Futhark User’s Guide¶
Welcome to the documentation for the Futhark compiler and language. For a basic introduction, please see the Futhark website. To get started, read the page on Installation. Once the compiler has been installed, you might want to take a look at Basic Usage. This User’s Guide contains a Language Reference, but new Futhark programmers are probably better served by reading Parallel Programming in Futhark first.
Documentation for the built-in prelude is also available online.
The particularly interested reader may also want to peruse the publications, or the development blog.
Installation¶
There are two main ways to install the Futhark compiler: using a precompiled tarball or compiling from source. Both methods are discussed below. If you are using Linux, see Installing Futhark on Linux. If you are using Windows, make sure to read Setting up Futhark on Windows. If you are using macOS, read Using OpenCL or CUDA.
Futhark is also available via Nix. If you
are using Nix, simply install the futhark
derivation from Nixpkgs.
Dependencies¶
The Linux binaries we distribute are statically linked and should not require any special libraries installed system-wide.
When building from source on Linux and macOS, you will need to have
the gmp
and tinfo
libraries installed. These are pretty
common, so you may already have them. On Debian-like systems
(e.g. Ubuntu), use:
sudo apt install libtinfo-dev libgmp-dev
If you install Futhark via a package manager (e.g. Homebrew, Nix, or AUR), you shouldn’t need to worry about any of this.
Actually running the output of the Futhark compiler may require additional dependencies, for example an OpenCL library and GPU driver. See the documentation for the respective compiler backends.
Compiling from source¶
The recommended way to compile Futhark is with the Haskell Tool
Stack, which handles dependencies and compilation of the Futhark
compiler. You will therefore need to install the stack
tool.
Fortunately, the stack
developers provide ample documentation
about installing Stack on a multitude of operating systems. If
you’re lucky, it may even be in your local package repository.
You can either retrieve a source release tarball or perform a checkout of our Git repository:
$ git clone https://github.com/diku-dk/futhark.git
This will create a directory futhark
, which you must enter:
$ cd futhark
To get all the prerequisites for building the Futhark compiler (including, if necessary, the appropriate version of the Haskell compiler), run:
$ stack setup
Note that this will not install anything system-wide and will have no effect outside the Futhark build directory. Now you can run the following command to build the Futhark compiler, including all dependencies:
$ stack build
The Futhark compiler and its tools will now be built. This step
typically requires at least 8GiB of memory. You may be able to build
it on a smaller machine by adding the --fast
option, although the
resulting Futhark compiler binary will run slower.
After building, you can copy the binaries to your $HOME/.local/bin
directory by running:
$ stack install
Note that this does not install the Futhark manual pages.
Compiling with cabal
¶
You can also compile Futhark with cabal
. If so, you must install
an appropriate version of GHC (usually the newest) and cabal
yourself, for example through your favourite package manager. On
Linux, you can always use ghcup. Then clone the
repository as listed above and run:
$ cabal update
$ cabal build
To install the Futhark binaries to a specific location, for example
$HOME/.local/bin
, run:
$ cabal install --install-method=copy --overwrite-policy=always --installdir=$HOME/.local/bin/
Installing from a precompiled snapshot¶
Tarballs of binary releases can be found online, but are available only for
very few platforms (as of this writing, only GNU/Linux on x86_64).
See the enclosed README.md
for installation instructions.
Furthermore, every day a program automatically clones the Git
repository, builds the compiler, and packages a simple tarball
containing the resulting binaries, built manpages, and a simple
Makefile
for installing. The implication is that these tarballs
are not vetted in any way, nor more stable than Git HEAD at any
particular moment in time. They are provided for users who wish to
use the most recent code, but are unable to compile Futhark
themselves.
We build such binary snapshots for the following operating systems:
- Linux (x86_64)
- Windows (x86_64)
futhark-nightly-windows-x86_64.zip
You will still likely need to make a C compiler (such as GCC) available on your own.
Installing Futhark on Linux¶
Linuxbrew is a distribution-agnostic package manager that contains a formula for Futhark. If Linuxbrew is installed (which does not require
root
access), installation is as easy as:$ brew install futhark
Note that as of this writing, Linuxbrew is hampered by limited compute resources for building packages, so the Futhark version may be a bit behind.
Arch Linux users can use a futhark-nightly package or a regular futhark package.
NixOS users can install the
futhark
derivation.
Otherwise (or if the version in the package system is too old), your best bet is to install from source or use a tarball, as described above.
Using OpenCL or CUDA¶
If you wish to use futhark opencl
or futhark cuda
, you must
have the OpenCL or CUDA libraries installed, respectively. Consult
your favourite search engine for instructions on how to do this on
your distribution. It is usually not terribly difficult if you
already have working GPU drivers.
For OpenCL, note that there is a distinction between the general
OpenCL host library (OpenCL.so
) that Futhark links against, and
the Installable Client Driver (ICD) that OpenCL uses to actually
talk to the hardware. You will need both. Working display drivers
for the GPU does not imply that an ICD has been installed - they are
usually in a separate package. Consult your favourite search engine
for details.
Installing Futhark on macOS¶
Futhark is available on Homebrew, and the latest release can be installed via:
$ brew install futhark
Or you can install the unreleased development version with:
$ brew install --HEAD futhark
This has to compile from source, so it takes a little while (20-30 minutes is common).
macOS ships with one OpenCL platform and various devices. One of
these devices is always the CPU, which is not fully functional, and is
never picked by Futhark by default. You can still select it manually
with the usual mechanisms (see Executable Options), but it is
unlikely to be able to run most Futhark programs. Depending on the
system, there may also be one or more GPU devices, and Futhark will
simply pick the first one as always. On multi-GPU MacBooks, this is
is the low-power integrated GPU. It should work just fine, but you
might have better performance if you use the dedicated GPU instead.
On a Mac with an AMD GPU, this is done by passing -dAMD
to the
generated Futhark executable.
Setting up Futhark on Windows¶
The Futhark compiler itself is easily installed on Windows via
stack
(see above). If you are using the default Windows console,
you may need to run chcp 65001
to make Unicode characters show up
correctly.
It takes a little more work to make the OpenCL and PyOpenCL backends functional. This guide was last updated on the 5th of May 2016, and is for computers using 64-bit Windows along with CUDA 7.5 and Python 2.7 (Anaconda preferred).
Also Git for Windows is required for its Linux command line tools.
If you have not marked the option to add them to path, there are
instructions below how to do so. The GUI alternative to git
,
GitHub Desktop is optional and does not come with the required
tools.
Setting up Futhark and OpenCL¶
Clone the Futhark repository to your hard drive.
Install Stack using the 64-bit installer. Compile the Futhark compiler as described in Installation.
For editing environment variables it is strongly recommended that you install the Rapid Environment Editor
For a Futhark compatible C/C++ compiler, that you will also need to install pyOpenCL later, install MingWpy. Do this using the
pip install -i https://pypi.anaconda.org/carlkl/simple mingwpy
command.Assuming you have the latest Anaconda distribution as your primary one, it will get installed to a place such as
C:\Users\UserName\Anaconda2\share\mingwpy
. The pip installation will not add its bin or include directories to path.To do so, open the Rapid Environment Editor and add
C:\Users\UserName\Anaconda2\share\mingwpy\bin
to the system-widePATH
variable.If you have other MingW or GCC distributions, make sure MingWpy takes priority by moving its entry above the other distributions. You can also change which Python distribution is the default one using the same trick should you need so.
If have done so correctly, typing
where gcc
in the command prompt should list the aforementioned MingWpy installation at the top or show only it.To finish the installation, add the
C:\Users\UserName\Anaconda2\share\mingwpy\include
to theCPATH
environment variable (note: notPATH
). Create the variable if necessary.The header files and the .dll for OpenCL that comes with the CUDA 7.5 distribution also need to be installed into MingWpy. Go to
C:\Program Files\NVIDIA GPU Computing Toolkit\CUDA\v7.5\include
and copy theCL
directory into the MingWpyinclude
directory.Next, go to
C:\Program Files\NVIDIA Corporation\OpenCL
and copy theOpenCL64.dll
file into the MingWpylib
directory (it is next toinclude
).The CUDA distribution also comes with the static
OpenCL.lib
, but trying to use that one instead of theOpenCL64.dll
will cause programs compiled withfuthark opencl
to crash, so ignore it completely.
Now you should be able to compile with futhark opencl
and run
Futhark programs on the GPU.
Congratulations!
Setting up PyOpenCL¶
The following instructions are for how to setup the
futhark-pyopencl
backend.
First install Mako using pip install mako
.
Also install PyPNG using pip install pypng
(not stricly necessary,
but some examples make use of it).
Clone the PyOpenCL repository to your hard drive. Do this instead of downloading the zip, as the zip will not contain some of the other repositories it links to and you will end up with missing header files.
If you have ignored the instructions and gotten Python 3.x instead 2.7, you will have to do some extra work.
Edit
.\pyopencl\compyte\ndarray\gen_elemwise.py
and.\pyopencl\compyte\ndarray\test_gpu_ndarray.py
and convert most Python 2.x style print statements to Python 3 syntax. Basically wrap print arguments in brackets “(..)” and ignore any lines containing StringIO>>
operator.Otherwise just go to the next point.
Go into the repo directory and from the command line execute
python configure.py
.Edit
siteconf.py
to following:CL_TRACE = false CL_ENABLE_GL = false CL_INC_DIR = ['c:\\Program Files\\NVIDIA GPU Computing Toolkit\\CUDA\\v7.5\\include'] CL_LIB_DIR = ['C:\\Program Files\\NVIDIA GPU Computing Toolkit\\CUDA\\v7.5\\lib\\x64'] CL_LIBNAME = ['OpenCL'] CXXFLAGS = ['-std=c++0x'] LDFLAGS = []
Run the following commands:
> python setup.py build_ext --compiler=mingw32 > python setup.py install
If everything went in order, pyOpenCL should be installed on your machine now.
Lastly, Pygame needs to be installed. Again, not stricly necessary, but some examples make use of it. To do so on Windows, download
pygame-1.9.2a0-cp27-none-win_amd64.whl
from here.cp27
means Python 2.7 andwin_amd64
means 64-bit Windows.Go to the directory you have downloaded the file and execute
pip install pygame-1.9.2a0-cp27-none-win_amd64.whl
from the command line.
Now you should be able to run the Game of Life example.
To run the makefiles, first setup
make
by going to thebin
directory of MingWpy and making a copy ofmingw32-make.exe
. Then simply renamemingw32-make – Copy.exe
or similar tomake.exe
. Now you will be able to run the makefiles.Also, if you have not selected to add the optional Linux command line tools to
PATH
during theGit for Windows
installation, add theC:\Program Files\Git\usr\bin
directory toPATH
manually now.This guide has been written off memory, so if you are having difficulties - ask on the issues page. There might be errors in it.
Futhark with Nix¶
Futhark mostly works fine with Nix and NixOS, but when using OpenCL you may need to make
more packages available in your environment. This is regardless of
whether you are using the futhark
package from Nixpkgs or one you
have installed otherwise.
On NixOS, for OpenCL, you should import
opencl-headers
andopencl-icd
. You also need some form of OpenCL backend. If you have an AMD GPU and use ROCm, you may also needrocm-opencl-runtime
.On NixOS, for CUDA (and probably also OpenCL on NVIDIA GPUs), you need
cudatoolkit
. However,cudatoolkit
does not appear to providelibcuda.so
and similar libraries. These are instead provided in annvidia_x11
package that is specific to some kernel version, e.g.linuxPackages_5_4.nvidia_x11
. You will need this as well.On macOS, for OpenCL, you need
darwin.apple_sdk.frameworks.OpenCL
.
These can be easily made available with e.g:
nix-shell -p opencl-headers -p opencl-icd
Basic Usage¶
Futhark contains several code generation backends. Each is provided
as subcommand of the futhark
binary. For example, futhark c
compiles a Futhark program by translating it to sequential C code,
while futhark pyopencl
generates Python code with calls to the
PyOpenCL library. The different compilers all contain the same
frontend and optimisation pipeline - only the code generator is
different. They all provide roughly the same command line interface,
but there may be minor differences and quirks due to characteristics
of the specific backends.
There are three main ways of compiling a Futhark program: to an
ordinary executable (by using --executable
, which is the default),
to a server executable (--server
), and to a library
(--library
). Plain executables can be run immediately, but are
useful mostly for testing and benchmarking. Server executables are
discussed in Server Protocol. Libraries can be called from
non-Futhark code.
Compiling to Executable¶
A Futhark program is stored in a file with the extension .fut
. It
can be compiled to an executable program as follows:
$ futhark c prog.fut
This makes use of the futhark c
compiler, but any other will work
as well. The compiler will automatically invoke cc
to produce an
executable binary called prog
. If we had used futhark py
instead of futhark c
, the prog
file would instead have
contained Python code, along with a shebang for easy execution. In
general, when compiling file foo.fut
, the result will be written
to a file foo
(i.e. the extension will be stripped off). This can
be overridden using the -o
option. For more details on specific
compilers, see their individual manual pages.
Executables generated by the various Futhark compilers share a common
command-line interface, but may also individually support more
options. When a Futhark program is run, execution starts at one of
its entry points. By default, the entry point named main
is
run. An alternative entry point can be indicated by using the -e
option. All entry point functions must be declared appropriately in
the program (see Entry Points). If the entry point takes any
parameters, these will be read from standard input in a subset of the
Futhark syntax. A binary input format is also supported; see
Binary Data Format. The result of the entry point is printed
to standard output.
Only a subset of all Futhark values can be passed to an executable. Specifically, only primitives and arrays of primitive types are supported. In particular, nested tuples and arrays of tuples are not permitted. Non-nested tuples are supported are supported as simply flat values. This restriction is not present for Futhark programs compiled to libraries. If an entry point returns any such value, its printed representation is unspecified. As a special case, an entry point is allowed to return a flat tuple.
Instead of compiling, there is also an interpreter, accessible as
futhark run
and futhark repl
. The latter is an interactive
prompt, useful for experimenting with Futhark expressions. Be aware
that the interpreter runs code very slowly.
Executable Options¶
All generated executables support the following options.
-h/--help
Print help text to standard output and exit.
-D
Print debugging information on standard error. Exactly what is printed, and how it looks, depends on which Futhark compiler is used. This option may also enable more conservative (and slower) execution, such as frequently synchronising to check for errors.
Non-Server Executable Options¶
The following options are only supported on non-server executables, because they make no sense in a server context.
-t FILE
Print the time taken to execute the program to the indicated file, an integral number of microseconds. The time taken to perform setup or teardown, including reading the input or writing the result, is not included in the measurement. See the documentation for specific compilers to see exactly what is measured.
-r RUNS
Run the specified entry point the given number of times (plus a warmup run). The program result is only printed once, after the last run. If combined with
-t
, one measurement is printed per run. This is a good way to perform benchmarking.
-b
Print the result using the binary data format (Binary Data Format). For large outputs, this is significantly faster and takes up less space.
GPU Options¶
The following options are supported by executables generated with the
GPU backends (opencl
, pyopencl
, and cuda
).
-d DEVICE
Pick the first device whose name contains the given string. The special string
#k
, wherek
is an integer, can be used to pick the k-th device, numbered from zero.
--tuning=FILE
Load tuning options from the indicated tuning file. The file must contain lines of the form
SIZE=VALUE
, where each SIZE must be one of the sizes listed by the--print-sizes
option (without size class), and the VALUE must be a non-negative integer. Extraneous spaces or blank lines are not allowed. A zero means to use the default size, whatever it may be. In case of duplicate assignments to the same size, the last one takes predecence. This is equivalent to passing each size setting on the command like using the--size
option, but more convenient.
--print-sizes
Print a list of tunable sizes followed by their size class in parentheses, which indicates what they are used for.
--size=SIZE=VALUE
Set one of the tunable sizes to the given value. Using the
--tuning
option is more convenient.
OpenCL-specific Options¶
The following options are supported by executables generated with the
OpenCL backends (opencl
, pyopencl
):
-P
Measure the time taken by various OpenCL operations (such as kernels) and print a summary at the end. Unfortunately, it is currently nontrivial (and manual) to relate these operations back to source Futhark code.
-p PLATFORM
Pick the first OpenCL platform whose name contains the given string. The special string
#k
, wherek
is an integer, can be used to pick the k-th platform, numbered from zero. If used in conjunction with-d
, only the devices from matching platforms are considered.
-d DEVICE
Pick the first OpenCL device whose name contains the given string. The special string
#k
, wherek
is an integer, can be used to pick the k-th device, numbered from zero. If used in conjunction with-p
, only the devices from matching platforms are considered.
--default-group-size INT
The default size of OpenCL workgroups that are launched. Capped to the hardware limit if necessary.
--default-num-groups INT
The default number of OpenCL workgroups that are launched.
--dump-opencl FILE
Don’t run the program, but instead dump the embedded OpenCL program to the indicated file. Useful if you want to see what is actually being executed.
--load-opencl FILE
Instead of using the embedded OpenCL program, load it from the indicated file. This is extremely unlikely to result in succesful execution unless this file is the result of a previous call to
--dump-opencl
(perhaps lightly modified).
--dump-opencl-binary FILE
Don’t run the program, but instead dump the compiled version of the embedded OpenCL program to the indicated file. On NVIDIA platforms, this will be PTX code. If this option is set, no entry point will be run.
--load-opencl-binary FILE
Load an OpenCL binary from the indicated file.
--build-option OPT
Add an additional build option to the string passed to
clBuildProgram()
. Refer to the OpenCL documentation for which options are supported. Be careful - some options can easily result in invalid results.
--list-devices
List all OpenCL devices and platforms available on the system.
There is rarely a need to use both -p
and -d
. For example, to
run on the first available NVIDIA GPU, -p NVIDIA
is sufficient, as
there is likely only a single device associated with this platform.
On *nix (including macOS), the clinfo tool (available in many package
managers) can be used to determine which OpenCL platforms and devices
are available on a given system. On Windows, CPU-z can be used.
CUDA-specific Options¶
The following options are supported by executables generated by the
cuda
backend:
--dump-cuda FILE
Don’t run the program, but instead dump the embedded CUDA program to the indicated file. Useful if you want to see what is actually being executed.
--load-cuda FILE
Instead of using the embedded CUDA program, load it from the indicated file. This is extremely unlikely to result in succesful execution unless this file is the result of a previous call to
--dump-cuda
(perhaps lightly modified).
--dump-ptx FILE
As
--dump-cuda
, but dumps the compiled PTX code instead.
--load-ptx FILE
Instead of using the embedded CUDA program, load compiled PTX code from the indicated file.
--nvrtc-option=OPT
Add the given option to the command line used to compile CUDA kernels with NVRTC. The list of supported options varies with the CUDA version but can be found in the NVRTC documentation.
For convenience, CUDA executables also accept the same
--default-num-groups
and --default-group-size
options that the
OpenCL backend uses. These then refer to grid size and thread block
size, respectively.
Multicore options¶
The following options are supported by executables generated by the
multicore
backend:
--num-threads=INT
The number of threads used to run parallel operations. If set to a value less than
1
, then the runtime system will use one thread per detected core.
Compiling to Library¶
While compiling a Futhark program to an executable is useful for
testing, it is not suitable for production use. Instead, a Futhark
program should be compiled into a reusable library in some target
language, enabling integration into a larger program. Five of the
Futhark compilers support this: futhark c
, futhark opencl
,
futhark cuda
, futhark py
, and futhark pyopencl
.
General Concerns¶
Futhark entry points are mapped to some form of function or method in the target language. Generally, an entry point taking n parameters will result in a function taking n parameters. If the entry point returns an m-element tuple, then the function will return m values (although the tuple can be replaced with a single opaque value, see below). Extra parameters may be added to pass in context data, or out-parameters for writing the result, for target languages that do not support multiple return values from functions.
Not all Futhark types can be mapped cleanly to the target language. Arrays of tuples, for example, are a common issue. In such cases, opaque types are used in the generated code. Values of these types cannot be directly inspected, but can be passed back to Futhark entry points. In the general case, these types will be named with a random hash. However, if you insert an explicit type annotation (and the type name contains only characters valid for identifiers for the used backend), the indicated name will be used. Note that arrays contain brackets, which are usually not valid in identifiers. Defining and using a type abbreviation is the best way around this.
Value Mapping¶
The rules for how Futhark values are mapped to target language values are as follows:
Primitive types or arrays of primitive types are mapped transparently (although for the C backends, this still involves a distinct type for arrays).
All other types are mapped to an opaque type. Use a type ascription with a type abbreviation to give it a specific name, otherwise one will be generated.
Return types follow the rules, with one addition:
If the return type is an m-element tuple, then the the function returns m values, mapped according to the rules above (but not including this one - nested tuples are not mapped directly). This rule does not apply when the entry point has been given a return type ascription that is not syntactically a tuple type.
Consumption and Aliasing¶
Futhark’s support for In-place Updates has implications for the generated API. Unfortunately, The type system of most languages (e.g. C) is not rich enough to express the rules, so they are not statically (or currently even dynamically checked). Since Futhark will never infer a unique/consuming type for an entry point parameter, this section can be ignored unless uniqueness annotations have been manually added to the entry points parameter types. The rules are essentially the same as in the language itself:
Each entry point input parameter is either consuming or nonconsuming (the default). This corresponds to unique and nonunique types in the original Futhark program. A value passed for a consuming parameter is considered consumed, now has an unspecified value, and may never be used again. It must still be manually freed, if applicable. Further, any aliases of that value are also considered consumed and may not be used.
Each entry point output is either unique or nonunique. A unique output has no aliases. A nonunique output aliases every nonconsuming input parameter.
Note that these distinctions are currently usually not visible in the generated API, and so correct usage requires knowledge of the original types in the Futhark function. The safest strategy is to not expose unique types in entry points.
Generating C¶
A Futhark program futlib.fut
can be compiled to reusable C code
using either:
$ futhark c --library futlib.fut
Or:
$ futhark opencl --library futlib.fut
This produces two files in the current directory: futlib.c
and
futlib.h
. If we wish (and are on a Unix system), we can then
compile futlib.c
to an object file like this:
$ gcc futlib.c -c
This produces a file futlib.o
that can then be linked with the
main application. Details of how to link the generated code with
other C code is highly system-dependent, and outside the scope of this
manual. On Unix, we can simply add futlib.o
to the final compiler
or linker command line:
$ gcc main.c -o main futlib.o
Depending on the Futhark backend you are using, you may need to add
some linker flags. For example, futhark opencl
requires
-lOpenCL
(-framework OpenCL
on macOS). See the manual page
for each compiler for details.
It is also possible to simply add the generated .c
file to the C
compiler command line used for compiling our whole program (here
main.c
):
$ gcc main.c -o main futlib.c
The downside of this approach is that the generated .c
file may
contain code that causes the C compiler to warn (for example, unused
support code that is not needed by the Futhark program).
The generated header file (here, futlib.h
) specifies the API, and
is intended to be human-readable. See C API Reference for more
information.
The basic usage revolves around creating a configuration object, which can then be used to obtain a context object, which must be passed whenever entry points are called.
The configuration object is created using the following function:
struct futhark_context_config *futhark_context_config_new();
Depending on the backend, various functions are generated to modify the configuration. The following is always available:
void futhark_context_config_set_debugging(struct futhark_context_config *cfg,
int flag);
A configuration object can be used to create a context with the following function:
struct futhark_context *futhark_context_new(struct futhark_context_config *cfg);
Context creation may fail. Immediately after
futhark_context_new()
, call futhark_context_get_error()
(see
below), which will return a non-NULL error string if context creation
failed. The API functions are all thread safe.
Memory management is entirely manual. Deallocation functions are provided for all types defined in the header file. Everything returned by an entry point must be manually deallocated.
For now, many internal errors, such as failure to allocate memory,
will cause the function to abort()
rather than return an error
code. However, all application errors (such as bounds and array size
checks) will produce an error code.
C with OpenCL¶
When generating C code with futhark opencl
, you will need to link
against the OpenCL library when linking the final binary:
$ gcc main.c -o main futlib.o -lOpenCL
When using the OpenCL backend, extra API functions are provided for directly accessing or providing the OpenCL objects used by Futhark. Take care when using these functions. In particular, a Futhark context can now be provided with the command queue to use:
struct futhark_context *futhark_context_new_with_command_queue(struct futhark_context_config *cfg, cl_command_queue queue);
As a cl_command_queue
specifies an OpenCL device, this is also how
manual platform and device selection is possible. A function is also
provided for retrieving the command queue used by some Futhark
context:
cl_command_queue futhark_context_get_command_queue(struct futhark_context *ctx);
This can be used to connect two separate Futhark contexts that have been loaded dynamically.
The raw cl_mem
object underlying a Futhark array can be accessed
with the function named futhark_values_raw_type
, where type
depends on the array in question. For example:
cl_mem futhark_values_raw_i32_1d(struct futhark_context *ctx, struct futhark_i32_1d *arr);
The array will be stored in row-major form in the returned memory
object. The function performs no copying, so the cl_mem
still
belongs to Futhark, and may be reused for other purposes when the
corresponding array is freed. A dual function can be used to
construct a Futhark array from a cl_mem
:
struct futhark_i32_1d *futhark_new_raw_i32_1d(struct futhark_context *ctx,
cl_mem data,
int offset,
int dim0);
This function does copy the provided memory into fresh internally
allocated memory. The array is assumed to be stored in row-major form
offset
bytes into the memory region.
See also futhark-opencl.
Generating Python¶
The futhark py
and futhark pyopencl
compilers both support
generating reusable Python code, although the latter of these
generates code of sufficient performance to be worthwhile. The
following mentions options and parameters only available for
futhark pyopencl
. You will need at least PyOpenCL version 2015.2.
We can use futhark pyopencl
to translate the program
futlib.fut
into a Python module futlib.py
with the following
command:
$ futhark pyopencl --library futlib.fut
This will create a file futlib.py
, which contains Python code that
defines a class named futlib
. This class defines one method for
each entry point function (see Entry Points) in the Futhark
program. The methods take one parameter for each parameter in the
corresponding entry point, and return a tuple containing a value for
every value returned by the entry point. For entry points returning a
single (non-tuple) value, just that value is returned (that is,
single-element tuples are not returned).
After the class has been instantiated, these methods can be invoked to run the corresponding Futhark function. The constructor for the class takes various keyword parameters:
interactive=BOOL
If
True
(the default isFalse
), show a menu of available OpenCL platforms and devices, and use the one chosen by the user.
platform_pref=STR
Use the first platform that contains the given string. Similar to the
-p
option for executables.
device_pref=STR
Use the first device that contains the given string. Similar to the
-d
option for executables.
Futhark arrays are mapped to either the Numpy ndarray
type or the
pyopencl.array
type. Scalars are mapped to Numpy scalar types.
Reproducibility¶
The Futhark compiler is deterministic by design, meaning that repeatedly compiling the same program with the same compilation flags and using the same version of the compiler will produce identical output every time.
Note that this only applies to the code generated by the Futhark
compiler itself. When compiling to an executable with one of the C
backends (see Compiling to Executable), Futhark will invoke a C compiler
that may not be perfectly reproducible. In such cases the generated
.c
and .h
files will be reproducible, but the final executable
may not.
Language Reference¶
This reference seeks to describe every construct in the Futhark language. It is not presented in a tutorial fashion, but rather intended for quick lookup and documentation of subtleties. For this reason, it is not written in a bottom-up manner, and some concepts may be used before they are fully defined. It is a good idea to have a basic grasp of Futhark (or some other functional programming language) before reading this reference. An ambiguous grammar is given for the full language. The text describes how ambiguities are resolved in practice (for example by applying rules of operator precedence).
This reference describes only the language itself. Documentation for the built-in prelude is available elsewhere.
Identifiers and Keywords¶
id ::=letter
constituent
* | "_"constituent
* constituent ::=letter
|digit
| "_" | "'" quals ::= (id
".")+ qualid ::=id
|quals
id
binop ::=opstartchar
opchar
* qualbinop ::=binop
|quals
binop
| "`"qualid
"`" fieldid ::=decimal
|id
opstartchar ::= "+" | "-" | "*" | "/" | "%" | "=" | "!" | ">" | "<" | "|" | "&" | "^" opchar ::=opstartchar
| "." constructor ::= "#"id
Many things in Futhark are named. When we are defining something, we
give it an unqualified name (id). When referencing something inside
a module, we use a qualified name (qualid). The constructor names
of a sum type are identifiers prefixed with #
, with no space
afterwards. The fields of a record are named with fieldid. Note
that a fieldid can be a decimal number. Futhark has three distinct
name spaces: terms, module types, and types. Modules (including
parametric modules) and values both share the term namespace.
Primitive Types and Values¶
literal ::=intnumber
|floatnumber
| "true" | "false"
Boolean literals are written true
and false
. The primitive
types in Futhark are the signed integer types i8
, i16
,
i32
, i64
, the unsigned integer types u8
, u16
, u32
,
u64
, the floating-point types f16
, f32
, f64
, as well
as bool
.
int_type ::= "i8" | "i16" | "i32" | "i64" | "u8" | "u16" | "u32" | "u64" float_type ::= "f16" | "f32" | "f64"
Numeric literals can be suffixed with their intended type. For
example 42i8
is of type i8
, and 1337e2f64
is of type
f64
. If no suffix is given, the type of the literal will be
inferred based on its use. If the use is not constrained, integral
literals will be assigned type i32
, and decimal literals type
f64
. Hexadecimal literals are supported by prefixing with 0x
,
and binary literals by prefixing with 0b
.
Floats can also be written in hexadecimal format such as 0x1.fp3
,
instead of the usual decimal notation. Here, 0x1.f
evaluates to
1 15/16
and the p3
multiplies it by 2^3 = 8
.
intnumber ::= (decimal
|hexadecimal
|binary
) [int_type
] decimal ::=decdigit
(decdigit
|"_")* hexadecimal ::= 0 ("x" | "X")hexdigit
(hexdigit
|"_")* binary ::= 0 ("b" | "B")bindigit
(bindigit
| "_")*
floatnumber ::= (pointfloat
|exponentfloat
|hexadecimalfloat
) [float_type
] pointfloat ::= [intpart
]fraction
exponentfloat ::= (intpart
|pointfloat
)exponent
hexadecimalfloat ::= 0 ("x" | "X")hexintpart
hexfraction
("p"|"P") ["+" | "-"]decdigit
+ intpart ::=decdigit
(decdigit
|"_")* fraction ::= "."decdigit
(decdigit
|"_")* hexintpart ::=hexdigit
(hexdigit
| "_")* hexfraction ::= "."hexdigit
(hexdigit
|"_")* exponent ::= ("e" | "E") ["+" | "-"]decdigit
+
decdigit ::= "0"..."9"
hexdigit ::= decdigit
| "a"..."f" | "A"..."F"
bindigit ::= "0" | "1"
Compound Types and Values¶
type ::=qualid
|array_type
|tuple_type
|record_type
|sum_type
|function_type
|type_application
Compound types can be constructed based on the primitive types. The Futhark type system is entirely structural, and type abbreviations are merely shorthands (with one exception, see Sizes in type abbreviations). The only exception is abstract types whose definition has been hidden via the module system (see Module System).
tuple_type ::= "(" ")" | "("type
(","type
)+ ")"
A tuple value or type is written as a sequence of comma-separated
values or types enclosed in parentheses. For example, (0, 1)
is a
tuple value of type (i32,i32)
. The elements of a tuple need not
have the same type – the value (false, 1, 2.0)
is of type
(bool, i32, f64)
. A tuple element can also be another tuple, as
in ((1,2),(3,4))
, which is of type ((i32,i32),(i32,i32))
. A
tuple cannot have just one element, but empty tuples are permitted,
although they are not very useful. Empty tuples are written ()
and are of type ()
.
array_type ::= "[" [dim
] "]"type
dim ::=qualid
|decimal
An array value is written as a sequence of zero or more
comma-separated values enclosed in square brackets: [1,2,3]
. An
array type is written as [d]t
, where t
is the element type of
the array, and d
is an integer or variable indicating the size.
We can often elide d
and write just []
(an anonymous size),
in which case the size will be inferred. As an example, an array of
three integers could be written as [1,2,3]
, and has type
[3]i32
. An empty array is written as []
, and its type is
inferred from its use. When writing Futhark values for such uses as
futhark test
(but not when writing programs), empty arrays are
written empty([0]t)
for an empty array of type [0]t
. When
using empty
, all dimensions must be given a size, and at least one
must be zero, e.g. empty([2][0]i32)
.
Multi-dimensional arrays are supported in Futhark, but they must be
regular, meaning that all inner arrays must have the same shape.
For example, [[1,2], [3,4], [5,6]]
is a valid array of type
[3][2]i32
, but [[1,2], [3,4,5], [6,7]]
is not, because there
we cannot come up with integers m
and n
such that
[m][n]i32
describes the array. The restriction to regular arrays
is rooted in low-level concerns about efficient compilation. However,
we can understand it in language terms by the inability to write a
type with consistent dimension sizes for an irregular array value. In
a Futhark program, all array values, including intermediate (unnamed)
arrays, must be typeable.
sum_type ::=constructor
type
* ("|"constructor
type
*)*
Sum types are anonymous in Futhark, and are written as the
constructors separated by vertical bars. Each constructor consists of
a #
-prefixed name, followed by zero or more types, called its
payload. Note: The current implementation of sum types is
fairly inefficient, in that all possible constructors of a sum-typed
value will be resident in memory. Avoid using sum types where
multiple constructors have large payloads.
record_type ::= "{" "}" | "{"fieldid
":"type
(","fieldid
":"type
)* "}"
Records are mappings from field names to values, with the field names known statically. A tuple behaves in all respects like a record with numeric field names starting from zero, and vice versa. It is an error for a record type to name the same field twice.
type_application ::=type
type_arg
| "*"type
type_arg ::= "[" [dim
] "]" |type
A parametric type abbreviation can be applied by juxtaposing its name and its arguments. The application must provide as many arguments as the type abbreviation has parameters - partial application is presently not allowed. See Type Abbreviations for further details.
function_type ::=param_type
"->"type
param_type ::=type
| "("id
":"type
")"
Functions are classified via function types, but they are not fully first class. See Higher-order functions for the details.
stringlit ::= '"'stringchar
* '"' charlit ::= "'"stringchar
"'" stringchar ::= <any source character except "\" or newline or quotes>
String literals are supported, but only as syntactic sugar for UTF-8
encoded arrays of u8
values. There is no character type in
Futhark, but character literals are interpreted as integers of the
corresponding Unicode code point.
Declarations¶
A Futhark file or module consists of a sequence of declarations. Each declaration is processed in order, and a declaration can only refer to names bound by preceding declarations.
dec ::=fun_bind
|val_bind
|type_bind
|mod_bind
|mod_type_bind
| "open"mod_exp
| "import"stringlit
| "local"dec
| "#[" attr "]" dec
The open
declaration brings names defined in another module into
scope (see also Module System). For the meaning of import
, see
Referring to Other Files. If a declaration is prefixed with
local
, whatever names it defines will not be visible outside the
current module. In particular local open
is used to bring names
from another module into scope, without making those names available
to users of the module being defined. In most cases, using module
type ascription is a better idea.
Declaring Functions and Values¶
fun_bind ::= ("let" | "entry") (id
| "("binop
")")type_param
*pat
+ [":"type
] "="exp
| ("let" | "entry")pat
binop
pat
[":"type
] "="exp
val_bind ::= "let"id
[":"type
] "="exp
Functions and values must be defined before they are used. A function declaration must specify the name, parameters, and body of the function:
let name params...: rettype = body
Hindley-Milner-style type inference is supported. A parameter may be
given a type with the notation (name: type)
. Functions may not be
recursive. You may put size annotations in the return type and
parameter types; see Size Types. A function can be polymorphic
by using type parameters, in the same way as for Type
Abbreviations:
let reverse [n] 't (xs: [n]t): [n]t = xs[::-1]
Type parameters for a function do not need to cover the types of all parameters. The type checker will add more if necessary. For example, the following is well typed:
let pair 'a (x: a) y = (x, y)
A new type variable will be invented for the parameter y
.
Shape and type parameters are not passed explicitly when calling function, but are automatically derived. If an array value v is passed for a type parameter t, all other arguments passed of type t must have the same shape as v. For example, consider the following definition:
let pair 't (x: t) (y: t) = (x, y)
The application pair [1] [2,3]
will fail at run-time.
To simplify the handling of in-place updates (see In-place Updates), the value returned by a function may not alias any global variables.
User-Defined Operators¶
Infix operators are defined much like functions:
let (p1: t1) op (p2: t2): rt = ...
For example:
let (a:i32,b:i32) +^ (c:i32,d:i32) = (a+c, b+d)
We can also define operators by enclosing the operator name in parentheses and suffixing the parameters, as an ordinary function:
let (+^) (a:i32,b:i32) (c:i32,d:i32) = (a+c, b+d)
This is necessary when defining a polymorphic operator.
A valid operator name is a non-empty sequence of characters chosen
from the string "+-*/%=!><&^"
. The fixity of an operator is
determined by its first characters, which must correspond to a
built-in operator. Thus, +^
binds like +
, whilst *^
binds
like *
. The longest such prefix is used to determine fixity, so
>>=
binds like >>
, not like >
.
It is not permitted to define operators with the names &&
or
||
(although these as prefixes are accepted). This is because a
user-defined version of these operators would not be short-circuiting.
User-defined operators behave exactly like ordinary functions, except
for being infix.
A built-in operator can be shadowed (i.e. a new +
can be defined).
This will result in the built-in polymorphic operator becoming
inaccessible, except through the intrinsics
module.
An infix operator can also be defined with prefix notation, like an ordinary function, by enclosing it in parentheses:
let (+) (x: i32) (y: i32) = x - y
This is necessary when defining operators that take type or shape parameters.
Entry Points¶
Apart from declaring a function with the keyword let
, it can also
be declared with entry
. When the Futhark program is compiled any
top-level function declared with entry
will be exposed as an entry
point. If the Futhark program has been compiled as a library, these
are the functions that will be exposed. If compiled as an executable,
you can use the --entry-point
command line option of the generated
executable to select the entry point you wish to run.
Any top-level function named main
will always be considered an
entry point, whether it is declared with entry
or not.
The name of an entry point must not contain an apostrophe ('
),
even though that is normally permitted in Futhark identifiers.
Value Declarations¶
A named value/constant can be declared as follows:
let name: type = definition
The definition can be an arbitrary expression, including function calls and other values, although they must be in scope before the value is defined. A constant value may not have a unique type (see In-place updates). If the return type contains any anonymous sizes (see Size types), new existential sizes will be constructed for them.
Type Abbreviations¶
type_bind ::= "type" ["^" | "~"]id
type_param
* "="type
type_param ::= "["id
"]" | "'"id
| "'~"id
| "'^"id
Type abbreviations function as shorthands for the purpose of
documentation or brevity. After a type binding type t1 = t2
, the
name t1
can be used as a shorthand for the type t2
. Type
abbreviations do not create distinct types: the types t1
and
t2
are entirely interchangeable.
If the right-hand side of a type contains anonymous sizes, it must be
declared “size-lifted” with type~
. If it (potentially) contains a
function, it must be declared “fully lifted” with type^
. A lifted
type can also contain anonymous sizes. Lifted types cannot be put in
arrays. Fully lifted types cannot be returned from conditional or
loop expressions.
A type abbreviation can have zero or more parameters. A type parameter enclosed with square brackets is a size parameter, and can be used in the definition as an array dimension size, or as a dimension argument to other type abbreviations. When passing an argument for a shape parameter, it must be enclosed in square brackets. Example:
type two_intvecs [n] = ([n]i32, [n]i32)
let x: two_intvecs [2] = (iota 2, replicate 2 0)
Size parameters work much like shape declarations for arrays. Like shape declarations, they can be elided via square brackets containing nothing. All size parameters must be used in the definition of the type abbreviation.
A type parameter prefixed with a single quote is a type parameter. It is in scope as a type in the definition of the type abbreviation. Whenever the type abbreviation is used in a type expression, a type argument must be passed for the parameter. Type arguments need not be prefixed with single quotes:
type two_vecs [n] 't = ([n]t, [n]t)
type two_intvecs [n] = two_vecs [n] i32
let x: two_vecs [2] i32 = (iota 2, replicate 2 0)
A size-lifted type parameter is prefixed with '~
, and a fully
lifted type parameter with '^
. These have the same rules and
restrictions as lifted type abbreviations.
Expressions¶
Expressions are the basic construct of any Futhark program. An expression has a statically determined type, and produces a value at runtime. Futhark is an eager/strict language (“call by value”).
The basic elements of expressions are called atoms, for example literals and variables, but also more complicated forms.
atom ::=literal
|qualid
("."fieldid
)* |stringlit
|charlit
| "(" ")" | "("exp
")" ("."fieldid
)* | "("exp
(","exp
)* ")" | "{" "}" | "{" field (","field
)* "}" |qualid
"["index
(","index
)* "]" | "("exp
")" "["index
(","index
)* "]" |quals
"." "("exp
")" | "["exp
(","exp
)* "]" | "["exp
[".."exp
] "..."exp
"]" | "("qualbinop
")" | "("exp
qualbinop
")" | "("qualbinop
exp
")" | "(" ( "."field
)+ ")" | "(" "." "["index
(","index
)* "]" ")" exp ::=atom
|exp
qualbinop
exp
|exp
exp
| "!"exp
| "-"exp
|constructor
exp
* |exp
":"type
|exp
":>"type
|exp
[ ".."exp
] "..."exp
|exp
[ ".."exp
] "..<"exp
|exp
[ ".."exp
] "..>"exp
| "if"exp
"then"exp
"else"exp
| "let"size
*pat
"="exp
"in"exp
| "let"id
"["index
(","index
)* "]" "="exp
"in"exp
| "let"id
type_param
*pat
+ [":"type
] "="exp
"in"exp
| "(" "\"pat
+ [":"type
] "->"exp
")" | "loop"pat
[("="exp
)]loopform
"do"exp
| "#[" attr "]"exp
| "unsafe"exp
| "assert"atom
atom
|exp
"with" "["index
(","index
)* "]" "="exp
|exp
"with"fieldid
("."fieldid
)* "="exp
| "match"exp
("case"pat
"->"exp
)+ field ::=fieldid
"="exp
|id
size ::= "["id
"]" pat ::=id
|literal
| "_" | "(" ")" | "("pat
")" | "("pat
(","pat
)+ ")" | "{" "}" | "{"fieldid
["="pat
] (","fieldid
["="pat
])* "}" |constructor
pat
* |pat
":"type
loopform ::= "for"id
"<"exp
| "for"pat
"in"exp
| "while"exp
index ::=exp
[":" [exp
]] [":" [exp
]] | [exp
] ":"exp
[":" [exp
]] | [exp
] [":"exp
] ":" [exp
]
Some of the built-in expression forms have parallel semantics, but it is not guaranteed that the the parallel constructs in Futhark are evaluated in parallel, especially if they are nested in complicated ways. Their purpose is to give the compiler as much freedom and information is possible, in order to enable it to maximise the efficiency of the generated code.
Resolving Ambiguities¶
The above grammar contains some ambiguities, which in the concrete implementation is resolved via a combination of lexer and grammar transformations. For ease of understanding, they are presented here in natural text.
An expression
x.y
may either be a reference to the namey
in the modulex
, or the fieldy
in the recordx
. Modules and values occupy the same name space, so this is disambiguated by the type ofx
.A type ascription (
exp : type
) cannot appear as an array index, as it conflicts with the syntax for slicing.In
f [x]
, there is am ambiguity between indexing the arrayf
at positionx
, or calling the functionf
with the singleton arrayx
. We resolve this the following way:If there is a space between
f
and the opening bracket, it is treated as a function application.Otherwise, it is an array index operation.
An expression
(-x)
is parsed as the variablex
negated and enclosed in parentheses, rather than an operator section partially applying the infix operator-
.Function application and prefix operators bind more tightly than any infix operator. Note that the only prefix operators are
!
and-
, and more cannot be defined.The following table describes the precedence and associativity of infix operators. All operators in the same row have the same precedence. The rows are listed in increasing order of precedence. Note that not all operators listed here are used in expressions; nevertheless, they are still used for resolving ambiguities.
Associativity
Operators
left
,
left
:
,:>
left
||
left
&&
left
<=
>=
>
<
==
!=
left
&
^
|
left
<<
>>
left
+
-
left
*
/
%
//
%%
left
|>
right
<|
right
->
left
juxtaposition
Patterns¶
We say that a pattern is irrefutable if it can never fail to match a
value of the appropriate type. Concretely, this means that it does
not require any specific sum type constructor (unless the type in
question has only a single constructor), or any specific numeric or
boolean literal. Patterns used in function parameters and let
bindings must be irrefutable. Patterns used in case
need not be
irrefutable.
A pattern _
matches any value. A pattern consisting of a literal
value (e.g. a numeric constant) matches exactly that value.
Semantics of Simple Expressions¶
literal¶
Evaluates to itself.
qualid¶
A variable name; evaluates to its value in the current environment.
stringlit¶
Evaluates to an array of type []u8
that contains the characters
encoded as UTF-8.
()
¶
Evaluates to an empty tuple.
( e )
¶
Evaluates to the result of e
.
(e1, e2, ..., eN)
¶
Evaluates to a tuple containing N
values. Equivalent to the
record literal {0=e1, 1=e2, ..., N-1=eN}
.
{f1, f2, ..., fN}
¶
A record expression consists of a comma-separated sequence of field expressions. Each field expression defines the value of a field in the record. A field expression can take one of two forms:
f = e
: defines a field with the namef
and the value resulting from evaluatinge
.
f
: defines a field with the namef
and the value of the variablef
in scope.
Each field may only be defined once.
a[i]
¶
Return the element at the given position in the array. The index may be a comma-separated list of indexes instead of just a single index. If the number of indices given is less than the rank of the array, an array is returned. The index may be of any unsigned integer type.
The array a
must be a variable name or a parenthesised expression.
Furthermore, there may not be a space between a
and the opening
bracket. This disambiguates the array indexing a[i]
, from a
[i]
, which is a function call with a literal array.
a[i:j:s]
¶
Return a slice of the array a
from index i
to j
, the
former inclusive and the latter exclusive, taking every s
-th
element. The s
parameter may not be zero. If s
is negative,
it means to start at i
and descend by steps of size s
to j
(not inclusive). Slicing can be done only with expressions of type
i64
.
It is generally a bad idea for s
to be non-constant.
Slicing of multiple dimensions can be done by separating with commas,
and may be intermixed freely with indexing.
If s
is elided it defaults to 1
. If i
or j
is elided, their
value depends on the sign of s
. If s
is positive, i
become 0
and j
become the length of the array. If s
is negative, i
becomes
the length of the array minus one, and j
becomes minus one. This means that
a[::-1]
is the reverse of the array a
.
In the general case, the size of the array produced by a slice is unknown (see Size types). In a few cases, the size is known statically:
a[0:n]
has sizen
a[:n]
has sizen
a[0:n:1]
has sizen
a[:n:1]
has sizen
This holds only if n
is a variable or constant.
[x, y, z]
¶
Create an array containing the indicated elements. Each element must have the same type and shape.
x..y...z
¶
Construct a signed integer array whose first element is x
and
which proceeds with a stride of y-x
until reaching z
(inclusive). The ..y
part can be elided in which case a stride of
1 is used. A run-time error occurs if z
is less than x
or
y
, or if x
and y
are the same value.
In the general case, the size of the array produced by a range is unknown (see Size types). In a few cases, the size is known statically:
1..2...n
has sizen
This holds only if n
is a variable or constant.
x..y..<z
¶
Construct a signed integer array whose first elements is x
, and
which proceeds upwards with a stride of y-x
until reaching z
(exclusive). The ..y
part can be elided in which case a stride of
1 is used. A run-time error occurs if z
is less than x
or
y
, or if x
and y
are the same value.
0..1..<n
has sizen
0..<n
has sizen
This holds only if n
is a variable or constant.
x..y..>z
¶
Construct a signed integer array whose first elements is x
, and
which proceeds downwards with a stride of y-x
until reaching z
(exclusive). The ..y
part can be elided in which case a stride of
-1 is used. A run-time error occurs if z
is greater than x
or
y
, or if x
and y
are the same value.
e.f
¶
Access field f
of the expression e
, which must be a record or
tuple.
m.(e)
¶
Evaluate the expression e
with the module m
locally opened, as
if by open
. This can make some expressions easier to read and
write, without polluting the global scope with a declaration-level
open
.
x
binop y
¶
Apply an operator to x
and y
. Operators are functions like
any other, and can be user-defined. Futhark pre-defines certain
“magical” overloaded operators that work on many different types.
Overloaded functions cannot be defined by the user. Both operands
must have the same type. The predefined operators and their semantics
are:
**
Power operator, defined for all numeric types.
//
,%%
Division and remainder on integers, with rounding towards zero.
*
,/
,%
,+
,-
The usual arithmetic operators, defined for all numeric types. Note that
/
and%
rounds towards negative infinity when used on integers - this is different from in C.
^
,&
,|
,>>
,<<
Bitwise operators, respectively bitwise xor, and, or, arithmetic shift right and left, and logical shift right. Shifting is undefined if the right operand is negative, or greater than or equal to the length in bits of the left operand.
Note that, unlike in C, bitwise operators have higher priority than arithmetic operators. This means that
x & y == z
is understood as(x & y) == z
, rather thanx & (y == z)
as it would in C. Note that the latter is a type error in Futhark anyhow.
==
,!=
Compare any two values of builtin or compound type for equality.
<
,<=
.>
,>=
Company any two values of numeric type for equality.
x && y
¶
Short-circuiting logical conjunction; both operands must be of type
bool
.
x || y
¶
Short-circuiting logical disjunction; both operands must be of type
bool
.
f x
¶
Apply the function f
to the argument x
.
#c x y z
¶
Apply the sum type constructor #x
to the payload x
, y
, and
z
. A constructor application is always assumed to be saturated,
i.e. its entire payload provided. This means that constructors may
not be partially applied.
e : t
¶
Annotate that e
is expected to be of type t
, failing with a
type error if it is not. If t
is an array with shape
declarations, the correctness of the shape declarations is checked at
run-time.
Due to ambiguities, this syntactic form cannot appear as an array
index expression unless it is first enclosed in parentheses. However,
as an array index must always be of type i64
, there is never a
reason to put an explicit type ascription there.
e :> t
¶
Coerce the size of e
to t
. The type of t
must match the
type of e
, except that the sizes may be statically different. At
run-time, it will be verified that the sizes are the same.
! x
¶
Logical negation if x
is of type bool
. Bitwise negation if
x
is of integral type.
- x
¶
Numerical negation of x
, which must be of numeric type.
#[attr] e
¶
Apply the given attribute to the expression. Attributes are an ad-hoc and optional mechanism for providing extra information, directives, or hints to the compiler. See Attributes for more information.
unsafe e
¶
Elide safety checks and assertions (such as bounds checking) that
occur during execution of e
. This is useful if the compiler is
otherwise unable to avoid bounds checks (e.g. when using indirect
indexes), but you really do not want them there. Make very sure that
the code is correct; eliding such checks can lead to memory
corruption.
This construct is deprecated. Use the #[unsafe]
attribute instead.
assert cond e
¶
Terminate execution with an error if cond
evaluates to false,
otherwise produce the result of evaluating e
. Unless e
produces a value that is used subsequently (it can just be a
variable), dead code elimination may remove the assertion.
a with [i] = e
¶
Return a
, but with the element at position i
changed to
contain the result of evaluating e
. Consumes a
.
r with f = e
¶
Return the record r
, but with field f
changed to have value
e
. The type of the field must remain unchanged. Type inference
is limited: r
must have a completely known type up to f
.
This sometimes requires extra type annotations to make the type of
r
known.
if c then a else b
¶
If c
evaluates to true
, evaluate a
, else evaluate b
.
Binding Expressions¶
let pat = e in body
¶
Evaluate e
and bind the result to the irrefutable pattern pat
(see Patterns) while evaluating body
. The in
keyword
is optional if body
is a let
expression.
let [n] pat = e in body
¶
As above, but bind sizes (here n
) used in the pattern (here to the
size of the array being bound). All sizes must be used in the
pattern. Roughly Equivalent to let f [n] pat = body in f e
.
let a[i] = v in body
¶
Write v
to a[i]
and evaluate body
. The given index need
not be complete and can also be a slice, but in these cases, the value
of v
must be an array of the proper size. This notation is
Syntactic sugar for let a = a with [i] = v in a
.
let f params... = e in body
¶
Bind f
to a function with the given parameters and definition
(e
) and evaluate body
. The function will be treated as
aliasing any free variables in e
. The function is not in scope of
itself, and hence cannot be recursive.
loop pat = initial for x in a do loopbody
¶
Bind
pat
to the initial values given ininitial
.For each element
x
ina
, evaluateloopbody
and rebindpat
to the result of the evaluation.Return the final value of
pat
.
The = initial
can be left out, in which case initial values for
the pattern are taken from equivalently named variables in the
environment. I.e., loop (x) = ...
is equivalent to loop (x = x)
= ...
.
loop pat = initial for x < n do loopbody
¶
Equivalent to loop (pat = initial) for x in [0..1..<n] do loopbody
.
loop pat = initial while cond do loopbody
¶
Bind
pat
to the initial values given ininitial
.If
cond
evaluates to true, bindpat
to the result of evaluatingloopbody
, and repeat the step.Return the final value of
pat
.
match x case p1 -> e1 case p2 -> e2
¶
Match the value produced by x
to each of the patterns in turn,
picking the first one that succeeds. The result of the corresponding
expression is the value of the entire match
expression. All the
expressions associated with a case
must have the same type (but
not necessarily match the type of x
). It is a type error if there
is not a case
for every possible value of x
- inexhaustive
pattern matching is not allowed.
Function Expressions¶
\x y z: t -> e
¶
Produces an anonymous function taking parameters x
, y
, and
z
, returns type t
, and whose body is e
. Lambdas do not
permit type parameters; use a named function if you want a polymorphic
function.
(binop)
¶
An operator section that is equivalent to \x y -> x *binop* y
.
(x binop)
¶
An operator section that is equivalent to \y -> x *binop* y
.
(binop y)
¶
An operator section that is equivalent to \x -> x *binop* y
.
(.a.b.c)
¶
An operator section that is equivalent to \x -> x.a.b.c
.
(.[i,j])
¶
An operator section that is equivalent to \x -> x[i,j]
.
Higher-order functions¶
At a high level, Futhark functions are values, and can be used as any other value. However, to ensure that the compiler is able to compile the higher-order functions efficiently via defunctionalisation, certain type-driven restrictions exist on how functions can be used. These also apply to any record or tuple containing a function (a functional type):
Arrays of functions are not permitted.
A function cannot be returned from an
if
expression.A
loop
parameter cannot be a function.
Further, type parameters are divided into non-lifted (bound with
an apostrophe, e.g. 't
), size-lifted ('~t
), and fully
lifted ('^t
). Only fully lifted type parameters may be
instantiated with a functional type. Within a function, a lifted type
parameter is treated as a functional type.
See also In-place updates for details on how uniqueness types interact with higher-order functions.
Type Inference¶
Futhark supports Hindley-Milner-style type inference, so in many cases explicit type annotations can be left off. Record field projection cannot in isolation be fully inferred, and may need type annotations where their inputs are bound. The same goes when constructing sum types, as Futhark cannot assume that a given constructor only belongs to a single type. Further, unique types (see In-place updates) must be explicitly annotated.
Type inference processes top-level declared in top-down order, and the type of a top-level function must be completely inferred at its definition site. Specifically, if a top-level function uses overloaded arithmetic operators, the resolution of those overloads cannot be influenced by later uses of the function.
Size Types¶
Futhark supports a simple system of size-dependent types that statically verifies that the sizes of arrays passed to a function are compatible. The focus is on simplicity, not completeness.
Whenever a pattern occurs (in let
, loop
, and function
parameters), as well as in return types, size annotations may be
used to express invariants about the shapes of arrays that are
accepted or produced by the function. For example:
let f [n] (a: [n]i32) (b: [n]i32): [n]i32 =
map2 (+) a b
We use a size parameter, [n]
, to explicitly quantify sizes. The
[n]
parameter is not explicitly passed when calling f
.
Rather, its value is implicitly deduced from the arguments passed for
the value parameters. An array can contain anonymous dimensions,
e.g. []i32
, for which the type checker will invent fresh size
parameters, which ensures that all arrays have a (symbolic) size.
A size annotation can also be an integer constant (with no suffix). Size parameters can be used as ordinary variables within the scope of the parameters. The type checker verifies that the program obeys any constraints imposed by size annotations.
Size-dependent types are supported, as the names of parameters can be used in the return type of a function:
let replicate 't (n: i64) (x: t): [n]t = ...
An application replicate 10 0
will have type [10]i32
.
Whenever we write a type [n]t
, n
must already be a variable of
type i64
in scope (possibly by being bound as a size parameter).
Unknown sizes¶
Since sizes must be constants or variables, there are many cases where
the type checker cannot assign a precise size to the result of some
operation. For example, the type of concat
should conceptually be:
val concat [n] [m] 't : [n]t -> [m]t -> [n+m]t
But this is not presently allowed. Instead, the return type contains an anonymous size:
val concat [n] [m] 't : [n]t -> [m]t -> []t
When an application concat xs ys
is found, the result will be of
type [k]t
, where k
is a fresh unknown size variable that is
considered distinct from every other size in the program. It is often
necessary to perform a size coercion (see Size coercion) to
convert an unknown size to a known size.
Generally, unknown sizes are constructed whenever the true size cannot be expressed. The following lists all possible sources of unknown sizes.
Size going out of scope¶
An unknown size is created when the proper size of an array refers to a name that has gone out of scope:
let c = a + b
in replicate c 0
The type of replicate c 0
is [c]i32
, but since c
is
locally bound, the type of the entire expression is [k]i32
for
some fresh k
.
Compound expression passed as function argument¶
Intuitively, the type of replicate (x+y) 0
should be [x+y]i32
,
but since sizes must be names or constants, this is not expressible.
Therefore an unknown size variable is created and the size of the
expression becomes [k]i32
.
Compound expression used as range bound¶
While a simple range expression such as 0..<n
can be assigned type
[n]i32
, a range expression 0..<(n+1)
will give produce an
unknown size.
Complex slicing¶
Most complex array slicing, such as xs[a:b]
, will have an unknown
size. Exceptions are listed in the reference for slice
expressions.
Complex ranges¶
Most complex ranges, such as a..<b
, will have an unknown size.
Exceptions exist for general ranges and “upto”
ranges.
Anonymous size in function return type¶
Whenever the result of a function application would have an anonymous size, that size is replaced with a fresh unknown size variable.
For example, filter
has the following type:
val filter [n] 'a : (p: a -> bool) -> (as: [n]a) -> []a
Naively, an application filter f xs
seems like it would have type
[]a
, but a fresh unknown size k
will be created and the actual
type will be [k]a
.
Branches of if
return arrays of different sizes¶
When an if
(or match
) expression has branches that returns
array of different sizes, the differing sizes will be replaced with
fresh unknown sizes. For example:
if b then [[1,2], [3,4]]
else [[5,6]]
This expression will have type [k][2]i32
, for some fresh k
.
Important: The check whether the sizes differ is done when first
encountering the if
or match
during type checking. At this
point, the type checker may not realise that the two sizes are
actually equal, even though constraints later in the function force
them to be. This can always be resolved by adding type annotations.
An array produced by a loop does not have a known size¶
If the size of some loop parameter is not maintained across a loop iteration, the final result of the loop will contain unknown sizes. For example:
loop xs = [1] for i < n do xs ++ xs
Similar to conditionals, the type checker may sometimes be too cautious in assuming that some size may change during the loop. Adding type annotations to the loop parameter can be used to resolve this.
Size coercion¶
Size coercion, written with :>
, can be used to perform a
runtime-checked coercion of one size to another. Since size
annotations can refer only to variables and constants, this is
necessary when writing more complicated size functions:
let concat_to 'a (m: i32) (a: []a) (b: []a) : [m]a =
a ++ b :> [m]a
Only expression-level type annotations give rise to run-time checks. Despite their similar syntax, parameter and return type annotations must be valid at compile-time, or type checking will fail.
Causality restriction¶
Conceptually, size parameters are assigned their value by reading the sizes of concrete values passed along as parameters. This means that any size parameter must be used as the size of some parameter. This is an error:
let f [n] (x: i32) = n
The following is not an error:
let f [n] (g: [n]i32 -> [n]i32) = ...
However, using this function comes with a constraint: whenever an
application f x
occurs, the value of the size parameter must be
inferable. Specifically, this value must have been used as the size
of an array before the f x
application is encountered. The
notion of “before” is subtle, as there is no evaluation ordering of a
Futhark expression, except that a let
-binding is always
evaluated before its body, the argument to a function is always
evaluated before the function itself, and the left operand to an
operator is evaluated before the right.
The causality restriction only occurs when a function has size parameters whose first use is not as a concrete array size. For example, it does not apply to uses of the following function:
let f [n] (arr: [n]i32) (g: [n]i32 -> [n]i32) = ...
This is because the proper value of n
can be read directly from
the actual size of the array.
Empty array literals¶
Just as with size-polymorphic functions, when constructing an empty
array, we must know the exact size of the (missing) elements. For
example, in the following program we are forcing the elements of a
to be the same as the elements of b
, but the size of the elements
of b
are not known at the time a
is constructed:
let main (b: bool) (xs: []i32) =
let a = [] : [][]i32
let b = [filter (>0) xs]
in a[0] == b[0]
The result is a type error.
Sum types¶
When constructing a value of a sum type, the compiler must still be able to determine the size of the constructors that are not used. This is illegal:
type sum = #foo ([]i32) | #bar ([]i32)
let main (xs: *[]i32) =
let v : sum = #foo xs
in xs
Modules¶
When matching a module with a module type (see Module System),
a non-lifted abstract type (i.e. one that is declared with type
rather than type^
) may not be implemented by a type abbreviation
that contains any anonymous sizes. This is to ensure that if we have
the following:
module m : { type t } = ...
Then we can construct an array of values of type m.t
without
worrying about constructing an irregular array.
Higher-order functions¶
When a higher-order function takes a functional argument whose return
type is a non-lifted type parameter, any instantiation of that type
parameter must have a non-anonymous size. If the return type is a
lifted type parameter, then the instantiation may contain anonymous
sizes. This is why the type of map
guarantees regular arrays:
val map [n] 'a 'b : (a -> b) -> [n]a -> [n]b
The type parameter b
can only be replaced with a type that has
non-anonymous sizes, which means they must be the same for every
application of the function. In contrast, this is the type of the
pipeline operator:
val (|>) '^a -> '^b : a -> (a -> b) -> b
The provided function can return something with an anonymous size
(such as filter
).
A function whose return type has an unknown size¶
If a function (named or anonymous) is inferred to have a return type that contains an unknown size variable created within the function body, that size variable will be replaced with an anonymous size. In most cases this is not important, but it means that an expression like the following is ill-typed:
map (\xs -> iota (length xs)) (xss : [n][m]i32)
This is because the (length xs)
expression gives rise to some
fresh size k
. The lambda is then assigned the type [n]t ->
[k]i32
, which is immediately turned into [n]t -> []i32
because
k
was generated inside its body. A function of this type cannot
be passed to map
, as explained before. The solution is to bind
length
to a name before the lambda.
Sizes in type abbreviations¶
When anonymous sizes are passed to type abbreviations, if that anonymous size is eventually instantiated with an existential size, the same existential size is going to be used for all instances of the corresponding parameter in the right-hand-side of the type abbreviation. Note that this breaks with the usual conception of type abbreviations as purely a shorthand, as this could not be expressed without the abbreviation. Example:
type square [n] = [n][n]i32
The following function is be known to return a square array:
val f : () -> square []
But this is not the case for the function that inlines the definition
of square
:
val g : () -> [][]i32
In-place Updates¶
In-place updates do not provide observable side effects, but they do provide a way to efficiently update an array in-place, with the guarantee that the cost is proportional to the size of the value(s) being written, not the size of the full array.
The a with [i] = v
language construct, and derived forms,
performs an in-place update. The compiler verifies that the original
array (a
) is not used on any execution path following the in-place
update. This involves also checking that no alias of a
is used.
Generally, most language constructs produce new arrays, but some
(slicing) create arrays that alias their input arrays.
When defining a function parameter or return type, we can mark it as unique by prefixing it with an asterisk. For example:
let modify (a: *[]i32) (i: i32) (x: i32): *[]i32 =
a with [i] = a[i] + x
For bulk in-place updates with multiple values, use the scatter
function in the basis library. In the parameter declaration a:
*[i32]
, the asterisk means that the function modify
has been
given “ownership” of the array a
, meaning that any caller of
modify
will never reference array a
after the call again.
This allows the with
expression to perform an in-place update.
After a call modify a i x
, neither a
or any variable that
aliases a
may be used on any following execution path.
Alias Analysis¶
The rules used by the Futhark compiler to determine aliasing are
intuitive in the intra-procedural case. Aliases are associated with
entire arrays. Aliases of a record are tuple are tracked for each
element, not for the record or tuple itself. Most constructs produce
fresh arrays, with no aliases. The main exceptions are if
,
loop
, function calls, and variable literals.
After a binding
let a = b
, that simply assigns a new name to an existing variable, the variablea
aliasesb
. Similarly for record projections and patterns.The result of an
if
aliases the union of the aliases of the components.The result of a
loop
aliases the initial values, as well as any aliases that the merge parameters may assume at the end of an iteration, computed to a fixed point.The aliases of a value returned from a function is the most interesting case, and depends on whether the return value is declared unique (with an asterisk
*
) or not. If it is declared unique, then it has no aliases. Otherwise, it aliases all arguments passed for non-unique parameters.
In-place Updates and Higher-Order Functions¶
Uniqueness typing generally interacts poorly with higher-order functions. The issue is that we cannot control how many times a function argument is applied, or to what, so it is not safe to pass a function that consumes its argument. The following two conservative rules govern the interaction between uniqueness types and higher-order functions:
In the expression
let p = e1 in ...
, if any in-place update takes place in the expressione1
, the value bound byp
must not be or contain a function.A function that consumes one of its arguments may not be passed as a higher-order argument to another function.
Module System¶
mod_bind ::= "module"id
mod_param
* "=" [":" mod_type_exp] "="mod_exp
mod_param ::= "("id
":"mod_type_exp
")" mod_type_bind ::= "module" "type"id
"="mod_type_exp
Futhark supports an ML-style higher-order module system. Modules can contain types, functions, and other modules and module types. Module types are used to classify the contents of modules, and parametric modules are used to abstract over modules (essentially module-level functions). In Standard ML, modules, module types and parametric modules are called structs, signatures, and functors, respectively. Module names exist in the same name space as values, but module types are their own name space.
Named modules are declared as:
module name = ...
A named module type is defined as:
module type name = ...
Where a module expression can be the name of another module, an application of a parametric module, or a sequence of declarations enclosed in curly braces:
module Vec3 = {
type t = ( f32 , f32 , f32 )
let add(a: t) (b: t): t =
let (a1, a2, a3) = a in
let (b1, b2, b3) = b in
(a1 + b1, a2 + b2 , a3 + b3)
}
module AlsoVec3 = Vec3
Functions and types within modules can be accessed using dot notation:
type vector = Vec3.t
let double(v: vector): vector = Vec3.add v v
We can also use open Vec3
to bring the names defined by Vec3
into the current scope. Multiple modules can be opened simultaneously
by separating their names with spaces. In case several modules define
the same names, the ones mentioned last take precedence. The first
argument to open
may be a full module expression.
Named module types are defined as:
module type ModuleTypeName = ...
A module type expression can be the name of another module type, or a sequence of specifications, or specs, enclosed in curly braces. A spec can be a value spec, indicating the presence of a function or value, an abstract type spec, or a type abbreviation spec. For example:
module type Addable = {
type t -- abstract type spec
type two_ts = (t,t) -- type abbreviation spec
val add: t -> t -> t -- value spec
}
This module type specifies the presence of an abstract type t
,
as well as a function operating on values of type t
. We can use
module type ascription to restrict a module to what is exposed by
some module type:
module AbstractVec = Vec3 : Addable
The definition of AbstractVec.t
is now hidden. In fact, with this
module type, we can neither construct values of type AbstractVec.T
or convert them to anything else, making this a rather useless use of
abstraction. As a derived form, we can write module M: S = e
to
mean module M = e : S
.
In a value spec, sizes in types on the left-hand side of a function arrow must not be anonymous. For example, this is forbidden:
val sum: []t -> t
Instead write:
val sum [n]: [n]t -> t
But this is allowed, because the empty size is not to the left of a function arrow:
val evens [n]: [n]i32 -> []i32
Parametric modules allow us to write definitions that abstract over modules. For example:
module Times = \(M: Addable) -> {
let times (x: M.t) (k: i32): M.t =
loop x' = x for i < k do
M.add x' x
}
We can instantiate Times
with any module that fulfils the module
type Addable
and get back a module that defines a function
times
:
module Vec3Times = Times Vec3
Now Vec3Times.times
is a function of type Vec3.t -> int ->
Vec3.t
. As a derived form, we can write module M p = e
to mean
module M = \p -> e
.
Module Expressions¶
mod_exp ::=qualid
|mod_exp
":"mod_type_exp
| "\" "("id
":"mod_type_exp
")" [":"mod_type_exp
] "->"mod_exp
|mod_exp
mod_exp
| "("mod_exp
")" | "{"dec
* "}" | "import"stringlit
A module expression produces a module. Modules are collections of bindings produced by declarations (dec). In particular, a module may contain other modules or module types.
qualid
¶
Evaluates to the module of the given name.
(mod_exp)
¶
Evaluates to mod_exp
.
mod_exp : mod_type_exp
¶
Module ascription evaluates the module expression and the module type expression, verifies that the module implements the module type, then returns a module that exposes only the functionality described by the module type. This is how internal details of a module can be hidden.
\(p: mt1): mt2 -> e
¶
Constructs a parametric module (a function at the module level) that
accepts a parameter of module type mt1
and returns a module of
type mt2
. The latter is optional, but the parameter type is not.
e1 e2
¶
Apply the parametric module m1
to the module m2
.
{ decs }
¶
Returns a module that contains the given definitions. The resulting
module defines any name defined by any declaration that is not
local
, in particular including names made available via
open
.
import "foo"
¶
Returns a module that contains the definitions of the file "foo"
relative to the current file. See Referring to Other Files.
Module Type Expressions¶
mod_type_exp ::=qualid
| "{"spec
* "}" |mod_type_exp
"with"qualid
type_param
* "="type
| "("mod_type_exp
")" | "("id
":"mod_type_exp
")" "->"mod_type_exp
|mod_type_exp
"->"mod_type_exp
spec ::= "val"id
type_param
* ":"spec_type
| "val"binop
type_param
* ":"spec_type
| "type" ["^"]id
type_param
* "="type
| "type" ["^"]id
type_param
* | "module"id
":"mod_type_exp
| "include"mod_type_exp
| "#[" attr "]" spec spec_type ::=type
|type
"->"spec_type
Module types classify modules, with the only (unimportant) difference in expressivity being that modules can contain module types, but module types cannot specify that a module must contain a specific module type. They can specify of course that a module contains a submodule of a specific module type.
Referring to Other Files¶
You can refer to external files in a Futhark file like this:
import "file"
The above will include all non-local
top-level definitions from
file.fut
is and make them available in the current file (but
will not export them). The .fut
extension is implied.
You can also include files from subdirectories:
import "path/to/a/file"
The above will include the file path/to/a/file.fut
relative to the
including file.
Qualified imports are also possible, where a module is created for the file:
module M = import "file"
In fact, a plain import "file"
is equivalent to:
local open import "file"
Attributes¶
attr ::=id
|id
"(" [attr
(","attr
)*] ")"
An expression, declaration, or module type spec can be prefixed with
an attribute, written as #[attr]
. This may affect how it is
treated by the compiler or other tools. In no case will attributes
affect or change the semantics of a program, but it may affect how
well it compiles and runs (or in some cases, whether it compiles or
runs at all). Unknown attributes are silently ignored. Most have no
effect in the interpreter. An attribute can be either an atom,
written as just an identifier, or compound, consisting of an
identifier and a comma-separated sequence of attributes. The latter
is used for grouping and encoding of more complex information.
Expression attributes¶
Many expression attributes affect second-order array combinators (SOACS). These must be applied to a fully saturated function application or they will have no effect. If two SOACs with contradictory attributes are combined through fusion, it is unspecified which attributes take precedence.
The following expression attributes are supported.
trace
¶
Print the value produced by the attributed expression. Used for debugging. Somewhat unreliable outside of the interpreter, and in particular does not work for GPU device code.
trace(tag)
¶
Like trace
, but prefix output with tag, which must lexically be
an identifier.
break
¶
In the interpreter, pause execution before evaluating the expression. No effect for compiled code.
opaque
¶
The compiler will treat the attributed expression as a black box. This is used to work around optimisation deficiencies (or bugs), although it should hopefully rarely be necessary.
incremental_flattening(no_outer)
¶
When using incremental flattening, do not generate the “only outer parallelism” version for the attributed SOACs.
incremental_flattening(no_intra)
¶
When using incremental flattening, do not generate the “intra-group parallelism” version for the attributed SOACs.
incremental_flattening(only_intra)
¶
When using incremental flattening, only generate the “intra-group parallelism” version of the attributed SOACs. Beware: the resulting program will fail to run if the inner parallelism does not fit on the device.
incremental_flattening(only_inner)
¶
When using incremental flattening, do not generate multiple versions for this SOAC, but do exploit inner parallelism (which may give rise to multiple versions at deeper levels).
noinline
¶
Do not inline the attributed function application. If used within a
parallel construct (e.g. map
), this will likely prevent the GPU
backends from generating working code.
sequential
¶
Fully sequentialise the attributed SOAC.
sequential_outer
¶
Turn the outer parallelism in the attributed SOAC sequential, but preserve any inner parallelism.
sequential_inner
¶
Exploit only outer parallelism in the attributed SOAC.
unroll
¶
Fully unroll the attributed loop
. If the compiler cannot
determine the exact number of iterations (possibly after other
optimisations and simplifications have taken place), then this
attribute has no code generation effect, but instead results in a
warning. Be very careful with this attribute: it can massively
increase program size (possibly crashing the compiler) if the loop has
a huge number of iterations.
unsafe
¶
Do not perform any dynamic safety checks (such as bound checks) during execution of the attributed expression.
warn(safety_checks)
¶
Make the compiler issue a warning if the attributed expression (or its subexpressions) requires safety checks (such as bounds checking) at run-time. This is used for performance-critical code where you want to be told when the compiler is unable to statically verify the safety of all operations.
Declaration attributes¶
The following declaration attributes are supported.
noinline
¶
Do not inline any calls to this function. If the function is then
used within a parallel construct (e.g. map
), this will likely
prevent the GPU backends from generating working code.
inline
¶
Always inline calls to this function.
Spec attributes¶
No spec attributes are currently supported by the compiler itself, although they are syntactically permitted and may be used by other tools.
C API Reference¶
A Futhark program futlib.fut
compiled to a C library with the
--library
command line option produces two files: futlib.c
and
futlib.h
. The API provided in the .h
file is documented in
the following.
Using the API requires creating a configuration object, which is then used to obtain a context object, which is then used to perform most other operations, such as calling Futhark functions.
Most functions that can fail return an integer: 0 on success and a
non-zero value on error. Others return a NULL
pointer. Use
futhark_context_get_error()
to get a (possibly) more precise
error message.
-
FUTHARK_BACKEND_foo
¶ A preprocessor macro identifying that the backend foo was used to generate the code; e.g.
c
,opencl
, orcuda
. This can be used for conditional compilation of code that only works with specific backends.
Configuration¶
Context creation is parameterised by a configuration object. Any
changes to the configuration must be made before calling
futhark_context_new()
. A configuration object must not be
freed before any context objects for which it is used. The same
configuration may be used for multiple concurrent contexts.
-
struct
futhark_context_config
¶ An opaque struct representing a Futhark configuration.
-
struct futhark_context_config *
futhark_context_config_new
(void)¶ Produce a new configuration object. You must call
futhark_context_config_free()
when you are done with it.
-
void
futhark_context_config_free
(struct futhark_context_config *cfg)¶ Free the configuration object.
-
void
futhark_context_config_set_debugging
(struct futhark_context_config *cfg, int flag)¶ With a nonzero flag, enable various debugging information, with the details specific to the backend. This may involve spewing copious amounts of information to the standard error stream. It is also likely to make the program run much slower.
-
void
futhark_context_config_set_profiling
(struct futhark_context_config *cfg, int flag)¶ With a nonzero flag, enable the capture of profiling information. This should not significantly impact program performance. Use
futhark_context_report()
to retrieve captured information, the details of which are backend-specific.
-
void
futhark_context_config_set_logging
(struct futhark_context_config *cfg, int flag)¶ With a nonzero flag, print a running log to standard error of what the program is doing.
Context¶
-
struct
futhark_context
¶ An opaque struct representing a Futhark context.
-
struct futhark_context *
futhark_context_new
(struct futhark_context_config *cfg)¶ Create a new context object. You must call
futhark_context_free()
when you are done with it. It is fine for multiple contexts to co-exist within the same process, but you must not pass values between them. They have the same C type, so this is an easy mistake to make.After you have created a context object, you must immediately call
futhark_context_get_error()
, which will return non-NULL
if initialisation failed. If initialisation has failed, then you still need to callfuthark_context_free()
to release resources used for the context object, but you may not use the context object for anything else.
-
void
futhark_context_free
(struct futhark_context *ctx)¶ Free the context object. It must not be used again. You must call
futhark_context_sync()
before calling this function to ensure there are no outstanding asynchronous operations still running. The configuration must be freed separately withfuthark_context_config_free()
.
-
int
futhark_context_sync
(struct futhark_context *ctx)¶ Block until all outstanding operations, including copies, have finished executing. Many API functions are asynchronous on their own.
-
void
futhark_context_pause_profiling
(struct futhark_context *ctx)¶ Temporarily suspend the collection of profiling information. Has no effect if profiling was not enabled in the configuration.
-
void
futhark_context_unpause_profiling
(struct futhark_context *ctx)¶ Resume the collection of profiling information. Has no effect if profiling was not enabled in the configuration.
-
char *
futhark_context_get_error
(struct futhark_context *ctx)¶ A human-readable string describing the last error, if any. It is the caller’s responsibility to
free()
the returned string. Any subsequent call to the function returnsNULL
, until a new error occurs.
-
void
futhark_context_set_logging_file
(struct futhark_context *ctx, FILE *f)¶ Set the stream used to print diagnostics, debug prints, and logging messages during runtime. This is
stderr
by default. Even when this is used to re-route logging messages, fatal errors will still only be printed tostderr
.
-
char *
futhark_context_report
(struct futhark_context *ctx)¶ Produce a human-readable C string with debug and profiling information collected during program runtime. It is the caller’s responsibility to free the returned string. It is likely to only contain interesting information if
futhark_context_config_set_debugging()
orfuthark_context_config_set_profiling()
has been called previously. ReturnsNULL
on failure.
-
int
futhark_context_clear_caches
(struct futhark_context *ctx)¶ Release any context-internal caches and buffers that may otherwise use computer resources. This is useful for freeing up those resources when no Futhark entry points are expected to run for some time. Particularly relevant when using a GPU backend, due to the relative scarcity of GPU memory.
Values¶
Primitive types (i32
, bool
, etc) are mapped directly to their
corresponding C type. The f16
type is mapped to uint16_t
,
because C does not have a standard half
type. This integer
contains the bitwise representation of the f16
value in the IEEE
754 binary16 format.
For each distinct array type of primitives (ignoring sizes), an opaque
C struct is defined. Arrays of f16
are presented as containing
uint16_t
elements. For types that do not map cleanly to C,
including records, sum types, and arrays of tuples, see
Opaque values.
All array values share a similar API, which is illustrated here for
the case of the type []i32
. The creation/retrieval functions are
all asynchronous, so make sure to call futhark_context_sync()
when appropriate. Memory management is entirely manual. All values
that are created with a new
function, or returned from an entry
point, must at some point be freed manually. Values are internally
reference counted, so even for entry points that return their input
unchanged, you should still free both the input and the output - this
will not result in a double free.
-
struct
futhark_i32_1d
¶ An opaque struct representing a Futhark value of type
[]i32
.
-
struct futhark_i32_1d *
futhark_new_i32_1d
(struct futhark_context *ctx, int32_t *data, int64_t dim0)¶ Asynchronously create a new array based on the given data. The dimensions express the number of elements. The data is copied into the new value. It is the caller’s responsibility to eventually call
futhark_free_i32_1d()
. Multi-dimensional arrays are assumed to be in row-major form. ReturnsNULL
on failure.
-
struct futhark_i32_1d *
futhark_new_raw_i32_1d
(struct futhark_context *ctx, char *data, int offset, int64_t dim0)¶ Create an array based on raw data, as well as an offset into it. This differs little from
futhark_i32_1d()
when using thec
backend, but when using e.g. theopencl
backend, thedata
parameter will be acl_mem
. It is the caller’s responsibility to eventually callfuthark_free_i32_1d()
. ReturnsNULL
on failure.
-
int
futhark_free_i32_1d
(struct futhark_context *ctx, struct futhark_i32_1d *arr)¶ Free the value. In practice, this merely decrements the reference count by one. The value (or at least this reference) may not be used again after this function returns.
-
int
futhark_values_i32_1d
(struct futhark_context *ctx, struct futhark_i32_1d *arr, int32_t *data)¶ Asynchronously copy data from the value into
data
, which must be of sufficient size. Multi-dimensional arrays are written in row-major form.
-
const int64_t *
futhark_shape_i32_1d
(struct futhark_context *ctx, struct futhark_i32_1d *arr)¶ Return a pointer to the shape of the array, with one element per dimension. The lifetime of the shape is the same as
arr
, and should not be manually freed. Assumingarr
is a valid object, this function cannot fail.
Opaque values¶
Each instance of a complex type in an entry point (records, nested
tuples, etc) is represented by an opaque C struct named
futhark_opaque_foo
. In the general case, foo
will be a hash
of the internal representation. However, if you insert explicit type
annotations in the entry point (and the type name contains only
characters valid for C identifiers), the indicated name will be used.
Note that arrays contain brackets, which are usually not valid in
identifiers. Defining a simple type abbreviation is the best way
around this.
The API for opaque values is similar to that of arrays, and the same
rules for memory management apply. You cannot construct them from
scratch, but must obtain them via entry points (or deserialisation,
see futhark_restore_opaque_foo()
).
-
struct
futhark_opaque_foo
¶ An opaque struct representing a Futhark value of type
foo
.
-
int
futhark_free_opaque_foo
(struct futhark_context *ctx, struct futhark_opaque_foo *obj)¶ Free the value. In practice, this merely decrements the reference count by one. The value (or at least this reference) may not be used again after this function returns.
-
int
futhark_store_opaque_foo
(struct futhark_context *ctx, const struct futhark_opaque_foo *obj, void **p, size_t *n)¶ Serialise an opaque value to a byte sequence, which can later be restored with
futhark_restore_opaque_foo()
. The byte representation is not otherwise specified, and is not stable between compiler versions or programs. It is stable under change of compiler backend, but not change of compiler version, or modification to the source program (although in most cases the format will not change).The variable pointed to by
n
will always be set to the number of bytes needed to represent the value. Thep
parameter is more complex:If
p
isNULL
, the function will write to*n
, but not actually serialise the opaque value.If
*p
isNULL
, the function will allocate sufficient storage withmalloc()
, serialise the value, and write the address of the byte representation to*p
.Otherwise, the serialised representation of the value will be stored at
*p
, which must have room for at least*n
bytes.
Returns 0 on success.
-
struct futhark_opaque_foo *
futhark_restore_opaque_foo
(struct futhark_context *ctx, const void *p)¶ Restore a byte sequence previously written with
futhark_store_opaque_foo()
. ReturnsNULL
on failure. The byte sequence does not need to have been generated by the same program instance, but it must have been generated by the same Futhark program, and compiled with the same version of the Futhark compiler.
Entry points¶
Entry points are mapped 1:1 to C functions. Return values are handled with out-parameters.
For example, this Futhark entry point:
entry sum = i32.sum
Results in the following C function:
-
int
futhark_entry_sum
(struct futhark_context *ctx, int32_t *out0, const struct futhark_i32_1d *in0)¶ Asynchronously call the entry point with the given arguments. Make sure to call
futhark_context_sync()
before using the value ofout0
.
Errors are indicated by a nonzero return value. On error, nothing is written to the out-parameters.
The precise semantics of the return value depends on the backend. For
the sequential C backend, errors will always be available when the
entry point returns, and futhark_context_sync()
will always
return zero. When using a GPU backend such as cuda
or opencl
,
the entry point may still be running asynchronous operations when it
returns, in which case the entry point may return zero successfully,
even though execution has already (or will) fail. These problems will
be reported when futhark_context_sync()
is called. Therefore,
be careful to check the return code of both the entry point itself,
and futhark_context_sync()
.
For the rules on entry points that consume their input, see Consumption and Aliasing. Note that even if a value has been consumed, you must still manually free it. This is the only operation that is permitted on a consumed value.
GPU¶
The following API functions are available when using the opencl
or
cuda
backends.
-
void
futhark_context_config_set_device
(struct futhark_context_config *cfg, const char *s)¶ Use the first device whose name contains the given string. The special string
#k
, wherek
is an integer, can be used to pick the k-th device, numbered from zero. If used in conjunction withfuthark_context_config_set_platform()
, only the devices from matching platforms are considered.
Exotic¶
The following functions are not interesting to most users.
-
void
futhark_context_config_set_default_group_size
(struct futhark_context_config *cfg, int size)¶ Set the default number of work-items in a work-group.
-
void
futhark_context_config_set_default_num_groups
(struct futhark_context_config *cfg, int num)¶ Set the default number of work-groups used for kernels.
-
void
futhark_context_config_set_default_tile_size
(struct futhark_context_config *cfg, int num)¶ Set the default tile size used when executing kernels that have been block tiled.
-
void
futhark_context_config_dump_program_to
(struct futhark_context_config *cfg, const char *path)¶ During
futhark_context_new()
, dump the OpenCL or CUDA program source to the given file.
-
void
futhark_context_config_load_program_from
(struct futhark_context_config *cfg, const char *path)¶ During
futhark_context_new()
, read OpenCL or CUDA program source from the given file instead of using the embedded program.
OpenCL¶
The following API functions are available only when using the
opencl
backend.
-
void
futhark_context_config_set_platform
(struct futhark_context_config *cfg, const char *s)¶ Use the first OpenCL platform whose name contains the given string. The special string
#k
, wherek
is an integer, can be used to pick the k-th platform, numbered from zero.
-
void
futhark_context_config_select_device_interactively
(struct futhark_context_config *cfg)¶ Immediately conduct an interactive dialogue on standard output to select the platform and device from a list.
-
struct futhark_context *
futhark_context_new_with_command_queue
(struct futhark_context_config *cfg, cl_command_queue queue)¶ Construct a context that uses a pre-existing command queue. This allows the caller to directly customise which device and platform is used.
-
cl_command_queue
futhark_context_get_command_queue
(struct futhark_context *ctx)¶ Retrieve the command queue used by the Futhark context. Be very careful with it - enqueueing your own work is unlikely to go well.
Exotic¶
The following functions are used for debugging generated code or advanced usage.
-
void
futhark_context_config_add_build_option
(struct futhark_context_config *cfg, const char *opt)¶ Add a build option to the OpenCL kernel compiler. See the OpenCL specification for clBuildProgram for available options.
-
void
futhark_context_config_dump_binary_to
(struct futhark_context_config *cfg, const char *path)¶ During
futhark_context_new()
, dump the compiled OpenCL binary to the given file.
-
void
futhark_context_config_load_binary_from
(struct futhark_context_config *cfg, const char *path)¶ During
futhark_context_new()
, read a compiled OpenCL binary from the given file instead of using the embedded program.
CUDA¶
The following API functions are available when using the cuda
backend.
Exotic¶
The following functions are used for debugging generated code or advanced usage.
-
void
futhark_context_config_add_nvrtc_option
(struct futhark_context_config *cfg, const char *opt)¶ Add a build option to the NVRTC compiler. See the CUDA documentation for
nvrtcCompileProgram
for available options.
-
void
futhark_context_config_dump_ptx_to
(struct futhark_context_config *cfg, const char *path)¶ During
futhark_context_new()
, dump the generated PTX code to the given file.
-
void
futhark_context_config_load_ptx_from
(struct futhark_context_config *cfg, const char *path)¶ During
futhark_context_new()
, read PTX code from the given file instead of using the embedded program.
Multicore¶
The following API functions are available when using the multicore
backend.
-
void
context_config_set_num_threads
(struct futhark_context_config *cfg, int n)¶ The number of threads used to run parallel operations. If set to a value less than
1
, then the runtime system will use one thread per detected core.
General guarantees¶
Calling an entry point, or interacting with Futhark values through the functions listed above, has no system-wide side effects, such as writing to the file system, launching processes, or performing network connections. Defects in the program or Futhark compiler itself can with high probability result only in the consumption of CPU or GPU resources, or a process crash.
Using the #[unsafe]
attribute with in-place updates can result in
writes to arbitrary memory locations. A malicious program can likely
exploit this to obtain arbitrary code execution, just as with any
insecure C program. If you must run untrusted code, consider using
the --safe
command line option to instruct the compiler to disable
#[unsafe]
.
Initialising a Futhark context likewise has no side effects, except if
explicitly configured differently, such as by using
futhark_context_config_dump_program_to()
. In its default
configuration, Futhark will not access the file system.
Note that for the GPU backends, the underlying API (such as CUDA or OpenCL) may perform file system operations during startup, and perhaps for caching GPU kernels in some cases. This is beyond Futhark’s control.
Violation the restrictions of consumption (see Consumption and Aliasing) can result in undefined behaviour. This does not matter for programs whose entry points do not have unique parameter types (In-place Updates).
JavaScript API Reference¶
The futhark-wasm and futhark-wasm-multicore compilers produce JavaScript wrapper code to allow JavaScript programs to invoke the generated WebAssembly code. This chapter describes the API exposed by the wrapper.
First a warning: the JavaScript API is experimental. It may change incompatibly even in minor versions of the compiler.
A Futhark program futlib.fut
compiled with a WASM backend as a library
with the --library
command line option produces four files:
futlib.c
,futlib.h
: Implementation and header C files generated by the compiler, similar tofuthark c
. You can delete these - they are not needed at run-time.futlib.class.js
: An intermediate build artifact. Feel free to delete it.futlib.wasm
: A compiled WebAssembly module, which must bepresent at runtime.
futlib.mjs
: An ES6 module that can can be imported by other JavaScript code, and implements the API given in the following.
The module exports a function, newFutharkContext
, which is a factory
function that returns a Promise producing a FutharkContext
instance (see below). A simple usage example:
import { newFutharkContext } from './futlib.mjs';
var fc;
newFutharkContext().then(x => fc = x);
General concerns¶
Memory management is completely manual, as JavaScript does not support finalizers that could let Futhark hook into the garbage collector. You are responsible for eventually freeing all objects produced by the API, using the appropriate methods.
FutharkContext¶
FutharkContext is a class that contains information about the context and configuration from the C API. It has methods for invoking the Futhark entry points and creating FutharkArrays on the WebAssembly heap.
-
newFutharkContext
()¶ Asynchronously create a new
FutharkContext
object.
-
class
FutharkContext
()¶ A bookkeeping class representing an instance of a Futhark program. Do not directly invoke its constructor - always use the
newFutharkContext()
factory function.
-
FutharkContext.
free
()¶ Frees all memory created by the
FutharkContext
object. Should be called when theFutharkContext
is done being used. It is an error use aFutharkArray
orFutharkOpaque
after theFutharkContext
on which they were defined has been freed.
Values¶
Numeric types u8
, u16
, u32
, i8
, i16
, i32
, f32
,
and f64
are mapped to JavaScript’s standard number type. 64-bit integers
u64
, and i64
are mapped to BigInt
. bool
is mapped to
JavaScript’s boolean
type. Arrays are represented by the FutharkArray
.
complex types (records, nested tuples, etc) are represented by the
FutharkOpaque
class.
FutharkArray¶
FutharkArray
has the following API
-
FutharkArray.
toArray
()¶ Returns a nested JavaScript array
-
FutharkArray.
toTypedArray
()¶ Returns a flat typed array of the underlying data.
-
FutharkArray.
shape
()¶ Returns the shape of the FutharkArray as an array of BigInts.
-
FutharkArray.
free
()¶ Frees the memory used by the FutharkArray class
FutharkContext
also contains two functions for creating
FutharkArrays
from JavaScript arrays, and typed arrays for each
array type that appears in an entry point. All array types share
similar API methods on the FutharkContext
, which is illustrated
here for the case of the type []i32
.
-
FutharkContext.
new_i32_1d_from_jsarray
(jsarray)¶ Creates and returns a one-dimensional
i32
FutharkArray
representing the JavaScript array jsarray
-
FutharkContext.
new_i32_1d
(array, dim1)¶ Creates and returns a one-dimensional
i32
FutharkArray
representing the typed array of array, with the size given by dim1.
FutharkOpaque¶
Complex types (records, nested tuples, etc) are represented by
FutharkOpaque
. It has no use outside of being accepted and
returned by entry point functions. For this reason the method only has
one function for freeing the memory when FutharkOpaque
is no
longer used.
-
FutharkOpaque.
free
()¶ Frees memory used by FutharkOpaque. Should be called when Futhark Opaque is no longer used.
Entry Points¶
Each entry point in the compiled futhark program has an entry point method on the FutharkContext
-
FutharkContext.
<entry_point_name>
(in1, ..., inN)¶ The entry point function taking the N arguments of the Futhark entry point function, and returns the result. If the result is a tuple the return value is an array.
Package Management¶
This document describes futhark pkg
, a minimalistic package
manager inspired by vgo. A
Futhark package is a downloadable collection of .fut
files and
little more. There is a (not necessarily comprehensive) list of
known packages.
Basic Concepts¶
A package is uniquely identified with a package path, which is
similar to a URL, except without a protocol. At the moment, package
paths are always links to Git repositories hosted on GitHub or GitLab.
In the future, this will become more flexible. As an example, a
package path may be github.com/athas/fut-foo
.
Packages are versioned with semantic version numbers of the form X.Y.Z
. Whenever versions are
indicated, all three digits must always be given (that is, 1.0
is
not a valid shorthand for 1.0.0
).
Most futhark pkg
operations involve reading and writing a package
manifest, which is always stored in a file called futhark.pkg
.
The futhark.pkg
file is human-editable, but is in day-to-day use
mainly modified by futhark pkg
automatically.
Using Packages¶
Required packages can be added by using futhark pkg add
, for example:
$ futhark pkg add github.com/athas/fut-foo 0.1.0
This will create a new file futhark.pkg
with the following contents:
require {
github.com/athas/fut-foo 0.1.0 #d285563c25c5152b1ae80fc64de64ff2775fa733
}
This lists one required package, with its package path, minimum version (see Version Selection), and the expected commit hash. The latter is used for verification, to ensure that the contents of a package version cannot be changed silently.
futhark pkg
will perform network requests to determine whether a
package of the given name and with the given version exists and fail
otherwise (but it will not check whether the package is otherwise
well-formed). The version number can be elided, in which case
futhark pkg
will use the newest available version. If the package
is already present in futhark.pkg
, it will simply have its version
requirement changed to the one specified in the command. Any
dependencies of the package will not be added to futhark.pkg
,
but will still be downloaded by futhark pkg sync
(see below).
Adding a package with futhark pkg add
modifies futhark.pkg
,
but does not download the package files. This is done with
futhark pkg sync
(without further options). The contents of each
required dependency and any transitive dependencies will be stored in
a subdirectory of lib/
corresponding to their package path. As an
example:
$ futhark pkg sync
$ tree lib
lib
└── github.com
└── athas
└── fut-foo
└── foo.fut
3 directories, 1 file
Warning: futhark pkg sync
will remove any unrecognized files or
local modifications to files in lib/
(except of course the package
directory of the package path listed in futhark.pkg
; see
Creating Packages).
Packages can be removed from futhark.pkg
with:
$ futhark pkg remove pkgpath
You will need to run futhark pkg sync
to actually remove the files in
lib/
.
The intended usage is that futhark.pkg
is added to version
control, but lib/
is not, as the contents of lib/
can always
be reproduced from futhark.pkg
. However, adding lib/
works
just fine as well.
Importing Files from Dependencies¶
futhark pkg sync
will populate the lib/
directory, but does
not interact with the compiler in any way. The downloaded files can
be imported using the usual import
mechanism (Referring to Other Files);
for example, assuming the package contains a file foo.fut
:
import "lib/github.com/athas/fut-foo/foo"
Ultimately, everything boils down to ordinary file system semantics. This has the downside of relatively long and clumsy import paths, but the upside of predictability.
Upgrading Dependencies¶
The futhark pkg upgrade
command will update every version
requirement in futhark.pkg
to be the most recent available
version. You still need to run futhark pkg sync
to actually
retrieve the new versions. Be careful - while upgrades are safe if
semantic versioning is followed correctly, this is not yet properly
machine-checked, so human mistakes may occur.
As an example:
$ cat futhark.pkg
require {
github.com/athas/fut-foo 0.1.0 #d285563c25c5152b1ae80fc64de64ff2775fa733
}
$ futhark pkg upgrade
Upgraded github.com/athas/fut-foo 0.1.0 => 0.2.1.
$ cat futhark.pkg
require {
github.com/athas/fut-foo 0.2.1 #3ddc9fc93c1d8ce560a3961e55547e5c78bd0f3e
}
$ futhark pkg sync
$ tree lib
lib
└── github.com
└── athas
├── fut-bar
│ └── bar.fut
└── fut-foo
└── foo.fut
4 directories, 2 files
Note that fut-foo 0.2.1
depends on github.com/athas/fut-bar
,
so it was fetched by futhark pkg sync
.
futhark pkg upgrade
will never upgrade across a major version
number. Due to the principle of Semantic Import Versioning, a new major version is a
completely different package from the point of view of the package
manager. Thus, to upgrade to a new major version, you will need to
use futhark pkg add
to add the new version and futhark pkg
remove
to remove the old version. Or you can keep it around - it is
perfectly acceptable to depend on multiple major versions of the same
package, because they are really different packages.
Creating Packages¶
A package is a directory tree (which at the moment must correspond to a Git repository). It must contain two things:
A file
futhark.pkg
at the root defining the package path and any required packages.A package directory
lib/pkg-path
, wherepkg-path
is the full package path.
The contents of the package directory is what will be made available
to users of the package. The repository may contain other things
(tests, data files, examples, docs, other programs, etc), but these
are ignored by futhark pkg
. This structure can be created
automatically by running for example:
$ futhark pkg init github.com/sturluson/edda
Note again, no https://
. The result is this futhark.pkg
:
package github.com/sturluson/edda
require {
}
And this file hierarchy:
$ tree lib
lib
└── github.com
└── sturluson
└── edda
3 directories, 0 files
Note that futhark pkg init
is not necessary simply to use
packages, only when creating packages.
When creating a package, the .fut
files we are writing will be
located inside the lib/
directory. If the package has its own
dependencies, whose files we would like to access, we can use
relative imports. For example, assume we are creating a package
github.com/sturluson/edda
and we are writing a Futhark file
located at lib/github.com/sturluson/edda/saga.fut
. Further, we
have a dependency on the package github.com/athas/foo-fut
, which
is stored in the directory lib/github.com/athas/foo-fut
. We can
import a file lib/github.com/athas/foo-fut/foo.fut
from
lib/github.com/sturluson/edda/saga.fut
with:
import "../foo-fut/foo"
Releasing a Package¶
Currently, a package corresponds exactly to a GitHub repository
mirroring the package path. A release is done by tagging an
appropriate commit with git tag vX.Y.Z
and then pushing the tag to
GitHub with git push --tags
. In the future, this will be
generalised to other code hosting sites and version control systems
(and possibly self-hosted tarballs). Remember to take semantic
versioning into account - unless you bump the major version number (or
the major version is 0), the new version must be fully compatible
with the old.
When releasing a new package, consider getting it added to the central package list. See this page for details.
Incrementing the Major Version Number¶
While backwards-incompatible modifications to a package are sometimes
unavoidable, it is wise to avoid them as much as possible, as they
significantly inconvenience users. To discourage breaking
compatibility, futhark pkg
tries to ensure that the package
developer feels this inconvenience as well. In many cases, an
incompatible change can be avoided simply by adding new files to the
package rather than incompatibly changing the existing ones.
In the general case, the package path also encodes the major version
of the package, separated with a @
. For example, version 5.2.1 of
a package might have the package path github.com/user/repo@5
. For
major versions 0 and 1, this can be elided. This means that multiple
(major) versions of a package are completely distinct from the point
of view of the package manager - this principle is called Semantic
Import Versioning, and is
intended to facilitate backwards compatibility of packages when new
versions are released.
If you really must increment the major version, then you will need to
change the package path in futhark.pkg
to contain the new major
version preceded by @
. For example,
lib/github.com/sturluson/edda
becomes
lib/github.com/sturluson/edda@2
. As a special case, this is not
necessary when moving from major version 0 to 1. Since the package
path has changed, you will also need to rename the package directory
in lib/
. This is painful and awkward, but it is less painful and
awkward than what users feel when their dependencies break
compatibility.
Renaming a Package¶
It is likely that the hosting location for a very long-lived package
will change from time to time. Since the hosting location is embedded
into the package path itself, this causes some issues for
futhark pkg
.
In simple cases, there is no problem. Consider a package
github.com/asgard/loki
which is moved to
github.com/utgard/loki
. If no GitHub-level redirect is set up,
all users must update the path by which they import the package. This
is unavoidable, unfortunately.
However, the old tagged versions, which contain a futhark.pkg
that
uses the old package path, will continue to work. This is because the
package path indicated in package.pkg
merely defines the
subdirectory of lib/
where the package files are to be found,
while the package path used by dependents in the require
section
defines where the package files are located after futhark pkg
sync
. Thus, when we import an old version of
github.com/utgard/loki
whose futhark.pkg
defines the package
as github.com/asgard/loki
, the package files will be retrieved
from the lib/github.com/asgard/loki
directory in the repository,
but stored at lib/github.com/utgard/loki
in the local directory.
The above means that package management remains operational in simple
cases of renaming, but it is awkward when a transitive dependency is
renamed (or deleted). The Futhark package ecosystem is sufficiently
embryonic that we have not yet developed more robust solutions. When
such solutions are developed, they will likely involve some form of
replace
directive that allows transparent local renaming of
packages, as well as perhaps a central registry of package paths that
does not depend on specific source code hosts.
Version Selection¶
The package manifest futhark.pkg
declares which packages the
program depends on. Dependencies are specified as the oldest
acceptable version within the given major version. Upper version
bounds are not supported, as strict adherence to semantic versioning
is assumed, so any later version with the same major version number
should work. When futhark pkg sync
calculates which version of a
given package to download, it will pick the oldest version that still
satisfies the minimum version requirements of that package in all
transitive dependencies. This means that a version may be used that
is newer than the one indicated in futhark.pkg
, but only if a
dependency requires a more recent version.
Tests and Documentation for Dependencies¶
Package management has been designed to ensure that the normal
development tools work as expected with the contents of the lib/
directory. For example, to ensure that all dependencies do in fact
work well (or at least compile) together, run:
futhark test lib
Also, you can generate hyperlinked documentation for all dependencies with:
futhark doc lib -o docs
The file docs/index.html
can be opened in a web browser to browse
the documentation. Prebuilt documentation is also available via the
online package list.
Safety¶
In contrast to some other package managers, futhark pkg
does not
run any package-supplied code on installation, upgrade, or removal.
This means that all futhark pkg
operations are in principle
completely safe (barring exploitable bugs in futhark pkg
itself,
which is unlikely but not impossible). Further, Futhark code itself
is also completely pure, so executing it cannot have any unfortunate
effects, such as infecting all of your own packages with a worm. The worst it can do
is loop infinitely, consume arbitrarily large amounts of memory, or
produce wrong results.
The exception is packages that uses unsafe
. With some cleverness,
unsafe
can be combined with in-place updates to perform arbitrary
memory reads and writes, which can trivially lead to exploitable
behaviour. You should not use untrusted code that employs unsafe
(but the --safe
compiler option may help). However, this is not
any worse than calling external code in a conventional impure
language, which generally can perform any conceivable harmful action.
Server Protocol¶
A Futhark program can be compiled to a server executable. Such a server maintains a Futhark context and presents a line-oriented interface (over stdin/stdout) for loading and dumping values, as well as calling the entry points in the program. The main advantage over the plain executable interface is that program initialisation is done only once, and we can work with opaque values.
The server interface is not intended for human consumption, but is useful for writing tools on top of Futhark programs, without having to use the C API. Futhark’s built-in benchmarking and testing tools use server executables.
A server executable is started like any other executable, and supports most of the same command line options.
Basics¶
Each command is sent as a single line on standard input. A command
consists of space-separated words. A word is either a sequence of
non-space characters (foo
), or double quotes surrounding a
sequence of non-newline and non-quote characters ("foo bar"
).
The response is sent on standard output. The server will print %%%
OK
on a line by itself to indicate that a command has finished. It
will also print %%% OK
at startup once initialisation has
finished. If initialisation fails, the process will terminate. If a
command fails, the server will print %%% FAILURE
followed by the
error message, and then %%% OK
when it is ready for more input.
Some output may also precede %%% FAILURE
, e.g. logging statements
that occured before failure was detected. Fatal errors (that lead to
server shutdown) may be printed to stderr.
Variables¶
Some commands produce or read variables. A variable is a mapping from a name to a Futhark value. Values can be both transparent (arrays and primitives), but they can also be opaque values. These can be produced by entry points and passed to other entry points, but cannot be directly inspected.
Types¶
All variables have types, and all entry points accept inputs and
produce outputs of defined types. The notion of transparent and
opaque types are the same as in the C API: primitives and array of
primitives are directly supported, and everything else is treated as
opaque. See also Value Mapping. When printed, types follow
basic Futhark type syntax without sizes (e.g. [][]i32
).
Uniqueness is not part of the types, but is indicated with an asterisk
in the inputs
and outputs
commands (see below).
Consumption and aliasing¶
Since the server protocol closely models the C API, the same rules
apply to entry points that consume their arguments (see
Consumption and Aliasing). In particular, consumed variables must still
be freed with the free
command - but this is the only operation
that may be used on consumed variables.
Commands¶
The following commands are supported.
call
entry o1 … oN i1 … iM¶
Call the given entry point with input from the variables i1 to iM. The results are stored in o1 to oN, which must not already exist.
restore
file v1 t1 … vN tN¶
Load N values from file and store them in the variables v1 to vN of types t1 to tN, which must not already exist.
store
file v1 … vN¶
Store the N values in variables v1 to vN in file.
free
v1 … vN¶
Delete the given variables.
rename
oldname newname¶
Rename the variable oldname to newname, which must not already exist.
inputs
entry¶
Print the types of inputs accepted by the given entry point, one per line. If the given input is consumed, the type is prefixed by *.
outputs
entry¶
Print the types of outputs produced by the given entry point, one per line. If the given output is guaranteed to be unique (does not alias any inputs), the type is prefixed by *.
clear
¶
Clear all internal caches and counters maintained by the Futhark
context. Corresponds to futhark_context_clear_caches()
.
pause_profiling
¶
Corresponds to futhark_context_pause_profiling()
.
unpause_profiling
¶
Corresponds to futhark_context_unpause_profiling()
.
report
¶
Corresponds to futhark_context_report()
.
Environment Variables¶
FUTHARK_COMPILER_DEBUGGING
¶
Turns on debugging output for the server when set to 1.
C Porting Guide¶
This short document contains a collection of tips and tricks for porting simple numerical C code to Futhark. Futhark’s sequential fragment is powerful enough to permit a rather straightforward translation of sequential C code that does not rely on pointer mutation. Additionally, we provide hints on how to recognise C coding patterns that are symptoms of C’s weak type system, and how better to organise it in Futhark.
One intended audience of this document is a programmer who needs to translate a benchmark application written in C, or needs to use a simple numerical algorithm that is already available in the form of C source code.
Where This Guide Falls Short¶
Some C code makes use of unstructured returns and nonlocal exits
(return
inside loops, for example). These are not easy to express
in Futhark, and will require massaging the control flow a bit. C code
that uses goto
is likewise not easy to port.
Types¶
Futhark provides scalar types that match the ones commonly used in C:
u8
/u16
/u32
/u64
for the unsigned integers,
i8
/i16
/i32
/i64
for the signed, and f32
/f64
for
float
and double
respectively. In contrast to C, Futhark does
not automatically promote types in expressions - you will have to
manually make sure that both operands to e.g. a multiplication are of
the exact same type. This means that you will need to understand
exactly which types a given expression in original C program operates
on, which generally boils down to converting the type of the
(type-wise) smaller operand to that of the larger. Note that the
Futhark bool
type is not considered a number.
Operators¶
Most of the C operators can be found in Futhark with their usual
names. Note however that the Futhark /
and %
operators for
integers round towards negative infinity, whereas their counterparts
in C round towards zero. You can write //
and %%
if you want
the C behaviour. There is no difference if both operands are
non-zero, but //
and %%
may be slightly faster. For unsigned
numbers, they are exactly the same.
Variable Mutation¶
As a sequential language, most C programs quite obviously rely heavily
on mutating variables. However, in many programs, this is done in a
static manner without indirection through pointers (except for arrays;
see below), which is conceptually similar to just declaring a new
variable of the same name that shadows the old one. If this is the
case, a C assignment can generally be translated to just a
let
-binding. As an example, let us consider the following
function for computing the modular multiplicative inverse of a 16-bit
unsigned integer (part of the IDEA encryption algorithm):
static uint16_t ideaInv(uint16_t a) {
uint32_t b;
uint32_t q;
uint32_t r;
int32_t t;
int32_t u;
int32_t v;
b = 0x10001;
u = 0;
v = 1;
while(a > 0)
{
q = b / a;
r = b % a;
b = a;
a = r;
t = v;
v = u - q * v;
u = t;
}
if(u < 0)
u += 0x10001;
return u;
}
Each iteration of the loop mutates the variables a
, b
, v
,
and u
in ways that are visible to the following iteration.
Conversely, the “mutations” of q
, r
, and t
are not truly
mutations, and the variable declarations could be moved inside the
loop if we wished. Presumably, the C programmer left them outside for
aesthetic reasons. When translating such code, it is important to
determine exactly how much true mutation is going on, and how much
is just reuse of variable space. This can usually be done by checking
whether a variable is read before it is written in any given
iteration - if not, then it is not true mutation. The variables that
change value from one iteration of the loop to the next will need to
be maintained as merge parameters of the Futhark do
-loop.
The Futhark program resulting from a straightforward port looks as follows:
let main(a: u16): u32 =
let b = 0x10001u32
let u = 0i32
let v = 1i32 in
let (_,_,u,_) = loop ((a,b,u,v)) while a > 0u16 do
let q = b / u32.u16(a)
let r = b % u32.u16(a)
let b = u32.u16(a)
let a = u16.u32(r)
let t = v
let v = u - i32.u32 (q) * v
let u = t in
(a,b,u,v)
in u32.i32(if u < 0 then u + 0x10001 else u)
Note the heavy use of type conversion and type suffixes for constants.
This is necessary due to Futhark’s lack of implicit conversions. Note
also the conspicuous way in which the do
-loop is written - the
result of a loop iteration consists of variables whose names are
identical to those of the merge parameters.
This program can still be massaged to make it more idiomatic Futhark -
for example, the variable t
only serves to store the old value of
v
that is otherwise clobbered. This can be written more elegantly
by simply inlining the expressions in the result part of the loop
body.
Arrays¶
Dynamically sized multidimensional arrays are somewhat awkward in C, and are often simulated via single-dimensional arrays with explicitly calculated indices:
a[i * M + j] = foo;
This indicates a two-dimensional array a
whose inner dimension
is of size M
. We can usually look at where a
is allocated to
figure out what the size of the outer dimension must be:
a = malloc(N * M * sizeof(int));
We see clearly that a
is a two-dimensional integer array of size
N
times M
- or of type [N][M]i32
in Futhark. Thus, the update
expression above would be translated as:
let a[i,j] = foo in
...
C programs usually first allocate an array, then enter a loop to
provide its initial values. This is not possible in Futhark -
consider whether you can write it as a replicate
, an iota
, or
a map
. In the worst case, use replicate
to obtain an array of
the desired size, then use a do
-loop with in-place updates to
initialise it (but note that this will run stricly sequentially).
Futhark Compared to Other Functional Languages¶
This guide is intended for programmers who are familiar with other functional languages and want to start working with Futhark.
Futhark is a simple language with a complex compiler. Functional programming is fundamentally well suited to data-parallelism, so Futhark’s syntax and underlying concepts are taken directly from established functional languages; mostly from Haskell and the members of the ML family. While Futhark does add a few small conveniences (built-in array types) and one complicated and unusual feature (in-place updates via uniqueness types, see In-place Updates), a programmer familiar with a common functional language should be able to understand the meaning of a Futhark program, and quickly begin writing their own programs. To speed up this process, we describe here some of the various quirks and unexpected limitations imposed by Futhark. We also recommended reading some of the example programs along with this guide. The guide does not cover all Futhark features worth knowing, so do also skim Language Reference.
Basic Syntax¶
Futhark uses a keyword-based structure, with optional indentation solely for human readability. This aspect differs from Haskell and F#.
Names are lexically divided into identifiers and symbols:
Identifiers begin with a letter or underscore and contain letters, numbers, underscores, and apostrophes.
Symbols contain the characters found in the default operators (
+-*/%=!><|&^
)
All function and variable names must be identifiers, and all infix operators are symbols. An identifier can be used as an infix operator by enclosing it in backticks, as in Haskell.
Identifiers are case-sensitive, and there is no restriction on the case of the first letter (unlike Haskell and OCaml, but like Standard ML).
User-defined operators are possible, but the fixity of the operator
depends on its name. Specifically, the fixity of a user-defined
operator op is equal to the fixity of the built-in operator that is
the longest prefix of op. For example, <<=
would have the
same fixity as <<
, and =<<
the same as =
. This rule is the
same as the rule found in OCaml and F#.
Top-level functions and values are defined with let
, as in OCaml
and F#.
Evaluation¶
Futhark is a completely pure language, with no cheating through monads or anything of the sort.
Evaluation is eager or call-by-value, like most non-Haskell languages. However, there is no defined evaluation order. Furthermore, the Futhark compiler is permitted to turn non-terminating programs into terminating programs, for example by removing dead code that might cause an error. Moreover, there is no way to handle errors within a Futhark program (no exceptions or similar); although errors are gracefully reported to whatever invokes the Futhark program.
The evaluation semantics are entirely sequential, with parallelism
being solely an operational detail. Hence, race conditions are
impossible. The Futhark compiler does not automatically go
looking for parallelism. Only certain special constructs and built-in
library functions (in particular map
, reduce
, scan
, and
filter
) may be executed in parallel.
Currying and partial application work as usual (although functions
are not fully first class; see Types). Some Futhark language
constructs look like functions, but are not. This means they cannot
be partially applied. These include unsafe
and assert
.
Lambda terms are written as \x -> x + 2
, as in Haskell.
A Futhark program is read top-down, and all functions must be declared
in the order they are used, like Standard ML. Unlike just
about all functional languages, recursive functions are not
supported. Most of the time, you will use bulk array operations
instead, but there is also a dedicated loop
language construct,
which is essentially syntactic sugar for tail recursive functions.
Types¶
Futhark supports a range of integer types, floating point types, and
booleans (see Primitive Types and Values). A numeric literal can be suffixed
with its desired type, such as 1i8
for an eight-bit signed
integer. Un-adorned numerals have their type inferred based on use.
This only works for built-in numeric types.
Arrays are a built-in type. The type of an array containing elements
of type t
is written []t
(not [t]
as in Haskell), and we
may optionally annotate it with a size as [n]t
(see Shape
Declarations). Array values are written as [1,2,3]
. Array
indexing is written a[i]
with no space allowed between the array
name and the brace. Indexing of multi-dimensional arrays is written
a[i,j]
. Arrays are 0-indexed.
All types can be combined in tuples as usual, as well as in structurally typed records, as in Standard ML. Non-recursive sum types are supported, and are also structurally typed. Abstract types are possible via the module system; see Module System.
If a variable foo
is a record of type {a: i32, b: bool}
, then
we access field a
with dot notation: foo.a
. Tuples are a
special case of records, where all the fields have a 0-indexed numeric
label. For example, (i32, bool)
is the same as {0: i32, 1:
bool}
, and can be indexed as foo.1
.
Sum types are defined as constructors separated by a vertical bar
(|
). Constructor names always start with a #
. For example,
#red | #blue i32
is a sum type with the constructors #red
and
#blue
, where the latter has an i32
as payload. The terms
#red
and #blue 2
produce values of this type. Constructor
applications must always be fully saturated. Due to the structural
typing, type annotations are usually necessary to resolve ambiguities.
For example, the term #blue 2
can produce a value of any type
that has an appropriate constructor.
Function types are supported with the usual a -> b
, and functions can be
passed as arguments to other functions. However, there are some
restrictions:
A function cannot be put in an array (but a record or tuple is fine).
A function cannot be returned from a branch.
A function cannot be used as a
loop
parameter.
Function types interact with type parameters in a subtle way:
let id 't (x: t) = x
This declaration defines a function id
that has a type parameter
t
. Here, t
is an unlifted type parameter, which is
guaranteed never to be a function type, and so in the body of the
function we could choose to put parameter values of type t
in an
array. However, it means that this identity function cannot be called
on a functional value. Instead, we probably want a lifted type
parameter:
let id '^t (x: t) = x
Such lifted type parameters are not restricted from being instantiated with function types. On the other hand, in the function definition they are subject to the same restrictions as functional types.
Futhark supports Hindley-Milner type inference (with some restrictions), so we could also just write it as:
let id x = x
Type abbreviations are possible:
type foo = (i32, i32)
Type parameters are supported as well:
type pair 'a 'b = (a, b)
As with everything else, they are structurally typed, so the types
pair i32 bool
and (i32, bool)
are entirely interchangeable.
Most unusually, this is also the case for sum types. The following
two types are entirely interchangeable:
type maybe 'a = #just a | #nothing
type option 'a = #nothing | #just a
Only for abstract types, where the definition has been hidden via the module system, do type names have any significance.
Size parameters can also be passed:
type vector [n] t = [n]t
type i32matrix [n][m] = [n] (vector [m] i32)
Note that for an actual array type, the dimensions come before the element type, but with a type abbreviation, a size is just another parameter. This easily becomes hard to read if you are not careful.
Hacking on the Futhark Compiler¶
The Futhark compiler is a significant body of code with a not entirely
straightforward design. The main source of documentation is the
Haddock comments in the source code itself. You can generate
hyperlinked reference documentation by running stack haddock
or
cabal haddock
, depending on your preference of build system.
There is also possibly-outdated documentation on Hackage
If you feel that the documentation is incomplete, or something lacks an explanation, then feel free to report it as an issue on the GitHub page. Documentation bugs are bugs too.
The Futhark compiler is usually built using Stack. It’s a good idea to familiarise yourself with how it works. As a starting point, here are a few hints:
When testing, pass
--fast
tostack
to disable the GHC optimiser. This speeds up builds considerably (although it still takes a while). The resulting Futhark compiler will run slower, but it is not something you will notice for small test programs.When debugging, pass
--profile
tostack
. This will build the Futhark compiler with debugging information (not just profiling). In particular, hard crashes will print a stack trace. You can also get actual profiling information by passing+RTS -pprof-all -RTS
to the Futhark compiler. This asks the Haskell runtime to print profiling information to a file. For more information, see the Profiling chapter in the GHC User Guide.You may wish to set the environment variable
FUTHARK_COMPILER_DEBUGGING=1
. Currently this only has the effect of making the frontend print internal names, but it may control more things in the future.
Debugging Internal Type Errors¶
The Futhark compiler uses a typed core language, and the type checker
is run after every pass. If a given pass produces a program with
inconsistent typing, the compiler will report an error and abort.
While not every compiler bug will manifest itself as a core language
type error (unfortunately), many will. To write the erroneous core
program to a file in case of type error, pass -v filename
to the
compiler. This will also enable verbose output, so you can tell which
pass fails. The -v
option is also useful when the compiler itself
crashes, as you can at least tell where in the pipeline it got to.
Checking Generated Code¶
Hacking on the compiler will often involve inspecting the quality of the generated code. The recommended way to do this is to use futhark-c or futhark-opencl to compile a Futhark program to an executable. These backends insert various forms of instrumentation that can be enabled by passing run-time options to the generated executable.
As a first resort, use
-t
option to use the built-in runtime measurements. A nice trick is to pass-t /dev/stderr
, while redirecting standard output to/dev/null
. This will print the runtime on the screen, but not the execution result.Optionally use
-r
to ask for several runs, e.g.-r 10
. If combined with-t
, this will cause several runtimes to be printed (one per line). The futhark-bench tool itself uses-t
and-r
to perform its measurements.Pass
-D
to have the program print information on allocation and deallocation of memory.(futhark-opencl only) Use the
-D
option to enable synchronous execution.clFinish()
will be called after most OpenCL operations, and a running log of kernel invocations will be printed. At the end of execution, the program prints a table summarising all kernels and their total runtime and average runtime.
Using futhark dev
¶
For debugging specific compiler passes, the futhark dev
subcommand
allows you to tailor your own compilation pipeline using command line
options. It is also useful for seeing what the AST looks like after
specific passes.
When you are about to have a bad day¶
When using the cuda
backend, you can use the --dump-ptx
runtime option to dump PTX, a kind of high-level assembly for NVIDIA
GPUs, corresponding to the GPU kernels. This can be used to
investigate why the generated code isn’t running as fast as you expect
(not fun), or even whether NVIDIAs compiler is miscompiling something
(extremely not fun). With the OpenCL backend,
--dump-opencl-binary
does the same thing.
On AMD platforms, --dump-opencl-binary
tends to produce an actual
binary of some kind, and it is pretty tricky to obtain a debugger for
it (they are available and open source, but the documentation and
installation instructions are terrible). Instead, AMDs OpenCL kernel
compiler accepts a -save-temps=foo
build option, which will make
it write certain intermediate files, prefixed with foo
. In
particular, it will write an .s
file that contains what appears to
be HSA assembly (at least when using ROCm). If you find yourself
having to do do this, then you are definitely going to have a bad day,
and probably evening and night as well.
Binary Data Format¶
Futhark programs compiled to an executable support both textual and binary input. Both are read via standard input, and can be mixed, such that one argument to an entry point may be binary, and another may be textual. The binary input format takes up significantly less space on disk, and can be read much faster than the textual format. This chapter describes the binary input format and its current limitations. The input formats (whether textual or binary) are not used for Futhark programs compiled to libraries, which instead use whichever format is supported by their host language.
Currently reading binary input is only supported for compiled programs.
It is not supported for futhark run
.
You can generate random data in the binary format with futhark
dataset
(futhark-dataset). This tool can also be used to
convert between binary and textual data.
Futhark-generated executables can be asked to generate binary output
with the -b
option.
Specification¶
Elements that are bigger than one byte are always stored using little endian – we mostly run our code on x86 hardware so this seemed like a reasonable choice.
When reading input for an argument to the entry function, we need to be able to
differentiate between text and binary input. If the first non-whitespace
character of the input is a b
we will parse this argument as binary,
otherwise we will parse it in text format. Allowing preceding whitespace
characters makes it easy to use binary input for some arguments, and text input
for others.
The general format has this header:
b <version> <num_dims> <type> <values...>
Where version
is a byte containing the version of the binary format used for
encoding (currently 2), num_dims
is the number of dimensions in the array as
a single byte (0 for scalar), and type
is a 4 character string describing
the type of the values(s) – see below for more details.
Encoding a scalar value is done by treating it as a 0-dimensional array:
b <version> 0 <type> <value>
To encode an array, we encode the number of dimensions n
as a
single byte, each dimension dim_i
as an unsigned 64-bit little
endian integer, and finally all the values in row-major order in their
binary little endian representation:
b <version> <n> <type> <dim_1> <dim_2> ... <dim_n> <values...>
Type Values¶
A type is identified by a 4 character ASCII string (four bytes). Valid types are:
" i8"
" i16"
" i32"
" i64"
" u8"
" u16"
" u32"
" u64"
" f16"
" f32"
" f64"
"bool"
Note that unsigned and signed integers have the same byte-level representation.
Values of type bool
are encoded with a byte each. The results are
undefined if this byte is not either 0 or 1.
futhark¶
SYNOPSIS¶
futhark <subcommand> options…
DESCRIPTION¶
Futhark is a data-parallel functional array language. Through various
subcommands, the futhark
tool provides facilities for compiling,
developing, or analysing Futhark programs. Most subcommands are
documented in their own manpage. For example, futhark opencl
is
documented as futhark-opencl. The remaining subcommands are
documented in this page.
COMMANDS¶
futhark check [-w] PROGRAM¶
Check whether a Futhark program type checks. With -w
, no warnings
are printed.
futhark datacmp FILE_A FILE_B¶
Check whether the two files contain the same Futhark values. The files must be formatted using the general Futhark data format that is used by all other executable and tools (such as futhark-dataset). All discrepancies will be reported. This is in contrast to futhark-test, which only reports the first one.
futhark dataget PROGRAM DATASET¶
Find the test dataset whose description contains DATASET
(e.g. #1
) and print it in binary representation to standard
output. This does not work for script
datasets.
futhark dev options… PROGRAM¶
A Futhark compiler development command, intentionally undocumented and intended for use in developing the Futhark compiler, not for programmers writing in Futhark.
futhark hash PROGRAM¶
Print a hexadecimal hash of the program AST, including all non-builtin imports. Supposed to be invariant to whitespace changes.
futhark imports PROGRAM¶
Print all non-builtin imported Futhark files to stdout, one per line.
futhark query PROGRAM LINE COL¶
Print information about the variable at the given position in the program.
SEE ALSO¶
futhark-opencl, futhark-c, futhark-python, futhark-pyopencl, futhark-wasm, futhark-wasm-multicore, futhark-dataset, futhark-doc, futhark-test, futhark-bench, futhark-run, futhark-repl, futhark-literate
futhark-autotune¶
SYNOPSIS¶
futhark autotune [options…] <program.fut>
DESCRIPTION¶
futhark-autotune
attemps to find optimal values for threshold
parameters given representative datasets. This is done by repeatedly
running running the program through futhark-bench with
different values for the threshold parameters. When
futhark-autotune
finishes tuning a program foo.fut
, the
results are written to foo.fut.tuning
, which will then
automatically be picked up by subsequent uses of
futhark-bench and futhark-test.
OPTIONS¶
- --backend=name
The backend used when compiling Futhark programs (without leading
futhark
, e.g. justopencl
).- --futhark=program
The program used to perform operations (eg. compilation). Defaults to the binary running
futhark autotune
itself.- --pass-option=opt
Pass an option to programs that are being run. For example, we might want to run OpenCL programs on a specific device:
futhark autotune prog.fut --backend=opencl --pass-option=-dHawaii
- --runs=count
The number of runs per data set.
- -v, --verbose
Print verbose information about what the tuner is doing. Pass multiple times to increase the amount of information printed.
- --tuning=EXTENSION
Change the extension used for tuning files (
.tuning
by default).- --timeout=seconds
Initial tuning timeout for each dataset in seconds. After running the intitial tuning run on each dataset, the timeout is based on the run time of that initial tuning. Defaults to 60.
A negative timeout means to wait indefinitely.
SEE ALSO¶
futhark-bench¶
SYNOPSIS¶
futhark bench [options…] programs…
DESCRIPTION¶
This tool is the recommended way to benchmark Futhark programs.
Programs are compiled using the specified backend (futhark c
by
default), then run a number of times for each test case, and the
average runtime printed on standard output. Refer to
futhark-test for information on how to format test data. A
program will be ignored if it contains no data sets - it will not even
be compiled.
If compilation of a program fails, then futhark bench
will abort
immediately. If execution of a test set fails, an error message will
be printed and benchmarking will continue (and --json
will write
the file), but a non-zero exit code will be returned at the end.
OPTIONS¶
- --backend=name
The backend used when compiling Futhark programs (without leading
futhark
, e.g. justopencl
).- --concurrency=NUM
The number of benchmark programs to prepare concurrently. Defaults to the number of cores available. Prepare means to compile the benchmark, as well as generate any needed datasets. In some cases, this generation can take too much memory, in which case lowering
--concurrency
may help.- --entry-point=name
Only run entry points with this name.
- --exclude-case=TAG
Do not run test cases that contain the given tag. Cases marked with “nobench” or “disable” are ignored by default.
- --futhark=program
The program used to perform operations (eg. compilation). Defaults to the binary running
futhark bench
itself.- --ignore-files=REGEX
Ignore files whose path match the given regular expression.
- --json=file
Write raw results in JSON format to the specified file.
- --no-tuning
Do not look for tuning files.
- --pass-option=opt
Pass an option to benchmark programs that are being run. For example, we might want to run OpenCL programs on a specific device:
futhark bench prog.fut --backend=opencl --pass-option=-dHawaii
- --pass-compiler-option=opt
Pass an extra option to the compiler when compiling the programs.
- --runner=program
If set to a non-empty string, compiled programs are not run directly, but instead the indicated program is run with its first argument being the path to the compiled Futhark program. This is useful for compilation targets that cannot be executed directly (as with futhark-pyopencl on some platforms), or when you wish to run the program on a remote machine.
- --runs=count
The number of runs per data set.
- --skip-compilation
Do not run the compiler, and instead assume that each benchmark program has already been compiled. Use with caution.
- --timeout=seconds
If the runtime for a dataset exceeds this integral number of seconds, it is aborted. Note that the time is allotted not per run, but for all runs for a dataset. A twenty second limit for ten runs thus means each run has only two seconds (minus initialisation overhead).
A negative timeout means to wait indefinitely.
- -v, --verbose
Print verbose information about what the benchmark is doing. Pass multiple times to increase the amount of information printed.
- --tuning=EXTENSION
For each program being run, look for a tuning file with this extension, which is suffixed to the name of the program. For example, given
--tuning=tuning
(the default), the programfoo.fut
will be passed the tuning filefoo.fut.tuning
if it exists.
WHAT FUTHARK BENCH MEASURES¶
futhark bench
measures the time it takes to run the given Futhark
program by passing the -t FILE
option to the generated program. See
the man page for the specific compiler to see exactly what is measured.
EXAMPLES¶
The following program benchmarks how quickly we can sum arrays of different sizes:
-- How quickly can we reduce arrays?
--
-- ==
-- nobench input { 0i64 }
-- output { 0i64 }
-- input { 100i64 }
-- output { 4950i64 }
-- compiled input { 10000i64 }
-- output { 49995000i64 }
-- compiled input { 1000000i64 }
-- output { 499999500000i64 }
let main(n: i64): i64 =
reduce (+) 0 (iota n)
SEE ALSO¶
futhark-c¶
SYNOPSIS¶
futhark c [options…] <program.fut>
DESCRIPTION¶
futhark c
translates a Futhark program to sequential C code, and
either compiles that C code with a C compiler (see below) to an
executable binary program, or produces a .h
and .c
file that
can be linked with other code.. The standard Futhark optimisation
pipeline is used, and
The resulting program will read the arguments to the entry point
(main
by default) from standard input and print its return value
on standard output. The arguments are read and printed in Futhark
syntax.
OPTIONS¶
- -h
Print help text to standard output and exit.
- --entry-point NAME
Treat this top-level function as an entry point.
- --library
Generate a library instead of an executable. Appends
.c
/.h
to the name indicated by the-o
option to determine output file names.- -o outfile
Where to write the result. If the source program is named
foo.fut
, this defaults tofoo
.- --safe
Ignore
unsafe
in program and perform safety checks unconditionally.- --server
Generate a server-mode executable that reads commands from stdin.
- -v verbose
Enable debugging output. If compilation fails due to a compiler error, the result of the last successful compiler step will be printed to standard error.
- -V
Print version information on standard output and exit.
- -W
Do not print any warnings.
- --Werror
Treat warnings as errors.
ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES¶
CC
The C compiler used to compile the program. Defaults to
cc
if unset.
CFLAGS
Space-separated list of options passed to the C compiler. Defaults to
-O3 -std=c99
if unset.
EXECUTABLE OPTIONS¶
The following options are accepted by executables generated by futhark c
.
- -h, --help
Print help text to standard output and exit.
- -b, --binary-output
Print the program result in the binary output format. The default is human-readable text, which is very slow.
- -D, --debugging
Perform possibly expensive internal correctness checks and verbose logging. Implies
-L
.- -e, --entry-point=FUN
The entry point to run. Defaults to
main
.- -L, --log
Print various low-overhead logging information to stderr while running.
- -r, --runs=NUM
Perform NUM runs of the program. With
-t
, the runtime for each individual run will be printed. Additionally, a single leading warmup run will be performed (not counted). Only the final run will have its result written to stdout.- -t, --write-runtime-to=FILE
Print the time taken to execute the program to the indicated file, an integral number of microseconds.
SEE ALSO¶
futhark-multicore¶
SYNOPSIS¶
futhark multicore [options…] <program.fut>
DESCRIPTION¶
futhark multicore
translates a Futhark program to multithreaded C
code, and either compiles that C code with a C compiler to an
executable binary program, or produces a .h
and .c
file that
can be linked with other code. The standard Futhark optimisation
pipeline is used.
The resulting program will read the arguments to the entry point
(main
by default) from standard input and print its return value
on standard output. The arguments are read and printed in Futhark
syntax.
OPTIONS¶
- -h
Print help text to standard output and exit.
- --entry-point NAME
Treat this top-level function as an entry point.
- --library
Generate a library instead of an executable. Appends
.c
/.h
to the name indicated by the-o
option to determine output file names.- -o outfile
Where to write the result. If the source program is named
foo.fut
, this defaults tofoo
.- --safe
Ignore
unsafe
in program and perform safety checks unconditionally.- --server
Generate a server-mode executable that reads commands from stdin.
- -v verbose
Enable debugging output. If compilation fails due to a compiler error, the result of the last successful compiler step will be printed to standard error.
- -V
Print version information on standard output and exit.
- -W
Do not print any warnings.
- --Werror
Treat warnings as errors.
ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES¶
CC
The C compiler used to compile the program. Defaults to
cc
if unset.
CFLAGS
Space-separated list of options passed to the C compiler. Defaults to
-O3 -std=c99 -pthread
if unset.
EXECUTABLE OPTIONS¶
The following options are accepted by executables generated by
futhark multicore
.
- -h, --help
Print help text to standard output and exit.
- -b, --binary-output
Print the program result in the binary output format. The default is human-readable text, which is very slow.
- -D, --debugging
Perform possibly expensive internal correctness checks and verbose logging. Implies
-L
.- -e, --entry-point=FUN
The entry point to run. Defaults to
main
.- -L, --log
Print various low-overhead logging information to stderr while running.
- -r, --runs=NUM
Perform NUM runs of the program. With
-t
, the runtime for each individual run will be printed. Additionally, a single leading warmup run will be performed (not counted). Only the final run will have its result written to stdout.- -t, --write-runtime-to=FILE
Print the time taken to execute the program to the indicated file, an integral number of microseconds.
BUGS¶
Currently works only on Unix-like systems.
SEE ALSO¶
futhark-cuda¶
SYNOPSIS¶
futhark cuda [options…] <program.fut>
DESCRIPTION¶
futhark cuda
translates a Futhark program to C code invoking CUDA
kernels, and either compiles that C code with a C compiler to an
executable binary program, or produces a .h
and .c
file that
can be linked with other code. The standard Futhark optimisation
pipeline is used.
futhark cuda
uses -lcuda -lcudart -lnvrtc
to link. If using
--library
, you will need to do the same when linking the final
binary.
The generated CUDA code can be called from multiple CPU threads, as it
brackets every API operation with cuCtxPushCurrent()
and
cuCtxPopCurrent()
.
OPTIONS¶
- -h
Print help text to standard output and exit.
- --entry-point NAME
Treat this top-level function as an entry point.
- --library
Generate a library instead of an executable. Appends
.c
/.h
to the name indicated by the-o
option to determine output file names.- -o outfile
Where to write the result. If the source program is named
foo.fut
, this defaults tofoo
.- --safe
Ignore
unsafe
in program and perform safety checks unconditionally.- --server
Generate a server-mode executable that reads commands from stdin.
- -v verbose
Enable debugging output. If compilation fails due to a compiler error, the result of the last successful compiler step will be printed to standard error.
- -V
Print version information on standard output and exit.
- -W
Do not print any warnings.
- --Werror
Treat warnings as errors.
ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES¶
CC
The C compiler used to compile the program. Defaults to
cc
if unset.
CFLAGS
Space-separated list of options passed to the C compiler. Defaults to
-O -std=c99
if unset.
EXECUTABLE OPTIONS¶
Generated executables accept the same options as those generated by
futhark-c. The -t
option behaves as with
futhark-opencl. For commonality, the options use OpenCL
nomenclature (“group” instead of “thread block”).
The following additional options are accepted.
- -h, --help
Print help text to standard output and exit.
- --default-group-size=INT
The default size of thread blocks that are launched. Capped to the hardware limit if necessary.
- --default-num-groups=INT
The default number of thread blocks that are launched.
- --default-threshold=INT
The default parallelism threshold used for comparisons when selecting between code versions generated by incremental flattening. Intuitively, the amount of parallelism needed to saturate the GPU.
- --default-tile-size=INT
The default tile size used when performing two-dimensional tiling (the workgroup size will be the square of the tile size).
- --dump-cuda=FILE
Don’t run the program, but instead dump the embedded CUDA kernels to the indicated file. Useful if you want to see what is actually being executed.
- --dump-ptx=FILE
Don’t run the program, but instead dump the PTX-compiled version of the embedded kernels to the indicated file.
- --load-cuda=FILE
Instead of using the embedded CUDA kernels, load them from the indicated file.
- --load-ptx=FILE
Load PTX code from the indicated file.
- --nvrtc-option=OPT
Add an additional build option to the string passed to NVRTC. Refer to the CUDA documentation for which options are supported. Be careful - some options can easily result in invalid results.
- --print-sizes
Print all sizes that can be set with
-size
or--tuning
.- --size=ASSIGNMENT
Set a configurable run-time parameter to the given value.
ASSIGNMENT
must be of the formNAME=INT
Use--print-sizes
to see which names are available.- --tuning=FILE
Read size=value assignments from the given file.
ENVIRONMENT¶
If run without --library
, futhark cuda
will invoke a C
compiler to compile the generated C program into a binary. This only
works if the C compiler can find the necessary CUDA libraries. On
most systems, CUDA is installed in /usr/local/cuda
, which is
usually not part of the default compiler search path. You may need to
set the following environment variables before running futhark
cuda
:
LIBRARY_PATH=/usr/local/cuda/lib64
LD_LIBRARY_PATH=/usr/local/cuda/lib64/
CPATH=/usr/local/cuda/include
At runtime the generated program must be able to find the CUDA
installation directory, which is normally located at
/usr/local/cuda
. If you have CUDA installed elsewhere, set any of
the CUDA_HOME
, CUDA_ROOT
, or CUDA_PATH
environment
variables to the proper directory.
SEE ALSO¶
futhark-dataset¶
SYNOPSIS¶
futhark dataset [options…]
DESCRIPTION¶
Generate random values in Futhark syntax, which can be useful when generating input datasets for program testing. All Futhark primitive types are supported. Tuples are not supported. Arrays of specific (non-random) sizes can be generated. You can specify maximum and minimum bounds for values, as well as the random seed used when generating the data. The generated values are written to standard output.
If no -g
/--generate
options are passed, values are read from
standard input, and printed to standard output in the indicated
format. The input format (whether textual or binary) is automatically
detected.
Returns a nonzero exit code if it fails to write the full output.
OPTIONS¶
- -b, --binary
Output data in binary Futhark format (must precede –generate).
- -g type, --generate type
Generate a value of the indicated type, e.g.
-g i32
or-g [10]f32
.The type may also be a value, in which case that literal value is generated.
- -s int
Set the seed used for the RNG. Zero by default.
- --T-bounds=<min:max>
Set inclusive lower and upper bounds on generated values of type
T
.T
is any primitive type, e.g.i32
orf32
. The bounds apply to any following uses of the-g
option.
You can alter the output format using the following flags. To use them, add them before data generation (–generate):
- --text
Output data in text format (must precede –generate). Default.
- -t, --type
Output the types of values (textually) instead of the values themselves. Mostly useful when reading values on stdin.
EXAMPLES¶
Generate a 4 by 2 integer matrix:
futhark dataset -g [4][2]i32
Generate an array of floating-point numbers and an array of indices into that array:
futhark dataset -g [10]f32 --i64-bounds=0:9 -g [100]i64
To generate binary data, the --binary
must come before the --generate
:
futhark dataset --binary --generate=[42]i32
Create a binary data file from a data file:
futhark dataset --binary < any_data > binary_data
Determine the types of values contained in a data file:
futhark dataset -t < any_data
SEE ALSO¶
futhark-doc¶
SYNOPSIS¶
futhark doc [options…] dir
DESCRIPTION¶
futhark doc
generates HTML-formatted documentation from Futhark
code. One HTML file will be created for each .fut
file in the
given directory, as well as any file reachable through import
expressions. The given Futhark code will be considered as one
cohesive whole, and must be type-correct.
Futhark definitions may be documented by prefixing them with a block
of line comments starting with -- |
(see example below).
Simple Markdown syntax is supported within these comments. A link to
another identifier is possible with the notation
`name`@namespace
, where namespace
must be either
term
, type
, or mtype
(module names are in the term
namespace). A file may contain a leading documentation comment, which
will be considered the file abstract.
futhark doc
will ignore any file whose documentation comment
consists solely of the word “ignore”. This is useful for files that
contain tests, or are otherwise not relevant to the reader of the
documentation.
OPTIONS¶
- -h
Print help text to standard output and exit.
- -o outdir
The name of the directory that will contain the generated documentation. This option is mandatory.
- -v, --verbose
Print status messages to stderr while running.
- -V
Print version information on standard output and exit.
EXAMPLES¶
-- | Gratuitous re-implementation of `map`@term.
--
-- Does exactly the same.
let mymap = ...
SEE ALSO¶
futhark-opencl¶
SYNOPSIS¶
futhark opencl [options…] <program.fut>
DESCRIPTION¶
futhark opencl
translates a Futhark program to C code invoking
OpenCL kernels, and either compiles that C code with a C compiler to
an executable binary program, or produces a .h
and .c
file
that can be linked with other code. The standard Futhark optimisation
pipeline is used.
futhark opencl
uses -lOpenCL
to link (-framework OpenCL
on
macOS). If using --library
, you will need to do the same when
linking the final binary.
OPTIONS¶
- -h
Print help text to standard output and exit.
- --entry-point NAME
Treat this top-level function as an entry point.
- --library
Generate a library instead of an executable. Appends
.c
/.h
to the name indicated by the-o
option to determine output file names.- -o outfile
Where to write the result. If the source program is named
foo.fut
, this defaults tofoo
.- --safe
Ignore
unsafe
in program and perform safety checks unconditionally.- --server
Generate a server-mode executable that reads commands from stdin.
- -v verbose
Enable debugging output. If compilation fails due to a compiler error, the result of the last successful compiler step will be printed to standard error.
- -V
Print version information on standard output and exit.
- -W
Do not print any warnings.
- --Werror
Treat warnings as errors.
ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES¶
CC
The C compiler used to compile the program. Defaults to
cc
if unset.
CFLAGS
Space-separated list of options passed to the C compiler. Defaults to
-O -std=c99
if unset.
EXECUTABLE OPTIONS¶
Generated executables accept the same options as those generated by
futhark-c. For the -t
option, The time taken to perform
device setup or teardown, including writing the input or reading the
result, is not included in the measurement. In particular, this means
that timing starts after all kernels have been compiled and data has
been copied to the device buffers but before setting any kernel
arguments. Timing stops after the kernels are done running, but before
data has been read from the buffers or the buffers have been released.
The following additional options are accepted.
- -h, --help
Print help text to standard output and exit.
- --build-option=OPT
Add an additional build option to the string passed to
clBuildProgram()
. Refer to the OpenCL documentation for which options are supported. Be careful - some options can easily result in invalid results.- --default-group-size=INT
The default size of OpenCL workgroups that are launched. Capped to the hardware limit if necessary.
- --default-num-groups=INT
The default number of OpenCL workgroups that are launched.
- --default-threshold=INT
The default parallelism threshold used for comparisons when selecting between code versions generated by incremental flattening. Intuitively, the amount of parallelism needed to saturate the GPU.
- --default-tile-size=INT
The default tile size used when performing two-dimensional tiling (the workgroup size will be the square of the tile size).
- -d, --device=NAME
Use the first OpenCL device whose name contains the given string. The special string
#k
, wherek
is an integer, can be used to pick the k-th device, numbered from zero. If used in conjunction with-p
, only the devices from matching platforms are considered.- --dump-opencl=FILE
Don’t run the program, but instead dump the embedded OpenCL program to the indicated file. Useful if you want to see what is actually being executed.
- --dump-opencl-binary=FILE
Don’t run the program, but instead dump the compiled version of the embedded OpenCL program to the indicated file. On NVIDIA platforms, this will be PTX code.
- --load-opencl=FILE
Instead of using the embedded OpenCL program, load it from the indicated file.
- --load-opencl-binary=FILE
Load an OpenCL binary from the indicated file.
- -p, --platform=NAME
Use the first OpenCL platform whose name contains the given string. The special string
#k
, wherek
is an integer, can be used to pick the k-th platform, numbered from zero.- --print-sizes
Print all sizes that can be set with
-size
or--tuning
.- -P, --profile
Gather profiling data while executing and print out a summary at the end. When
-r
is used, only the last run will be profiled. Implied by-D
.- --size=ASSIGNMENT
Set a configurable run-time parameter to the given value.
ASSIGNMENT
must be of the formNAME=INT
Use--print-sizes
to see which names are available.- --tuning=FILE
Read size=value assignments from the given file.
- --list-devices
List all OpenCL devices and platforms available on the system.
SEE ALSO¶
futhark-pkg¶
SYNOPSIS¶
futhark pkg add PKGPATH [X.Y.Z]
futhark pkg check
futhark pkg init PKGPATH
futhark pkg fmt
futhark pkg remove PKGPATH
futhark pkg sync
futhark pkg upgrade
futhark pkg versions
DESCRIPTION¶
This tool is used to modify the package manifest (futhark.pkg
) and
download the required packages it describes. futhark pkg
is not a
build system; you will still need to compile your Futhark code with
the usual compilers. The only purpose of futhark pkg
is to
download code (and perform other package management utility tasks).
This manpage is not a general introduction to package management in
Futhark; see the User’s Guide for that.
The futhark pkg
subcommands will modify only two locations in the
file system (relative to the current working directory): the
futhark.pkg
file, and the contents of lib/
. When modifying
lib/
, futhark pkg
constructs the new version in lib~new/
and backs up the old version in lib~old
. If futhark pkg
should fail for any reason, you can recover the old state by moving
lib~old
back. These temporary directories are erased if
futhark pkg
finishes without errors.
The futhark pkg sync
and futhark pkg init
subcommands are
the only ones that actually modifies lib/
; the others modify only
futhark.pkg
and require you to manually run futhark pkg sync
afterwards.
Most commands take a -v
/--verbose
option that makes
futhark pkg
write running diagnostics to stderr.
Network requests (exclusively HTTP GETs) are done via curl
, which
must be available on the PATH
.
COMMANDS¶
futhark pkg add PKGPATH [X.Y.Z]¶
Add the specified package of the given minimum version as a
requirement to futhark.pkg
. If no version is provided, the newest
one is used. If the package is already required in futhark.pkg
,
the new version requirement will replace the old one.
Note that adding a package does not automatically download it. Run
futhark pkg sync
to do that.
futhark pkg check¶
Verify that the futhark.pkg
is valid, that all required packages
are available in the indicated versions. This command does not check
that these versions contain well-formed code. If a package path is
defined in futhark.pkg
, also checks that .fut
files are
located at the expected location in the file system.
futhark pkg init PKGPATH¶
Create a new futhark.pkg
defining a package with the given package
path, and initially no requirements.
futhark pkg fmt¶
Reformat the futhark.pkg
file, while retaining any comments.
futhark pkg remove PKGPATH¶
Remove a package from futhark.pkg
. Does not remove it from the
lib/
directory.
futhark pkg sync¶
Populate the lib/
directory with the packages listed in
futhark.pkg
. Warning: this will delete everything in lib/
that does not relate to a file listed in futhark.pkg
, as well as
any local modifications.
futhark pkg upgrade¶
Upgrade all package requirements in futhark.pkg
to the newest
available versions.
futhark pkg versions PKGPATH¶
Print all available versions for the given package path.
COMMIT VERSIONS¶
It is possible to use futhark pkg
with packages that have not yet
made proper releases. This is done via pseudoversions of the form
0.0.0-yyyymmddhhmmss+commitid
. The timestamp is not verified
against the actual commit. The timestamp ensures that newer commits
take precedence if multiple packages depend on a commit version for
the same package. If futhark pkg add
is given a package with no
releases, the most recent commit will be used. In this case, the
timestamp is merely set to the current time.
Commit versions are awkward and fragile, and should not be relied upon. Issue proper releases (even experimental 0.x version) as soon as feasible. Released versions also always take precedence over commit versions, since any version number will be greater than 0.0.0.
EXAMPLES¶
Create a new package that will be hosted at
https://github.com/sturluson/edda
:
futhark pkg init github.com/sturluson/edda
Add a package dependency:
futhark pkg add github.com/sturluson/hattatal
Download the dependencies:
futhark pkg sync
And then you’re ready to start hacking! (Except that these packages do not actually exist.)
BUGS¶
Since the lib/
directory is populated with transitive dependencies
as well, it is possible for a package to depend unwittingly on one of
the dependencies of its dependencies, without the futhark.pkg
file
reflecting this.
There is no caching of zipballs and version lists between invocations, so the network traffic can be rather heavy.
Only GitHub and GitLab are supported as code hosting sites.
SEE ALSO¶
futhark-pyopencl¶
SYNOPSIS¶
futhark pyopencl [options…] infile
DESCRIPTION¶
futhark pyopencl
translates a Futhark program to Python code
invoking OpenCL kernels, which depends on Numpy and PyOpenCL. By
default, the program uses the first device of the first OpenCL
platform - this can be changed by passing -p
and -d
options to
the generated program (not to futhark pyopencl
itself).
The resulting program will otherwise behave exactly as one compiled
with futhark py
. While the sequential host-level code is pure
Python and just as slow as in futhark py
, parallel sections will
have been compiled to OpenCL, and runs just as fast as when using
futhark opencl
. The kernel launch overhead is significantly
higher, however, so a good rule of thumb when using
futhark pyopencl
is to aim for having fewer but longer-lasting
parallel sections.
The generated code requires at least PyOpenCL version 2015.2.
OPTIONS¶
- -h
Print help text to standard output and exit.
- --entry-point NAME
Treat this top-level function as an entry point.
- --library
Instead of compiling to an executable program, generate a Python module that can be imported by other Python code. The module will contain a class of the same name as the Futhark source file with
.fut
removed. Objects of the class define one method per entry point in the Futhark program, with matching parameters and return value.- -o outfile
Where to write the resulting binary. By default, if the source program is named ‘foo.fut’, the binary will be named ‘foo’.
- --server
Generate a server-mode executable that reads commands from stdin.
- --safe
Ignore
unsafe
in program and perform safety checks unconditionally.- -v verbose
Enable debugging output. If compilation fails due to a compiler error, the result of the last successful compiler step will be printed to standard error.
- -V
Print version information on standard output and exit.
- -W
Do not print any warnings.
- --Werror
Treat warnings as errors.
SEE ALSO¶
futhark-python¶
SYNOPSIS¶
futhark python [options…] infile
DESCRIPTION¶
futhark python
translates a Futhark program to sequential Python
code, which depends on Numpy.
The resulting program will read the arguments to the main
function
from standard input and print its return value on standard output.
The arguments are read and printed in Futhark syntax.
The generated code is very slow, likely too slow to be useful. It is more interesting to use this command’s big brother, futhark-pyopencl.
OPTIONS¶
- -h
Print help text to standard output and exit.
- --entry-point NAME
Treat this top-level function as an entry point.
- --library
Instead of compiling to an executable program, generate a Python module that can be imported by other Python code. The module will contain a class of the same name as the Futhark source file with
.fut
removed. Objects of the class define one method per entry point in the Futhark program, with matching parameters and return value.- -o outfile
Where to write the resulting binary. By default, if the source program is named ‘foo.fut’, the binary will be named ‘foo’.
- --safe
Ignore
unsafe
in program and perform safety checks unconditionally.- --server
Generate a server-mode executable that reads commands from stdin.
- -v verbose
Enable debugging output. If compilation fails due to a compiler error, the result of the last successful compiler step will be printed to standard error.
- -V
Print version information on standard output and exit.
- -W
Do not print any warnings.
- --Werror
Treat warnings as errors.
SEE ALSO¶
futhark-wasm¶
SYNOPSIS¶
futhark wasm [options…] <program.fut>
DESCRIPTION¶
futhark wasm
translates a Futhark program to sequential
WebAssembly code by first generating C as futhark c
, and then
using Emscripten (emcc
). This produces a .js
file that allows
the compiled code to be invoked from JavaScript. Executables
implement the Futhark server protocol and can be run with Node.js.
OPTIONS¶
- -h
Print help text to standard output and exit.
- --entry-point NAME
Treat this top-level function as an entry point.
- --library
Generate a library instead of an executable. Appends
.js
to the name indicated by the-o
option to determine output file names.- -o outfile
Where to write the result. If the source program is named
foo.fut
, this defaults tofoo
.- --safe
Ignore
unsafe
in program and perform safety checks unconditionally.- --server
Generate a server-mode executable that reads commands from stdin. This is the default.
- -v verbose
Enable debugging output. If compilation fails due to a compiler error, the result of the last successful compiler step will be printed to standard error.
- -V
Print version information on standard output and exit.
- -W
Do not print any warnings.
- --Werror
Treat warnings as errors.
ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES¶
CFLAGS
Space-separated list of options passed to
emcc
. Defaults to-O3 -std=c99
if unset.
EMCFLAGS
Space-separated list of options passed to
emcc
.
EXECUTABLE OPTIONS¶
The following options are accepted by executables generated by
futhark wasm
.
- -h, --help
Print help text to standard output and exit.
- -D, --debugging
Perform possibly expensive internal correctness checks and verbose logging. Implies
-L
.- -L, --log
Print various low-overhead logging information to stderr while running.
SEE ALSO¶
futhark-wasm-multicore¶
SYNOPSIS¶
futhark wasm-multicore [options…] <program.fut>
DESCRIPTION¶
futhark wasm-multicore
translates a Futhark program to
multi-threaded WebAssembly code by first generating C as futhark
c
, and then using Emscripten (emcc
). This produces a .js
file that allows the compiled code to be invoked from JavaScript.
Executables implement the Futhark server protocol and can be run with
Node.js.
OPTIONS¶
- -h
Print help text to standard output and exit.
- --entry-point NAME
Treat this top-level function as an entry point.
- --library
Generate a library instead of an executable. Appends
.js
to the name indicated by the-o
option to determine output file names.- -o outfile
Where to write the result. If the source program is named
foo.fut
, this defaults tofoo
.- --safe
Ignore
unsafe
in program and perform safety checks unconditionally.- --server
Generate a server-mode executable that reads commands from stdin.
- -v verbose
Enable debugging output. If compilation fails due to a compiler error, the result of the last successful compiler step will be printed to standard error.
- -V
Print version information on standard output and exit.
- -W
Do not print any warnings.
- --Werror
Treat warnings as errors.
ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES¶
CFLAGS
Space-separated list of options passed to
emcc
. Defaults to-O3 -std=c99
if unset.
EMCFLAGS
Space-separated list of options passed to
emcc
.
EXECUTABLE OPTIONS¶
The following options are accepted by executables generated by
futhark wasm-multicore
.
- -h, --help
Print help text to standard output and exit.
- -D, --debugging
Perform possibly expensive internal correctness checks and verbose logging. Implies
-L
.- -L, --log
Print various low-overhead logging information to stderr while running.
SEE ALSO¶
futhark-repl¶
SYNOPSIS¶
futhark repl [program.fut]
DESCRIPTION¶
Start an interactive Futhark session. This will let you interactively enter expressions and declarations which are then immediately interpreted. If the entered line can be either a declaration or an expression, it is assumed to be a declaration.
Futhark source files can be loaded using the :load
command. This
will erase any interactively entered definitions. Use the :help
command to see a list of commands. All commands are prefixed with a
colon.
futhark repl
uses the Futhark interpreter, which grants access to
the #[trace]
and #[break]
attributes. See
futhark-run for a description.
OPTIONS¶
- -h
Print help text to standard output and exit.
- -V
Print version information on standard output and exit.
SEE ALSO¶
futhark-run¶
SYNOPSIS¶
futhark run <program.fut>
DESCRIPTION¶
Execute the given program by evaluating the main
function with
arguments read from standard input, and write the results on standard
output.
futhark run
is very slow, and in practice only useful for testing,
teaching, and experimenting with the language. The #[trace]
and
#[break]
attributes are fully supported in the interpreter.
Tracing prints values to stdout in contrast to compiled code, which
prints to stderr.
OPTIONS¶
- -e NAME
Run the given entry point instead of
main
.- -h
Print help text to standard output and exit.
- -V
Print version information on standard output and exit.
- -w, --no-warnings
Disable interpreter warnings.
SEE ALSO¶
futhark-literate¶
SYNOPSIS¶
futhark literate [options…] program
DESCRIPTION¶
The command futhark literate foo.fut
will compile the given
program and then generate a Markdown file foo.md
that contains a
prettyprinted form of the program. This is useful for demonstrating
programming techniques.
Top-level comments that start with a line comment marker (
--
) and a space in the next column will be turned into ordinary text in the Markdown file.Ordinary top-level definitions will be enclosed in Markdown code blocks.
Any directives will be executed and replaced with their output. See below.
Warning: Do not run untrusted programs. See SAFETY below.
Image directives and builtin functions shell out to convert
(from
ImageMagick). Video generation uses ffmpeg
.
OPTIONS¶
- --backend=name
The backend used when compiling Futhark programs (without leading
futhark
, e.g. justopencl
). Defaults toc
.- --futhark=program
The program used to perform operations (eg. compilation). Defaults to the binary running
futhark literate
itself.- --output=FILE
Override the default output file. The image directory will be set to the provided
FILE
with its extension stripped and-img/
appended.- --pass-option=opt
Pass an option to benchmark programs that are being run. For example, we might want to run OpenCL programs on a specific device:
futhark literate prog.fut --backend=opencl --pass-option=-dHawaii
- --pass-compiler-option=opt
Pass an extra option to the compiler when compiling the programs.
- --skip-compilation
Do not run the compiler, and instead assume that the program has already been compiled. Use with caution.
- --stop-on-error
Terminate immediately without producing an output file if a directive fails. Otherwise a file will still be produced, and failing directives will be followed by an error message.
- -v, --verbose
Print verbose information on stderr about directives as they are executing.
DIRECTIVES¶
A directive is a way to show the result of running a function. Depending on the directive, this can be as simple as printing the textual representation of the result, or as complex as running an external plotting program and referencing a generated image.
Any directives that produce images for a program foo.fut
will
place them in the directory foo-img/
. If this directory already
exists, it will be deleted.
A directive is a line starting with -- >
, which must follow an
empty line. Arguments to the directive follow on the remainder of the
line. Any expression arguments are given in a very restricted subset
of Futhark called FutharkScript (see below).
Some directives take mandatory or optional parameters. These are entered after a semicolon and a linebreak.
The following directives are supported:
> e
Shows the result of executing the FutharkScript expression
e
, which can have any (transparent) type.> :video e[; parameters...]
Creates a video from
e
. The optional parameters are lines of the form key: value:repeat: <true|false>
fps: <int>
format: <webm|gif>
e
must be one of the following:A 3D array where the 2D elements is of a type acceptable to
:img
, and the outermost dimension is the number of frames.A triple
(s -> (img,s), s, i64)
, for some typess
andimg
, whereimg
is an array acceptable to:img
. This means not all frames have to be held in memory at once.
> :brief <directive>
The same as the given directive (which must not start with another
>
), but suppress parameters when printing it.> :covert <directive>
The same as the given directive (which must not start with another
>
), but do not show the directive itself in the output, only its result.> :img e
Visualises
e
. The following types are supported:[][]i32
and[][]u32
Interpreted as ARGB pixel values.
[][]f32
and[][]f64
Interpreted as greyscale. Values should be between 0 and 1, with 0 being black and 0 being white.
[][]u8
Interpreted as greyscale. 0 is black and 255 is white.
[][]bool
Interpreted as black and white.
false
is black andtrue
is white.
> :plot2d e[; size=(height,width)]
Shows a plot generated with
gnuplot
ofe
, which must be an expression of type([]t, []t)
, wheret
is some numeric type. The two arrays must have the same length and are interpreted asx
andy
values, respectively.The expression may also be a record expression (not merely the name of a Futhark variable of record type), where each field will be plotted separately and must have the type mentioned above.
> :gnuplot e; script...
Similar to
plot2d
, except that it uses the provided Gnuplot script. Thee
argument must be a record whose fields are tuples of one-dimensional arrays, and the data will be available in temporary files whose names are in variables named after the record fields. Each file will contain a column of data for each array in the corresponding tuple.Use
set term png size width,height
to change the size towidth
byheight
pixels.
FUTHARKSCRIPT¶
Only an extremely limited subset of Futhark is supported:
script_exp ::=fun
script_exp
* | "("script_exp
")" | "("script_exp
( ","script_exp
)+ ")" | "["script_exp
( ","script_exp
)+ "]" | "empty" "(" ("["decimal
"]" )+script_type
")" | "{" "}" | "{" (id
=script_exp
) (","id
=script_exp
)* "}" | "let"script_pat
"="script_exp
"in"script_exp
|literal
script_pat ::=id
| "("id
(","id
) ")" script_fun ::=id
| "$"id
script_type ::=int_type
|float_type
| "bool"
Note that empty arrays must be written using the empty(t)
notation, e.g. empty([0]i32)
.
Function applications are either of Futhark functions or builtin
functions. The latter are prefixed with $
and are magical
(usually impure) functions that could not possibly be implemented in
Futhark. The following builtins are supported:
$loadimg "file"
reads an image from the given file and returns it as a row-major[][]u32
array with each pixel encoded as ARGB.
SAFETY¶
Some directives (e.g. :gnuplot
) can run arbitrary shell commands.
Other directives or builtin functions can read or write arbitrary
files. Running an untrusted literate Futhark program is as dangerous
as running a shell script you downloaded off the Internet. Before
running a program from an unknown source, you should always give it a
quick read to see if anything looks fishy.
SEE ALSO¶
futhark-test¶
SYNOPSIS¶
futhark test [options…] infiles…
DESCRIPTION¶
This tool is used to test Futhark programs based on input/output
datasets. If a directory is given, all contained files with a
.fut
extension are considered.
A Futhark test program is an ordinary Futhark program, with at least one test block describing input/output test cases and possibly other options. The last line must end in a newline. A test block consists of commented-out text with the following overall format:
description
==
cases...
The description
is an arbitrary (and possibly multiline)
human-readable explanation of the test program. It is separated from
the test cases by a line containing just ==
. Any comment starting
at the beginning of the line, and containing a line consisting of just
==
, will be considered a test block. The format of a test case is
as follows:
[tags { tags... }]
[entry: names...]
[compiled|nobench|random|script] input ({ values... } | @ filename)
output { values... } | auto output | error: regex
If compiled
is present before the input
keyword, this test
case will never be passed to the interpreter. This is useful for test
cases that are annoyingly slow to interpret. The nobench
keyword
is for data sets that are too small to be worth benchmarking, and only
has meaning to futhark-bench.
If input
is preceded by random
, the text between the curly
braces must consist of a sequence of Futhark types, including sizes in
the case of arrays. When futhark test
is run, a file located in a
data/
subdirectory, containing values of the indicated types and
shapes is, automatically constructed with futhark-dataset
. Apart
from sizes, integer constants (with or without type suffix), and
floating-point constants (always with type suffix) are also permitted.
If input
is preceded by script
, the text between the curly
braces is interpreted as a FutharkScript expression (see
futhark-literate), which is executed to generate the input.
It must use only functions explicitly declared as entry points. If
the expression produces an n-element tuple, it will be unpacked and
its components passed as n distinct arguments to the test function.
If input
is followed by an @
and a file name (which must not
contain any whitespace) instead of curly braces, values or
FutharkScript expression will be read from the indicated file. This
is recommended for large data sets. This notation cannot be used with
random
input.
After the input
block, the expected result of the test case is
written as either output
followed by another block of values, or
an expected run-time error, in which a regular expression can be used
to specify the exact error message expected. If no regular expression
is given, any error message is accepted. If neither output
nor
error
is given, the program will be expected to execute
succesfully, but its output will not be validated.
If output
is preceded by auto
(as in auto output
), the
expected values are automatically generated by compiling the program
with futhark-c
and recording its result for the given input (which
must not fail). This is usually only useful for testing or
benchmarking alternative compilers, and not for testing the
correctness of Futhark programs. This currently does not work for
script
inputs.
Alternatively, instead of input-output pairs, the test cases can simply be a description of an expected compile time type error:
error: regex
This is used to test the type checker.
By default, both the interpreter and compiler is run on all test cases
(except those that have specified compiled
), although this can be
changed with command-line options to futhark test
.
Tuple syntax is not supported when specifying input and output values.
Instead, you can write an N-tuple as its constituent N values. Beware
of syntax errors in the values - the errors reported by
futhark test
are very poor.
An optional tags specification is permitted in the first test block. This section can contain arbitrary tags that classify the benchmark:
tags { names... }
Tag are sequences of alphanumeric characters, dashes, and underscores,
with each tag seperated by whitespace. Any program with the
disable
tag is ignored by futhark test
.
Another optional directive is entry
, which specifies the entry
point to be used for testing. This is useful for writing programs
that test libraries with multiple entry points. Multiple entry points
can be specified on the same line by separating them with space, and
they will all be tested with the same input/output pairs. The
entry
directive affects subsequent input-output pairs in the same
comment block, and may only be present immediately preceding these
input-output pairs. If no entry
is given, main
is assumed.
See below for an example.
For many usage examples, see the tests
directory in the
Futhark source directory. A simple example can be found in
EXAMPLES
below.
OPTIONS¶
- --backend=program
The backend used when compiling Futhark programs (without leading
futhark
, e.g. justopencl
).- -c
Only run compiled code - do not run any interpreters.
- -C
Compile the programs, but do not run them.
- --concurrency=NUM
The number of tests to run concurrently. Defaults to the number of (hyper-)cores available.
- --exclude=tag
Do not run test cases that contain the given tag. Cases marked with “disable” are ignored by default.
- -i
Only interpret - do not run any compilers.
- -t
Type-check the programs, but do not run them.
- --futhark=program
The program used to perform operations (eg. compilation). Defaults to the binary running
futhark test
itself.- --no-terminal
Print each result on a line by itself, without line buffering.
- --no-tuning
Do not look for tuning files.
- --pass-option=opt
Pass an option to benchmark programs that are being run. For example, we might want to run OpenCL programs on a specific device:
futhark test prog.fut --backend=opencl --pass-option=-dHawaii
- --pass-compiler-option=opt
Pass an extra option to the compiler when compiling the programs.
- --runner=program
If set to a non-empty string, compiled programs are not run directly, but instead the indicated program is run with its first argument being the path to the compiled Futhark program. This is useful for compilation targets that cannot be executed directly (as with futhark-pyopencl on some platforms), or when you wish to run the program on a remote machine.
- --tuning=EXTENSION
For each program being run, look for a tuning file with this extension, which is suffixed to the name of the program. For example, given
--tuning=tuning
(the default), the programfoo.fut
will be passed the tuning filefoo.fut.tuning
if it exists.
EXAMPLES¶
The following program tests simple indexing and bounds checking:
-- Test simple indexing of an array.
-- ==
-- tags { firsttag secondtag }
-- input { [4,3,2,1] 1i64 }
-- output { 3 }
-- input { [4,3,2,1] 5i64 }
-- error: Error*
let main (a: []i32) (i: i64): i32 =
a[i]
The following program contains two entry points, both of which are tested:
let add (x: i32) (y: i32): i32 = x + y
-- Test the add1 function.
-- ==
-- entry: add1
-- input { 1 } output { 2 }
entry add1 (x: i32): i32 = add x 1
-- Test the sub1 function.
-- ==
-- entry: sub1
-- input { 1 } output { 0 }
entry sub1 (x: i32): i32 = add x (-1)
The following program contains an entry point that is tested with randomly generated data:
-- ==
-- random input { [100]i32 [100]i32 } auto output
-- random input { [1000]i32 [1000]i32 } auto output
let main xs ys = i32.product (map2 (*) xs ys)