Generate Code Using the Command Line Interface - MATLAB & Simulink (original) (raw)
The easiest way to create CUDA® kernels is to place the coder.gpu.kernelfun pragma into your primary MATLAB® function. The primary function is also known as the_top-level_ or entry-point function. When the GPU Coder™ encounters kernelfun
pragma, it attempts to parallelize all the computation within this function and then maps it to the GPU.
Learning Objectives
In this tutorial, you learn how to:
- Prepare your MATLAB code for CUDA code generation by using the
kernelfun
pragma. - Create and set up a GPU Coder project.
- Define function input properties.
- Check for code generation readiness and run-time issues.
- Specify code generation properties.
- Generate CUDA code by using the codegen command.
Tutorial Prerequisites
This tutorial requires the following products:
- MATLAB
- MATLAB Coder™
- GPU Coder
- C compiler
- NVIDIA® GPU enabled for CUDA
- CUDA Toolkit and driver
- Environment variables for the compilers and libraries. For more information, see Environment Variables
Example: The Mandelbrot Set
Description
The Mandelbrot set is the region in the complex plane consisting of the values z 0 for which the trajectories defined by this equation remain bounded at k→∞.
The overall geometry of the Mandelbrot set is shown in the figure. This view does not have the resolution to show the richly detailed structure of the fringe just outside the boundary of the set. At increasing magnifications, the Mandelbrot set exhibits an elaborate boundary that reveals progressively finer recursive detail.
Algorithm
For this tutorial, pick a set of limits that specify a highly zoomed part of the Mandelbrot set in the valley between the main cardioid and the p/q bulb to its left. A 1000-by-1000 grid of real parts (x) and imaginary parts (y) is created between these two limits. The Mandelbrot algorithm is then iterated at each grid location. An iteration number of 500 renders the image in full resolution.
maxIterations = 500; gridSize = 1000; xlim = [-0.748766713922161,-0.748766707771757]; ylim = [0.123640844894862,0.123640851045266];
This tutorial uses an implementation of the Mandelbrot set by using standard MATLAB commands running on the CPU. This calculation is vectorized such that every location is updated simultaneously.
Tutorial Files
Create a MATLAB script called mandelbrot_count.m
with the following lines of code. This code is a baseline vectorized MATLAB implementation of the Mandelbrot set. Later in this tutorial, you modify this file to make it suitable for code generation.
function count = mandelbrot_count(maxIterations, xGrid, yGrid) % mandelbrot computation
z0 = complex(xGrid,yGrid); count = ones(size(z0));
z = z0; for n = 0:maxIterations z = z.*z + z0; inside = abs(z)<=2; count = count + inside; end count = log(count);
Create a MATLAB script called mandelbrot_test.m
with the following lines of code. The script generates 1000-by-1000 grid of real parts (x) and imaginary parts (y) between the limits specified by xlim
and ylim
. It also calls the mandelbrot_count
function and plots the resulting Mandelbrot set.
maxIterations = 500; gridSize = 1000; xlim = [-0.748766713922161, -0.748766707771757]; ylim = [ 0.123640844894862, 0.123640851045266];
x = linspace( xlim(1), xlim(2), gridSize ); y = linspace( ylim(1), ylim(2), gridSize ); [xGrid,yGrid] = meshgrid( x, y );
%% Mandelbrot computation in MATLAB count = mandelbrot_count(maxIterations, xGrid, yGrid);
% Show figure(1) imagesc( x, y, count ); colormap([jet();flipud( jet() );0 0 0]); axis off title('Mandelbrot set with MATLAB');
Run the Original MATLAB Code
Run the Mandelbrot Example
Before making the MATLAB version of the Mandelbrot set algorithm suitable for code generation, you can test the functionality of the original code.
- Change the current working folder of MATLAB to the location that contains the two files you created in the previous step. GPU Coder places generated code in this folder, change your current working folder if you do not have full access to this folder.
- Open the
mandelbrot_test
script in the MATLAB Editor. - Run the test script by clicking the run button
or by entering
mandelbrot_test
in the MATLAB Command Window.
The test script runs and shows the geometry of the Mandelbrot within the boundary set by the variablesxlim
andylim
.
Make the MATLAB Code Suitable for Code Generation
To begin the process of making your MATLAB code suitable for code generation, use the filemandelbrot_count.m
.
- Set your MATLAB current folder to the work folder that contains your files for this tutorial.
- In the MATLAB Editor, open
mandelbrot_count.m
. The file opens in the MATLAB Editor. The Code Analyzer message indicator in the top right corner of the MATLAB Editor is green. The analyzer did not detect errors, warnings, or opportunities for improvement in the code. - Turn on MATLAB for code generation error checking. After the function declaration, add the
%#codegen
directive.
function count = mandelbrot_count(maxIterations, xGrid, yGrid) %#codegen
The Code Analyzer message indicator remains green, indicating that it has not detected code generation issues. - To map the
mandelbrot_count
function to a CUDA kernel, modify the original MATLAB code by placing thecoder.gpu.kernelfun
pragma outside thefor
-loop body.
function count = mandelbrot_count(maxIterations, xGrid, yGrid) %#codegen
% mandelbrot computation
z0 = complex(xGrid,yGrid);
count = ones(size(z0));
% Add Kernelfun pragma to trigger kernel creation
coder.gpu.kernelfun;
z = z0;
for n = 0:maxIterations
z = z.*z + z0;
inside = abs(z)<=2;
count = count + inside;
end
count = log(count);
When using thecoder.gpu.kernelfun
pragma, GPU Coder attempts to map the computations in the functionmandelbrot_count
to the GPU. - Save the file. You are now ready to compile your code by using the command-line interface.
Code Generation from the Command Line
You can use the codegen command to translate MATLAB functions to a CUDA compatible static or dynamic library, executable, or MEX function, instead of using the GPU Coder app.
Define Input Types
At compile time, GPU Coder must know the data types of all the inputs to the entry-point function. Therefore, if your entry-point function has inputs, you must specify its data type at the time that you compile the file with the codegen
function.
You can generate inputs and then use the -args
option in the codegen
function to let GPU Coder determine the class, size, and complexity of the input parameters. To generate inputs for mandelbrot_count
function, use these commands:
maxIterations = 500; gridSize = 1000; xlim = [-0.748766713922161, -0.748766707771757]; ylim = [ 0.123640844894862, 0.123640851045266];
x = linspace( xlim(1), xlim(2), gridSize ); y = linspace( ylim(1), ylim(2), gridSize ); [xGrid,yGrid] = meshgrid( x, y );
Alternatively, you can specify the size, type and complexity of the inputs to the entry-point functions without generating input data by using the coder.typeof function.
ARGS = cell(1,1); ARGS{1} = cell(3,1); ARGS{1}{1} = coder.typeof(0); ARGS{1}{2} = coder.typeof(0,[1000 1000]); ARGS{1}{3} = coder.typeof(0,[1000 1000]);
Build Configuration
To configure build settings such as output file name, location, type, you have to create coder configuration objects. To create the objects, use the coder.gpuConfig function. For example, to create a coder.MexCodeConfig code generation object for use with codegen
when generating a MEX function, use:
cfg = coder.gpuConfig('mex');
Other available options are:
cfg = coder.gpuConfig('lib');
, to create a code generation configuration object for use withcodegen
when generating a CUDA static library.cfg = coder.gpuConfig('dll');
, to create a code generation configuration object for use withcodegen
when generating a CUDA dynamic library.cfg = coder.gpuConfig('exe');
, to create a code generation configuration object for use withcodegen
when generating a CUDA executable.
For more information, see coder.gpuConfig.
Each configuration object comes with a set of parameters, initialized to default values. You can use dot notation to modify the value of one configuration object parameter at a time. Use this syntax:
configuration_object.property = value
You can enable the same settings as in the Generate Code by Using the GPU Coder App by using the following command-line equivalents:
cfg = coder.gpuConfig('mex'); cfg.GpuConfig.CompilerFlags = '--fmad=false'; cfg.GenerateReport = true;
The cfg
configuration object has configuration parameters that are common to MATLAB Coder and GPU Coder and parameters that are GPU Coder-specific. You can see all the GPU-specific properties available in the cfg
configuration object by typing cfg.GpuConfig
in the MATLAB Command Window.
cfg.GpuConfig
ans =
GpuCodeConfig with properties:
Enabled: 1
MallocMode: 'discrete'
KernelNamePrefix: ''
EnableCUBLAS: 1
EnableCUSOLVER: 1
EnableCUFFT: 1
Benchmarking: 0
SafeBuild: 0
ComputeCapability: 'Auto'
CustomComputeCapability: ''
CompilerFlags: ''
StackLimitPerThread: 1024
MallocThreshold: 200
MaximumBlocksPerKernel: 0
EnableMemoryManager: 1
SelectCudaDevice: -1
The --fmad=false
flag when passed to thenvcc
, instructs the compiler to disable Floating-Point Multiply-Add (FMAD) optimization. This option is set to prevent numerical mismatch in the generated code because of architectural differences in the CPU and the GPU. For more information, see Numerical Differences Between CPU and GPU.
For more information on configuration parameters that are common toMATLAB Coder and GPU Coder, see coder.CodeConfig class.
Build Script
You can create a build script mandelbrot_codegen.m
that automates the series of commands mentioned previously.
% GPU code generation for getting started example (mandelbrot_count.m) %% Create configuration object of class 'coder.MexCodeConfig'. cfg = coder.gpuConfig('mex'); cfg.GenerateReport = true; cfg.GpuConfig.CompilerFlags = '--fmad=false';
%% Define argument types for entry-point 'mandelbrot_count'. ARGS = cell(1,1); ARGS{1} = cell(3,1); ARGS{1}{1} = coder.typeof(0); ARGS{1}{2} = coder.typeof(0,[1000 1000]); ARGS{1}{3} = coder.typeof(0,[1000 1000]);
%% Invoke GPU Coder. codegen -config cfg mandelbrot_count -args ARGS{1}
The codegen
command opens the filemandelbrot_count.m
and translates the MATLAB code into CUDA code.
- The
-report
option instructscodegen
to generate a code generation report that you can use to debug your MATLAB code. - The
-args
option instructscodegen
to compile the filemandelbrot_count.m
by using the class, size, and complexity of the input parameters_maxIterations_, xGrid, and_yGrid_. - The
-config
option instructscodegen
to use the specified configuration object for code generation.
When code generation is successful, you can view the resulting code generation report by clicking View Report in the MATLAB Command Window.
mandelbrot_codegen Code generation successful: View report
Verify Correctness of the Generated Code
To verify correctness of the generated MEX file, see Verify Correctness of the Generated Code.