Chris@42: Chris@42: Chris@42: Chris@42: Chris@42: Chris@42: FFTW 3.3.5: Acknowledgments Chris@42: Chris@42: Chris@42: Chris@42: Chris@42: Chris@42: Chris@42: Chris@42: Chris@42: Chris@42: Chris@42: Chris@42: Chris@42: Chris@42: Chris@42: Chris@42: Chris@42: Chris@42: Chris@42: Chris@42: Chris@42:
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11 Acknowledgments

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Matteo Frigo was supported in part by the Special Research Program SFB Chris@42: F011 “AURORA” of the Austrian Science Fund FWF and by MIT Lincoln Chris@42: Laboratory. For previous versions of FFTW, he was supported in part by the Chris@42: Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA), under Grants Chris@42: N00014-94-1-0985 and F30602-97-1-0270, and by a Digital Equipment Chris@42: Corporation Fellowship. Chris@42:

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Steven G. Johnson was supported in part by a Dept. of Defense NDSEG Chris@42: Fellowship, an MIT Karl Taylor Compton Fellowship, and by the Materials Chris@42: Research Science and Engineering Center program of the National Science Chris@42: Foundation under award DMR-9400334. Chris@42:

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Code for the Cell Broadband Engine was graciously donated to the FFTW Chris@42: project by the IBM Austin Research Lab and included in fftw-3.2. (This Chris@42: code was removed in fftw-3.3.) Chris@42:

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Code for the MIPS paired-single SIMD support was graciously donated to Chris@42: the FFTW project by CodeSourcery, Inc. Chris@42:

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We are grateful to Sun Microsystems Inc. for its donation of a Chris@42: cluster of 9 8-processor Ultra HPC 5000 SMPs (24 Gflops peak). These Chris@42: machines served as the primary platform for the development of early Chris@42: versions of FFTW. Chris@42:

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We thank Intel Corporation for donating a four-processor Pentium Pro Chris@42: machine. We thank the GNU/Linux community for giving us a decent OS to Chris@42: run on that machine. Chris@42:

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We are thankful to the AMD corporation for donating an AMD Athlon XP 1700+ Chris@42: computer to the FFTW project. Chris@42:

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We thank the Compaq/HP testdrive program and VA Software Corporation Chris@42: (SourceForge.net) for providing remote access to machines that were used Chris@42: to test FFTW. Chris@42:

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The genfft suite of code generators was written using Objective Chris@42: Caml, a dialect of ML. Objective Caml is a small and elegant language Chris@42: developed by Xavier Leroy. The implementation is available from Chris@42: http://caml.inria.fr/. In previous Chris@42: releases of FFTW, genfft was written in Caml Light, by the same Chris@42: authors. An even earlier implementation of genfft was written in Chris@42: Scheme, but Caml is definitely better for this kind of application. Chris@42: Chris@42: Chris@42:

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FFTW uses many tools from the GNU project, including automake, Chris@42: texinfo, and libtool. Chris@42:

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Prof. Charles E. Leiserson of MIT provided continuous support and Chris@42: encouragement. This program would not exist without him. Charles also Chris@42: proposed the name “codelets” for the basic FFT blocks. Chris@42: Chris@42:

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Prof. John D. Joannopoulos of MIT demonstrated continuing tolerance of Chris@42: Steven’s “extra-curricular” computer-science activities, as well as Chris@42: remarkable creativity in working them into his grant proposals. Chris@42: Steven’s physics degree would not exist without him. Chris@42:

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Franz Franchetti wrote SIMD extensions to FFTW 2, which eventually Chris@42: led to the SIMD support in FFTW 3. Chris@42:

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Stefan Kral wrote most of the K7 code generator distributed with FFTW Chris@42: 3.0.x and 3.1.x. Chris@42:

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Andrew Sterian contributed the Windows timing code in FFTW 2. Chris@42:

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Didier Miras reported a bug in the test procedure used in FFTW 1.2. We Chris@42: now use a completely different test algorithm by Funda Ergun that does Chris@42: not require a separate FFT program to compare against. Chris@42:

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Wolfgang Reimer contributed the Pentium cycle counter and a few fixes Chris@42: that help portability. Chris@42:

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Ming-Chang Liu uncovered a well-hidden bug in the complex transforms of Chris@42: FFTW 2.0 and supplied a patch to correct it. Chris@42:

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The FFTW FAQ was written in bfnn (Bizarre Format With No Name) Chris@42: and formatted using the tools developed by Ian Jackson for the Linux Chris@42: FAQ. Chris@42:

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We are especially thankful to all of our users for their Chris@42: continuing support, feedback, and interest during our development of Chris@42: FFTW. Chris@42:

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