source: sasmodels/doc/developer/calculator.rst @ 6c12927

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[e822c97]1.. currentmodule:: sasmodels
2
[870a2f4]3.. _Calculator_Interface:
4
[d5ac45f]5Calculator Interface
6====================
7
[e822c97]8This document describes the layer between the form factor kernels and the
9model calculator which implements the polydispersity and magnetic SLD
10calculations.  There are three separate implementations of this layer,
[2e66ef5]11:mod:`kernelcl` for OpenCL, which operates on a single Q value at a time,
12:mod:`kerneldll` for the DLL, which loops over a vector of Q values, and
13:mod:`kernelpy` for python models which operates on vector Q values.
[e822c97]14
15Each implementation provides three different calls *Iq*, *Iqxy* and *Imagnetic*
16for 1-D, 2-D and 2-D magnetic kernels respectively.
17
18The C code is defined in *kernel_iq.c* and *kernel_iq.cl* for DLL and OpenCL
19respectively.  The kernel call looks as follows::
20
21  kernel void KERNEL_NAME(
22      int nq,                  // Number of q values in the q vector
23      int pd_start,            // Starting position in the polydispersity loop
24      int pd_stop,             // Ending position in the polydispersity loop
25      ProblemDetails *details, // Polydispersity info
26      double *values,          // Value and weights vector
27      double *q,               // q or (qx,qy) vector
28      double *result,          // returned I(q), with result[nq] = pd_weight
29      double cutoff)           // polydispersity weight cutoff
30
31The details for OpenCL and the python loop are slightly different, but these
32data structures are common.
33
34*nq* indicates the number of q values that will be calculated.
35
36The *pd_start* and *pd_stop* parameters set the range of the polydispersity
37loop to compute for the current kernel call.   Give a polydispersity
38calculation with 30 weights for length and 30 weights for radius for example,
39there are a total of 900 calls to the form factor required to compute the
40kernel.  These might be done in chunks of 100, so the first call would start
41at zero and stop after 100 iterations.  The second call would then have to set
42the length index to 3 and the radius index to 10 for a position of 3*30+10=100,
43and could then proceed to position 200.  This allows us to interrupt the
44calculation in the middle of a long polydispersity loop without having to
45do special tricks with the C code.  More importantly, it stops the OpenCL
46kernel in a reasonable time; because the GPU is used by the operating
47system to show its windows, if a GPU kernel runs too long then it will be
48automatically killed and no results will be returned to the caller.
49
50The *ProblemDetails* structure is a direct map of the
51:class:`details.CallDetails` buffer.  This indicates which parameters are
52polydisperse, and where in the values vector the values and weights can be
53found.  For each polydisperse parameter there is a parameter id, the length
54of the polydispersity loop for that parameter, the offset of the parameter
55values in the pd value and pd weight vectors and the 'stride' from one index
56to the next, which is used to translate between the position in the
57polydispersity loop and the particular parameter indices.  The *num_eval*
58field is the total size of the polydispersity loop.  *num_weights* is the
59number of elements in the pd value and pd weight vectors.  *num_active* is
60the number of non-trivial pd loops (polydisperse parameters should be ordered
61by decreasing pd vector length, with a length of 1 meaning no polydispersity).
62Oriented objects in 2-D need a cos(theta) spherical correction on the angular
63variation in order to preserve the 'surface area' of the weight distribution.
64*theta_par* is the id of the polar coordinate parameter if there is one.
65
66
67The *values* vector consists of the fixed values for the model plus pd value
68and pd weight vectors.  There are *NUM_VALUES* fixed values for the model,
69which includes the initial two slots for scale and background, the NUM_PARS
70values for the kernel parameters, three slots for the applied magnetism, and
71three slots for each of the SLD parameters for the sample magnetiziation
72*(Mx, My, Mz)*.  Sample magnetization is translated from *(M, theta, phi)*
73to *(Mx, My, Mz)* before the kernel is called.   After the fixed values comes
74the pd value vector, with the polydispersity values for each parameter
75stacked one after the other.  The order isn't important since the location
76for each parameter is stored in the *pd_offset* field of the *ProblemDetails*
77structure, but the values do need to be contiguous.  After *num_weights*
78values, the pd weight vector is stored, with the same configuration as the
79pd value vector.  Note that the pd vectors can contain values that are not
80in the polydispersity loop; this is used by :class:`mixture.MixtureKernel`
81to make it easier to call the various component kernels.
82
83The *q* vector contains one value for each q for *Iq* kernels, or a pair
84of *(qx,qy)* values for each q for *Iqxy* and *Imagnetic* kernels.  OpenCL
85pads all vectors to 32 value boundaries just to be safe, including the
86*values* vector and the the *results* vector.
87
88The *results* vector contains one slot for each of the *nq* values, plus
89one extra slot at the end for the current polydisperse normalization.  This
90is required when the polydispersity loop is broken across several kernel
91calls.
92
93*cutoff* is a importance cutoff so that points which contribute negligibly
94to the total scattering can be skipped without calculating them.
95
96:func:`generate.make_source` defines the following C macros:
[d5ac45f]97
98- USE_OPENCL is defined if running in opencl
[6fd8de0]99- MAX_PD is the maximum depth of the polydispersity loop [model specific]
[e822c97]100- NUM_PARS is the number of parameter values in the kernel.  This may be
101  more than the number of parameters if some of the parameters are vector
102  values.
103- NUM_VALUES is the number of fixed values, which defines the offset in the
104  value list to the polydisperse value and weight vectors.
105- NUM_MAGNETIC is the number of magnetic SLDs
106- MAGNETIC_PARS is a comma separated list of the magnetic SLDs, indicating
107  their locations in the values vector.
108- MAGNETIC_PAR0 to MAGNETIC_PAR2 are the first three magnetic parameter ids
109  so we can hard code the setting of magnetic values if there are only a
110  few of them.
111- KERNEL_NAME is the name of the function being declared
112- PARAMETER_TABLE is the declaration of the parameters to the kernel:
[d5ac45f]113
[e822c97]114    Cylinder::
[d5ac45f]115
116        #define PARAMETER_TABLE \
117        double length; \
118        double radius; \
119        double sld; \
[e822c97]120        double sld_solvent;
[d5ac45f]121
122    Note: scale and background are never included
123
[e822c97]124    Multi-shell cylinder (10 shell max)::
[d5ac45f]125
126        #define PARAMETER_TABLE \
127        double num_shells; \
128        double length; \
129        double radius[10]; \
130        double sld[10]; \
[e822c97]131        double sld_solvent;
[d5ac45f]132
[e822c97]133- CALL_IQ(q, i, var) is the declaration of a call to the kernel:
[d5ac45f]134
[e822c97]135    Cylinder::
[d5ac45f]136
[03cac08]137        #define CALL_IQ(q, i, var) Iq(q[i], \
[d5ac45f]138        var.length, \
139        var.radius, \
140        var.sld, \
141        var.sld_solvent)
142
[e822c97]143    Multi-shell cylinder::
[d5ac45f]144
[03cac08]145        #define CALL_IQ(q, i, var) Iq(q[i], \
[d5ac45f]146        var.num_shells, \
147        var.length, \
148        var.radius, \
149        var.sld, \
150        var.sld_solvent)
151
[e822c97]152    Cylinder2D::
[03cac08]153
154        #define CALL_IQ(q, i, var) Iqxy(q[2*i], q[2*i+1], \
155        var.length, \
156        var.radius, \
157        var.sld, \
158        var.sld_solvent, \
159        var.theta, \
160        var.phi)
161
[d5ac45f]162- CALL_VOLUME(var) is similar, but for calling the form volume::
163
164        #define CALL_VOLUME(var) \
165        form_volume(var.length, var.radius)
166
[e822c97]167There is an additional macro that can be defined within the model.c file:
[d5ac45f]168
[e822c97]169- INVALID(var) is a test for model parameters in the correct range:
170
171    Cylinder::
[d5ac45f]172
173        #define INVALID(var) 0
174
[e822c97]175    BarBell::
[d5ac45f]176
[6fd8de0]177        #define INVALID(var) (var.bell_radius < var.radius)
[d5ac45f]178
[e822c97]179    Model with complicated constraints::
[d5ac45f]180
181        inline bool constrained(p1, p2, p3) { return expression; }
182        #define INVALID(var) constrained(var.p1, var.p2, var.p3)
183
184Our design supports a limited number of polydispersity loops, wherein
185we need to cycle through the values of the polydispersity, calculate
186the I(q, p) for each combination of parameters, and perform a normalized
187weighted sum across all the weights.  Parameters may be passed to the
188underlying calculation engine as scalars or vectors, but the polydispersity
189calculator treats the parameter set as one long vector.
190
[e822c97]191Let's assume we have 8 parameters in the model, with two polydisperse.  Since
192this is a 1-D model the orientation parameters won't be used::
[d5ac45f]193
194    0: scale        {scl = constant}
195    1: background   {bkg = constant}
[e822c97]196    2: radius       {r = vector of 10pts}
197    3: length       {l = vector of 30pts}
[6fd8de0]198    4: sld          {s = constant/(radius**2*length)}
199    5: sld_solvent  {s2 = constant}
[e822c97]200    6: theta        {not used}
201    7: phi          {not used}
202
203This generates the following call to the kernel.  Note that parameters 4 and
2045 are treated as polydisperse even though they are not --- this is because
205it is harmless to do so and simplifies the looping code::
206
207    MAX_PD = 4
208    NUM_PARS = 6          // kernel parameters only
209    NUM_VALUES = 17       // all values, including scale and background
210    NUM_MAGNETIC = 2      // two parameters might be magnetic
211    MAGNETIC_PARS = 4, 5  // they are sld and sld_solvent
212    MAGNETIC_PAR0 = 4     // sld index
213    MAGNETIC_PAR1 = 5     // solvent index
214
215    details {
216        pd_par = {3, 2, 4, 5}         // parameters *radius* and *length* vary
217        pd_length = {30, 10, 1, 1}    // *length* has more, so it is first
218        pd_offset = {10, 0, 31, 32}   // *length* starts at index 10 in weights
[d5ac45f]219        pd_stride = {1, 30, 300, 300} // cumulative product of pd length
[e822c97]220        num_eval = 300   // 300 values in the polydispersity loop
221        num_weights = 42 // 42 values in the pd vector
222        num_active = 2   // only the first two pd are active
223        theta_var =  6   // spherical correction
[d5ac45f]224    }
225
[e822c97]226    values = { scl, bkg,                                  // universal
227               r, l, s, s2, theta, phi,                   // kernel pars
228               in spin, out spin, spin angle,             // applied magnetism
229               mx s, my s, mz s, mx s2, my s2, mz s2,     // magnetic slds
230               r0, .., r9, l0, .., l29, s, s2,            // pd values
231               r0, .., r9, l0, .., l29, s, s2}            // pd weights
[d5ac45f]232
233    nq = 130
234    q = { q0, q1, ..., q130, x, x }  # pad to 8 element boundary
[e822c97]235    result = {r1, ..., r130, pd_norm, x }
[d5ac45f]236
237The polydisperse parameters are stored in as an array of parameter
238indices, one for each polydisperse parameter, stored in pd_par[n].
239Non-polydisperse parameters do not appear in this array. Each polydisperse
[6fd8de0]240parameter has a weight vector whose length is stored in pd_length[n].
[d5ac45f]241The weights are stored in a contiguous vector of weights for all
242parameters, with the starting position for the each parameter stored
243in pd_offset[n].  The values corresponding to the weights are stored
244together in a separate weights[] vector, with offset stored in
245par_offset[pd_par[n]]. Polydisperse parameters should be stored in
246decreasing order of length for highest efficiency.
247
[48fbd50]248We limit the number of polydisperse dimensions to MAX_PD (currently 4),
249though some models may have fewer if they have fewer polydisperse
[e822c97]250parameters.  The main reason for the limit is to reduce code size.
251Each additional polydisperse parameter requires a separate polydispersity
252loop.  If more than 4 levels of polydispersity are needed, then kernel_iq.c
253and kernel_iq.cl will need to be extended.
254
255Constraints between parameters are not supported.  Instead users will
256have to define a new model with the constraints built in by making a
257copy of the existing model.  Mac provides OpenCL and we are supplying
258the tinycc compiler for Windows so this won't be a complete limitation,
259but it is rather inconvenient.  The process could perhaps be automated
260so that there is no code copying required, just an alternate CALL_IQ
261macro that implements the constraints.  Think carefully about constraining
262theta since the polar coordinates normalization is tied to this parameter.
[d5ac45f]263
264If there is no polydispersity we pretend that it is polydisperisty with one
265parameter, pd_start=0 and pd_stop=1.  We may or may not short circuit the
266calculation in this case, depending on how much time it saves.
267
[e822c97]268The problem details structure could be allocated and sent in as an integer
269array using the read-only flag.  This would allow us to copy it once per fit
[d5ac45f]270along with the weights vector, since features such as the number of
271polydisperity elements per pd parameter or the coordinated won't change
[e822c97]272between function evaluations.  A new parameter vector must be sent for
273each I(q) evaluation.  This is not currently implemented, and would require
274some resturcturing of the :class:`sasview_model.SasviewModel` interface.
[d5ac45f]275
276The results array will be initialized to zero for polydispersity loop
277entry zero, and preserved between calls to [start, stop] so that the
278results accumulate by the time the loop has completed.  Background and
279scale will be applied when the loop reaches the end.  This does require
280that the results array be allocated read-write, which is less efficient
281for the GPU, but it makes the calling sequence much more manageable.
282
[03cac08]283For accuracy we may want to introduce Kahan summation into the integration::
284
285    double accumulated_error = 0.0;
286    ...
287    #if USE_KAHAN_SUMMATION
288        const double y = next - accumulated_error;
289        const double t = ret + y;
290        accumulated_error = (t - ret) - y;
291        ret = t;
292    #else
293        ret += next;
294    #endif
[e822c97]295
296This will require accumulated error for each I(q) value to be preserved
297between kernel calls to implement this fully.  The kernel_iq.c code, which
298loops over q for each parameter set in the polydispersity loop, will need
299also need the accumalation vector.
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