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3 <title>Basic and advanced distribution interfaces - FFTW 3.2alpha3</title>
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8 <link rel="up" href="MPI-data-distribution.html#MPI-data-distribution" title="MPI data distribution">
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12 <!--
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13 This manual is for FFTW
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14 (version 3.2alpha3, 14 August 2007).
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15
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16 Copyright (C) 2003 Matteo Frigo.
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17
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18 Copyright (C) 2003 Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
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19
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20 Permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim copies of
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21 this manual provided the copyright notice and this permission
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26 that the entire resulting derived work is distributed under the
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27 terms of a permission notice identical to this one.
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28
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29 Permission is granted to copy and distribute translations of this
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30 manual into another language, under the above conditions for
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31 modified versions, except that this permission notice may be
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46 </head>
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47 <body>
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48 <div class="node">
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49 <p>
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50 <a name="Basic-and-advanced-distribution-interfaces"></a>
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51 Next: <a rel="next" accesskey="n" href="Load-balancing.html#Load-balancing">Load balancing</a>,
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52 Previous: <a rel="previous" accesskey="p" href="MPI-data-distribution.html#MPI-data-distribution">MPI data distribution</a>,
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53 Up: <a rel="up" accesskey="u" href="MPI-data-distribution.html#MPI-data-distribution">MPI data distribution</a>
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54 <hr>
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55 </div>
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56
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57 <h4 class="subsection">6.4.1 Basic and advanced distribution interfaces</h4>
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58
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59 <p>As with the planner interface, the `<samp><span class="samp">fftw_mpi_local_size</span></samp>'
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60 distribution interface is broken into basic and advanced
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61 (`<samp><span class="samp">_many</span></samp>') interfaces, where the latter allows you to specify the
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62 block size manually and also to request block sizes when computing
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63 multiple transforms simultaneously. These functions are documented
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64 more exhaustively by the FFTW MPI Reference, but we summarize the
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65 basic ideas here using a couple of two-dimensional examples.
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66
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67 <p>For the 100 × 200 complex-DFT example, above, we would find
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68 the distribution by calling the following function in the basic
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69 interface:
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70
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71 <pre class="example"> ptrdiff_t fftw_mpi_local_size_2d(ptrdiff_t n0, ptrdiff_t n1, MPI_Comm comm,
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72 ptrdiff_t *local_n0, ptrdiff_t *local_0_start);
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73 </pre>
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74 <p><a name="index-fftw_005fmpi_005flocal_005fsize_005f2d-352"></a>
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75 Given the total size of the data to be transformed (here, <code>n0 =
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76 100</code> and <code>n1 = 200</code>) and an MPI communicator (<code>comm</code>), this
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77 function provides three numbers.
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78
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79 <p>First, it describes the shape of the local data: the current process
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80 should store a <code>local_n0</code> by <code>n1</code> slice of the overall
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81 dataset, in row-major order (<code>n1</code> dimension contiguous), starting
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82 at index <code>local_0_start</code>. That is, if the total dataset is
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83 viewed as a <code>n0</code> by <code>n1</code> matrix, the current process should
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84 store the rows <code>local_0_start</code> to
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85 <code>local_0_start+local_n0-1</code>. Obviously, if you are running with
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86 only a single MPI process, that process will store the entire array:
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87 <code>local_0_start</code> will be zero and <code>local_n0</code> will be
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88 <code>n0</code>. See <a href="Row_002dmajor-Format.html#Row_002dmajor-Format">Row-major Format</a>.
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89 <a name="index-row_002dmajor-353"></a>
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90 Second, the return value is the total number of data elements (e.g.,
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91 complex numbers for a complex DFT) that should be allocated for the
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92 input and output arrays on the current process (ideally with
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93 <code>fftw_malloc</code>, to ensure optimal alignment). It might seem that
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94 this should always be equal to <code>local_n0 * n1</code>, but this is
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95 <em>not</em> the case. FFTW's distributed FFT algorithms require data
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96 redistributions at intermediate stages of the transform, and in some
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97 circumstances this may require slightly larger local storage. This is
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98 discussed in more detail below, under <a href="Load-balancing.html#Load-balancing">Load balancing</a>.
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99 <a name="index-fftw_005fmalloc-354"></a>
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100 The advanced-interface `<samp><span class="samp">local_size</span></samp>' function for multidimensional
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101 transforms returns the same three things (<code>local_n0</code>,
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102 <code>local_0_start</code>, and the total number of elements to allocate),
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103 but takes more inputs:
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104
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105 <pre class="example"> ptrdiff_t fftw_mpi_local_size_many(int rnk, const ptrdiff_t *n,
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106 ptrdiff_t howmany,
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107 ptrdiff_t block0,
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108 MPI_Comm comm,
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109 ptrdiff_t *local_n0,
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110 ptrdiff_t *local_0_start);
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111 </pre>
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112 <p><a name="index-fftw_005fmpi_005flocal_005fsize_005fmany-355"></a>
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113 The two-dimensional case above corresponds to <code>rnk = 2</code> and an
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114 array <code>n</code> of length 2 with <code>n[0] = n0</code> and <code>n[1] = n1</code>.
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115 This routine is for any <code>rnk > 1</code>; one-dimensional transforms
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116 have their own interface because they work slightly differently, as
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117 discussed below.
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118
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119 <p>First, the advanced interface allows you to perform multiple
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120 transforms at once, of interleaved data, as specified by the
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121 <code>howmany</code> parameter. (<code>hoamany</code> is 1 for a single
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122 transform.)
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123
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124 <p>Second, here you can specify your desired block size in the <code>n0</code>
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125 dimension, <code>block0</code>. To use FFTW's default block size, pass
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126 <code>FFTW_MPI_DEFAULT_BLOCK</code> (0) for <code>block0</code>. Otherwise, on
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127 <code>P</code> processes, FFTW will return <code>local_n0</code> equal to
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128 <code>block0</code> on the first <code>P / block0</code> processes (rounded down),
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129 return <code>local_n0</code> equal to <code>n0 - block0 * (P / block0)</code> on
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130 the next process, and <code>local_n0</code> equal to zero on any remaining
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131 processes. In general, we recommend using the default block size
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132 (which corresponds to <code>n0 / P</code>, rounded up).
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133 <a name="index-FFTW_005fMPI_005fDEFAULT_005fBLOCK-356"></a><a name="index-block-distribution-357"></a>
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134 For example, suppose you have <code>P = 4</code> processes and <code>n0 =
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135 21</code>. The default will be a block size of <code>6</code>, which will give
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136 <code>local_n0 = 6</code> on the first three processes and <code>local_n0 =
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137 3</code> on the last process. Instead, however, you could specify
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138 <code>block0 = 5</code> if you wanted, which would give <code>local_n0 = 5</code>
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139 on processes 0 to 2, <code>local_n0 = 6</code> on process 3. (This choice,
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140 while it may look superficially more “balanced,” has the same
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141 critical path as FFTW's default but requires more communications.)
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142
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143 </body></html>
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144
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