector with the "tab_handle"	 * identifier. When a task needs to access a piece of data, it should	 * refer to the handle that is associated to it.	 * In the case of the "vector" data interface:	 *  - the first argument of the registration method is a pointer to the	 *    handle that should describe the data	 *  - the second argument is the memory node where the data (ie. "tab")	 *    resides initially: 0 stands for an address in main memory, as	 *    opposed to an adress on a GPU for instance.	 *  - the third argument is the adress of the vector in RAM	 *  - the fourth argument is the number of elements in the vector	 *  - the fifth argument is the size of each element.	 */	starpu_data_handle tab_handle;	starpu_register_vector_data(&tab_handle, 0, (uintptr_t)tab, N, sizeof(float));	float factor = 3.14;	/* create a synchronous task: any call to starpu_submit_task will block 	 * until it is terminated */	struct starpu_task *task = starpu_task_create();	task->synchronous = 1;	starpu_codelet cl = {		.where = STARPU_CPU,		/* CPU implementation of the codelet */		.cpu_func = scal_func,		.nbuffers = 1	};	task->cl = &cl;	/* the codelet manipulates one buffer in RW mode */	task->buffers[0].handle = tab_handle;	task->buffers[0].mode = STARPU_RW;	/* an argument is passed to the codelet, beware that this is a	 * READ-ONLY buffer and that the codelet may be given a pointer to a	 * COPY of the argument */	task->cl_arg = &factor;	task->cl_arg_size = sizeof(float);	/* execute the task on any eligible computational ressource */	starpu_submit_task(task);	/* StarPU does not need to manipulate the array anymore so we can stop 	 * monitoring it */	starpu_delete_data(tab_handle);	/* terminate StarPU, no task can be submitted after */	starpu_shutdown();	fprintf(stderr, "AFTER First element is %f\n", tab[0]);	return 0;}
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