annotate fft/fftw/fftw-3.3.4/kernel/kalloc.c @ 40:223f770b5341 kissfft-double tip

Try a double-precision kissfft
author Chris Cannam
date Wed, 07 Sep 2016 10:40:32 +0100
parents 26056e866c29
children
rev   line source
Chris@19 1 /*
Chris@19 2 * Copyright (c) 2003, 2007-14 Matteo Frigo
Chris@19 3 * Copyright (c) 2003, 2007-14 Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Chris@19 4 *
Chris@19 5 * This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
Chris@19 6 * it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
Chris@19 7 * the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
Chris@19 8 * (at your option) any later version.
Chris@19 9 *
Chris@19 10 * This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
Chris@19 11 * but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
Chris@19 12 * MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
Chris@19 13 * GNU General Public License for more details.
Chris@19 14 *
Chris@19 15 * You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
Chris@19 16 * along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
Chris@19 17 * Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301 USA
Chris@19 18 *
Chris@19 19 */
Chris@19 20
Chris@19 21
Chris@19 22 #include "ifftw.h"
Chris@19 23
Chris@19 24 #if defined(HAVE_MALLOC_H)
Chris@19 25 # include <malloc.h>
Chris@19 26 #endif
Chris@19 27
Chris@19 28 /* ``kernel'' malloc(), with proper memory alignment */
Chris@19 29
Chris@19 30 #if defined(HAVE_DECL_MEMALIGN) && !HAVE_DECL_MEMALIGN
Chris@19 31 extern void *memalign(size_t, size_t);
Chris@19 32 #endif
Chris@19 33
Chris@19 34 #if defined(HAVE_DECL_POSIX_MEMALIGN) && !HAVE_DECL_POSIX_MEMALIGN
Chris@19 35 extern int posix_memalign(void **, size_t, size_t);
Chris@19 36 #endif
Chris@19 37
Chris@19 38 #if defined(macintosh) /* MacOS 9 */
Chris@19 39 # include <Multiprocessing.h>
Chris@19 40 #endif
Chris@19 41
Chris@19 42 #define real_free free /* memalign and malloc use ordinary free */
Chris@19 43
Chris@19 44 #define IS_POWER_OF_TWO(n) (((n) > 0) && (((n) & ((n) - 1)) == 0))
Chris@19 45 #if defined(WITH_OUR_MALLOC) && (MIN_ALIGNMENT >= 8) && IS_POWER_OF_TWO(MIN_ALIGNMENT)
Chris@19 46 /* Our own MIN_ALIGNMENT-aligned malloc/free. Assumes sizeof(void*) is a
Chris@19 47 power of two <= 8 and that malloc is at least sizeof(void*)-aligned.
Chris@19 48
Chris@19 49 The main reason for this routine is that, as of this writing,
Chris@19 50 Windows does not include any aligned allocation routines in its
Chris@19 51 system libraries, and instead provides an implementation with a
Chris@19 52 Visual C++ "Processor Pack" that you have to statically link into
Chris@19 53 your program. We do not want to require users to have VC++
Chris@19 54 (e.g. gcc/MinGW should be fine). Our code should be at least as good
Chris@19 55 as the MS _aligned_malloc, in any case, according to second-hand
Chris@19 56 reports of the algorithm it employs (also based on plain malloc). */
Chris@19 57 static void *our_malloc(size_t n)
Chris@19 58 {
Chris@19 59 void *p0, *p;
Chris@19 60 if (!(p0 = malloc(n + MIN_ALIGNMENT))) return (void *) 0;
Chris@19 61 p = (void *) (((uintptr_t) p0 + MIN_ALIGNMENT) & (~((uintptr_t) (MIN_ALIGNMENT - 1))));
Chris@19 62 *((void **) p - 1) = p0;
Chris@19 63 return p;
Chris@19 64 }
Chris@19 65 static void our_free(void *p)
Chris@19 66 {
Chris@19 67 if (p) free(*((void **) p - 1));
Chris@19 68 }
Chris@19 69 #endif
Chris@19 70
Chris@19 71 void *X(kernel_malloc)(size_t n)
Chris@19 72 {
Chris@19 73 void *p;
Chris@19 74
Chris@19 75 #if defined(MIN_ALIGNMENT)
Chris@19 76
Chris@19 77 # if defined(WITH_OUR_MALLOC)
Chris@19 78 p = our_malloc(n);
Chris@19 79 # undef real_free
Chris@19 80 # define real_free our_free
Chris@19 81
Chris@19 82 # elif defined(__FreeBSD__) && (MIN_ALIGNMENT <= 16)
Chris@19 83 /* FreeBSD does not have memalign, but its malloc is 16-byte aligned. */
Chris@19 84 p = malloc(n);
Chris@19 85
Chris@19 86 # elif (defined(__MACOSX__) || defined(__APPLE__)) && (MIN_ALIGNMENT <= 16)
Chris@19 87 /* MacOS X malloc is already 16-byte aligned */
Chris@19 88 p = malloc(n);
Chris@19 89
Chris@19 90 # elif defined(HAVE_MEMALIGN)
Chris@19 91 p = memalign(MIN_ALIGNMENT, n);
Chris@19 92
Chris@19 93 # elif defined(HAVE_POSIX_MEMALIGN)
Chris@19 94 /* note: posix_memalign is broken in glibc 2.2.5: it constrains
Chris@19 95 the size, not the alignment, to be (power of two) * sizeof(void*).
Chris@19 96 The bug seems to have been fixed as of glibc 2.3.1. */
Chris@19 97 if (posix_memalign(&p, MIN_ALIGNMENT, n))
Chris@19 98 p = (void*) 0;
Chris@19 99
Chris@19 100 # elif defined(__ICC) || defined(__INTEL_COMPILER) || defined(HAVE__MM_MALLOC)
Chris@19 101 /* Intel's C compiler defines _mm_malloc and _mm_free intrinsics */
Chris@19 102 p = (void *) _mm_malloc(n, MIN_ALIGNMENT);
Chris@19 103 # undef real_free
Chris@19 104 # define real_free _mm_free
Chris@19 105
Chris@19 106 # elif defined(_MSC_VER)
Chris@19 107 /* MS Visual C++ 6.0 with a "Processor Pack" supports SIMD
Chris@19 108 and _aligned_malloc/free (uses malloc.h) */
Chris@19 109 p = (void *) _aligned_malloc(n, MIN_ALIGNMENT);
Chris@19 110 # undef real_free
Chris@19 111 # define real_free _aligned_free
Chris@19 112
Chris@19 113 # elif defined(macintosh) /* MacOS 9 */
Chris@19 114 p = (void *) MPAllocateAligned(n,
Chris@19 115 # if MIN_ALIGNMENT == 8
Chris@19 116 kMPAllocate8ByteAligned,
Chris@19 117 # elif MIN_ALIGNMENT == 16
Chris@19 118 kMPAllocate16ByteAligned,
Chris@19 119 # elif MIN_ALIGNMENT == 32
Chris@19 120 kMPAllocate32ByteAligned,
Chris@19 121 # else
Chris@19 122 # error "Unknown alignment for MPAllocateAligned"
Chris@19 123 # endif
Chris@19 124 0);
Chris@19 125 # undef real_free
Chris@19 126 # define real_free MPFree
Chris@19 127
Chris@19 128 # else
Chris@19 129 /* Add your machine here and send a patch to fftw@fftw.org
Chris@19 130 or (e.g. for Windows) configure --with-our-malloc */
Chris@19 131 # error "Don't know how to malloc() aligned memory ... try configuring --with-our-malloc"
Chris@19 132 # endif
Chris@19 133
Chris@19 134 #else /* !defined(MIN_ALIGNMENT) */
Chris@19 135 p = malloc(n);
Chris@19 136 #endif
Chris@19 137
Chris@19 138 return p;
Chris@19 139 }
Chris@19 140
Chris@19 141 void X(kernel_free)(void *p)
Chris@19 142 {
Chris@19 143 real_free(p);
Chris@19 144 }