Previously, ArrayHandleVirtual was defined as a specialization of
ArrayHandle with the virtual storage tag. This was because the storage
object was polymorphic and needed to be handled special. These changes
moved the existing storage definition to an internal class, and then
managed the pointer to that implementation class in a Storage object
that can be managed like any other storage object.
Also moved the implementation of StorageAny into the implementation of
the internal storage object.
ArrayHandleVirtual can automatically be constructed from any ArrayHandle.
In the cases where the input ArrayHandle doesn't derived from ArrayHandleVirtual,
it will automatically construct StorageAny to hold the array.
Sandia National Laboratories recently changed management from the
Sandia Corporation to the National Technology & Engineering Solutions
of Sandia, LLC (NTESS). The copyright statements need to be updated
accordingly.
Previously, The ArrayRangeCompute code would throw an exception if you
tried to compute the array range on an empty array. This change instead
returns empty ranges.
Most uses of ArrayRangeCompute just want to get the range of the data
and probably don't have a particular device in mind. Thus, it is better
to use a TryExecute internally use whatever devices are available.
Note that when using TryExecute, the calling code is expected to be able
to support all devices. That might not always be the case. Thus, I am
experimenting a bit with how we incorporate this in a library. The
advantage of having the code compiled in a library is that you only have
to compile it once and the calling code does not need to worry about
CUDA, etc.
However, because ArrayRangeCompute is templated, we can only pre-compile
some subset of array handle types. The most common are compiled into the
code (matching all the predefined ArrayHandles as well as some special
cases). If the code wants to use some other type, it has to include
ArrayRangeCompute.hxx. The only place where this is necessary is a test
that intentially trys to find the range on an uncommon type.
If array portals were to support virtual methods, then we should be able
to modify this code so that we could precompile for all array handle
types.