I recently got Theano working on Windows 10 with CUDA v7.5, CUDNN v3, and Visual Studio 2013 Community Edition. In order to verify it was working correctly, I tested the following code from the Theano Windows install page using both CPU and GPU:
import numpy as np
import time
import theano
A = np.random.rand(10000,10000).astype(theano.config.floatX)
B = np.random.rand(10000,10000).astype(theano.config.floatX)
np_start = time.time()
AB = A.dot(B)
np_end = time.time()
X,Y = theano.tensor.matrices('XY')
mf = theano.function([X,Y],X.dot(Y))
t_start = time.time()
tAB = mf(A,B)
t_end = time.time()
print "NP time: %f[s], theano time: %f[s] (times should be close when run on CPU!)" %(
np_end-np_start, t_end-t_start)
print "Result difference: %f" % (np.abs(AB-tAB).max(), )
I got the following results:
G:\ml\Theano\Projects>python Test.py
NP time: 10.585000[s], theano time: 10.587000[s] (times should be close when run on CPU!)
Result difference: 0.000000
G:\ml\Theano\Projects>python Test.py
Using gpu device 0: GeForce GTX 970 (CNMeM is disabled)
NP time: 10.838000[s], theano time: 1.294000[s] (times should be close when run on CPU!)
Result difference: 0.022461
As you can see, there is a fairly significant difference of 0.022 when doing the calculation on GPU. Just wondering whether this is to be expected or I am doing something wrong.
Here is my .theanorc:
[global]
device = gpu
floatX = float32
[nvcc]
fastmath = True