partition_space#

Header file: <Kokkos_Core.hpp>

Warning

Currently partition_space is still in the namespace Kokkos::Experimental

Usage#

auto instances = Kokkos::partition_space(Kokkos::DefaultExecutionSpace(),1,1,1);

Interface#

template<class ExecSpace, class ...Args>
std::vector<ExecSpace> partition_space(const ExecSpace &space, Args... args);#
template<class ExecSpace, class T>
std::vector<ExecSpace> partition_space(const ExecSpace &space, std::vector<T> const &weigths);#

Creates new execution space instances which dispatch to the same underlying hardware resources as an existing execution space instance. There is no implied synchronization relationship between the newly created instances and the pre-existing instance.

Parameters:
  • space – an execution space instance (see ../execution_spaces.html)

  • args – the number of created instances is equal to sizeof...(Args). The relative weight of args is a hint for the fraction of hardware resources of space to associate with each newly created instance.

  • weightsstd::vector of arithmetic type T providing a hint for the fraction of hardware resources of space to associate with each newly created instance.

Requirements#

  • (std::is_arithmetic_v<Args> && ...) is true.

  • std::is_arithmetic_v<T> is true.

  • ExecutionSpace().concurrency() >= N_PARTITIONS

Semantics#

  • There is no implied synchronization relationship between any of the instances, specifically: - instance[i] is not fenced by space.fence(), - instance[i] is not fenced by instance[j].fence(), and - space is not fenced by instance[i].fence(). However, in practice these instances may block each other because they dispatch to the same hardware resources.

  • The relative weight of args``(or of the ``weights elements) is used as a hint for the desired resource allocation. For example for a backend which uses discrete threads, weights of {1,2} would result in two instances where the first is associated with about 1/3rd of the threads of the original instance, and the second with 2/3rds. However, for some backends each returned instance may be a copy of the original one.

Important

For Cuda, HIP and SYCL each newly created instance is associated with its own stream/queue.

Examples#

Splitting an existing instance for use with concurrent kernels

template<class ExecSpace, class ... OtherParams>
void foo(const ExecSpace& space, OtherParams...params) {
  auto instances = Kokkos::partition_space(space,1,2);
  // dispatch two kernels, F1 needs less resources then F2
  // F1 and F2 may now execute concurrently
  Kokkos::parallel_for("F1",
    Kokkos::RangePolicy<ExecSpace>(instances[0],0,N1),
    Functor1(params...));
  Kokkos::parallel_for("F2",
    Kokkos::RangePolicy<ExecSpace>(instances[1],0,N2),
    Functor2(params...));

  // Wait for both
  // Note: space.fence() would NOT block execution of the instances
  instances[0].fence();
  instances[1].fence();
  Kokkos::parallel_for("F3",
    Kokkos::RangePolicy<ExecSpace>(space,0,N3),
    Functor3(params...));
}