Difference between revisions of "Scan"

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{{Warning|Do NOT mutate the data parameter.  Return a new array which contains the sum scan of data.}}
 
{{Warning|Do NOT mutate the data parameter.  Return a new array which contains the sum scan of data.}}
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Implement the simple sequential scan algorithm with the dependencies depicted below:
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[[File:Sequential_scan.png|600px]]
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Work: N
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CPL: N
  
 
==Hillis and Steele Parallel Scan==
 
==Hillis and Steele Parallel Scan==

Revision as of 06:29, 7 April 2020

Motivation

Scan, also known as parallel prefix, is a fundamental and useful operation in parallel programming. We will gain experience in building Hillis & Steele scan with an optional work efficient Blellock scan.

Further, the dependencies in scan:

make it seem to have little hope for parallelism. However, simple yet clever approaches can achieve critical path lengths.

While we will simply implement prefix sum, scan can be used for other associative operations.

Background

Prefix Sum

Hillis-Steele Prefix Sum

Hillis and Steele Algorithm

Data parallel algorithms

Hillis-Steele Prefix Sum.svg

(Extra Credit) Work-efficient Blelloch Scan

Blelloch Algorithm

Scan Primitives for Vector Computers

Prefix Sums and Their Applications

Prefix sum 16.svg

Lecture

slides

Code To Use

class PhasableIntArrays extends AbstractPhasable

getSrcForPhase(phaseIndex)
getSrcForPhase(phaseIndex)

PowersOf2Iterable

PhasableIntArrays

One of the downsides to parallel scan requires memory. For our scans we add the additional requirement that we will not mutate the incoming array parameter. We could create log(n) arrays, one for each level but that would be wasteful. If we create two array buffers and switch which is the source to read from and which is the destination to write from at each power of two level of the scan, we should be good to go.

The table below shows which array will be passed back for each offset.

phase: 0 1 2 3 4
power of 2: 1 2 4 8 16
src: data a b a b
dst: a b a b a

NOTE: think about which array is the correct one to return from your scan method given how you write your code.

PowersOf2Iterable

This studio should come in handy here.

Example usage:

for(int v : new PowersOfTwoLessThan(71)) {
    System.out.println(v);
}

Code To Implement

Sequential Scan

class: SequentialScan.java Java.png
methods: sumScanInclusive
package: scan.studio
source folder: student/src/main/java

method: public static int[] sumScanInclusive(int[] data) Sequential.svg (sequential implementation only)

Attention niels epting.svg Warning:Do NOT mutate the data parameter. Return a new array which contains the sum scan of data.

Implement the simple sequential scan algorithm with the dependencies depicted below:

Sequential scan.png

Work: N

CPL: N

Hillis and Steele Parallel Scan

class: StepEfficientParallelScan.java Java.png
methods: sumScanInclusive
package: scan.studio
source folder: student/src/main/java

method: private static int[] sumScanInclusive(PhasableIntArrays phasable) Parallel.svg (parallel implementation required)

(Extra Credit) Blelloch Work Efficient Scan

class: WorkEfficientParallelScan.java Java.png
methods: sumScanExclusiveInPlace
package: scan.challenge
source folder: student/src/main/java

method: public static void sumScanExclusiveInPlace(int[] data) Parallel.svg (parallel implementation required)

Testing Your Solution

Correctness

Required

class: ScanTestSuite.java Junit.png
package: scan.studio
source folder: testing/src/test/java

Optional Work Efficient

class: WorkEfficientScanTestSuite.java Junit.png
package: scan.challenge
source folder: testing/src/test/java