Maxwell Architecture has introduced a new instruction in PTX assembly called LOP3 which according to the NVIDIA blog:
"Can save instructions when performing complex logic operations on multiple inputs."
At GTC 2016, some CUDA developers managed to accelerated the atan2f function for Tegra X1 processor (Maxwell) with such instructions.
However, the below function defined within a .cu
file leads to undefined definitions for __SET_LT
and __LOP3_0xe2
.
Do I have to define them in .ptx
file instead ? if so, how ?
float atan2f(const float dy, const float dx)
{
float flag, z = 0.0f;
__SET_LT(flag, fabsf(dy), fabsf(dx));
uint32_t m, t1 = 0x80000000;
float t2 = float(M_PI) / 2.0f;
__LOP3_0x2e(m, __float_as_int(dx), t1, __float_as_int(t2));
float w = flag * __int_as_float(m) + float(M_PI)/2.0f;
float Offset = copysignf(w, dy);
float t = fminf(fabsf(dx), fabsf(dy)) / fmaxf(fabsf(dx), fabsf(dy));
uint32_t r, b = __float_as_int(flag) << 2;
uint32_t mask = __float_as_int(dx) ^ __float_as_int(dy) ^ (~b);
__LOP3_0xe2(r, mask, t1, __floast_as_int(t));
const float p = fabsf(__int_as_float(r)) - 1.0f;
return ((-0.0663f*(-p) + 0.311f) * (-p) + float(float(M_PI)/4.0)) * (*(float *)&r) + Offset;
}
Edit:
The macro defines are finally:
#define __SET_LT(D, A, B) asm("set.lt.f32.f32 %0, %1, %2;" : "=f"(D) : "f"(A), "f"(B))
#define __SET_GT(D, A, B) asm("set.gt.f32.f32 %0, %1, %2;" : "=f"(D) : "f"(A), "f"(B))
#define __LOP3_0x2e(D, A, B, C) asm("lop3.b32 %0, %1, %2, %3, 0x2e;" : "=r"(D) : "r"(A), "r"(B), "r"(C))
#define __LOP3_0xe2(D, A, B, C) asm("lop3.b32 %0, %1, %2, %3, 0xe2;" : "=r"(D) : "r"(A), "r"(B), "r"(C))
__SET_LT
and__LOP3_0xe2
. If you grabbed those from some online source I don't think you've identified it in your question. Anyway the most direct way to invoke a specific PTX instruction from CUDA C/C++ source code would be to use inline PTX.lop3.b32
PTX instruction, or are you asking the specific question what exactly do I need to do to make the__LOP3_0xe2
and other functions for the specific example to accelerateatan2f
?