derelict-extras-clblast 0.1.0
A dynamic binding to the CLBlast (OpenCL BLAS Tuned) API.
To use this package, run the following command in your project's root directory:
Manual usage
Put the following dependency into your project's dependences section:
DerelictCLBlast
A dynamic loading binding to CLBlast for the D Programming Language.
Please see the pages Building and Linking Derelict and Using Derelict, or information on how to build DerelictCLBlast and load the OpenCL library at run time.
What is CLBlast?
The name "CLBlast" is a library that uses OpenCL to execute BLAS functions using a parallel computing device, such as a GPU. It is tuned to have better performance on most types of GPUs. Thus the name "CLBlast" = "OpenCL" + "BLAS" + "Tuned".
What is it for?
In many practical applications, for example in scientific computing or machine learning, very large numbers of very large matrices need to have large numbers of mathematical operations applied to them. For example, most Deep Learning systems are based on Neural Networks, which need to train against large amounts of data using a backpropagation algorithm. In a nutshell, this means that it must do a LOT of linear algebra operations on very large Tensors. Tensors are essentially the generalization of vectors and matrices, having an arbitrary number of dimensions, and can also be called "N-Dimensional Arrays".
BLAS Functions and Performance
Attempting to execute such algorithms directly on a comptuer's CPU can result in suboptimal performance, which limits how much data can be processed in a given cost and amount of time. Highly optimized algorithms that take advantage of a particular architecture's capabilities, for example, CPUs that offer Single-Instruction, Multiple-Data (SIMD) instructions, are often created and bundled under a standard set of functions called Basic Linear Algebra Subprograms (BLAS).
BLAS funtions will follow a slightly odd, but consistent, naming convention. Most function names are abbreviations for what they do and what type of data they operate on.
Consider the oddly named function "Saxpy". This name is short for "Single-Precision (float), A*X Plus Y". The function "Gemm" stands for "Generalized Matrix Multiplication". If one can convert one's problems to use these high-optimized functions, it can lead to large boosts in performance.
GPUs and other Compute Devices
Thus far, we've only spoken about executing algorithms on a CPU. However, there are other hardware devices that do large volumes of linear algebra operations in parallel. Chief among them are GPUs. GPUs excel at highly parallized computation devices that specialize in linear algebra. Those familiar with computer games may recognize terms such as a shaders, which are essentially small programs known as kernels, that perform operations in parallel on large matrixes. Converting an image (a matrix) into black-and-white, projecting the vectors of a 3D object onto a surface in order to create a shadow, rotating the vectors of a 3D object, these are all examples of problems which ultimately boil down in to linear algebra operations on 2D and 3D matrices. This is why GPUs can be harnessed for scientific and machine learning purposes.
BLAS and GPUs
One complication with running code on GPUs, however, is that they vary considerably in their capabilities and even their core architecture. Different vendors, such as Intel, NVIDIA, and AMD all make powerful GPUs.
An abstraction layer that is used to access GPUs in a consistent manner for scientific and machine learning computing purposes is the Compute Unified Device Architecture (CUDA). However, the libraries and SDKs for CUDA are specific to NVIDIA and are proprietary. This means that, if you do not have NVIDIA GPUs available, then you are simply out of luck.
An alternative compute device interface is the Open Computing Language (OpenCL). In addition to working on NVIDIA GPUs, OpenCL can be used to execute on a much wider variety of GPUs and other computing devices. In the absence of a GPU, it can also execute directly on the CPU using CPU-based implementations such as Portable Computing Language (PoCL). CPU-based implementations of OpenCL can simplify work efforts, allowing testing and development even on weaker personal computers, while still being able to execute the finished product on a powerful multi-GPU architecture.
Joining GPUs and BLAS
This is where the CLBlast library comes into play. It is an implementation of the same BLAS algorithms that are familiar in scientific and machine learning computing, but it is built on top of OpenCL, permitting these operations to be run on a GPU. CLBlast is written originally for C and C++.
CLBLast contains a number of kernels written for different GPUs and tuned for performance. CLBlast uses OpenCL to compile these kernels if necessary and load them onto the GPU. This allows the user to benefit from BLAS-like methods, but using the parallel computing power of a GPU.
A D Binding
For those wishing to pursue scientific computing and machine learning problems using the D Programming Language, this binding library was created.
Why D? It is built with three main ideas in mind:
- Read Fast: Clear, readable, documented code familiar to those using C, Java, or any related language.
- Write Fast: A succinct syntax that avoids excess boilerplate, a powerful multi-paradigm language letting you pick the right tool for the right job.
- Run Fast: D is a compiled language that runs directly on your CPU without an interpretter.
D combines the simplicity of Python with the performance of C++.
Setup (Ubuntu Linux)
This binding performs dynamic loading, this means that the C libraries are loaded at runtime rather than during linking. Thus, it is important to make sure the proper dependencies are installed and available on your computer.
- Install a tool used to check OpenCL support on your system:
$ sudo apt install clinfo
- Check to see what OpenCL platforms are supported:
$ clinfo
Number of platforms 0
- Install an OpenCL platform, which will vary with the GPU available on your system. For a quick setup, try using PoCL, which will let your CPU act as an OpenCL computing device:
$ sudo apt install libpocl2 libpocl-dev # Run on CPU
$ sudo apt install nvidia-opencl-icd-384 # An NVidia GPU Platform
$ # Other platforms as per their official instructions...
- Validate that a compute platform is available, e.g.:
$ clinfo
Number of platforms 1
Platform Name Portable Computing Language
Platform Vendor The pocl project
Platform Version OpenCL 2.0 pocl 1.8 Linux, None+Asserts, RELOC, LLVM 11.1.0, SLEEF, DISTRO, POCL_DEBUG
Platform Profile FULL_PROFILE
Platform Extensions cl_khr_icd cl_pocl_content_size
Platform Extensions function suffix POCL
- Finally install CLBlast:
$ sudo apt install libclblast1
Usage
The usage of OpenCL and CLBlast isn't something that fits into a 5-line example program, but the test program serves as a good example.
This program demonstrates the following:
- Initializing OpenCL, viewing Compute Platforms and Compute Devices.
- Initializing CLBlast.
- Creating buffers on the GPU, loading data into them.
- Executing a function (GEMM in this case).
- Pulling the results out of the GPU and printing them on the host.
- Registered by Vijay Nayar
- 0.1.0 released 11 months ago
- vnayar/DerelictCLBlast
- MIT
- Copyright © 2024, Vijay Nayar
- Authors:
- Dependencies:
- derelict-util, derelict-cl
- Versions:
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0.1.0 2024-Jan-05 ~master 2024-Jan-05 - Download Stats:
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