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7.5 Allocating aligned memory in Fortran

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In order to obtain maximum performance in FFTW, you should store your cannam@127: data in arrays that have been specially aligned in memory (see SIMD alignment and fftw_malloc). Enforcing alignment also permits you to cannam@127: safely use the new-array execute functions (see New-array Execute Functions) to apply a given plan to more than one pair of in/out cannam@127: arrays. Unfortunately, standard Fortran arrays do not provide cannam@127: any alignment guarantees. The only way to allocate aligned cannam@127: memory in standard Fortran is to allocate it with an external C cannam@127: function, like the fftw_alloc_real and cannam@127: fftw_alloc_complex functions. Fortunately, Fortran 2003 provides cannam@127: a simple way to associate such allocated memory with a standard Fortran cannam@127: array pointer that you can then use normally. cannam@127:

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We therefore recommend allocating all your input/output arrays using cannam@127: the following technique: cannam@127:

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  1. Declare a pointer, arr, to your array of the desired type cannam@127: and dimensions. For example, real(C_DOUBLE), pointer :: a(:,:) cannam@127: for a 2d real array, or complex(C_DOUBLE_COMPLEX), pointer :: cannam@127: a(:,:,:) for a 3d complex array. cannam@127: cannam@127:
  2. The number of elements to allocate must be an cannam@127: integer(C_SIZE_T). You can either declare a variable of this cannam@127: type, e.g. integer(C_SIZE_T) :: sz, to store the number of cannam@127: elements to allocate, or you can use the int(..., C_SIZE_T) cannam@127: intrinsic function. e.g. set sz = L * M * N or use cannam@127: int(L * M * N, C_SIZE_T) for an L × M × N array. cannam@127: cannam@127:
  3. Declare a type(C_PTR) :: p to hold the return value from cannam@127: FFTW’s allocation routine. Set p = fftw_alloc_real(sz) for a real array, or p = fftw_alloc_complex(sz) for a complex array. cannam@127: cannam@127:
  4. cannam@127: Associate your pointer arr with the allocated memory p cannam@127: using the standard c_f_pointer subroutine: call cannam@127: c_f_pointer(p, arr, [...dimensions...]), where cannam@127: [...dimensions...]) are an array of the dimensions of the array cannam@127: (in the usual Fortran order). e.g. call c_f_pointer(p, arr, cannam@127: [L,M,N]) for an L × M × N array. (Alternatively, you can cannam@127: omit the dimensions argument if you specified the shape explicitly cannam@127: when declaring arr.) You can now use arr as a usual cannam@127: multidimensional array. cannam@127: cannam@127:
  5. When you are done using the array, deallocate the memory by call cannam@127: fftw_free(p) on p. cannam@127: cannam@127:
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For example, here is how we would allocate an L × M 2d real array: cannam@127:

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  real(C_DOUBLE), pointer :: arr(:,:)
cannam@127:   type(C_PTR) :: p
cannam@127:   p = fftw_alloc_real(int(L * M, C_SIZE_T))
cannam@127:   call c_f_pointer(p, arr, [L,M])
cannam@127:   ...use arr and arr(i,j) as usual...
cannam@127:   call fftw_free(p)
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and here is an L × M × N 3d complex array: cannam@127:

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  complex(C_DOUBLE_COMPLEX), pointer :: arr(:,:,:)
cannam@127:   type(C_PTR) :: p
cannam@127:   p = fftw_alloc_complex(int(L * M * N, C_SIZE_T))
cannam@127:   call c_f_pointer(p, arr, [L,M,N])
cannam@127:   ...use arr and arr(i,j,k) as usual...
cannam@127:   call fftw_free(p)
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See Reversing array dimensions for an example allocating a cannam@127: single array and associating both real and complex array pointers with cannam@127: it, for in-place real-to-complex transforms. cannam@127:

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