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sasmodels/doc/developer/calculator.rst
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Calculator Interface
The environment needs to provide the following #defines:
USE_OPENCL is defined if running in opencl
KERNEL declares a function to be available externally
KERNEL_NAME is the name of the function being declared
MAX_PD is the maximum depth of the polydispersity loop [model specific]
NPARS is the number of parameters in the kernel
PARAMETER_TABLE is the declaration of the parameters to the kernel:
Cylinder: #define PARAMETER_TABLE \ double length; \ double radius; \ double sld; \ double sld_solvent Note: scale and background are never included Multi-shell cylinder (10 shell max): #define PARAMETER_TABLE \ double num_shells; \ double length; \ double radius[10]; \ double sld[10]; \ double sld_solvent
CALL_IQ(q, i, var) is the declaration of a call to the kernel:
Cylinder: #define CALL_IQ(q, i, var) Iq(q[i], \ var.length, \ var.radius, \ var.sld, \ var.sld_solvent) Multi-shell cylinder: #define CALL_IQ(q, i, var) Iq(q[i], \ var.num_shells, \ var.length, \ var.radius, \ var.sld, \ var.sld_solvent) Cylinder2D: #define CALL_IQ(q, i, var) Iqxy(q[2*i], q[2*i+1], \ var.length, \ var.radius, \ var.sld, \ var.sld_solvent, \ var.theta, \ var.phi)
CALL_VOLUME(var) is similar, but for calling the form volume:
#define CALL_VOLUME(var) \ form_volume(var.length, var.radius)
INVALID(var) is a test for model parameters in the correct range:
Cylinder: #define INVALID(var) 0 BarBell: #define INVALID(var) (var.bell_radius < var.radius) Model with complicated constraints: inline bool constrained(p1, p2, p3) { return expression; } #define INVALID(var) constrained(var.p1, var.p2, var.p3)
Our design supports a limited number of polydispersity loops, wherein we need to cycle through the values of the polydispersity, calculate the I(q, p) for each combination of parameters, and perform a normalized weighted sum across all the weights. Parameters may be passed to the underlying calculation engine as scalars or vectors, but the polydispersity calculator treats the parameter set as one long vector.
Let's assume we have 6 parameters in the model, with two polydisperse:
0: scale {scl = constant} 1: background {bkg = constant} 2: length {l = vector of 30pts} 3: radius {r = vector of 10pts} 4: sld {s = constant/(radius**2*length)} 5: sld_solvent {s2 = constant}
This generates the following call to the kernel (where x stands for an arbitrary value that is not used by the kernel evaluator):
NPARS = 4 // scale and background are in all models problem { pd_par = {3, 2, x, x} // parameters *radius* and *length* vary pd_length = {30, 10, 0, 0} // *length* has more, so it is first pd_offset = {10, 0, x, x} // *length* starts at index 10 in weights pd_stride = {1, 30, 300, 300} // cumulative product of pd length pd_isvol = {True, True, x, x} // true if weight is a volume weight par_offset = {2, 3, 303, 313} // parameter offsets par_coord = {0, 3, 2, 1} // bitmap of parameter dependencies fast_coord_index = {3, 5, x, x} // radius and sld have fast index fast_coord_count = 2 // two parameters vary with *length* distribution theta_var = -1 // no spherical correction fast_theta = 0 // spherical correction angle is not pd 1 } weight = { l0, .., l29, r0, .., r9} //length comes first as the longest vec pars = { scl, bkg, l0, ..., l29, r0, r1, ..., r9, s[l0,r0], ... s[l0,r9], s[l1,r0], ... s[l29,r9] , s2} //where s[x,y] stands for material sld, s2 = solvent sld nq = 130 q = { q0, q1, ..., q130, x, x } # pad to 8 element boundary result = {r1, ..., r130, norm, vol, vol_norm, x, x, x, x, x, x, x}
The polydisperse parameters are stored in as an array of parameter indices, one for each polydisperse parameter, stored in pd_par[n]. Non-polydisperse parameters do not appear in this array. Each polydisperse parameter has a weight vector whose length is stored in pd_length[n]. The weights are stored in a contiguous vector of weights for all parameters, with the starting position for the each parameter stored in pd_offset[n]. The values corresponding to the weights are stored together in a separate weights[] vector, with offset stored in par_offset[pd_par[n]]. Polydisperse parameters should be stored in decreasing order of length for highest efficiency.
We limit the number of polydisperse dimensions to MAX_PD (currently 4), though some models may have fewer if they have fewer polydisperse parameters. This cuts the size of the structure in half compared to allowing a separate polydispersity for each parameter. This will help a little bit for models with large numbers of parameters, such as the onion model.
Parameters may be coordinated. That is, we may have the value of one parameter depend on a set of other parameters, some of which may be polydisperse. For example, if sld is inversely proportional to the volume of a cylinder, and the length and radius are independently polydisperse, then for each combination of length and radius we need a separate value for the sld. The caller must provide a coordination table for each parameter containing the value for each parameter given the value of the polydisperse parameters v1, v2, etc. The tables for each parameter are arranged contiguously in a vector, with offset[k] giving the starting location of parameter k in the vector. Each parameter defines par_coord[k] as a bit mask indicating which polydispersity parameters the parameter depends upon. Usually this is zero, indicating that the parameter is independent, but for the cylinder example given, the bits for the radius and length polydispersity parameters would both be set, the result being a (#radius x #length) table, or maybe a (#length x #radius) table if length comes first in the polydispersity table.
NB: If we can guarantee that a compiler and OpenCL driver are available, we could instead create the coordination function on the fly for each parameter, saving memory and transfer time, but requiring a C compiler as part of the environment.
In ordering the polydisperse parameters by decreasing length we can iterate over the longest dispersion weight vector first. All parameters coordinated with this weight vector (the 'fast' parameters), can be updated with a simple increment to the next position in the parameter value table. The indices of these parameters is stored in fast_coord_index[], with fast_coord_count being the number of fast parameters. A total of NPARS slots is allocated to allow for the case that all parameters are coordinated with the fast index, though this will likely be mostly empty. When the fast increment count reaches the end of the weight vector, then the index of the second polydisperse parameter must be incremented, and all of its coordinated parameters updated. Because this operation is not in the inner loop, a slower algorithm can be used.
If there is no polydispersity we pretend that it is polydisperisty with one parameter, pd_start=0 and pd_stop=1. We may or may not short circuit the calculation in this case, depending on how much time it saves.
The problem details structure can be allocated and sent in as an integer array using the read-only flag. This allows us to copy it once per fit along with the weights vector, since features such as the number of polydisperity elements per pd parameter or the coordinated won't change between function evaluations. A new parameter vector is sent for each I(q) evaluation.
To protect against expensive evaluations taking all the GPU resource on large fits, the entire polydispersity will not be computed at once. Instead, a start and stop location will be sent, indicating where in the polydispersity loop the calculation should start and where it should stop. We can do this for arbitrary start/stop points since we have unwound the nested loop. Instead, we use the same technique as array index translation, using div and mod to figure out the i,j,k,... indices in the virtual nested loop.
The results array will be initialized to zero for polydispersity loop entry zero, and preserved between calls to [start, stop] so that the results accumulate by the time the loop has completed. Background and scale will be applied when the loop reaches the end. This does require that the results array be allocated read-write, which is less efficient for the GPU, but it makes the calling sequence much more manageable.
Scale and background cannot be coordinated with other polydisperse parameters
Oriented objects in 2-D need a spherical correction on the angular variation in order to preserve the 'surface area' of the weight distribution.
cutoff parameter limits integration area within polydispersity hypercude, which speeds calculations
For accuracy we may want to introduce Kahan summation into the integration:
double accumulated_error = 0.0; ... #if USE_KAHAN_SUMMATION const double y = next - accumulated_error; const double t = ret + y; accumulated_error = (t - ret) - y; ret = t; #else ret += next; #endif