stl-utilities#
- group Utilities
Functions
-
template<typename Function>
unspecified elementwise(Function &&fn)# A functional adaptor that, given a callable object
fn, returns another callable objectgthat appliesfnelement-wise to its arguments.The arguments to
gmust bemdspanobjects or models of thelogical_store_likeconcept. The shapes of the input arguments must all match. The element-wise application offis performed lazily; i.e., the result is not computed until the elements of the result are accessed.- Example:
// Perform element-wise addition of the rows of two logical stores, // assigning the result element-wise into the rows of the first. stl::logical_store<int, 2> store1 = { {1, 2, 3, 4}, // row 0 {2, 3, 4, 5}, // row 1 {3, 4, 5, 6} // row 2 }; stl::logical_store<int, 2> store2 = { {10, 20, 30, 40}, // row 0 {20, 30, 40, 50}, // row 1 {30, 40, 50, 60} // row 2 }; stl::transform(stl::rows_of(store1), stl::rows_of(store2), stl::rows_of(store1), stl::elementwise(std::plus<>{})); // store1 now contains: // [[11 22 33 44] // row 0 // [22 33 44 55] // row 1 // [33 44 55 66]] // row 2
Note
The Legate.STL algorithms recognize the return type of \(\mathtt{elementwise(fn)(}A^1,A^2\cdots,A^n\mathtt{)}\) such that assigning its result to an
mdspanobject will perform an element-wise assignment. The element-wise assignment is done withthrust::copyand will be accelerated if CUDA support is enabled.- Parameters:
fn – The callable object to apply element-wise.
- Returns:
A callable object \(\mathtt{g}\) such that, given multi-dimensional arguments \(A^1,A^2\cdots,A^n\), the expression \(\mathtt{g(}A^1,A^2\cdots,A^n\mathtt{)}\) returns a multi-dimensional view \(\mathtt{V}\) where \(\mathtt{V}_{i,j,\ldots}\) is the result of calling \(\mathtt{fn(}{A^1}_{i,j,\ldots}, {A^2}_{i,j,\ldots}, \cdots, {A^n}_{i,j,\ldots}\mathtt{)}\).
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template<LaunchParam... Params>
void launch_task(Params... params)# A function that launches a task with the given inputs, outputs, scalars, and constraints.
Launch parameter arguments can be one of the following in any order:
legate::experimental::stl::inputs- specifies the input stores for the taskExample:
inputs(store1, store2, store3)
legate::experimental::stl::outputs- specifies the output stores for the taskExample:
outputs(store1, store2, store3)
legate::experimental::stl::scalars- specifies the scalar arguments for the taskExample:
scalars(42, 3.14f)
legate::experimental::stl::function- specifies the function to be applied iteratively to the inputs.The function will take as arguments the current elements of the input stores, in order, followed by the current elements of the output stores. The elements of a
stl::logical_storeare lvalue references to the elements of the physical store it represents. The elements of a view such asstl::rows_of(store)aremdspans denoting the rows ofstore.The function must be bitwise copyable.
Only one of
functionorreductioncan be specified in a call tolaunch_taskExample:
function([](const auto& in, auto& out) { out = in * in; })
legate::experimental::stl::reduction- specifies the reduction store and the reduction function to be applied to the inputs.The function must be bitwise copyable.
The reduction function must take as
mdspans referring to parts of the input stores.The reduction store can be a
logical_storeor some view of a store, such asrows_of(store). When operating on a view, the arguments to the reduction function will be the elements of the view. For example, if the reduction store isrows_of(store), the arguments passed to the reduction function will bemdspans denoting rows ofstore.Only one of
functionorreductioncan be specified in a call tolaunch_taskExample:
stl::reduction(stl::rows_of(store), stl::elementwise(std::plus{}))
legate::experimental::stl::constraints- specifies the constraints for the task.A constraint is a callable that takes an
legate::AutoTask&and the input, output, and reduction stores as arguments. Its function signature must be:void(legate::AutoTask&, // the task to add the constraints to const std::vector<LogicalStore>&, // the input stores const std::vector<LogicalStore>&, // the output stores const LogicalStore&) // the reduction store
Legate.STL provides one constraint generator,
legate::experimental::stl::align, for specifying the alignment constraints for the task. It can be used many different ways:align(inputs[0], inputs[1])- aligns the first input with the second inputalign(inputs[0], outputs[0])- aligns the first input with the first outputalign(outputs[0], inputs)- aligns the first output with all the inputsalign(outputs, inputs[1])- aligns all the outputs with the second inputalign(reduction, inputs[0])- aligns the reduction store with the first inputalign(reduction, inputs)- aligns the reduction store with all the inputalign(inputs)- aligns all the inputs with each otheralign(outputs)- aligns all the outputs with each other
- Example
The following use of
launch_taskis equivalent tostl::transform(input, output op):stl::launch_task(stl::function(detail::UnaryTransform{std::move(op)}), stl::inputs(std::forward<InputRange>(input)), stl::outputs(std::forward<OutputRange>(output)), stl::constraints(stl::align(stl::inputs[0], stl::outputs[0])));
Variables
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ResourceConfig LEGATE_STL_RESOURCE_CONFIG = {1024, 1024, 64, 0, 0}#
Configuration for the Legate STL resource.
This constant represents the configuration for the Legate STL resource. It specifies (in order):
the maximum number of tasks,
the maximum number of dynamic tasks,
the maximum number of reduction operations,
the maximum number of projections, and
the maximum number of shardings
See also
-
class launch_task
- #include <legate/experimental/stl/detail/launch_task.hpp>
A class that represents a task launcher.
The
launch_taskclass provides a convenient interface for launching tasks in the Legate framework. It supports both iteration tasks and reduction tasks. The tasks are created and submitted to the runtime using the provided inputs, outputs, scalars, and constraints.
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class initialize_library
- #include <legate/experimental/stl/detail/registrar.hpp>
A class that initializes the Legate runtime and creates the
legate.stllibrary instance.The
initialize_libraryclass is responsible for creating a library instance. The initialization fails if the runtime has not started. If the initialization is successful, it creates a library with the name"legate.stl".The library instance is automatically destroyed when the
initialize_libraryobject goes out of scope.It is harmless to create multiple
initialize_libraryobjects in the same program.See also
Public Functions
-
inline initialize_library()
Constructs an
initialize_libraryobject.This constructor creates a library instance for Legate STL. The initialization fails if the runtime has not started. If the initialization is successful, it creates a library with the name
"legate.stl".- Throws:
std::runtime_error – If the runtime has not started
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inline initialize_library()
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template<typename Function>