Chris@10: \comment This is the source for the FFTW FAQ list, in Chris@10: \comment the Bizarre Format With No Name. It is turned into Lout Chris@10: \comment input, HTML, plain ASCII and an Info document by a Perl script. Chris@10: \comment Chris@10: \comment The format and scripts come from the Linux FAQ, by Chris@10: \comment Ian Jackson. Chris@10: \set brieftitle FFTW FAQ Chris@10: \set author Matteo Frigo and Steven G. Johnson / fftw@fftw.org Chris@10: \set authormail fftw@fftw.org Chris@10: \set title FFTW Frequently Asked Questions with Answers Chris@10: \set copyholder Matteo Frigo and Massachusetts Institute of Technology Chris@10: \call-html startup html.refs2 Chris@10: \copyto ASCII Chris@10: FFTW FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS WITH ANSWERS Chris@10: `date '+%d %h %Y'` Chris@10: Matteo Frigo Chris@10: Steven G. Johnson Chris@10: Chris@10: Chris@10: \endcopy Chris@10: \copyto INFO Chris@10: START-INFO-DIR-ENTRY Chris@10: * FFTW FAQ: (fftw-faq). FFTW Frequently Asked Questions with Answers. Chris@10: END-INFO-DIR-ENTRY Chris@10: Chris@10:  Chris@10: File: $prefix.info, Node: Top, Next: Question 1.1, Up: (dir) Chris@10: Chris@10: FFTW FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS WITH ANSWERS Chris@10: `date '+%d %h %Y'` Chris@10: Matteo Frigo Chris@10: Steven G. Johnson Chris@10: Chris@10: Chris@10: \endcopy Chris@10: Chris@10: This is the list of Frequently Asked Questions about FFTW, a Chris@10: collection of fast C routines for computing the Discrete Fourier Chris@10: Transform in one or more dimensions. Chris@10: Chris@10: \section Index Chris@10: Chris@10: \index Chris@10: Chris@10: \comment ###################################################################### Chris@10: Chris@10: \section Introduction and General Information Chris@10: Chris@10: \question 26aug:whatisfftw What is FFTW? Chris@10: Chris@10: FFTW is a free collection of fast C routines for computing the Chris@10: Discrete Fourier Transform in one or more dimensions. It includes Chris@10: complex, real, symmetric, and parallel transforms, and can handle Chris@10: arbitrary array sizes efficiently. FFTW is typically faster than Chris@10: other publically-available FFT implementations, and is even Chris@10: competitive with vendor-tuned libraries. (See our web page for Chris@10: extensive benchmarks.) To achieve this performance, FFTW uses novel Chris@10: code-generation and runtime self-optimization techniques (along with Chris@10: many other tricks). Chris@10: Chris@10: \question 26aug:whereisfftw How do I obtain FFTW? Chris@10: Chris@10: FFTW can be found at \docref{the FFTW web page\}. You can also Chris@10: retrieve it from \ftpon ftp.fftw.org in \ftpin /pub/fftw. Chris@10: Chris@10: \question 26aug:isfftwfree Is FFTW free software? Chris@10: Chris@10: Starting with version 1.3, FFTW is Free Software in the technical Chris@10: sense defined by the Free Software Foundation (see \docref{Categories Chris@10: of Free and Non-Free Software\}), and is distributed under the terms Chris@10: of the GNU General Public License. Previous versions of FFTW were Chris@10: distributed without fee for noncommercial use, but were not Chris@10: technically ``free.'' Chris@10: Chris@10: Non-free licenses for FFTW are also available that permit different Chris@10: terms of use than the GPL. Chris@10: Chris@10: \question 10apr:nonfree What is this about non-free licenses? Chris@10: Chris@10: The non-free licenses are for companies that wish to use FFTW in their Chris@10: products but are unwilling to release their software under the GPL Chris@10: (which would require them to release source code and allow free Chris@10: redistribution). Such users can purchase an unlimited-use license Chris@10: from MIT. Contact us for more details. Chris@10: Chris@10: We could instead have released FFTW under the LGPL, or even disallowed Chris@10: non-Free usage. Suffice it to say, however, that MIT owns the Chris@10: copyright to FFTW and they only let us GPL it because we convinced Chris@10: them that it would neither affect their licensing revenue nor irritate Chris@10: existing licensees. Chris@10: Chris@10: \question 24oct:west In the West? I thought MIT was in the East? Chris@10: Chris@10: Not to an Italian. You could say that we're a Spaghetti Western Chris@10: (with apologies to Sergio Leone). Chris@10: Chris@10: \comment ###################################################################### Chris@10: Chris@10: \section Installing FFTW Chris@10: Chris@10: \question 26aug:systems Which systems does FFTW run on? Chris@10: Chris@10: FFTW is written in ANSI C, and should work on any system with a decent Chris@10: C compiler. (See also \qref runOnWindows, \qref compilerCrashes.) Chris@10: FFTW can also take advantage of certain hardware-specific features, Chris@10: such as cycle counters and SIMD instructions, but this is optional. Chris@10: Chris@10: \question 26aug:runOnWindows Does FFTW run on Windows? Chris@10: Chris@10: Yes, many people have reported successfully using FFTW on Windows with Chris@10: various compilers. FFTW was not developed on Windows, but the source Chris@10: code is essentially straight ANSI C. See also the \docref{FFTW Chris@10: Windows installation notes\}, \qref compilerCrashes, and \qref Chris@10: vbetalia. Chris@10: Chris@10: \question 26aug:compilerCrashes My compiler has trouble with FFTW. Chris@10: Chris@10: Complain fiercely to the vendor of the compiler. Chris@10: Chris@10: We have successfully used \courier{gcc\} 3.2.x on x86 and PPC, a Chris@10: recent Compaq C compiler for Alpha, version 6 of IBM's \courier{xlc\} Chris@10: compiler for AIX, Intel's \courier{icc\} versions 5-7, and Sun Chris@10: WorkShop \courier{cc\} version 6. Chris@10: Chris@10: FFTW is likely to push compilers to their limits, however, and several Chris@10: compiler bugs have been exposed by FFTW. A partial list follows. Chris@10: Chris@10: \courier{gcc\} 2.95.x for Solaris/SPARC produces incorrect code for Chris@10: the test program (workaround: recompile the \courier{libbench2\} Chris@10: directory with \courier{-O2\}). Chris@10: Chris@10: NetBSD/macppc 1.6 comes with a \courier{gcc\} version that also Chris@10: miscompiles the test program. (Please report a workaround if you know Chris@10: one.) Chris@10: Chris@10: \courier{gcc\} 3.2.3 for ARM reportedly crashes during compilation. Chris@10: This bug is reportedly fixed in later versions of \courier{gcc\}. Chris@10: Chris@10: Versions 8.0 and 8.1 of Intel's \courier{icc\} falsely claim to be Chris@10: \courier{gcc\}, so you should specify \courier{CC="icc -no-gcc"\}; Chris@10: this is automatic in FFTW 3.1. \courier{icc-8.0.066\} reportely Chris@10: produces incorrect code for FFTW 2.1.5, but is fixed in version 8.1. Chris@10: \courier{icc-7.1\} compiler build 20030402Z appears to produce Chris@10: incorrect dependencies, causing the compilation to fail. Chris@10: \courier{icc-7.1\} build 20030307Z appears to work fine. (Use Chris@10: \courier{icc -V\} to check which build you have.) As of 2003/04/18, Chris@10: build 20030402Z appears not to be available any longer on Intel's Chris@10: website, whereas the older build 20030307Z is available. Chris@10: Chris@10: \courier{ranlib\} of GNU \courier{binutils\} 2.9.1 on Irix has been Chris@10: observed to corrupt the FFTW libraries, causing a link failure when Chris@10: FFTW is compiled. Since \courier{ranlib\} is completely superfluous Chris@10: on Irix, we suggest deleting it from your system and replacing it with Chris@10: a symbolic link to \courier{/bin/echo\}. Chris@10: Chris@10: If support for SIMD instructions is enabled in FFTW, further compiler Chris@10: problems may appear: Chris@10: Chris@10: \courier{gcc\} 3.4.[0123] for x86 produces incorrect SSE2 code for Chris@10: FFTW when \courier{-O2\} (the best choice for FFTW) is used, causing Chris@10: FFTW to crash (\courier{make check\} crashes). This bug is fixed in Chris@10: \courier{gcc\} 3.4.4. On x86_64 (amd64/em64t), \courier{gcc\} 3.4.4 Chris@10: reportedly still has a similar problem, but this is fixed as of Chris@10: \courier{gcc\} 3.4.6. Chris@10: Chris@10: \courier{gcc-3.2\} for x86 produces incorrect SIMD code if Chris@10: \courier{-O3\} is used. The same compiler produces incorrect SIMD Chris@10: code if no optimization is used, too. When using \courier{gcc-3.2\}, Chris@10: it is a good idea not to change the default \courier{CFLAGS\} selected Chris@10: by the \courier{configure\} script. Chris@10: Chris@10: Some 3.0.x and 3.1.x versions of \courier{gcc\} on \courier{x86\} may Chris@10: crash. \courier{gcc\} so-called 2.96 shipping with RedHat 7.3 crashes Chris@10: when compiling SIMD code. In both cases, please upgrade to Chris@10: \courier{gcc-3.2\} or later. Chris@10: Chris@10: Intel's \courier{icc\} 6.0 misaligns SSE constants, but FFTW has a Chris@10: workaround. \courier{icc\} 8.x fails to compile FFTW 3.0.x because it Chris@10: falsely claims to be \courier{gcc\}; we believe this to be a bug in Chris@10: \courier{icc\}, but FFTW 3.1 has a workaround. Chris@10: Chris@10: Visual C++ 2003 reportedly produces incorrect code for SSE/SSE2 when Chris@10: compiling FFTW. This bug was reportedly fixed in VC++ 2005; Chris@10: alternatively, you could switch to the Intel compiler. VC++ 6.0 also Chris@10: reportedly produces incorrect code for the file Chris@10: \courier{reodft11e-r2hc-odd.c\} unless optimizations are disabled for Chris@10: that file. Chris@10: Chris@10: \courier{gcc\} 2.95 on MacOS X miscompiles AltiVec code (fixed in Chris@10: later versions). \courier{gcc\} 3.2.x miscompiles AltiVec Chris@10: permutations, but FFTW has a workaround. \courier{gcc\} 4.0.1 on Chris@10: MacOS for Intel crashes when compiling FFTW; a workaround is to Chris@10: compile one file without optimization: \courier{cd kernel; make Chris@10: CFLAGS=" " trig.lo\}. Chris@10: Chris@10: \courier{gcc\} 4.1.1 reportedly crashes when compiling FFTW for MIPS; Chris@10: the workaround is to compile the file it crashes on Chris@10: (\courier{t2_64.c\}) with a lower optimization level. Chris@10: Chris@10: \courier{gcc\} versions 4.1.2 to 4.2.0 for x86 reportedly miscompile Chris@10: FFTW 3.1's test program, causing \courier{make check\} to crash Chris@10: (\courier{gcc\} bug #26528). The bug was reportedly fixed in Chris@10: \courier{gcc\} version 4.2.1 and later. A workaround is to compile Chris@10: \courier{libbench2/verify-lib.c\} without optimization. Chris@10: Chris@10: \question 26aug:solarisSucks FFTW does not compile on Solaris, complaining about \courier{const\}. Chris@10: Chris@10: We know that at least on Solaris 2.5.x with Sun's compilers 4.2 you Chris@10: might get error messages from \courier{make\} such as Chris@10: Chris@10: \courier{"./fftw.h", line 88: warning: const is a keyword in ANSI C\} Chris@10: Chris@10: This is the case when the \courier{configure\} script reports that Chris@10: \courier{const\} does not work: Chris@10: Chris@10: \courier{checking for working const... (cached) no\} Chris@10: Chris@10: You should be aware that Solaris comes with two compilers, namely, Chris@10: \courier{/opt/SUNWspro/SC4.2/bin/cc\} and \courier{/usr/ucb/cc\}. The Chris@10: latter compiler is non-ANSI. Indeed, it is a perverse shell script Chris@10: that calls the real compiler in non-ANSI mode. In order Chris@10: to compile FFTW, change your path so that the right \courier{cc\} Chris@10: is used. Chris@10: Chris@10: To know whether your compiler is the right one, type Chris@10: \courier{cc -V\}. If the compiler prints ``\courier{ucbcc\}'', Chris@10: as in Chris@10: Chris@10: \courier{ucbcc: WorkShop Compilers 4.2 30 Oct 1996 C 4.2\} Chris@10: Chris@10: then the compiler is wrong. The right message is something like Chris@10: Chris@10: \courier{cc: WorkShop Compilers 4.2 30 Oct 1996 C 4.2\} Chris@10: Chris@10: \question 19mar:3dnow What's the difference between \courier{--enable-3dnow\} and \courier{--enable-k7\}? Chris@10: Chris@10: \courier{--enable-k7\} enables 3DNow! instructions on K7 processors Chris@10: (AMD Athlon and its variants). K7 support is provided by assembly Chris@10: routines generated by a special purpose compiler. Chris@10: As of fftw-3.2, --enable-k7 is no longer supported. Chris@10: Chris@10: \courier{--enable-3dnow\} enables generic 3DNow! support using Chris@10: \courier{gcc\} builtin functions. This works on earlier AMD Chris@10: processors, but it is not as fast as our special assembly routines. Chris@10: As of fftw-3.1, --enable-3dnow is no longer supported. Chris@10: Chris@10: \question 18apr:fma What's the difference between the fma and the non-fma versions? Chris@10: Chris@10: The fma version tries to exploit the fused multiply-add instructions Chris@10: implemented in many processors such as PowerPC, ia-64, and MIPS. The Chris@10: two FFTW packages are otherwise identical. In FFTW 3.1, the fma and Chris@10: non-fma versions were merged together into a single package, and the Chris@10: \courier{configure\} script attempts to automatically guess which Chris@10: version to use. Chris@10: Chris@10: The FFTW 3.1 \courier{configure\} script enables fma by default on Chris@10: PowerPC, Itanium, and PA-RISC, and disables it otherwise. You can Chris@10: force one or the other by using the \courier{--enable-fma\} or Chris@10: \courier{--disable-fma\} flag for \courier{configure\}. Chris@10: Chris@10: Definitely use fma if you have a PowerPC-based system with Chris@10: \courier{gcc\} (or IBM \courier{xlc\}). This includes all GNU/Linux Chris@10: systems for PowerPC and the older PowerPC-based MacOS systems. Also Chris@10: use it on PA-RISC and Itanium with the HP/UX compiler. Chris@10: Chris@10: Definitely do not use the fma version if you have an ia-32 processor Chris@10: (Intel, AMD, MacOS on Intel, etcetera). Chris@10: Chris@10: For other architectures/compilers, the situation is not so clear. For Chris@10: example, ia-64 has the fma instruction, but \courier{gcc-3.2\} appears Chris@10: not to exploit it correctly. Other compilers may do the right thing, Chris@10: but we have not tried them. Please send us your feedback so that we Chris@10: can update this FAQ entry. Chris@10: Chris@10: \question 26aug:languages Which language is FFTW written in? Chris@10: Chris@10: FFTW is written in ANSI C. Most of the code, however, was Chris@10: automatically generated by a program called \courier{genfft\}, written Chris@10: in the Objective Caml dialect of ML. You do not need to know ML or to Chris@10: have an Objective Caml compiler in order to use FFTW. Chris@10: Chris@10: \courier{genfft\} is provided with the FFTW sources, which means that Chris@10: you can play with the code generator if you want. In this case, you Chris@10: need a working Objective Caml system. Objective Caml is available Chris@10: from \docref{the Caml web page\}. Chris@10: Chris@10: \question 26aug:fortran Can I call FFTW from Fortran? Chris@10: Chris@10: Yes, FFTW (versions 1.3 and higher) contains a Fortran-callable Chris@10: interface, documented in the FFTW manual. Chris@10: Chris@10: By default, FFTW configures its Fortran interface to work with the Chris@10: first compiler it finds, e.g. \courier{g77\}. To configure for a Chris@10: different, incompatible Fortran compiler \courier{foobar\}, use Chris@10: \courier{./configure F77=foobar\} when installing FFTW. (In the case Chris@10: of \courier{g77\}, however, FFTW 3.x also includes an extra set of Chris@10: Fortran-callable routines with one less underscore at the end of Chris@10: identifiers, which should cover most other Fortran compilers on Linux Chris@10: at least.) Chris@10: Chris@10: \question 26aug:cplusplus Can I call FFTW from C++? Chris@10: Chris@10: Most definitely. FFTW should compile and/or link under any C++ Chris@10: compiler. Moreover, it is likely that the C++ \courier{\} Chris@10: template class is bit-compatible with FFTW's complex-number format Chris@10: (see the FFTW manual for more details). Chris@10: Chris@10: \question 26aug:whynotfortran Why isn't FFTW written in Fortran/C++? Chris@10: Chris@10: Because we don't like those languages, and neither approaches the Chris@10: portability of C. Chris@10: Chris@10: \question 29mar:singleprec How do I compile FFTW to run in single precision? Chris@10: Chris@10: On a Unix system: \courier{configure --enable-float\}. On a non-Unix Chris@10: system: edit \courier{config.h\} to \courier{#define\} the symbol Chris@10: \courier{FFTW_SINGLE\} (for FFTW 3.x). In both cases, you must then Chris@10: recompile FFTW. In FFTW 3, all FFTW identifiers will then begin with Chris@10: \courier{fftwf_\} instead of \courier{fftw_\}. Chris@10: Chris@10: \question 28mar:64bitk7 --enable-k7 does not work on x86-64 Chris@10: Chris@10: Support for --enable-k7 was discontinued in fftw-3.2. Chris@10: Chris@10: The fftw-3.1 release supports --enable-k7. This option only works on Chris@10: 32-bit x86 machines that implement 3DNow!, including the AMD Athlon Chris@10: and the AMD Opteron in 32-bit mode. --enable-k7 does not work on AMD Chris@10: Opteron in 64-bit mode. Use --enable-sse for x86-64 machines. Chris@10: Chris@10: FFTW supports 3DNow! by means of assembly code generated by a Chris@10: special-purpose compiler. It is hard to produce assembly code that Chris@10: works in both 32-bit and 64-bit mode. Chris@10: Chris@10: \comment ###################################################################### Chris@10: Chris@10: \section Using FFTW Chris@10: Chris@10: \question 15mar:fftw2to3 Why not support the FFTW 2 interface in FFTW 3? Chris@10: Chris@10: FFTW 3 has semantics incompatible with earlier versions: its plans can Chris@10: only be used for a given stride, multiplicity, and other Chris@10: characteristics of the input and output arrays; these stronger Chris@10: semantics are necessary for performance reasons. Thus, it is Chris@10: impossible to efficiently emulate the older interface (whose plans can Chris@10: be used for any transform of the same size). We believe that it Chris@10: should be possible to upgrade most programs without any difficulty, Chris@10: however. Chris@10: Chris@10: \question 20mar:planperarray Why do FFTW 3 plans encapsulate the input/output arrays and not just the algorithm? Chris@10: Chris@10: There are several reasons: Chris@10: Chris@10: \call startlist Chris@10: \call item Chris@10: It was important for performance reasons that the plan be specific to Chris@10: array characteristics like the stride (and alignment, for SIMD), and Chris@10: requiring that the user maintain these invariants is error prone. Chris@10: \call item Chris@10: In most high-performance applications, as far as we can tell, you are Chris@10: usually transforming the same array over and over, so FFTW's semantics Chris@10: should not be a burden. Chris@10: \call item Chris@10: If you need to transform another array of the same size, creating a Chris@10: new plan once the first exists is a cheap operation. Chris@10: \call item Chris@10: If you need to transform many arrays of the same size at once, you Chris@10: should really use the \courier{plan_many\} routines in FFTW's "advanced" Chris@10: interface. Chris@10: \call item Chris@10: If the abovementioned array characteristics are the same, you are Chris@10: willing to pay close attention to the documentation, and you really Chris@10: need to, we provide a "new-array execution" interface to apply a plan Chris@10: to a new array. Chris@10: \call endlist Chris@10: Chris@10: \question 25may:slow FFTW seems really slow. Chris@10: Chris@10: You are probably recreating the plan before every transform, rather Chris@10: than creating it once and reusing it for all transforms of the same Chris@10: size. FFTW is designed to be used in the following way: Chris@10: Chris@10: \call startlist Chris@10: \call item Chris@10: First, you create a plan. This will take several seconds. Chris@10: \call item Chris@10: Then, you reuse the plan many times to perform FFTs. These are fast. Chris@10: \call endlist Chris@10: Chris@10: If you don't need to compute many transforms and the time for the Chris@10: planner is significant, you have two options. First, you can use the Chris@10: \courier{FFTW_ESTIMATE\} option in the planner, which uses heuristics Chris@10: instead of runtime measurements and produces a good plan in a short Chris@10: time. Second, you can use the wisdom feature to precompute the plan; Chris@10: see \qref savePlans Chris@10: Chris@10: \question 22oct:slows FFTW slows down after repeated calls. Chris@10: Chris@10: Probably, NaNs or similar are creeping into your data, and the Chris@10: slowdown is due to the resulting floating-point exceptions. For Chris@10: example, be aware that repeatedly FFTing the same array is a diverging Chris@10: process (because FFTW computes the unnormalized transform). Chris@10: Chris@10: \question 22oct:segfault An FFTW routine is crashing when I call it. Chris@10: Chris@10: Did the FFTW test programs pass (\courier{make check\}, or \courier{cd Chris@10: tests; make bigcheck\} if you want to be paranoid)? If so, you almost Chris@10: certainly have a bug in your own code. For example, you could be Chris@10: passing invalid arguments (such as wrongly-sized arrays) to FFTW, or Chris@10: you could simply have memory corruption elsewhere in your program that Chris@10: causes random crashes later on. Please don't complain to us unless Chris@10: you can come up with a minimal self-contained program (preferably Chris@10: under 30 lines) that illustrates the problem. Chris@10: Chris@10: \question 22oct:fortran64 My Fortran program crashes when calling FFTW. Chris@10: Chris@10: As described in the manual, on 64-bit machines you must store the Chris@10: plans in variables large enough to hold a pointer, for example Chris@10: \courier{integer*8\}. We recommend using \courier{integer*8\} on Chris@10: 32-bit machines as well, to simplify porting. Chris@10: Chris@10: \question 24mar:conventions FFTW gives results different from my old FFT. Chris@10: Chris@10: People follow many different conventions for the DFT, and you should Chris@10: be sure to know the ones that we use (described in the FFTW manual). Chris@10: In particular, you should be aware that the Chris@10: \courier{FFTW_FORWARD\}/\courier{FFTW_BACKWARD\} directions correspond Chris@10: to signs of -1/+1 in the exponent of the DFT definition. Chris@10: (\italic{Numerical Recipes\} uses the opposite convention.) Chris@10: Chris@10: You should also know that we compute an unnormalized transform. In Chris@10: contrast, Matlab is an example of program that computes a normalized Chris@10: transform. See \qref whyscaled. Chris@10: Chris@10: Finally, note that floating-point arithmetic is not exact, so Chris@10: different FFT algorithms will give slightly different results (on the Chris@10: order of the numerical accuracy; typically a fractional difference of Chris@10: 1e-15 or so in double precision). Chris@10: Chris@10: \question 31aug:nondeterministic FFTW gives different results between runs Chris@10: Chris@10: If you use \courier{FFTW_MEASURE\} or \courier{FFTW_PATIENT\} mode, Chris@10: then the algorithm FFTW employs is not deterministic: it depends on Chris@10: runtime performance measurements. This will cause the results to vary Chris@10: slightly from run to run. However, the differences should be slight, Chris@10: on the order of the floating-point precision, and therefore should Chris@10: have no practical impact on most applications. Chris@10: Chris@10: If you use saved plans (wisdom) or \courier{FFTW_ESTIMATE\} mode, Chris@10: however, then the algorithm is deterministic and the results should be Chris@10: identical between runs. Chris@10: Chris@10: \question 26aug:savePlans Can I save FFTW's plans? Chris@10: Chris@10: Yes. Starting with version 1.2, FFTW provides the \courier{wisdom\} Chris@10: mechanism for saving plans; see the FFTW manual. Chris@10: Chris@10: \question 14sep:whyscaled Why does your inverse transform return a scaled result? Chris@10: Chris@10: Computing the forward transform followed by the backward transform (or Chris@10: vice versa) yields the original array scaled by the size of the array. Chris@10: (For multi-dimensional transforms, the size of the array is the Chris@10: product of the dimensions.) We could, instead, have chosen a Chris@10: normalization that would have returned the unscaled array. Or, to Chris@10: accomodate the many conventions in this matter, the transform routines Chris@10: could have accepted a "scale factor" parameter. We did not do this, Chris@10: however, for two reasons. First, we didn't want to sacrifice Chris@10: performance in the common case where the scale factor is 1. Second, in Chris@10: real applications the FFT is followed or preceded by some computation Chris@10: on the data, into which the scale factor can typically be absorbed at Chris@10: little or no cost. Chris@10: Chris@10: \question 02dec:centerorigin How can I make FFTW put the origin (zero frequency) at the center of its output? Chris@10: Chris@10: For human viewing of a spectrum, it is often convenient to put the Chris@10: origin in frequency space at the center of the output array, rather Chris@10: than in the zero-th element (the default in FFTW). If all of the Chris@10: dimensions of your array are even, you can accomplish this by simply Chris@10: multiplying each element of the input array by (-1)^(i + j + ...), Chris@10: where i, j, etcetera are the indices of the element. (This trick is a Chris@10: general property of the DFT, and is not specific to FFTW.) Chris@10: Chris@10: \question 08may:imageaudio How do I FFT an image/audio file in \italic{foobar\} format? Chris@10: Chris@10: FFTW performs an FFT on an array of floating-point values. You can Chris@10: certainly use it to compute the transform of an image or audio stream, Chris@10: but you are responsible for figuring out your data format and Chris@10: converting it to the form FFTW requires. Chris@10: Chris@10: \question 09apr:linkfails My program does not link (on Unix). Chris@10: Chris@10: The libraries must be listed in the correct order (\courier{-lfftw3 Chris@10: -lm\} for FFTW 3.x) and \italic{after\} your program sources/objects. Chris@10: (The general rule is that if \italic{A\} uses \italic{B\}, then Chris@10: \italic{A\} must be listed before \italic{B\} in the link command.). Chris@10: Chris@10: \question 15mar:linkheader I included your header, but linking still fails. Chris@10: Chris@10: You're a C++ programmer, aren't you? You have to compile the FFTW Chris@10: library and link it into your program, not just \courier{#include Chris@10: \}. (Yes, this is really a FAQ.) Chris@10: Chris@10: \question 22oct:nostack My program crashes, complaining about stack space. Chris@10: Chris@10: You cannot declare large arrays with automatic storage (e.g. via Chris@10: \courier{fftw_complex array[N]\}); you should use Chris@10: \courier{fftw_malloc\} (or equivalent) to allocate the arrays you want Chris@10: to transform if they are larger than a few hundred elements. Chris@10: Chris@10: \question 13may:leaks FFTW seems to have a memory leak. Chris@10: Chris@10: After you create a plan, FFTW caches the information required to Chris@10: quickly recreate the plan. (See \qref savePlans) It also maintains a Chris@10: small amount of other persistent memory. You can deallocate all of Chris@10: FFTW's internally allocated memory, if you wish, by calling Chris@10: \courier{fftw_cleanup()\}, as documented in the manual. Chris@10: Chris@10: \question 16may:allzero The output of FFTW's transform is all zeros. Chris@10: Chris@10: You should initialize your input array \italic{after\} creating the Chris@10: plan, unless you use \courier{FFTW_ESTIMATE\}: planning with Chris@10: \courier{FFTW_MEASURE\} or \courier{FFTW_PATIENT\} overwrites the Chris@10: input/output arrays, as described in the manual. Chris@10: Chris@10: \question 05sep:vbetalia How do I call FFTW from the Microsoft language du jour? Chris@10: Chris@10: Please \italic{do not\} ask us Windows-specific questions. We do not Chris@10: use Windows. We know nothing about Visual Basic, Visual C++, or .NET. Chris@10: Please find the appropriate Usenet discussion group and ask your Chris@10: question there. See also \qref runOnWindows. Chris@10: Chris@10: \question 15oct:pruned Can I compute only a subset of the DFT outputs? Chris@10: Chris@10: In general, no, an FFT intrinsically computes all outputs from all Chris@10: inputs. In principle, there is something called a \italic{pruned Chris@10: FFT\} that can do what you want, but to compute K outputs out of N the Chris@10: complexity is in general O(N log K) instead of O(N log N), thus saving Chris@10: only a small additive factor in the log. (The same argument holds if Chris@10: you instead have only K nonzero inputs.) Chris@10: Chris@10: There are some specific cases in which you can get the O(N log K) Chris@10: performance benefits easily, however, by combining a few ordinary Chris@10: FFTs. In particular, the case where you want the first K outputs, Chris@10: where K divides N, can be handled by performing N/K transforms of size Chris@10: K and then summing the outputs multiplied by appropriate phase Chris@10: factors. For more details, see \docref{pruned FFTs with FFTW\}. Chris@10: Chris@10: There are also some algorithms that compute pruned transforms Chris@10: \italic{approximately\}, but they are beyond the scope of this FAQ. Chris@10: Chris@10: \question 21jan:transpose Can I use FFTW's routines for in-place and out-of-place matrix transposition? Chris@10: Chris@10: You can use the FFTW guru interface to create a rank-0 transform of Chris@10: vector rank 2 where the vector strides are transposed. (A rank-0 Chris@10: transform is equivalent to a 1D transform of size 1, which. just Chris@10: copies the input into the output.) Specifying the same location for Chris@10: the input and output makes the transpose in-place. Chris@10: Chris@10: For double-valued data stored in row-major format, plan creation looks like Chris@10: this: Chris@10: Chris@10: \verbatim Chris@10: fftw_plan plan_transpose(int rows, int cols, double *in, double *out) Chris@10: { Chris@10: const unsigned flags = FFTW_ESTIMATE; /* other flags are possible */ Chris@10: fftw_iodim howmany_dims[2]; Chris@10: Chris@10: howmany_dims[0].n = rows; Chris@10: howmany_dims[0].is = cols; Chris@10: howmany_dims[0].os = 1; Chris@10: Chris@10: howmany_dims[1].n = cols; Chris@10: howmany_dims[1].is = 1; Chris@10: howmany_dims[1].os = rows; Chris@10: Chris@10: return fftw_plan_guru_r2r(/*rank=*/ 0, /*dims=*/ NULL, Chris@10: /*howmany_rank=*/ 2, howmany_dims, Chris@10: in, out, /*kind=*/ NULL, flags); Chris@10: } Chris@10: \endverbatim Chris@10: Chris@10: (This entry was written by Rhys Ulerich.) Chris@10: Chris@10: \comment ###################################################################### Chris@10: Chris@10: \section Internals of FFTW Chris@10: Chris@10: \question 26aug:howworks How does FFTW work? Chris@10: Chris@10: The innovation (if it can be so called) in FFTW consists in having a Chris@10: variety of composable \italic{solvers\}, representing different FFT Chris@10: algorithms and implementation strategies, whose combination into a Chris@10: particular \italic{plan\} for a given size can be determined at Chris@10: runtime according to the characteristics of your machine/compiler. Chris@10: This peculiar software architecture allows FFTW to adapt itself to Chris@10: almost any machine. Chris@10: Chris@10: For more details (albeit somewhat outdated), see the paper "FFTW: An Chris@10: Adaptive Software Architecture for the FFT", by M. Frigo and Chris@10: S. G. Johnson, \italic{Proc. ICASSP\} 3, 1381 (1998), also Chris@10: available at \docref{the FFTW web page\}. Chris@10: Chris@10: \question 26aug:whyfast Why is FFTW so fast? Chris@10: Chris@10: This is a complex question, and there is no simple answer. In fact, Chris@10: the authors do not fully know the answer, either. In addition to many Chris@10: small performance hacks throughout FFTW, there are three general Chris@10: reasons for FFTW's speed. Chris@10: Chris@10: \call startlist Chris@10: \call item Chris@10: FFTW uses a variety of FFT algorithms and implementation styles Chris@10: that can be arbitrarily composed to adapt itself to Chris@10: a machine. See \qref howworks. Chris@10: \call item Chris@10: FFTW uses a code generator to produce highly-optimized Chris@10: routines for computing small transforms. Chris@10: \call item Chris@10: FFTW uses explicit divide-and-conquer to take advantage Chris@10: of the memory hierarchy. Chris@10: \call endlist Chris@10: Chris@10: For more details (albeit somewhat outdated), see the paper "FFTW: An Chris@10: Adaptive Software Architecture for the FFT", by M. Frigo and Chris@10: S. G. Johnson, \italic{Proc. ICASSP\} 3, 1381 (1998), Chris@10: available along with other references at \docref{the FFTW web page\}. Chris@10: Chris@10: \comment ###################################################################### Chris@10: Chris@10: \section Known bugs Chris@10: Chris@10: \question 27aug:rfftwndbug FFTW 1.1 crashes in rfftwnd on Linux. Chris@10: Chris@10: This bug was fixed in FFTW 1.2. There was a bug in \courier{rfftwnd\} Chris@10: causing an incorrect amount of memory to be allocated. The bug showed Chris@10: up in Linux with libc-5.3.12 (and nowhere else that we know of). Chris@10: Chris@10: \question 15oct:fftwmpibug The MPI transforms in FFTW 1.2 give incorrect results/leak memory. Chris@10: Chris@10: These bugs were corrected in FFTW 1.2.1. The MPI transforms (really, Chris@10: just the transpose routines) in FFTW 1.2 had bugs that could cause Chris@10: errors in some situations. Chris@10: Chris@10: \question 05nov:testsingbug The test programs in FFTW 1.2.1 fail when I change FFTW to use single precision. Chris@10: Chris@10: This bug was fixed in FFTW 1.3. (Older versions of FFTW did Chris@10: work in single precision, but the test programs didn't--the error Chris@10: tolerances in the tests were set for double precision.) Chris@10: Chris@10: \question 24mar:teststoobig The test program in FFTW 1.2.1 fails for n > 46340. Chris@10: Chris@10: This bug was fixed in FFTW 1.3. FFTW 1.2.1 produced the right answer, Chris@10: but the test program was wrong. For large n, n*n in the naive Chris@10: transform that we used for comparison overflows 32 bit integer Chris@10: precision, breaking the test. Chris@10: Chris@10: \question 24aug:linuxthreads The threaded code fails on Linux Redhat 5.0 Chris@10: Chris@10: We had problems with glibc-2.0.5. The code should work with Chris@10: glibc-2.0.7. Chris@10: Chris@10: \question 26sep:bigrfftwnd FFTW 2.0's rfftwnd fails for rank > 1 transforms with a final dimension >= 65536. Chris@10: Chris@10: This bug was fixed in FFTW 2.0.1. (There was a 32-bit integer overflow due Chris@10: to a poorly-parenthesized expression.) Chris@10: Chris@10: \question 26mar:primebug FFTW 2.0's complex transforms give the wrong results with prime factors 17 to 97. Chris@10: Chris@10: There was a bug in the complex transforms that could cause incorrect Chris@10: results under (hopefully rare) circumstances for lengths with Chris@10: intermediate-size prime factors (17-97). This bug was fixed in FFTW Chris@10: 2.1.1. Chris@10: Chris@10: \question 05apr:mpichbug FFTW 2.1.1's MPI test programs crash with MPICH. Chris@10: Chris@10: This bug was fixed in FFTW 2.1.2. The 2.1/2.1.1 MPI test programs crashed Chris@10: when using the MPICH implementation of MPI with the \courier{ch_p4\} Chris@10: device (TCP/IP); the transforms themselves worked fine. Chris@10: Chris@10: \question 25may:aixthreadbug FFTW 2.1.2's multi-threaded transforms don't work on AIX. Chris@10: Chris@10: This bug was fixed in FFTW 2.1.3. The multi-threaded transforms in Chris@10: previous versions didn't work with AIX's \courier{pthreads\} Chris@10: implementation, which idiosyncratically creates threads in detached Chris@10: (non-joinable) mode by default. Chris@10: Chris@10: \question 27sep:bigprimebug FFTW 2.1.2's complex transforms give incorrect results for large prime sizes. Chris@10: Chris@10: This bug was fixed in FFTW 2.1.3. FFTW's complex-transform algorithm Chris@10: for prime sizes (in versions 2.0 to 2.1.2) had an integer overflow Chris@10: problem that caused incorrect results for many primes greater than Chris@10: 32768 (on 32-bit machines). (Sizes without large prime factors are Chris@10: not affected.) Chris@10: Chris@10: \question 25may:solaristhreadbug FFTW 2.1.3's multi-threaded transforms don't give any speedup on Solaris. Chris@10: Chris@10: This bug was fixed in FFTW 2.1.4. (By default, Solaris creates Chris@10: threads that do not parallelize over multiple processors, so one has Chris@10: to request the proper behavior specifically.) Chris@10: Chris@10: \question 03may:aixflags FFTW 2.1.3 crashes on AIX. Chris@10: Chris@10: The FFTW 2.1.3 \courier{configure\} script picked incorrect compiler Chris@10: flags for the \courier{xlc\} compiler on newer IBM processors. This Chris@10: is fixed in FFTW 2.1.4. Chris@10: Chris@10: \comment Here it ends! Chris@10: