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OpenCL™ 2.0 – Pipes

2016-03-14 15:17 330 查看

copy from http://developer.amd.com/community/blog/2014/10/31/opencl-2-0-pipes/

OpenCL™ 2.0 – Pipes

In the previous post, we saw one of the important features of OpenCL™ 2.0, Shared Virtual Memory (SVM). In this blog, we will see another feature of OpenCL 2.0 called “pipes”.

To get the most from our discussions, we recommend the same approach as in the previous post:

Review the code snippets in each blog post along with the explanatory text.

Download the AMD OpenCL 2.0 Driver located here. This page also has a complete list of supported platforms.

Download the sample code from our OpenCL 2.0 Samples page here.

Write your own OpenCL 2.0 samples and share your results with the OpenCL community.

The code will run on a variety of AMD platforms, such as the Radeon HD8000 series. The driver page has a complete list of supported product families.

Overview

OpenCL 2.0 introduces a new mechanism for passing data between kernels, called “pipes.” A pipe is essentially a structured buffer containing some space for a set of “packets”—kernel-specified type objects. As the name suggests, these packets of data are ordered in the pipe. There is a write end of the pipe into which the data is written and a read end of the pipe from which the data is read. A pipe is essentially an addition to buffer objects, such as buffers and images. Pipes can only be accessed using the built-in functions provided by the kernel and cannot be accessed from the host.

Special built-in functions,
read_pipe
and
write_pipe
, provide access to pipes from the kernel. A given kernel can either read from or write to a pipe, but not both. Pipes are only coherent at the standard synchronization points; the result of concurrent accesses to the same pipe by multiple kernels (even hardware permitting) is undefined. The host side cannot access a pipe.

It is easy to create pipes. On the host, invoke
clCreatePipe
, and you are done.

You can use the pipes for a variety of functions. You can pass the pipes between kernels. Even better, combine pipes with the device-size enqueue feature in OpenCL 2.0 to dynamically construct computational data flow graphs.

Pipes come in two types: a read pipe, from which a number of packets can be read, and a write pipe, to which a number of packets can be written.

Note: You cannot write to a pipe specified as read-only, nor can you read from a pipe specified as write-only. You cannot both read from and write to a pipe at the same time.

Functions for Accessing Pipes

OpenCL 2.0 adds a new host API function to create a pipe.

cl_mem clCreatePipe ( cl_context context, cl_mem_flags flags,
cl_uint pipe_packet_size, cl_uint pipe_max_packets,
const cl_pipe_properties * properties,
cl_int *errcode_ret)

The memory allocated in this function can pass to kernels as read-only or write-only pipes. The pipe objects can only be passed as kernel arguments or kernel functions and cannot be declared inside a kernel or as program-scoped objects.

Also, the OpenCL 2.0 spec adds a set of built-in functions for operating on the pipes. The important ones are:

read_pipe(pipe p, gentype *ptr)
: for reading packet from pipe p into ptr.

write_pipe (pipe p, gentype *ptr)
: for writing packet pointed to by ptr to pipe p.

To ensure you have enough space in the pipe structure for reading and writing (before you actually do it), you can use built-in functions to “reserve” enough space. For example, you could reserve room by calling
reserve_read_pipe
or
reserve_write_pipe
. These functions return a reservation ID, which can be used when the actual operations are performed. Similarly, the standard has built-in functions for workgroup level reservations, such as
work_group_reserve_read_pipe
and
work_group_reserve_write_pipe
and for the workgroup order (in the program). These workgroup built-in functions operate at the workgroup level. Ordering across workgroups is undefined. Calls to
commit_read_pipe
and
commit_write_pipe
, as the names suggest, commit the actual operations (read/write).

Using Pipes—A Simple Example

Let’s look at a typical usage of pipes in the example code (SimplePipe). The code contains two kernels:
producer_kernel
, which writes to the pipe, and
consumer_kernel
, which reads from the same pipe. In the example, the producer writes a sequence of random numbers; the consumer reads them and creates a histogram.

The host creates the pipe, which both kernels will use, as follows:

rngPipe = clCreatePipe(context,
CL_MEM_READ_WRITE,
szPipePkt,
szPipe,
NULL,
&status);

This code makes a pipe that the program kernels can access (read/write). The host creates two kernels,
producer_kernel
and
consumer_kernel
. The producer kernel first reserves enough space for the write pipe:

//reserve space in pipe for writing random numbers.
reserve_id_t rid = work_group_reserve_write_pipe(rng_pipe, szgr);

Next, the kernel writes and commits to the pipe by invoking the following functions:

write_pipe(rng_pipe,rid,lid, &gfrn);
work_group_commit_write_pipe(rng_pipe, rid);

Similarly, the consumer kernel reads from the pipe:

//reserve pipe for reading
reserve_id_t rid = work_group_reserve_read_pipe(rng_pipe, szgr);
if(is_valid_reserve_id(rid)) {
//read random number from the pipe.
read_pipe(rng_pipe,rid,lid, &rn);
work_group_commit_read_pipe(rng_pipe, rid);
}

The
consumer_kernel
then uses this set of random number and constructs the histogram. The CPU creates the same histogram and verifies whether the histogram created by the kernel is correct. Here,
lid
is the local id of the work item, obtained by
get_local_id(0)
.

The example code demonstrates how you can use a pipe as a convenient data structure that allows two kernels to communicate. It’s really pretty simple.

In OpenCL 1.2, this kind of communication typically involves the host – although kernels can communicate without returning control to the host. Pipes, however, ease programming by reducing the amount of code that some applications require. There are additional examples of pipes used in conjunction with device enqueue, which we will explore in later blogs in this series.

To conclude, using pipes in OpenCL 2.0 can make your code simpler and more readable. Don’t believe us? Write your own OpenCL 2.0 programs and tell us about the difference!

Sample code and readme

The sample code demonstrates the use of the pipes feature of OpenCL.2.0 using the SimplePipe (producer/consumer kernels) sample:

The sample code and readme are provided here.

Install AMD OpenCL 2.0 Driver located here. This page also has a complete list of supported platforms.

Build the sample using the instructions in the readme.

Let us know your feedback and comments on the Developer Central OpenCL forum.

– Prakash Raghavendra

Dr. Prakash Raghavendra is a technical lead at AMD. He has several years of experience in developing compilers and run-time. His postings are his own opinions and may not represent AMD’s positions, strategies or opinions. Links to third party sites, and references to third party trademarks, are provided for convenience and illustrative purposes only. Unless explicitly stated, AMD is not responsible for the contents of such links, and no third party endorsement of AMD or any of its products is implied.
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