In-place Parallel Super Scalar Samplesort (IPS⁴o)

Related tags

Deep Learningips4o
Overview

In-place Parallel Super Scalar Samplesort (IPS⁴o)

This is the implementation of the algorithm IPS⁴o presented in the paper Engineering In-place (Shared-memory) Sorting Algorithms, which contains an in-depth description of its inner workings, as well as an extensive experimental performance evaluation. Here's the abstract:

We present new sequential and parallel sorting algorithms that now represent the fastest known techniques for a wide range of input sizes, input distributions, data types, and machines. Somewhat surprisingly, part of the speed advantage is due to the additional feature of the algorithms to work in-place, i.e., they do not need a significant amount of space beyond the input array. Previously, the in-place feature often implied performance penalties. Our main algorithmic contribution is a blockwise approach to in-place data distribution that is provably cache-efficient. We also parallelize this approach taking dynamic load balancing and memory locality into account.

Our new comparison-based algorithm In-place Superscalar Samplesort (IPS⁴o), combines this technique with branchless decision trees. By taking cases with many equal elements into account and by adapting the distribution degree dynamically, we obtain a highly robust algorithm that outperforms the best previous in-place parallel comparison-based sorting algorithms by almost a factor of three. That algorithm also outperforms the best comparison-based competitors regardless of whether we consider in-place or not in-place, parallel or sequential settings.

Another surprising result is that IPS⁴o even outperforms the best (in-place or not in-place) integer sorting algorithms in a wide range of situations. In many of the remaining cases (often involving near-uniform input distributions, small keys, or a sequential setting), our new In-place Parallel Super Scalar Radix Sort (IPS²Ra) turns out to be the best algorithm.

Claims to have the -- in some sense -- "best" sorting algorithm can be found in many papers which cannot all be true. Therefore, we base our conclusions on an extensive experimental study involving a large part of the cross product of 21 state-of-the-art sorting codes, 6 data types, 10 input distributions, 4 machines, 4 memory allocation strategies, and input sizes varying over 7 orders of magnitude. This confirms the claims made about the robust performance of our algorithms while revealing major performance problems in many competitors outside the concrete set of measurements reported in the associated publications. This is particularly true for integer sorting algorithms giving one reason to prefer comparison-based algorithms for robust general-purpose sorting.

An initial version of IPS⁴o has been described in our publication on the 25th Annual European Symposium on Algorithms.

Usage

Clone this repository and check out its submodule

git clone --recurse-submodules https://github.com/ips4o/ips4o.git

or use the following commands instead if you want to include this repository as a submodule:

git submodule add https://github.com/ips4o/ips4o.git
git submodule update --recursive --init

IPS⁴o provides a CMake library for simple usage:

add_subdirectory(<path-to-the-ips4o-repository>)
target_link_libraries(<your-target> PRIVATE ips4o)

A minimal working example:

#include "ips4o.hpp"

// sort sequentially
ips4o::sort(begin, end[, comparator]);

// sort in parallel (uses OpenMP if available, std::thread otherwise)
ips4o::parallel::sort(begin, end[, comparator]);

The parallel version of IPS⁴o requires 16-byte atomic compare-and-exchange instructions to run the fastest. Most CPUs and compilers support 16-byte compare-and-exchange instructions nowadays. If the CPU in question does so, IPS⁴o uses 16-byte compare-and-exchange instructions when you set your CPU correctly (e.g., -march=native) or when you enable the instructions explicitly (-mcx16). In this case, you also have to link against GCC's libatomic (-latomic). Otherwise, we emulate some 16-byte compare-and-exchange instructions with locks which may slightly mitigate the performance of IPS⁴o.

If you use the CMake example shown above, we automatically optimize IPS⁴o for the native CPU (e.g., -march=native). You can disable the CMake property IPS4O_OPTIMIZE_FOR_NATIVE to avoid native optimization and you can enable the CMake property IPS4O_USE_MCX16 if you compile with GCC or Clang to enable 16-byte compare-and-exchange instructions explicitly.

IPS⁴o uses C++ threads if not specified otherwise. If you prefer OpenMP threads, you need to enable OpenMP threads, e.g., enable the CMake property IPS4O_USE_OPENMP or add OpenMP to your target. If you enable the CMake property DISABLE_IPS4O_PARALLEL, most of the parallel code will not be compiled and no parallel libraries will be linked. Otherwise, CMake automatically enables C++ threads (e.g., -pthread) and links against TBB and GCC's libatomic. (Only when you compile your code for 16-byte compare-and-exchange instructions you need libatomic.) Thus, you need the Thread Building Blocks (TBB) library to compile and execute the parallel version of IPS⁴o. We search for TBB with find_package(TBB REQUIRED). If you want to execute IPS⁴o in parallel but your TBB library is not accessible via find_package(TBB REQUIRED), you can still compile IPS⁴o with parallel support. Just enable the CMake property DISABLE_IPS4O_PARALLEL, enable C++ threads for your own target and link your own target against your TBB library (and also link your target against libatomic if you want 16-byte atomic compare-and-exchange instruction support).

If you do not set a CMake build type, we use the build type Release which disables debugging (e.g., -DNDEBUG) and enables optimizations (e.g., -O3).

Currently, the code does not compile on Windows.

Licensing

IPS⁴o is free software provided under the BSD 2-Clause License described in the LICENSE file. If you use this implementation of IPS⁴o in an academic setting please cite the paper Engineering In-place (Shared-memory) Sorting Algorithms using the BibTeX entry

@misc{axtmann2020engineering,
  title =	 {Engineering In-place (Shared-memory) Sorting Algorithms},
  author =	 {Michael Axtmann and Sascha Witt and Daniel Ferizovic and Peter Sanders},
  howpublished = {Computing Research Repository (CoRR)},
  year =	 {Sept. 2020},
  archivePrefix ={arXiv},
  eprint =	 {2009.13569},
}
🍅🍅🍅YOLOv5-Lite: lighter, faster and easier to deploy. Evolved from yolov5 and the size of model is only 1.7M (int8) and 3.3M (fp16). It can reach 10+ FPS on the Raspberry Pi 4B when the input size is 320×320~

YOLOv5-Lite:lighter, faster and easier to deploy Perform a series of ablation experiments on yolov5 to make it lighter (smaller Flops, lower memory, a

pogg 1.5k Jan 05, 2023
Using Convolutional Neural Networks (CNN) for Semantic Segmentation of Breast Cancer Lesions (BRCA)

Using Convolutional Neural Networks (CNN) for Semantic Segmentation of Breast Cancer Lesions (BRCA). Master's thesis documents. Bibliography, experiments and reports.

Erick Cobos 73 Dec 04, 2022
Starter Code for VALUE benchmark

StarterCode for VALUE Benchmark This is the starter code for VALUE Benchmark [website], [paper]. This repository currently supports all baseline model

VALUE Benchmark 73 Dec 09, 2022
wlad 2 Dec 19, 2022
The object detection pipeline is based on Ultralytics YOLOv5

AYOLOv2 The main goal of this repository is to rewrite the object detection pipeline with a better code structure for better portability and adaptabil

153 Dec 22, 2022
BridgeGAN - Tensorflow implementation of Bridging the Gap between Label- and Reference-based Synthesis in Multi-attribute Image-to-Image Translation.

Bridging the Gap between Label- and Reference based Synthesis(ICCV 2021) Tensorflow implementation of Bridging the Gap between Label- and Reference-ba

huangqiusheng 8 Jul 13, 2022
KeypointDeformer: Unsupervised 3D Keypoint Discovery for Shape Control

KeypointDeformer: Unsupervised 3D Keypoint Discovery for Shape Control Tomas Jakab, Richard Tucker, Ameesh Makadia, Jiajun Wu, Noah Snavely, Angjoo Ka

Tomas Jakab 87 Nov 30, 2022
CURL: Contrastive Unsupervised Representations for Reinforcement Learning

CURL Rainbow Status: Archive (code is provided as-is, no updates expected) This is an implementation of CURL: Contrastive Unsupervised Representations

Aravind Srinivas 46 Dec 12, 2022
Machine Learning with JAX Tutorials

The purpose of this repo is to make it easy to get started with JAX. It contains my "Machine Learning with JAX" series of tutorials (YouTube videos and Jupyter Notebooks) as well as the content I fou

Aleksa Gordić 372 Dec 28, 2022
A GUI to automatically create a TOPAS-readable MLC simulation file

Python script to create a TOPAS-readable simulation file descriring a Multi-Leaf-Collimator. Builds the MLC using the data from a 3D .stl file.

Sebastian Schäfer 0 Jun 19, 2022
Video Instance Segmentation with a Propose-Reduce Paradigm (ICCV 2021)

Propose-Reduce VIS This repo contains the official implementation for the paper: Video Instance Segmentation with a Propose-Reduce Paradigm Huaijia Li

DV Lab 39 Nov 23, 2022
A simple python library for fast image generation of people who do not exist.

Random Face A simple python library for fast image generation of people who do not exist. For more details, please refer to the [paper](https://arxiv.

Sergei Belousov 170 Dec 15, 2022
CLIP (Contrastive Language–Image Pre-training) trained on Indonesian data

CLIP-Indonesian CLIP (Radford et al., 2021) is a multimodal model that can connect images and text by training a vision encoder and a text encoder joi

Galuh 17 Mar 10, 2022
CRISCE: Automatically Generating Critical Driving Scenarios From Car Accident Sketches

CRISCE: Automatically Generating Critical Driving Scenarios From Car Accident Sketches This document describes how to install and use CRISCE (CRItical

Chair of Software Engineering II, Uni Passau 2 Feb 09, 2022
Official implementation of the MM'21 paper Constrained Graphic Layout Generation via Latent Optimization

[MM'21] Constrained Graphic Layout Generation via Latent Optimization This repository provides the official code for the paper "Constrained Graphic La

Kotaro Kikuchi 73 Dec 27, 2022
SW components and demos for visual kinship recognition. An emphasis is put on the FIW dataset-- data loaders, benchmarks, results in summary.

FIW Data Development Kit Table of Contents Introduction Families In the Wild Database Publications Organization To Do License Getting Involved Introdu

Joseph P. Robinson 12 Jun 04, 2022
Python script that takes an Impulse response .wav and a input .wav to demonstrate audio convolution.

convolver Python script that takes an Impulse response .wav and a input .wav to demonstrate audio convolution. Created by Sean Higley

Sean Higley 1 Feb 23, 2022
Code for "LoRA: Low-Rank Adaptation of Large Language Models"

LoRA: Low-Rank Adaptation of Large Language Models This repo contains the implementation of LoRA in GPT-2 and steps to replicate the results in our re

Microsoft 394 Jan 08, 2023
Keras-1D-NN-Classifier

Keras-1D-NN-Classifier This code is based on the reference codes linked below. reference 1, reference 2 This code is for 1-D array data classification

Jae-Hoon Shim 6 May 18, 2021
Official PyTorch implementation of the paper "Recycling Discriminator: Towards Opinion-Unaware Image Quality Assessment Using Wasserstein GAN", accepted to ACM MM 2021 BNI Track.

RecycleD Official PyTorch implementation of the paper "Recycling Discriminator: Towards Opinion-Unaware Image Quality Assessment Using Wasserstein GAN

Yunan Zhu 23 Nov 05, 2022