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I want to use fftw3 in threads. But the code pasted at http://codepad.org/lIjdGF5z causes "double free or corruption" error. How to call fftw3 routines in threads properly. Thanks! You can compile the code through command "g++ test.cpp -lfftw3_threads -lfftw3 -lboost_thread"

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  • You shouldn't be creating and destroying a plan every time you do an FFT. Just do it once.
    – Paul R
    Jan 14, 2013 at 13:28

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I believe the call to fftw_plan_dft_2d is not reentrant, meaning that it can't be called in multiple threads simultaneously, even if you are creating different plans. The only fftw functions that are thread-safe are fftw_execute variants according to paragraph 2 of the Thread Safety page of the documentation.

Additionally as Paul R. mentioned in the comments, you should only create the plan/s once at the beginning and then use them over and over. It will be much faster. Also, according to paragraph 3 of the Thread Safety documentation page, you can use the same plan in multiple simultaneous calls to fftw_execute. So if your transforms are the same size, you will only need one plan for all the threads.

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  • how about the program pasted at codepad.org/nHSAN1lJ . The thread only contains the reentrant routine of fftw
    – user41635
    Jan 15, 2013 at 5:56
  • Is it working? If not, I don't think you need to use the fftw_plan_many_dft interface here. That is for if you have multiple 2D FFTs to perform in sequence with a single fftw_execute call. The fact that you are calling it with howmany == 1 means that you are still only doing one 2D transform per fftw_execute. You can still just use the simpler fftw_plan_dft_2d interface.
    – Jason B
    Jan 15, 2013 at 15:12
  • How can one use the same plan in multiple simultaneous calls to fftw_execute? Since a plan encapsulates its input/output, won't that give you either undefined or at best identical results? Jan 4, 2015 at 22:32
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    That is true for the standard fftw_execute call, but you can also use the "New-array execute functions" mentioned here: fftw.org/fftw3_doc/…. In these, as long as the data is formatted identically, you can pass in different input and output pointers to each execute call.
    – Jason B
    Jan 5, 2015 at 4:43

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