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author Geogaddi\David <d.m.ronan@qmul.ac.uk>
date Thu, 09 Jul 2015 01:12:16 +0100
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d@0 3 <title>SIMD alignment and fftw_malloc - FFTW 3.2.1</title>
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d@0 50 <a name="SIMD-alignment-and-fftw_malloc"></a>
d@0 51 <a name="SIMD-alignment-and-fftw_005fmalloc"></a>
d@0 52 Next:&nbsp;<a rel="next" accesskey="n" href="Stack-alignment-on-x86.html#Stack-alignment-on-x86">Stack alignment on x86</a>,
d@0 53 Previous:&nbsp;<a rel="previous" accesskey="p" href="Data-Alignment.html#Data-Alignment">Data Alignment</a>,
d@0 54 Up:&nbsp;<a rel="up" accesskey="u" href="Data-Alignment.html#Data-Alignment">Data Alignment</a>
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d@0 57
d@0 58 <h4 class="subsection">3.1.1 SIMD alignment and fftw_malloc</h4>
d@0 59
d@0 60 <p>SIMD, which stands for &ldquo;Single Instruction Multiple Data,&rdquo; is a set of
d@0 61 special operations supported by some processors to perform a single
d@0 62 operation on several numbers (usually 2 or 4) simultaneously. SIMD
d@0 63 floating-point instructions are available on several popular CPUs:
d@0 64 SSE/SSE2 (single/double precision) on Pentium III and higher and on
d@0 65 AMD64, AltiVec (single precision) on some PowerPCs (Apple G4 and
d@0 66 higher), and MIPS Paired Single. FFTW can be compiled to support the
d@0 67 SIMD instructions on any of these systems.
d@0 68 <a name="index-SIMD-102"></a><a name="index-SSE-103"></a><a name="index-SSE2-104"></a><a name="index-AltiVec-105"></a><a name="index-MIPS-PS-106"></a><a name="index-precision-107"></a>
d@0 69 A program linking to an FFTW library compiled with SIMD support can
d@0 70 obtain a nonnegligible speedup for most complex and r2c/c2r
d@0 71 transforms. In order to obtain this speedup, however, the arrays of
d@0 72 complex (or real) data passed to FFTW must be specially aligned in
d@0 73 memory (typically 16-byte aligned), and often this alignment is more
d@0 74 stringent than that provided by the usual <code>malloc</code> (etc.)
d@0 75 allocation routines.
d@0 76
d@0 77 <p><a name="index-portability-108"></a>In order to guarantee proper alignment for SIMD, therefore, in case
d@0 78 your program is ever linked against a SIMD-using FFTW, we recommend
d@0 79 allocating your transform data with <code>fftw_malloc</code> and
d@0 80 de-allocating it with <code>fftw_free</code>.
d@0 81 <a name="index-fftw_005fmalloc-109"></a><a name="index-fftw_005ffree-110"></a>These have exactly the same interface and behavior as
d@0 82 <code>malloc</code>/<code>free</code>, except that for a SIMD FFTW they ensure
d@0 83 that the returned pointer has the necessary alignment (by calling
d@0 84 <code>memalign</code> or its equivalent on your OS).
d@0 85
d@0 86 <p>You are not <em>required</em> to use <code>fftw_malloc</code>. You can
d@0 87 allocate your data in any way that you like, from <code>malloc</code> to
d@0 88 <code>new</code> (in C++) to a fixed-size array declaration. If the array
d@0 89 happens not to be properly aligned, FFTW will not use the SIMD
d@0 90 extensions.
d@0 91 <a name="index-C_002b_002b-111"></a>
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