C interface (GPU) ================= There are four steps needed to call cuFINUFFT from C: 1) making a plan, 2) setting the nonuniform points in this plan, 3) executing one or more transforms using the current nonuniform points, then, when all is done, 4) destroying the plan. The simplest case is to call them in order, i.e., 1234. However, it is possible to repeat 3 with new strength or coefficient data, or to repeat 2 to choose new nonuniform points in order to do one or more step 3's again, before destroying. For instance, 123334 and 1232334 are allowed. If non-standard algorithm options are desired, an extra function is needed before making the plan (see bottom of this page). This API matches very closely that of the plan interface to FINUFFT (in turn modeled on those of FFTW and NFFT). Here is the full documentation for these functions. They have double (``cufinufft``) and single (``cufinufftf``) precision versions, which we document together. The mathematical transforms are exactly as performed by FINUFFT, to which we refer for their definitions. You will also want to read the examples in ``examples/cuda`` and ``test/cuda/cufinufft*.cu``, and may want to read extra documentation in the source at ``src/cuda/cufinufft.cu``. *Note*: The interface to cuFINUFFT has changed between versions 1.3 and 2.2. Please see :ref:`Migration to cuFINUFFT v2.2` for details. Getting started --------------- Let us consider applying a 1D type-1 transform in single precision. First we need to include some headers .. code-block:: c #include #include #include #include #include #include Inside our ``main`` function, we first define the problem parameters and some pointers for the data arrays: .. code-block:: c const int M = 100000, N = 10000; int64_t modes[1] = {N}; float *x; float _Complex *c; float _Complex *f; Here ``M`` is the number of nonuniform points, ``N`` is the size of our 1D grid. cuFINUFFT expets the grid size to be given as an array, so we also define the ``modes`` integer array. Finally we have the nonuniform points ``x``, the coefficients (or strengths) ``c`` and the output values ``f`` on the grid. Note that we are using the ``float _Complex`` type here to remain compatible with both C and C++. For the former, we can use ``float complex`` while the latter would accept ``std::complex`` instead. We also define the corresponding data pointers on the device (GPU) as well as the cuFINUFFT plan: .. code-block:: c float *d_x; cuFloatComplex *d_c, *d_f; cufinufftf_plan plan; Finally, we'll need some variables to compute the NUDFT at some arbitrary point to check the accuracy of the cuFINUFFT call: .. code-block:: c int idx; float _Complex f0; Now the actual work can begin. First, we allocate the host (CPU) arrays and fill the ``x`` and ``c`` arrays with appropriate values (``f`` will hold the output of the cuFINUFFT call). The frequencies in ``x`` must be in the interval :math:`[-\pi, \pi]` while the coefficients ``c`` can be any value. Here we draw the frequencies and coefficients from the uniform distributions on :math:`[-\pi, \pi]` and :math:`[-1, 1]^2` respectively. .. code-block:: c x = (float *) malloc(M * sizeof(float)); c = (float _Complex *) malloc(M * sizeof(float _Complex)); f = (float _Complex *) malloc(N * sizeof(float _Complex)); srand(0); for(int j = 0; j < M; ++j) { x[j] = 2 * M_PI * (((float) rand()) / RAND_MAX - 1); c[j] = (2 * ((float) rand()) / RAND_MAX - 1) + I * (2 * ((float) rand()) / RAND_MAX - 1); } Now that the data is generated, we must transfer it to the device. For this, we first allocate the necessary arrays using ``cudaMalloc`` and then transfer the data using ``cudaMemcpy``. .. code-block:: c cudaMalloc(&d_x, M * sizeof(float)); cudaMalloc(&d_c, M * sizeof(float _Complex)); cudaMalloc(&d_f, N * sizeof(float _Complex)); cudaMemcpy(d_x, x, M * sizeof(float), cudaMemcpyHostToDevice); cudaMemcpy(d_c, c, M * sizeof(float _Complex), cudaMemcpyHostToDevice); It's finally time to put cuFINUFFT to work. First, we create a plan using ``cufinufftf_makeplan`` (the prefix ``cufinufftf_`` is replaced with ``cufinufft_`` when working in double precision). .. code-block:: c cufinufftf_makeplan(1, 1, modes, 1, 1, 1e-6, &plan, NULL); The first argument gives the type, while the second gives the number of dimensions. After this, we have the grid size as an integer array, followed by the sign in the complex exponential (here positive) and the number of transforms to compute simultaneously (here just one). Then there's the tolerance (six digits) and finally there's a pointer to the plan and a non-mandatory options structure. Once the plan is created, we set the points and execute the plan. .. code-block:: c cufinufftf_setpts(plan, M, d_x, NULL, NULL, 0, NULL, NULL, NULL); cufinufftf_execute(plan, d_c, d_f); Once the results are calculated, we transfer the data back onto the host, destroy the plan, and free the device arrays. .. code-block:: c cudaMemcpy(f, d_f, N * sizeof(float _Complex), cudaMemcpyDeviceToHost); cufinufftf_destroy(plan); cudaFree(d_x); cudaFree(d_c); cudaFree(d_f); The result is now in the host array ``f`` and we can print out its value at a particular index. .. code-block:: c idx = 4 * N / 7; printf("f[%d] = %lf + %lfi\n", idx, crealf(f[idx]), cimagf(f[idx])); If we want, we can complare this to the value obtained using the type-1 NUDFT formula. .. code-block:: c f0 = 0; for(int j = 0; j < M; ++j) { f0 += c[j] * cexp(I * x[j] * (idx - N / 2)); } printf("f0[%d] = %lf + %lfi\n", idx, crealf(f0), cimagf(f0)); Finally, we'll want to deallocate the arrays once we're done with them. .. code-block:: c free(x); free(c); free(f); The complete listing can be found in ``examples/cuda/getting_started.cpp``. Full documentation ------------------ Plan ~~~~ Given the user's desired dimension, number of Fourier modes in each direction, sign in the exponential, number of transforms, tolerance, and desired batch size, and (possibly) an options struct, this creates a new plan object. .. code-block:: c int cufinufft_makeplan(int type, int dim, int64_t* nmodes, int iflag, int ntr, double eps, cufinufft_plan *plan, cufinufft_opts *opts) int cufinufftf_makeplan(int type, int dim, int64_t* nmodes, int iflag, int ntr, float tol, cufinufftf_plan *plan, cufinufft_opts *opts) Inputs: type type of the transform, 1 or 2 (note: 3 is not implemented yet) dim overall dimension of the transform, 2 or 3 (note: 1 is not implemented yet) nmodes a length-dim integer array: nmodes[d] is the number of Fourier modes in (zero-indexed) direction d. Specifically, in 2D: nmodes[0]=N1, nmodes[1]=N2, in 3D: nmodes[0]=N1, nmodes[1]=N2, nmodes[2]=N3. iflag if >=0, uses + sign in complex exponential, otherwise - sign ntransf number of transforms to performed in the execute stage (>=1). This controls the number of input/output data expected for c and fk. tol relative tolerance requested (must be >1e-16 for double precision, >1e-8 for single precision) opts optional pointer to options-setting struct. If NULL, uses defaults. See cufinufft_default_opts below for the non-NULL case. Input/Output: plan a pointer to an instance of a cufinufft_plan (in double precision) or cufinufftf_plan (in single precision). Returns: status zero if success, otherwise an error occurred Note: under the hood, in double precision, a ``cufinufft_plan`` object is simply a pointer to a ``cufinufft_plan_s`` struct (or in single precision, a ``cufinufftf_plan`` is a pointer to a ``cufinufftf_plan_s`` struct). The struct contains the actual planning arrays, some of which live on the GPU. This extra level of indirection leads to a simpler interface, and follows the approach of FFTW and FINUFFT. See definitions in ``include/cufinufft.h`` Set nonuniform points ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ This tells cuFINUFFT where to look for the coordinates of nonuniform points, and, if appropriate, creates an internal sorting index array to choose a good order to sweep through these points. For type 1 these points are "sources", but for type 2, "targets". .. code-block:: c int cufinufft_setpts(cufinufft_plan plan, int M, double* x, double* y, double* z, int N, double* s, double* t, double *u) int cufinufftf_setpts(cufinufftf_plan plan, int M, float* x, float* y, float* z, int N, float* s, float* t, float *u) Input: M number of nonuniform points x, y, z length-M GPU arrays of x (in 1D), x, y (in 2D), or x, y, z (in 3D) coordinates of nonuniform points. In each dimension they refer to a periodic domain [-pi,pi), but values out to [-3pi, 3pi) will be folded back correctly into this domain. Beyond that, they will not, and may result in crash. In dimension 2, z is ignored. N, s, t, u (unused for types 1 or 2 transforms; reserved for future type 3) Input/Output: plan the plan object from the above plan stage Returns: status zero if success, otherwise an error occurred Note: The user must not change the contents of the GPU arrays ``x``, ``y``, or ``z`` between this step and the below execution step. They are read in the execution step also. Note: Here we pass in the actual plan handle, not its pointer as in ``cufinufft_makeplan``. The same goes for the other functions below. Execute ~~~~~~~ This reads the strength (for type 1) or coefficient (for type 2) data and carries out one or more transforms (as specified in the plan stage), using the current nonuniform points chosen in the previous step. Multiple transforms use the same set of nonuniform points. The result is written into whichever array was not the input (the roles of these two swap for type 1 vs type 2 transforms). .. code-block:: c int cufinufft_execute(cufinufft_plan plan, cuDoubleComplex* c, cuDoubleComplex* f) int cufinufftf_execute(cufinufftf_plan plan, cuFloatComplex* c, cuFloatComplex* f) Input/Output: plan the plan object c If type 1, the input strengths at the nonuniform point sources (size M*ntransf complex array). If type 2, the output values at the nonuniform point targets (size M*ntransf complex array). f If type 1, the output Fourier mode coefficients (size N1*N2*ntransf or N1*N2*N3*ntransf complex array, when dim = 2 or 3 respectively). If type 2, the input Fourier mode coefficients (size N1*N2*ntransf or N1*N2*N3*ntransf complex array, when dim = 2 or 3 respectively). Returns: status zero if success, otherwise an error occurred Note: The contents of the arrays ``x``, ``y``, and ``z`` must not have changed since the ``cufinufft_setpts`` call that read them. The execution rereads them (this way of doing business saves RAM). Note: ``f`` and ``c`` are contiguous Fortran-style (row-major) arrays with the transform number being the "slowest" (outer) dimension, if ``ntr>1``. For the ``f`` array, ``x`` is "fastest", then ``y``, then (if relevant) ``z`` is "slowest". Destroy ~~~~~~~ .. code-block:: c int cufinufft_destroy(cufinufft_plan plan) int cufinufftf_destroy(cufinufftf_plan plan) Input: plan the cufinufft plan object Returns: status zero if success, otherwise an error occurred This deallocates all arrays inside the ``plan`` struct, freeing all internal memory used in the above three stages. Note: the plan (being just a pointer to the plan struct) is not actually "destroyed"; rather, its internal struct is destroyed. There is no need for further deallocation of the plan. Non-standard options ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ The last argument in the above plan stage accepts a pointer to an options structure, which is the same in both single and double precision. To create such a structure, use: .. code-block:: c cufinufft_opts opts; cufinufft_default_opts(&opts); Then you may change fields of ``opts`` by hand, finally pass ``&opts`` in as the last argument to ``cufinufft_makeplan`` or ``cufinufftf_makeplan``. The options fields are currently only documented in the ``include/cufinufft_opts.h``. For examples of this advanced usage, see ``test/cuda/cufinufft*.cu``