Commit Graph

5 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
nadavi
fbcea82e78 conslidate the license statement 2019-04-17 10:57:13 -06:00
Kenneth Moreland
85265a9c84 Add const correctness to Timer
It should be possible to query a vtkm::cont::Timer without modifying it.
As such, its query functions (such as Stopped and GetElapsedTime) should
be const.
2019-02-28 15:08:16 -07:00
Haocheng LIU
415252c662 Introduce asynchronous and device independent timer
The timer class now is asynchronous and device independent. it's using an
similiar API as vtkOpenGLRenderTimer with Start(), Stop(), Reset(), Ready(),
and GetElapsedTime() function. For convenience and backward compability, Each
Start() function call will call Reset() internally and each GetElapsedTime()
function call will call Stop() function if it hasn't been called yet for keeping
backward compatibility purpose.

Bascially it can be used in two modes:

* Create a Timer without any device info. vtkm::cont::Timer time;

  * It would enable timers for all enabled devices on the machine. Users can get a
specific elapsed time by passing a device id into the GetElapsedtime function.
If no device is provided, it would pick the maximum of all timer results - the
logic behind this decision is that if cuda is disabled, openmp, serial and tbb
roughly give the same results; if cuda is enabled it's safe to return the
maximum elapsed time since users are more interested in the device execution
time rather than the kernal launch time. The Ready function can be handy here
to query the status of the timer.

* Create a Timer with a device id. vtkm::cont::Timer time((vtkm::cont::DeviceAdapterTagCuda()));

  * It works as the old timer that times for a specific device id.
2019-02-05 12:01:56 -05:00
Robert Maynard
e28244f345 Re-implement DeviceAdapterRuntimeDetector to avoid ODR violations.
The previous implementation of DeviceAdapterRuntimeDetector caused
multiple differing definitions of the same class to exist and
was causing the runtime device tracker to report CUDA as disabled
when it actually was enabled.

The ODR was caused by having a default implementation for
DeviceAdapterRuntimeDetector and a specific specialization for
CUDA. If a library had both CUDA and C++ sources it would pick up
both implementations and would have undefined behavior. In general
it would think the CUDA backend was disabled.

To avoid this kind of situation in the future I have reworked VTK-m
so that each device adapter must implement DeviceAdapterRuntimeDetector
for that device.
2018-05-15 13:08:34 -04:00
Robert Maynard
571556d984 CUDA's RuntimeDeviceTracker and Timer are now built as part of vtkm_cont
This is done to not only reduce the amount of code that users need
to generate but to reduce the amount of errors when using
the RuntimeDeviceTracker. If the runtime device tracker is initially
used in a library by a c++ file it will never properly detect the
cuda backend. By moving the code into vtkm_cont we can make sure
this problem doesn't occur.
2018-05-10 10:57:06 -04:00