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Revision: 1.73
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# Content
1 =head1 NAME
2
3 OpenCL - Open Computing Language Bindings
4
5 =head1 SYNOPSIS
6
7 use OpenCL;
8
9 =head1 DESCRIPTION
10
11 This is an early release which might be useful, but hasn't seen much testing.
12
13 =head2 OpenCL FROM 10000 FEET HEIGHT
14
15 Here is a high level overview of OpenCL:
16
17 First you need to find one or more OpenCL::Platforms (kind of like
18 vendors) - usually there is only one.
19
20 Each platform gives you access to a number of OpenCL::Device objects, e.g.
21 your graphics card.
22
23 From a platform and some device(s), you create an OpenCL::Context, which is
24 a very central object in OpenCL: Once you have a context you can create
25 most other objects:
26
27 OpenCL::Program objects, which store source code and, after building for a
28 specific device ("compiling and linking"), also binary programs. For each
29 kernel function in a program you can then create an OpenCL::Kernel object
30 which represents basically a function call with argument values.
31
32 OpenCL::Memory objects of various flavours: OpenCL::Buffer objects (flat
33 memory areas, think arrays or structs) and OpenCL::Image objects (think 2d
34 or 3d array) for bulk data and input and output for kernels.
35
36 OpenCL::Sampler objects, which are kind of like texture filter modes in
37 OpenGL.
38
39 OpenCL::Queue objects - command queues, which allow you to submit memory
40 reads, writes and copies, as well as kernel calls to your devices. They
41 also offer a variety of methods to synchronise request execution, for
42 example with barriers or OpenCL::Event objects.
43
44 OpenCL::Event objects are used to signal when something is complete.
45
46 =head2 HELPFUL RESOURCES
47
48 The OpenCL specs used to develop this module - download these and keept
49 hema round, they are required reference material:
50
51 http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/specs/opencl-1.1.pdf
52 http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/specs/opencl-1.2.pdf
53 http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/specs/opencl-1.2-extensions.pdf
54
55 OpenCL manpages:
56
57 http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/
58 http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.2/docs/man/xhtml/
59
60 If you are into UML class diagrams, the following diagram might help - if
61 not, it will be mildly confusing (also, the class hierarchy of this module
62 is much more fine-grained):
63
64 http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.2/docs/man/xhtml/classDiagram.html
65
66 Here's a tutorial from AMD (very AMD-centric, too), not sure how useful it
67 is, but at least it's free of charge:
68
69 http://developer.amd.com/zones/OpenCLZone/courses/Documents/Introduction_to_OpenCL_Programming%20Training_Guide%20%28201005%29.pdf
70
71 And here's NVIDIA's OpenCL Best Practises Guide:
72
73 http://developer.download.nvidia.com/compute/cuda/3_2/toolkit/docs/OpenCL_Best_Practices_Guide.pdf
74
75 =head1 BASIC WORKFLOW
76
77 To get something done, you basically have to do this once (refer to the
78 examples below for actual code, this is just a high-level description):
79
80 Find some platform (e.g. the first one) and some device(s) (e.g. the first
81 device of the platform), and create a context from those.
82
83 Create program objects from your OpenCL source code, then build (compile)
84 the programs for each device you want to run them on.
85
86 Create kernel objects for all kernels you want to use (surprisingly, these
87 are not device-specific).
88
89 Then, to execute stuff, you repeat these steps, possibly resuing or
90 sharing some buffers:
91
92 Create some input and output buffers from your context. Set these as
93 arguments to your kernel.
94
95 Enqueue buffer writes to initialise your input buffers (when not
96 initialised at creation time).
97
98 Enqueue the kernel execution.
99
100 Enqueue buffer reads for your output buffer to read results.
101
102 =head1 EXAMPLES
103
104 =head2 Enumerate all devices and get contexts for them.
105
106 Best run this once to get a feel for the platforms and devices in your
107 system.
108
109 for my $platform (OpenCL::platforms) {
110 printf "platform: %s\n", $platform->name;
111 printf "extensions: %s\n", $platform->extensions;
112 for my $device ($platform->devices) {
113 printf "+ device: %s\n", $device->name;
114 my $ctx = $platform->context (undef, [$device]);
115 # do stuff
116 }
117 }
118
119 =head2 Get a useful context and a command queue.
120
121 This is a useful boilerplate for any OpenCL program that only wants to use
122 one device,
123
124 my ($platform) = OpenCL::platforms; # find first platform
125 my ($dev) = $platform->devices; # find first device of platform
126 my $ctx = $platform->context (undef, [$dev]); # create context out of those
127 my $queue = $ctx->queue ($dev); # create a command queue for the device
128
129 =head2 Print all supported image formats of a context.
130
131 Best run this once for your context, to see whats available and how to
132 gather information.
133
134 for my $type (OpenCL::MEM_OBJECT_IMAGE2D, OpenCL::MEM_OBJECT_IMAGE3D) {
135 print "supported image formats for ", OpenCL::enum2str $type, "\n";
136
137 for my $f ($ctx->supported_image_formats (0, $type)) {
138 printf " %-10s %-20s\n", OpenCL::enum2str $f->[0], OpenCL::enum2str $f->[1];
139 }
140 }
141
142 =head2 Create a buffer with some predefined data, read it back synchronously,
143 then asynchronously.
144
145 my $buf = $ctx->buffer_sv (OpenCL::MEM_COPY_HOST_PTR, "helmut");
146
147 $queue->read_buffer ($buf, 1, 1, 3, my $data);
148 print "$data\n";
149
150 my $ev = $queue->read_buffer ($buf, 0, 1, 3, my $data);
151 $ev->wait;
152 print "$data\n"; # prints "elm"
153
154 =head2 Create and build a program, then create a kernel out of one of its
155 functions.
156
157 my $src = '
158 kernel void
159 squareit (global float *input, global float *output)
160 {
161 $id = get_global_id (0);
162 output [id] = input [id] * input [id];
163 }
164 ';
165
166 my $prog = $ctx->build_program ($src);
167 my $kernel = $prog->kernel ("squareit");
168
169 =head2 Create some input and output float buffers, then call the
170 'squareit' kernel on them.
171
172 my $input = $ctx->buffer_sv (OpenCL::MEM_COPY_HOST_PTR, pack "f*", 1, 2, 3, 4.5);
173 my $output = $ctx->buffer (0, OpenCL::SIZEOF_FLOAT * 5);
174
175 # set buffer
176 $kernel->set_buffer (0, $input);
177 $kernel->set_buffer (1, $output);
178
179 # execute it for all 4 numbers
180 $queue->nd_range_kernel ($kernel, undef, [4], undef);
181
182 # enqueue a synchronous read
183 $queue->read_buffer ($output, 1, 0, OpenCL::SIZEOF_FLOAT * 4, my $data);
184
185 # print the results:
186 printf "%s\n", join ", ", unpack "f*", $data;
187
188 =head2 The same enqueue operations as before, but assuming an out-of-order queue,
189 showing off barriers.
190
191 # execute it for all 4 numbers
192 $queue->nd_range_kernel ($kernel, undef, [4], undef);
193
194 # enqueue a barrier to ensure in-order execution
195 $queue->barrier;
196
197 # enqueue an async read
198 $queue->read_buffer ($output, 0, 0, OpenCL::SIZEOF_FLOAT * 4, my $data);
199
200 # wait for all requests to finish
201 $queue->finish;
202
203 =head2 The same enqueue operations as before, but assuming an out-of-order queue,
204 showing off event objects and wait lists.
205
206 # execute it for all 4 numbers
207 my $ev = $queue->nd_range_kernel ($kernel, undef, [4], undef);
208
209 # enqueue an async read
210 $ev = $queue->read_buffer ($output, 0, 0, OpenCL::SIZEOF_FLOAT * 4, my $data, $ev);
211
212 # wait for the last event to complete
213 $ev->wait;
214
215 =head2 Use the OpenGL module to share a texture between OpenCL and OpenGL and draw some julia
216 set flight effect.
217
218 This is quite a long example to get you going - you can download it from
219 L<http://cvs.schmorp.de/OpenCL/examples/juliaflight>.
220
221 use OpenGL ":all";
222 use OpenCL;
223
224 my $S = $ARGV[0] || 256; # window/texture size, smaller is faster
225
226 # open a window and create a gl texture
227 OpenGL::glpOpenWindow width => $S, height => $S;
228 my $texid = glGenTextures_p 1;
229 glBindTexture GL_TEXTURE_2D, $texid;
230 glTexImage2D_c GL_TEXTURE_2D, 0, GL_RGBA8, $S, $S, 0, GL_RGBA, GL_UNSIGNED_BYTE, 0;
231
232 # find and use the first opencl device that let's us get a shared opengl context
233 my $platform;
234 my $dev;
235 my $ctx;
236
237 for (OpenCL::platforms) {
238 $platform = $_;
239 for ($platform->devices) {
240 $dev = $_;
241 $ctx = $platform->context ([OpenCL::GLX_DISPLAY_KHR, undef, OpenCL::GL_CONTEXT_KHR, undef], [$dev])
242 and last;
243 }
244 }
245
246 $ctx
247 or die "cannot find suitable OpenCL device\n";
248
249 my $queue = $ctx->queue ($dev);
250
251 # now attach an opencl image2d object to the opengl texture
252 my $tex = $ctx->gl_texture2d (OpenCL::MEM_WRITE_ONLY, GL_TEXTURE_2D, 0, $texid);
253
254 # now the boring opencl code
255 my $src = <<EOF;
256 kernel void
257 juliatunnel (write_only image2d_t img, float time)
258 {
259 int2 xy = (int2)(get_global_id (0), get_global_id (1));
260 float2 p = convert_float2 (xy) / $S.f * 2.f - 1.f;
261
262 float2 m = (float2)(1.f, p.y) / fabs (p.x); // tunnel
263 m.x = fabs (fmod (m.x + time * 0.05f, 4.f) - 2.f);
264
265 float2 z = m;
266 float2 c = (float2)(sin (time * 0.01133f), cos (time * 0.02521f));
267
268 for (int i = 0; i < 25 && dot (z, z) < 4.f; ++i) // standard julia
269 z = (float2)(z.x * z.x - z.y * z.y, 2.f * z.x * z.y) + c;
270
271 float3 colour = (float3)(z.x, z.y, atan2 (z.y, z.x));
272 write_imagef (img, xy, (float4)(colour * p.x * p.x, 1.));
273 }
274 EOF
275
276 my $prog = $ctx->build_program ($src);
277 my $kernel = $prog->kernel ("juliatunnel");
278
279 # program compiled, kernel ready, now draw and loop
280
281 for (my $time; ; ++$time) {
282 # acquire objects from opengl
283 $queue->acquire_gl_objects ([$tex]);
284
285 # configure and run our kernel
286 $kernel->setf ("mf", $tex, $time*2); # mf = memory object, float
287 $queue->nd_range_kernel ($kernel, undef, [$S, $S], undef);
288
289 # release objects to opengl again
290 $queue->release_gl_objects ([$tex]);
291
292 # wait
293 $queue->finish;
294
295 # now draw the texture, the defaults should be all right
296 glTexParameterf GL_TEXTURE_2D, GL_TEXTURE_MIN_FILTER, GL_NEAREST;
297
298 glEnable GL_TEXTURE_2D;
299 glBegin GL_QUADS;
300 glTexCoord2f 0, 1; glVertex3i -1, -1, -1;
301 glTexCoord2f 0, 0; glVertex3i 1, -1, -1;
302 glTexCoord2f 1, 0; glVertex3i 1, 1, -1;
303 glTexCoord2f 1, 1; glVertex3i -1, 1, -1;
304 glEnd;
305
306 glXSwapBuffers;
307
308 select undef, undef, undef, 1/60;
309 }
310
311 =head2 How to modify the previous example to not rely on GL sharing.
312
313 For those poor souls with only a sucky CPU OpenCL implementation, you
314 currently have to read the image into some perl scalar, and then modify a
315 texture or use glDrawPixels or so).
316
317 First, when you don't need gl sharing, you can create the context much simpler:
318
319 $ctx = $platform->context (undef, [$dev])
320
321 To use a texture, you would modify the above example by creating an
322 OpenCL::Image manually instead of deriving it from a texture:
323
324 my $tex = $ctx->image2d (OpenCL::MEM_WRITE_ONLY, OpenCL::RGBA, OpenCL::UNORM_INT8, $S, $S);
325
326 And in the draw loop, intead of acquire_gl_objects/release_gl_objects, you
327 would read the image2d after the kernel has written it:
328
329 $queue->read_image ($tex, 0, 0, 0, 0, $S, $S, 1, 0, 0, my $data);
330
331 And then you would upload the pixel data to the texture (or use glDrawPixels):
332
333 glTexSubImage2D_s GL_TEXTURE_2D, 0, 0, 0, $S, $S, GL_RGBA, GL_UNSIGNED_BYTE, $data;
334
335 The fully modified example can be found at
336 L<http://cvs.schmorp.de/OpenCL/examples/juliaflight-nosharing>.
337
338 =head2 Julia sets look soooo 80ies.
339
340 Then colour them differently, e.g. using orbit traps! Replace the loop and
341 colour calculation from the previous examples by this:
342
343 float2 dm = (float2)(1.f, 1.f);
344
345 for (int i = 0; i < 25; ++i)
346 {
347 z = (float2)(z.x * z.x - z.y * z.y, 2.f * z.x * z.y) + c;
348 dm = fmin (dm, (float2)(fabs (dot (z, z) - 1.f), fabs (z.x - 1.f)));
349 }
350
351 float3 colour = (float3)(dm.x * dm.y, dm.x * dm.y, dm.x);
352
353 Also try C<-10.f> instead of C<-1.f>.
354
355 =head1 DOCUMENTATION
356
357 =head2 BASIC CONVENTIONS
358
359 This is not a one-to-one C-style translation of OpenCL to Perl - instead
360 I attempted to make the interface as type-safe as possible by introducing
361 object syntax where it makes sense. There are a number of important
362 differences between the OpenCL C API and this module:
363
364 =over 4
365
366 =item * Object lifetime managament is automatic - there is no need
367 to free objects explicitly (C<clReleaseXXX>), the release function
368 is called automatically once all Perl references to it go away.
369
370 =item * OpenCL uses CamelCase for function names
371 (e.g. C<clGetPlatformIDs>, C<clGetPlatformInfo>), while this module
372 uses underscores as word separator and often leaves out prefixes
373 (C<OpenCL::platforms>, C<< $platform->info >>).
374
375 =item * OpenCL often specifies fixed vector function arguments as short
376 arrays (C<size_t origin[3]>), while this module explicitly expects the
377 components as separate arguments (C<$orig_x, $orig_y, $orig_z>) in
378 function calls.
379
380 =item * Structures are often specified by flattening out their components
381 as with short vectors, and returned as arrayrefs.
382
383 =item * When enqueuing commands, the wait list is specified by adding
384 extra arguments to the function - anywhere a C<$wait_events...> argument
385 is documented this can be any number of event objects. As an extsnion
386 implemented by this module, C<undef> values will be ignored in the event
387 list.
388
389 =item * When enqueuing commands, if the enqueue method is called in void
390 context, no event is created. In all other contexts an event is returned
391 by the method.
392
393 =item * This module expects all functions to return C<CL_SUCCESS>. If any
394 other status is returned the function will throw an exception, so you
395 don't normally have to to any error checking.
396
397 =back
398
399 =head2 PERL AND OPENCL TYPES
400
401 This handy(?) table lists OpenCL types and their perl, PDL and pack/unpack
402 format equivalents:
403
404 OpenCL perl PDL pack/unpack
405 char IV - c
406 uchar IV byte C
407 short IV short s
408 ushort IV ushort S
409 int IV long? l
410 uint IV - L
411 long IV longlong q
412 ulong IV - Q
413 float NV float f
414 half IV ushort S
415 double NV double d
416
417 =head2 GLX SUPPORT
418
419 Due to the sad state that OpenGL support is in in Perl (mostly the OpenGL
420 module, which has little to no documentation and has little to no support
421 for glX), this module, as a special extension, treats context creation
422 properties C<OpenCL::GLX_DISPLAY_KHR> and C<OpenCL::GL_CONTEXT_KHR>
423 specially: If either or both of these are C<undef>, then the OpenCL
424 module tries to dynamically resolve C<glXGetCurrentDisplay> and
425 C<glXGetCurrentContext>, call these functions and use their return values
426 instead.
427
428 For this to work, the OpenGL library must be loaded, a GLX context must
429 have been created and be made current, and C<dlsym> must be available and
430 capable of finding the function via C<RTLD_DEFAULT>.
431
432 =head2 EVENT SYSTEM
433
434 OpenCL can generate a number of (potentially) asynchronous events, for
435 example, after compiling a program, to signal a context-related error or,
436 perhaps most important, to signal completion of queued jobs (by setting
437 callbacks on OpenCL::Event objects).
438
439 To facilitate this, this module maintains an event queue - each
440 time an asynchronous event happens, it is queued, and perl will be
441 interrupted. This is implemented via the L<Async::Interrupt> module. In
442 addition, this module has L<AnyEvent> support, so it can seamlessly
443 integrate itself into many event loops.
444
445 Since this module is a bit hard to understand, here are some case examples:
446
447 =head3 Don't use callbacks.
448
449 When your program never uses any callbacks, then there will never be any
450 notifications you need to take care of, and therefore no need to worry
451 about all this.
452
453 You can achieve a great deal by explicitly waiting for events, or using
454 barriers and flush calls. In many programs, there is no need at all to
455 tinker with asynchronous events.
456
457 =head3 Use AnyEvent
458
459 This module automatically registers a watcher that invokes all outstanding
460 event callbacks when AnyEvent is initialised (and block asynchronous
461 interruptions). Using this mode of operations is the safest and most
462 recommended one.
463
464 To use this, simply use AnyEvent and this module normally, make sure you
465 have an event loop running:
466
467 use Gtk2 -init;
468 use AnyEvent;
469
470 # initialise AnyEvent, by creating a watcher, or:
471 AnyEvent::detect;
472
473 my $e = $queue->marker;
474 $e->cb (sub {
475 warn "opencl is finished\n";
476 })
477
478 main Gtk2;
479
480 Note that this module will not initialise AnyEvent for you. Before
481 AnyEvent is initialised, the module will asynchronously interrupt perl
482 instead. To avoid any surprises, it's best to explicitly initialise
483 AnyEvent.
484
485 You can temporarily enable asynchronous interruptions (see next paragraph)
486 by calling C<$OpenCL::INTERRUPT->unblock> and disable them again by
487 calling C<$OpenCL::INTERRUPT->block>.
488
489 =head3 Let yourself be interrupted at any time
490
491 This mode is the default unless AnyEvent is loaded and initialised. In
492 this mode, OpenCL asynchronously interrupts a running perl program. The
493 emphasis is on both I<asynchronously> and I<running> here.
494
495 Asynchronously means that perl might execute your callbacks at any
496 time. For example, in the following code (I<THAT YOU SHOULD NOT COPY>),
497 the C<until> loop following the marker call will be interrupted by the
498 callback:
499
500 my $e = $queue->marker;
501 my $flag;
502 $e->cb (sub { $flag = 1 });
503 1 until $flag;
504 # $flag is now 1
505
506 The reason why you shouldn't blindly copy the above code is that
507 busy waiting is a really really bad thing, and really really bad for
508 performance.
509
510 While at first this asynchronous business might look exciting, it can be
511 really hard, because you need to be prepared for the callback code to be
512 executed at any time, which limits the amount of things the callback code
513 can do safely.
514
515 This can be mitigated somewhat by using C<<
516 $OpenCL::INTERRUPT->scope_block >> (see the L<Async::Interrupt>
517 documentation for details).
518
519 The other problem is that your program must be actively I<running> to be
520 interrupted. When you calculate stuff, your program is running. When you
521 hang in some C functions or other block execution (by calling C<sleep>,
522 C<select>, running an event loop and so on), your program is waiting, not
523 running.
524
525 One way around that would be to attach a read watcher to your event loop,
526 listening for events on C<< $OpenCL::INTERRUPT->pipe_fileno >>, using a
527 dummy callback (C<sub { }>) to temporarily execute some perl code.
528
529 That is then awfully close to using the built-in AnyEvent support above,
530 though, so consider that one instead.
531
532 =head3 Be creative
533
534 OpenCL exports the L<Async::Interrupt> object it uses in the global
535 variable C<$OpenCL::INTERRUPT>. You can configure it in any way you like.
536
537 So if you want to feel like a real pro, err, wait, if you feel no risk
538 menas no fun, you can experiment by implementing your own mode of
539 operations.
540
541 =cut
542
543 package OpenCL;
544
545 use common::sense;
546 use Carp ();
547 use Async::Interrupt ();
548
549 our $POLL_FUNC; # set by XS
550
551 BEGIN {
552 our $VERSION = '0.99';
553
554 require XSLoader;
555 XSLoader::load (__PACKAGE__, $VERSION);
556
557 @OpenCL::Platform::ISA =
558 @OpenCL::Device::ISA =
559 @OpenCL::Context::ISA =
560 @OpenCL::Queue::ISA =
561 @OpenCL::Memory::ISA =
562 @OpenCL::Sampler::ISA =
563 @OpenCL::Program::ISA =
564 @OpenCL::Kernel::ISA =
565 @OpenCL::Event::ISA = OpenCL::Object::;
566
567 @OpenCL::SubDevice::ISA = OpenCL::Device::;
568
569 @OpenCL::Buffer::ISA =
570 @OpenCL::Image::ISA = OpenCL::Memory::;
571
572 @OpenCL::BufferObj::ISA = OpenCL::Buffer::;
573
574 @OpenCL::Image2D::ISA =
575 @OpenCL::Image3D::ISA =
576 @OpenCL::Image2DArray::ISA =
577 @OpenCL::Image1D::ISA =
578 @OpenCL::Image1DArray::ISA =
579 @OpenCL::Image1DBuffer::ISA = OpenCL::Image::;
580
581 @OpenCL::UserEvent::ISA = OpenCL::Event::;
582
583 @OpenCL::MappedBuffer::ISA =
584 @OpenCL::MappedImage::ISA = OpenCL::Mapped::;
585 }
586
587 =head2 THE OpenCL PACKAGE
588
589 =over 4
590
591 =item $int = OpenCL::errno
592
593 The last error returned by a function - it's only valid after an error occured
594 and before calling another OpenCL function.
595
596 =item $str = OpenCL::err2str [$errval]
597
598 Converts an error value into a human readable string. IF no error value is
599 given, then the last error will be used (as returned by OpenCL::errno).
600
601 =item $str = OpenCL::enum2str $enum
602
603 Converts most enum values (of parameter names, image format constants,
604 object types, addressing and filter modes, command types etc.) into a
605 human readable string. When confronted with some random integer it can be
606 very helpful to pass it through this function to maybe get some readable
607 string out of it.
608
609 =item @platforms = OpenCL::platforms
610
611 Returns all available OpenCL::Platform objects.
612
613 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clGetPlatformIDs.html>
614
615 =item $ctx = OpenCL::context_from_type $properties, $type = OpenCL::DEVICE_TYPE_DEFAULT, $callback->($err, $pvt) = $print_stderr
616
617 Tries to create a context from a default device and platform type - never worked for me.
618
619 type: OpenCL::DEVICE_TYPE_DEFAULT, OpenCL::DEVICE_TYPE_CPU, OpenCL::DEVICE_TYPE_GPU,
620 OpenCL::DEVICE_TYPE_ACCELERATOR, OpenCL::DEVICE_TYPE_CUSTOM, OpenCL::DEVICE_TYPE_ALL.
621
622 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clCreateContextFromType.html>
623
624 =item $ctx = OpenCL::context $properties, \@devices, $callback->($err, $pvt) = $print_stderr)
625
626 Create a new OpenCL::Context object using the given device object(s). This
627 function isn't implemented yet, use C<< $platform->context >> instead.
628
629 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clCreateContext.html>
630
631 =item OpenCL::wait_for_events $wait_events...
632
633 Waits for all events to complete.
634
635 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clWaitForEvents.html>
636
637 =item OpenCL::poll
638
639 Checks if there are any outstanding events (see L<EVENT SYSTEM>) and
640 invokes their callbacks.
641
642 =item $OpenCL::INTERRUPT
643
644 The L<Async::Interrupt> object used to signal asynchronous events (see
645 L<EVENT SYSTEM>).
646
647 =cut
648
649 our $INTERRUPT = new Async::Interrupt c_cb => [$POLL_FUNC, 0];
650
651 &_eq_initialise ($INTERRUPT->signal_func);
652
653 =item $OpenCL::WATCHER
654
655 The L<AnyEvent> watcher object used to watch for asynchronous events (see
656 L<EVENT SYSTEM>). This variable is C<undef> until L<AnyEvent> has been
657 loaded I<and> initialised (e.g. by calling C<AnyEvent::detect>).
658
659 =cut
660
661 our $WATCHER;
662
663 sub _init_anyevent {
664 $INTERRUPT->block;
665 $WATCHER = AE::io ($INTERRUPT->pipe_fileno, 0, sub { $INTERRUPT->handle });
666 }
667
668 if (defined $AnyEvent::MODEL) {
669 _init_anyevent;
670 } else {
671 push @AnyEvent::post_detect, \&_init_anyevent;
672 }
673
674 =back
675
676 =head2 THE OpenCL::Object CLASS
677
678 This is the base class for all objects in the OpenCL module. The only
679 method it implements is the C<id> method, which is only useful if you want
680 to interface to OpenCL on the C level.
681
682 =over 4
683
684 =item $iv = $obj->id
685
686 OpenCL objects are represented by pointers or integers on the C level. If
687 you want to interface to an OpenCL object directly on the C level, then
688 you need this value, which is returned by this method. You should use an
689 C<IV> type in your code and cast that to the correct type.
690
691 =cut
692
693 sub OpenCL::Object::id {
694 ref $_[0] eq "SCALAR"
695 ? ${ $_[0] }
696 : $_[0][0]
697 }
698
699 =back
700
701 =head2 THE OpenCL::Platform CLASS
702
703 =over 4
704
705 =item @devices = $platform->devices ($type = OpenCL::DEVICE_TYPE_ALL)
706
707 Returns a list of matching OpenCL::Device objects.
708
709 =item $ctx = $platform->context_from_type ($properties, $type = OpenCL::DEVICE_TYPE_DEFAULT, $callback->($err, $pvt) = $print_stderr)
710
711 Tries to create a context. Never worked for me, and you need devices explicitly anyway.
712
713 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clCreateContextFromType.html>
714
715 =item $ctx = $platform->context ($properties, \@devices, $callback->($err, $pvt) = $print_stderr)
716
717 Create a new OpenCL::Context object using the given device object(s)- a
718 CL_CONTEXT_PLATFORM property is supplied automatically.
719
720 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clCreateContext.html>
721
722 =item $packed_value = $platform->info ($name)
723
724 Calls C<clGetPlatformInfo> and returns the packed, raw value - for
725 strings, this will be the string (possibly including terminating \0), for
726 other values you probably need to use the correct C<unpack>.
727
728 It's best to avoid this method and use one of the following convenience
729 wrappers.
730
731 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clGetPlatformInfo.html>
732
733 =item $platform->unload_compiler
734
735 Attempts to unload the compiler for this platform, for endless
736 profit. Does nothing on OpenCL 1.1.
737
738 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.2/docs/man/xhtml/clUnloadPlatformCompiler.html>
739
740 =for gengetinfo begin platform
741
742 =item $string = $platform->profile
743
744 Calls C<clGetPlatformInfo> with C<OpenCL::PLATFORM_PROFILE> and returns the result.
745
746 =item $string = $platform->version
747
748 Calls C<clGetPlatformInfo> with C<OpenCL::PLATFORM_VERSION> and returns the result.
749
750 =item $string = $platform->name
751
752 Calls C<clGetPlatformInfo> with C<OpenCL::PLATFORM_NAME> and returns the result.
753
754 =item $string = $platform->vendor
755
756 Calls C<clGetPlatformInfo> with C<OpenCL::PLATFORM_VENDOR> and returns the result.
757
758 =item $string = $platform->extensions
759
760 Calls C<clGetPlatformInfo> with C<OpenCL::PLATFORM_EXTENSIONS> and returns the result.
761
762 =for gengetinfo end platform
763
764 =back
765
766 =head2 THE OpenCL::Device CLASS
767
768 =over 4
769
770 =item $packed_value = $device->info ($name)
771
772 See C<< $platform->info >> for details.
773
774 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clGetDeviceInfo.html>
775
776 =item @devices = $device->sub_devices (\@properties)
777
778 Creates OpencL::SubDevice objects by partitioning an existing device.
779
780 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.2/docs/man/xhtml/clCreateSubDevices.html>
781
782 =for gengetinfo begin device
783
784 =item $device_type = $device->type
785
786 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_TYPE> and returns the result.
787
788 =item $uint = $device->vendor_id
789
790 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_VENDOR_ID> and returns the result.
791
792 =item $uint = $device->max_compute_units
793
794 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_MAX_COMPUTE_UNITS> and returns the result.
795
796 =item $uint = $device->max_work_item_dimensions
797
798 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_MAX_WORK_ITEM_DIMENSIONS> and returns the result.
799
800 =item $int = $device->max_work_group_size
801
802 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_MAX_WORK_GROUP_SIZE> and returns the result.
803
804 =item @ints = $device->max_work_item_sizes
805
806 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_MAX_WORK_ITEM_SIZES> and returns the result.
807
808 =item $uint = $device->preferred_vector_width_char
809
810 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_PREFERRED_VECTOR_WIDTH_CHAR> and returns the result.
811
812 =item $uint = $device->preferred_vector_width_short
813
814 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_PREFERRED_VECTOR_WIDTH_SHORT> and returns the result.
815
816 =item $uint = $device->preferred_vector_width_int
817
818 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_PREFERRED_VECTOR_WIDTH_INT> and returns the result.
819
820 =item $uint = $device->preferred_vector_width_long
821
822 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_PREFERRED_VECTOR_WIDTH_LONG> and returns the result.
823
824 =item $uint = $device->preferred_vector_width_float
825
826 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_PREFERRED_VECTOR_WIDTH_FLOAT> and returns the result.
827
828 =item $uint = $device->preferred_vector_width_double
829
830 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_PREFERRED_VECTOR_WIDTH_DOUBLE> and returns the result.
831
832 =item $uint = $device->max_clock_frequency
833
834 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_MAX_CLOCK_FREQUENCY> and returns the result.
835
836 =item $bitfield = $device->address_bits
837
838 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_ADDRESS_BITS> and returns the result.
839
840 =item $uint = $device->max_read_image_args
841
842 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_MAX_READ_IMAGE_ARGS> and returns the result.
843
844 =item $uint = $device->max_write_image_args
845
846 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_MAX_WRITE_IMAGE_ARGS> and returns the result.
847
848 =item $ulong = $device->max_mem_alloc_size
849
850 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_MAX_MEM_ALLOC_SIZE> and returns the result.
851
852 =item $int = $device->image2d_max_width
853
854 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_IMAGE2D_MAX_WIDTH> and returns the result.
855
856 =item $int = $device->image2d_max_height
857
858 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_IMAGE2D_MAX_HEIGHT> and returns the result.
859
860 =item $int = $device->image3d_max_width
861
862 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_IMAGE3D_MAX_WIDTH> and returns the result.
863
864 =item $int = $device->image3d_max_height
865
866 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_IMAGE3D_MAX_HEIGHT> and returns the result.
867
868 =item $int = $device->image3d_max_depth
869
870 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_IMAGE3D_MAX_DEPTH> and returns the result.
871
872 =item $uint = $device->image_support
873
874 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_IMAGE_SUPPORT> and returns the result.
875
876 =item $int = $device->max_parameter_size
877
878 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_MAX_PARAMETER_SIZE> and returns the result.
879
880 =item $uint = $device->max_samplers
881
882 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_MAX_SAMPLERS> and returns the result.
883
884 =item $uint = $device->mem_base_addr_align
885
886 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_MEM_BASE_ADDR_ALIGN> and returns the result.
887
888 =item $uint = $device->min_data_type_align_size
889
890 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_MIN_DATA_TYPE_ALIGN_SIZE> and returns the result.
891
892 =item $device_fp_config = $device->single_fp_config
893
894 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_SINGLE_FP_CONFIG> and returns the result.
895
896 =item $device_mem_cache_type = $device->global_mem_cache_type
897
898 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_GLOBAL_MEM_CACHE_TYPE> and returns the result.
899
900 =item $uint = $device->global_mem_cacheline_size
901
902 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_GLOBAL_MEM_CACHELINE_SIZE> and returns the result.
903
904 =item $ulong = $device->global_mem_cache_size
905
906 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_GLOBAL_MEM_CACHE_SIZE> and returns the result.
907
908 =item $ulong = $device->global_mem_size
909
910 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_GLOBAL_MEM_SIZE> and returns the result.
911
912 =item $ulong = $device->max_constant_buffer_size
913
914 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_MAX_CONSTANT_BUFFER_SIZE> and returns the result.
915
916 =item $uint = $device->max_constant_args
917
918 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_MAX_CONSTANT_ARGS> and returns the result.
919
920 =item $device_local_mem_type = $device->local_mem_type
921
922 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_LOCAL_MEM_TYPE> and returns the result.
923
924 =item $ulong = $device->local_mem_size
925
926 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_LOCAL_MEM_SIZE> and returns the result.
927
928 =item $boolean = $device->error_correction_support
929
930 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_ERROR_CORRECTION_SUPPORT> and returns the result.
931
932 =item $int = $device->profiling_timer_resolution
933
934 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_PROFILING_TIMER_RESOLUTION> and returns the result.
935
936 =item $boolean = $device->endian_little
937
938 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_ENDIAN_LITTLE> and returns the result.
939
940 =item $boolean = $device->available
941
942 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_AVAILABLE> and returns the result.
943
944 =item $boolean = $device->compiler_available
945
946 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_COMPILER_AVAILABLE> and returns the result.
947
948 =item $device_exec_capabilities = $device->execution_capabilities
949
950 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_EXECUTION_CAPABILITIES> and returns the result.
951
952 =item $command_queue_properties = $device->properties
953
954 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_QUEUE_PROPERTIES> and returns the result.
955
956 =item $ = $device->platform
957
958 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_PLATFORM> and returns the result.
959
960 =item $string = $device->name
961
962 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_NAME> and returns the result.
963
964 =item $string = $device->vendor
965
966 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_VENDOR> and returns the result.
967
968 =item $string = $device->driver_version
969
970 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DRIVER_VERSION> and returns the result.
971
972 =item $string = $device->profile
973
974 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_PROFILE> and returns the result.
975
976 =item $string = $device->version
977
978 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_VERSION> and returns the result.
979
980 =item $string = $device->extensions
981
982 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_EXTENSIONS> and returns the result.
983
984 =item $uint = $device->preferred_vector_width_half
985
986 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_PREFERRED_VECTOR_WIDTH_HALF> and returns the result.
987
988 =item $uint = $device->native_vector_width_char
989
990 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_NATIVE_VECTOR_WIDTH_CHAR> and returns the result.
991
992 =item $uint = $device->native_vector_width_short
993
994 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_NATIVE_VECTOR_WIDTH_SHORT> and returns the result.
995
996 =item $uint = $device->native_vector_width_int
997
998 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_NATIVE_VECTOR_WIDTH_INT> and returns the result.
999
1000 =item $uint = $device->native_vector_width_long
1001
1002 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_NATIVE_VECTOR_WIDTH_LONG> and returns the result.
1003
1004 =item $uint = $device->native_vector_width_float
1005
1006 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_NATIVE_VECTOR_WIDTH_FLOAT> and returns the result.
1007
1008 =item $uint = $device->native_vector_width_double
1009
1010 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_NATIVE_VECTOR_WIDTH_DOUBLE> and returns the result.
1011
1012 =item $uint = $device->native_vector_width_half
1013
1014 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_NATIVE_VECTOR_WIDTH_HALF> and returns the result.
1015
1016 =item $device_fp_config = $device->double_fp_config
1017
1018 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_DOUBLE_FP_CONFIG> and returns the result.
1019
1020 =item $device_fp_config = $device->half_fp_config
1021
1022 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_HALF_FP_CONFIG> and returns the result.
1023
1024 =item $boolean = $device->host_unified_memory
1025
1026 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_HOST_UNIFIED_MEMORY> and returns the result.
1027
1028 =item $device = $device->parent_device_ext
1029
1030 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_PARENT_DEVICE_EXT> and returns the result.
1031
1032 =item @device_partition_property_exts = $device->partition_types_ext
1033
1034 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_PARTITION_TYPES_EXT> and returns the result.
1035
1036 =item @device_partition_property_exts = $device->affinity_domains_ext
1037
1038 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_AFFINITY_DOMAINS_EXT> and returns the result.
1039
1040 =item $uint = $device->reference_count_ext
1041
1042 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_REFERENCE_COUNT_EXT> and returns the result.
1043
1044 =item @device_partition_property_exts = $device->partition_style_ext
1045
1046 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_PARTITION_STYLE_EXT> and returns the result.
1047
1048 =for gengetinfo end device
1049
1050 =back
1051
1052 =head2 THE OpenCL::Context CLASS
1053
1054 An OpenCL::Context is basically a container, or manager, for a number of
1055 devices of a platform. It is used to create all sorts of secondary objects
1056 such as buffers, queues, programs and so on.
1057
1058 All context creation functions and methods take a list of properties
1059 (type-value pairs). All property values can be specified as integers -
1060 some additionally support other types:
1061
1062 =over 4
1063
1064 =item OpenCL::CONTEXT_PLATFORM
1065
1066 Also accepts OpenCL::Platform objects.
1067
1068 =item OpenCL::GLX_DISPLAY_KHR
1069
1070 Also accepts C<undef>, in which case a deep and troubling hack is engaged
1071 to find the current glx display (see L<GLX SUPPORT>).
1072
1073 =item OpenCL::GL_CONTEXT_KHR
1074
1075 Also accepts C<undef>, in which case a deep and troubling hack is engaged
1076 to find the current glx context (see L<GLX SUPPORT>).
1077
1078 =back
1079
1080 =over 4
1081
1082 =item $prog = $ctx->build_program ($program, $options = "")
1083
1084 This convenience function tries to build the program on all devices in
1085 the context. If the build fails, then the function will C<croak> with the
1086 build log. Otherwise ti returns the program object.
1087
1088 The C<$program> can either be a C<OpenCL::Program> object or a string
1089 containing the program. In the latter case, a program objetc will be
1090 created automatically.
1091
1092 =cut
1093
1094 sub OpenCL::Context::build_program {
1095 my ($self, $prog, $options) = @_;
1096
1097 $prog = $self->program_with_source ($prog)
1098 unless ref $prog;
1099
1100 eval { $prog->build (undef, $options); 1 }
1101 or errno == BUILD_PROGRAM_FAILURE
1102 or errno == INVALID_BINARY # workaround nvidia bug
1103 or Carp::croak "OpenCL::Context->build_program: " . err2str;
1104
1105 # we check status for all devices
1106 for my $dev ($self->devices) {
1107 $prog->build_status ($dev) == BUILD_SUCCESS
1108 or Carp::croak "Building OpenCL program for device '" . $dev->name . "' failed:\n"
1109 . $prog->build_log ($dev);
1110 }
1111
1112 $prog
1113 }
1114
1115 =item $queue = $ctx->queue ($device, $properties)
1116
1117 Create a new OpenCL::Queue object from the context and the given device.
1118
1119 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clCreateCommandQueue.html>
1120
1121 Example: create an out-of-order queue.
1122
1123 $queue = $ctx->queue ($device, OpenCL::QUEUE_OUT_OF_ORDER_EXEC_MODE_ENABLE);
1124
1125 =item $ev = $ctx->user_event
1126
1127 Creates a new OpenCL::UserEvent object.
1128
1129 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clCreateUserEvent.html>
1130
1131 =item $buf = $ctx->buffer ($flags, $len)
1132
1133 Creates a new OpenCL::Buffer (actually OpenCL::BufferObj) object with the
1134 given flags and octet-size.
1135
1136 flags: OpenCL::MEM_READ_WRITE, OpenCL::MEM_WRITE_ONLY, OpenCL::MEM_READ_ONLY,
1137 OpenCL::MEM_USE_HOST_PTR, OpenCL::MEM_ALLOC_HOST_PTR, OpenCL::MEM_COPY_HOST_PTR,
1138 OpenCL::MEM_HOST_WRITE_ONLY, OpenCL::MEM_HOST_READ_ONLY, OpenCL::MEM_HOST_NO_ACCESS.
1139
1140 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clCreateBuffer.html>
1141
1142 =item $buf = $ctx->buffer_sv ($flags, $data)
1143
1144 Creates a new OpenCL::Buffer (actually OpenCL::BufferObj) object and
1145 initialise it with the given data values.
1146
1147 =item $img = $ctx->image ($self, $flags, $channel_order, $channel_type, $type, $width, $height, $depth = 0, $array_size = 0, $row_pitch = 0, $slice_pitch = 0, $num_mip_level = 0, $num_samples = 0, $*data = &PL_sv_undef)
1148
1149 Creates a new OpenCL::Image object and optionally initialises it with
1150 the given data values.
1151
1152 channel_order: OpenCL::R, OpenCL::A, OpenCL::RG, OpenCL::RA, OpenCL::RGB,
1153 OpenCL::RGBA, OpenCL::BGRA, OpenCL::ARGB, OpenCL::INTENSITY, OpenCL::LUMINANCE,
1154 OpenCL::Rx, OpenCL::RGx, OpenCL::RGBx.
1155
1156 channel_type: OpenCL::SNORM_INT8, OpenCL::SNORM_INT16, OpenCL::UNORM_INT8,
1157 OpenCL::UNORM_INT16, OpenCL::UNORM_SHORT_565, OpenCL::UNORM_SHORT_555,
1158 OpenCL::UNORM_INT_101010, OpenCL::SIGNED_INT8, OpenCL::SIGNED_INT16,
1159 OpenCL::SIGNED_INT32, OpenCL::UNSIGNED_INT8, OpenCL::UNSIGNED_INT16,
1160 OpenCL::UNSIGNED_INT32, OpenCL::HALF_FLOAT, OpenCL::FLOAT.
1161
1162
1163 type: OpenCL::MEM_OBJECT_BUFFER, OpenCL::MEM_OBJECT_IMAGE2D,
1164 OpenCL::MEM_OBJECT_IMAGE3D, OpenCL::MEM_OBJECT_IMAGE2D_ARRAY,
1165 OpenCL::MEM_OBJECT_IMAGE1D, OpenCL::MEM_OBJECT_IMAGE1D_ARRAY,
1166 OpenCL::MEM_OBJECT_IMAGE1D_BUFFER.
1167
1168 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.2/docs/man/xhtml/clCreateImage.html>
1169
1170 =item $img = $ctx->image2d ($flags, $channel_order, $channel_type, $width, $height, $row_pitch = 0, $data = undef)
1171
1172 Creates a new OpenCL::Image2D object and optionally initialises it with
1173 the given data values.
1174
1175 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clCreateImage2D.html>
1176
1177 =item $img = $ctx->image3d ($flags, $channel_order, $channel_type, $width, $height, $depth, $row_pitch = 0, $slice_pitch = 0, $data = undef)
1178
1179 Creates a new OpenCL::Image3D object and optionally initialises it with
1180 the given data values.
1181
1182 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clCreateImage3D.html>
1183
1184 =item $buffer = $ctx->gl_buffer ($flags, $bufobj)
1185
1186 Creates a new OpenCL::Buffer (actually OpenCL::BufferObj) object that refers to the given
1187 OpenGL buffer object.
1188
1189 flags: OpenCL::MEM_READ_WRITE, OpenCL::MEM_READ_ONLY, OpenCL::MEM_WRITE_ONLY.
1190
1191 http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clCreateFromGLBuffer.html
1192
1193 =item $img = $ctx->gl_texture ($flags, $target, $miplevel, $texture)
1194
1195 Creates a new OpenCL::Image object that refers to the given OpenGL
1196 texture object or buffer.
1197
1198 target: GL_TEXTURE_1D, GL_TEXTURE_1D_ARRAY, GL_TEXTURE_BUFFER,
1199 GL_TEXTURE_2D, GL_TEXTURE_2D_ARRAY, GL_TEXTURE_3D,
1200 GL_TEXTURE_CUBE_MAP_POSITIVE_X, GL_TEXTURE_CUBE_MAP_POSITIVE_Y,
1201 GL_TEXTURE_CUBE_MAP_POSITIVE_Z, GL_TEXTURE_CUBE_MAP_NEGATIVE_X,
1202 GL_TEXTURE_CUBE_MAP_NEGATIVE_Y, GL_TEXTURE_CUBE_MAP_NEGATIVE_Z,
1203 GL_TEXTURE_RECTANGLE/GL_TEXTURE_RECTANGLE_ARB.
1204
1205 http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.2/docs/man/xhtml/clCreateFromGLTexture.html
1206
1207 =item $img = $ctx->gl_texture2d ($flags, $target, $miplevel, $texture)
1208
1209 Creates a new OpenCL::Image2D object that refers to the given OpenGL
1210 2D texture object.
1211
1212 http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clCreateFromGLTexture2D.html
1213
1214 =item $img = $ctx->gl_texture3d ($flags, $target, $miplevel, $texture)
1215
1216 Creates a new OpenCL::Image3D object that refers to the given OpenGL
1217 3D texture object.
1218
1219 http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clCreateFromGLTexture3D.html
1220
1221 =item $ctx->gl_renderbuffer ($flags, $renderbuffer)
1222
1223 Creates a new OpenCL::Image2D object that refers to the given OpenGL
1224 render buffer.
1225
1226 http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clCreateFromGLRenderbuffer.html
1227
1228 =item @formats = $ctx->supported_image_formats ($flags, $image_type)
1229
1230 Returns a list of matching image formats - each format is an arrayref with
1231 two values, $channel_order and $channel_type, in it.
1232
1233 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clGetSupportedImageFormats.html>
1234
1235 =item $sampler = $ctx->sampler ($normalized_coords, $addressing_mode, $filter_mode)
1236
1237 Creates a new OpenCL::Sampler object.
1238
1239 addressing_mode: OpenCL::ADDRESS_NONE, OpenCL::ADDRESS_CLAMP_TO_EDGE,
1240 OpenCL::ADDRESS_CLAMP, OpenCL::ADDRESS_REPEAT, OpenCL::ADDRESS_MIRRORED_REPEAT.
1241
1242 filter_mode: OpenCL::FILTER_NEAREST, OpenCL::FILTER_LINEAR.
1243
1244 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clCreateSampler.html>
1245
1246 =item $program = $ctx->program_with_source ($string)
1247
1248 Creates a new OpenCL::Program object from the given source code.
1249
1250 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clCreateProgramWithSource.html>
1251
1252 =item ($program, \@status) = $ctx->program_with_binary (\@devices, \@binaries)
1253
1254 Creates a new OpenCL::Program object from the given binaries.
1255
1256 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clCreateProgramWithBinary.html>
1257
1258 Example: clone an existing program object that contains a successfully
1259 compiled program, no matter how useless this is.
1260
1261 my $clone = $ctx->program_with_binary ([$prog->devices], [$prog->binaries]);
1262
1263 =item $program = $ctx->program_with_built_in_kernels (\@devices, $kernel_names)
1264
1265 Creates a new OpenCL::Program object from the given built-in kernel names.
1266
1267 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.2/docs/man/xhtml/clCreateProgramWithBuiltInKernels.html>
1268
1269 =item $packed_value = $ctx->info ($name)
1270
1271 See C<< $platform->info >> for details.
1272
1273 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clGetContextInfo.html>
1274
1275 =for gengetinfo begin context
1276
1277 =item $uint = $context->reference_count
1278
1279 Calls C<clGetContextInfo> with C<OpenCL::CONTEXT_REFERENCE_COUNT> and returns the result.
1280
1281 =item @devices = $context->devices
1282
1283 Calls C<clGetContextInfo> with C<OpenCL::CONTEXT_DEVICES> and returns the result.
1284
1285 =item @property_ints = $context->properties
1286
1287 Calls C<clGetContextInfo> with C<OpenCL::CONTEXT_PROPERTIES> and returns the result.
1288
1289 =item $uint = $context->num_devices
1290
1291 Calls C<clGetContextInfo> with C<OpenCL::CONTEXT_NUM_DEVICES> and returns the result.
1292
1293 =for gengetinfo end context
1294
1295 =back
1296
1297 =head2 THE OpenCL::Queue CLASS
1298
1299 An OpenCL::Queue represents an execution queue for OpenCL. You execute
1300 requests by calling their respective method and waiting for it to complete
1301 in some way.
1302
1303 Most methods that enqueue some request return an event object that can
1304 be used to wait for completion (optionally using a callback), unless
1305 the method is called in void context, in which case no event object is
1306 created.
1307
1308 They also allow you to specify any number of other event objects that this
1309 request has to wait for before it starts executing, by simply passing the
1310 event objects as extra parameters to the enqueue methods. To simplify
1311 program design, this module ignores any C<undef> values in the list of
1312 events. This makes it possible to code operations such as this, without
1313 having to put a valid event object into C<$event> first:
1314
1315 $event = $queue->xxx (..., $event);
1316
1317 Queues execute in-order by default, without any parallelism, so in most
1318 cases (i.e. you use only one queue) it's not necessary to wait for or
1319 create event objects, althoguh an our of order queue is often a bit
1320 faster.
1321
1322 =over 4
1323
1324 =item $ev = $queue->read_buffer ($buffer, $blocking, $offset, $len, $data, $wait_events...)
1325
1326 Reads data from buffer into the given string.
1327
1328 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clEnqueueReadBuffer.html>
1329
1330 =item $ev = $queue->write_buffer ($buffer, $blocking, $offset, $data, $wait_events...)
1331
1332 Writes data to buffer from the given string.
1333
1334 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clEnqueueWriteBuffer.html>
1335
1336 =item $ev = $queue->copy_buffer ($src, $dst, $src_offset, $dst_offset, $len, $wait_events...)
1337
1338 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clEnqueueCopyBuffer.html>
1339
1340 =item $ev = $queue->read_buffer_rect (OpenCL::Memory buf, cl_bool blocking, $buf_x, $buf_y, $buf_z, $host_x, $host_y, $host_z, $width, $height, $depth, $buf_row_pitch, $buf_slice_pitch, $host_row_pitch, $host_slice_pitch, $data, $wait_events...)
1341
1342 http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clEnqueueReadBufferRect.html
1343
1344 =item $ev = $queue->write_buffer_rect (OpenCL::Memory buf, cl_bool blocking, $buf_x, $buf_y, $buf_z, $host_x, $host_y, $host_z, $width, $height, $depth, $buf_row_pitch, $buf_slice_pitch, $host_row_pitch, $host_slice_pitch, $data, $wait_events...)
1345
1346 http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clEnqueueWriteBufferRect.html
1347
1348 =item $ev = $queue->copy_buffer_to_image ($src_buffer, $dst_image, $src_offset, $dst_x, $dst_y, $dst_z, $width, $height, $depth, $wait_events...)
1349
1350 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clEnqueueCopyBufferToImage.html>
1351
1352 =item $ev = $queue->read_image ($src, $blocking, $x, $y, $z, $width, $height, $depth, $row_pitch, $slice_pitch, $data, $wait_events...)
1353
1354 C<$row_pitch> (and C<$slice_pitch>) can be C<0>, in which case the OpenCL
1355 module uses the image width (and height) to supply default values.
1356
1357 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clEnqueueReadImage.html>
1358
1359 =item $ev = $queue->write_image ($src, $blocking, $x, $y, $z, $width, $height, $depth, $row_pitch, $slice_pitch, $data, $wait_events...)
1360
1361 C<$row_pitch> (and C<$slice_pitch>) can be C<0>, in which case the OpenCL
1362 module uses the image width (and height) to supply default values.
1363 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clEnqueueWriteImage.html>
1364
1365 =item $ev = $queue->copy_image ($src_image, $dst_image, $src_x, $src_y, $src_z, $dst_x, $dst_y, $dst_z, $width, $height, $depth, $wait_events...)
1366
1367 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clEnqueueCopyImage.html>
1368
1369 =item $ev = $queue->copy_image_to_buffer ($src_image, $dst_image, $src_x, $src_y, $src_z, $width, $height, $depth, $dst_offset, $wait_events...)
1370
1371 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clEnqueueCopyImageToBuffer.html>
1372
1373 =item $ev = $queue->copy_buffer_rect ($src, $dst, $src_x, $src_y, $src_z, $dst_x, $dst_y, $dst_z, $width, $height, $depth, $src_row_pitch, $src_slice_pitch, $dst_row_pitch, $dst_slice_pitch, $wait_event...)
1374
1375 Yeah.
1376
1377 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clEnqueueCopyBufferToImage.html>.
1378
1379 =item $ev = $queue->fill_buffer ($mem, $pattern, $offset, $size, ...)
1380
1381 Fills the given buffer object with repeated applications of C<$pattern>,
1382 starting at C<$offset> for C<$size> octets.
1383
1384 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.2/docs/man/xhtml/clEnqueueFillBuffer.html>
1385
1386 =item $ev = $queue->fill_image ($img, $r, $g, $b, $a, $x, $y, $z, $width, $height, $depth, ...)
1387
1388 Fills the given image area with the given rgba colour components. The
1389 components are normally floating point values between C<0> and C<1>,
1390 except when the image channel data type is a signe dor unsigned
1391 unnormalised format, in which case the range is determined by the format.
1392
1393 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.2/docs/man/xhtml/clEnqueueFillImage.html>
1394
1395 =item $ev = $queue->task ($kernel, $wait_events...)
1396
1397 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clEnqueueTask.html>
1398
1399 =item $ev = $queue->nd_range_kernel ($kernel, \@global_work_offset, \@global_work_size, \@local_work_size, $wait_events...)
1400
1401 Enqueues a kernel execution.
1402
1403 \@global_work_size must be specified as a reference to an array of
1404 integers specifying the work sizes (element counts).
1405
1406 \@global_work_offset must be either C<undef> (in which case all offsets
1407 are C<0>), or a reference to an array of work offsets, with the same number
1408 of elements as \@global_work_size.
1409
1410 \@local_work_size must be either C<undef> (in which case the
1411 implementation is supposed to choose good local work sizes), or a
1412 reference to an array of local work sizes, with the same number of
1413 elements as \@global_work_size.
1414
1415 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clEnqueueNDRangeKernel.html>
1416
1417 =item $ev = $queue->migrate_mem_objects (\@mem_objects, $flags, $wait_events...)
1418
1419 Migrates a number of OpenCL::Memory objects to or from the device.
1420
1421 flags: OpenCL::MIGRATE_MEM_OBJECT_HOST, OpenCL::MIGRATE_MEM_OBJECT_CONTENT_UNDEFINED
1422
1423 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.2/docs/man/xhtml/clEnqueueMigrateMemObjects.html>
1424
1425 =item $ev = $queue->acquire_gl_objects ([object, ...], $wait_events...)
1426
1427 Enqueues a list (an array-ref of OpenCL::Memory objects) to be acquired
1428 for subsequent OpenCL usage.
1429
1430 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clEnqueueAcquireGLObjects.html>
1431
1432 =item $ev = $queue->release_gl_objects ([object, ...], $wait_events...)
1433
1434 Enqueues a list (an array-ref of OpenCL::Memory objects) to be released
1435 for subsequent OpenGL usage.
1436
1437 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clEnqueueReleaseGLObjects.html>
1438
1439 =item $ev = $queue->wait_for_events ($wait_events...)
1440
1441 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clEnqueueWaitForEvents.html>
1442
1443 =item $ev = $queue->marker ($wait_events...)
1444
1445 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.2/docs/man/xhtml/clEnqueueMarkerWithWaitList.html>
1446
1447 =item $ev = $queue->barrier ($wait_events...)
1448
1449 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.2/docs/man/xhtml/clEnqueueBarrierWithWaitList.html>
1450
1451 =item $queue->flush
1452
1453 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clFlush.html>
1454
1455 =item $queue->finish
1456
1457 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clFinish.html>
1458
1459 =item $packed_value = $queue->info ($name)
1460
1461 See C<< $platform->info >> for details.
1462
1463 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clGetCommandQueueInfo.html>
1464
1465 =for gengetinfo begin command_queue
1466
1467 =item $ctx = $command_queue->context
1468
1469 Calls C<clGetCommandQueueInfo> with C<OpenCL::QUEUE_CONTEXT> and returns the result.
1470
1471 =item $device = $command_queue->device
1472
1473 Calls C<clGetCommandQueueInfo> with C<OpenCL::QUEUE_DEVICE> and returns the result.
1474
1475 =item $uint = $command_queue->reference_count
1476
1477 Calls C<clGetCommandQueueInfo> with C<OpenCL::QUEUE_REFERENCE_COUNT> and returns the result.
1478
1479 =item $command_queue_properties = $command_queue->properties
1480
1481 Calls C<clGetCommandQueueInfo> with C<OpenCL::QUEUE_PROPERTIES> and returns the result.
1482
1483 =for gengetinfo end command_queue
1484
1485 =back
1486
1487 =head3 MEMORY MAPPED BUFFERS
1488
1489 OpenCL allows you to map buffers and images to host memory (read: perl
1490 scalars). This is done much like reading or copying a buffer, by enqueuing
1491 a map or unmap operation on the command queue.
1492
1493 The map operations return an C<OpenCL::Mapped> object - see L<THE
1494 OpenCL::Mapped CLASS> section for details on what to do with these
1495 objects.
1496
1497 The object will be unmapped automatically when the mapped object is
1498 destroyed (you can use a barrier to make sure the unmap has finished,
1499 before using the buffer in a kernel), but you can also enqueue an unmap
1500 operation manually.
1501
1502 =over 4
1503
1504 =item $mapped_buffer = $queue->map_buffer ($buf, $blocking=1, $map_flags=OpenCL::MAP_READ|OpenCL::MAP_WRITE, $offset=0, $size=undef, $wait_events...)
1505
1506 Maps the given buffer into host memory and returns an
1507 C<OpenCL::MappedBuffer> object. If C<$size> is specified as undef, then
1508 the map will extend to the end of the buffer.
1509
1510 map_flags: OpenCL::MAP_READ, OpenCL::MAP_WRITE, OpenCL::MAP_WRITE_INVALIDATE_REGION.
1511
1512 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clEnqueueMapBuffer.html>
1513
1514 Example: map the buffer $buf fully and replace the first 4 bytes by "abcd", then unmap.
1515
1516 {
1517 my $mapped = $queue->map_buffer ($buf, 1, OpenCL::MAP_WRITE);
1518 substr $$mapped, 0, 4, "abcd";
1519 } # asynchronously unmap because $mapped is destroyed
1520
1521 =item $mapped_image = $queue->map_image ($img, $blocking=1, $map_flags=OpenCL::MAP_READ|OpenCL::MAP_WRITE, $x=0, $y=0, $z=0, $width=undef, $height=undef, $depth=undef, $wait_events...)
1522
1523 Maps the given image area into host memory and return an
1524 C<OpenCL::MappedImage> object.
1525
1526 If any of C<$width>, C<$height> and/or C<$depth> are C<undef> then they
1527 will be replaced by the maximum possible value.
1528
1529 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clEnqueueMapImage.html>
1530
1531 Example: map an image (with OpenCL::UNSIGNED_INT8 channel type) and set
1532 the first channel of the leftmost column to 5, then explicitly unmap
1533 it. You are not necessarily meant to do it this way, this example just
1534 shows you the accessors to use :)
1535
1536 my $mapped = $queue->map_image ($image, 1, OpenCL::MAP_WRITE);
1537
1538 $mapped->set ($_ * $mapped->row_pitch, pack "C", 5)
1539 for 0..$image->height;
1540
1541 $mapped->unmap;.
1542 $mapped->wait; # only needed for out of order queues normally
1543
1544 =item $ev = $queue->unmap ($mapped, $wait_events...)
1545
1546 Unmaps the data from host memory. You must not call any methods that
1547 modify the data, or modify the data scalar directly, after calling this
1548 method.
1549
1550 The mapped event object will always be passed as part of the
1551 $wait_events. The mapped event object will be replaced by the new event
1552 object that this request creates.
1553
1554 =back
1555
1556 =head2 THE OpenCL::Memory CLASS
1557
1558 This the superclass of all memory objects - OpenCL::Buffer, OpenCL::Image,
1559 OpenCL::Image2D and OpenCL::Image3D.
1560
1561 =over 4
1562
1563 =item $packed_value = $memory->info ($name)
1564
1565 See C<< $platform->info >> for details.
1566
1567 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clGetMemObjectInfo.html>
1568
1569 =for gengetinfo begin mem
1570
1571 =item $mem_object_type = $mem->type
1572
1573 Calls C<clGetMemObjectInfo> with C<OpenCL::MEM_TYPE> and returns the result.
1574
1575 =item $mem_flags = $mem->flags
1576
1577 Calls C<clGetMemObjectInfo> with C<OpenCL::MEM_FLAGS> and returns the result.
1578
1579 =item $int = $mem->size
1580
1581 Calls C<clGetMemObjectInfo> with C<OpenCL::MEM_SIZE> and returns the result.
1582
1583 =item $ptr_value = $mem->host_ptr
1584
1585 Calls C<clGetMemObjectInfo> with C<OpenCL::MEM_HOST_PTR> and returns the result.
1586
1587 =item $uint = $mem->map_count
1588
1589 Calls C<clGetMemObjectInfo> with C<OpenCL::MEM_MAP_COUNT> and returns the result.
1590
1591 =item $uint = $mem->reference_count
1592
1593 Calls C<clGetMemObjectInfo> with C<OpenCL::MEM_REFERENCE_COUNT> and returns the result.
1594
1595 =item $ctx = $mem->context
1596
1597 Calls C<clGetMemObjectInfo> with C<OpenCL::MEM_CONTEXT> and returns the result.
1598
1599 =item $mem = $mem->associated_memobject
1600
1601 Calls C<clGetMemObjectInfo> with C<OpenCL::MEM_ASSOCIATED_MEMOBJECT> and returns the result.
1602
1603 =item $int = $mem->offset
1604
1605 Calls C<clGetMemObjectInfo> with C<OpenCL::MEM_OFFSET> and returns the result.
1606
1607 =for gengetinfo end mem
1608
1609 =item ($type, $name) = $mem->gl_object_info
1610
1611 Returns the OpenGL object type (e.g. OpenCL::GL_OBJECT_TEXTURE2D) and the
1612 object "name" (e.g. the texture name) used to create this memory object.
1613
1614 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clGetGLObjectInfo.html>
1615
1616 =back
1617
1618 =head2 THE OpenCL::Buffer CLASS
1619
1620 This is a subclass of OpenCL::Memory, and the superclass of
1621 OpenCL::BufferObj. Its purpose is simply to distinguish between buffers
1622 and sub-buffers.
1623
1624 =head2 THE OpenCL::BufferObj CLASS
1625
1626 This is a subclass of OpenCL::Buffer and thus OpenCL::Memory. It exists
1627 because one cna create sub buffers of OpenLC::BufferObj objects, but not
1628 sub buffers from these sub buffers.
1629
1630 =over 4
1631
1632 =item $subbuf = $buf_obj->sub_buffer_region ($flags, $origin, $size)
1633
1634 Creates an OpenCL::Buffer objects from this buffer and returns it. The
1635 C<buffer_create_type> is assumed to be C<CL_BUFFER_CREATE_TYPE_REGION>.
1636
1637 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clCreateSubBuffer.html>
1638
1639 =back
1640
1641 =head2 THE OpenCL::Image CLASS
1642
1643 This is the superclass of all image objects - OpenCL::Image1D,
1644 OpenCL::Image1DArray, OpenCL::Image1DBuffer, OpenCL::Image2D,
1645 OpenCL::Image2DArray and OpenCL::Image3D.
1646
1647 =over 4
1648
1649 =item $packed_value = $image->image_info ($name)
1650
1651 See C<< $platform->info >> for details.
1652
1653 The reason this method is not called C<info> is that there already is an
1654 C<< ->info >> method inherited from C<OpenCL::Memory>.
1655
1656 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clGetImageInfo.html>
1657
1658 =item ($channel_order, $channel_data_type) = $image->format
1659
1660 Returns the channel order and type used to create the image by calling
1661 C<clGetImageInfo> with C<CL_IMAGE_FORMAT>.
1662
1663 =for gengetinfo begin image
1664
1665 =item $int = $image->element_size
1666
1667 Calls C<clGetImageInfo> with C<OpenCL::IMAGE_ELEMENT_SIZE> and returns the result.
1668
1669 =item $int = $image->row_pitch
1670
1671 Calls C<clGetImageInfo> with C<OpenCL::IMAGE_ROW_PITCH> and returns the result.
1672
1673 =item $int = $image->slice_pitch
1674
1675 Calls C<clGetImageInfo> with C<OpenCL::IMAGE_SLICE_PITCH> and returns the result.
1676
1677 =item $int = $image->width
1678
1679 Calls C<clGetImageInfo> with C<OpenCL::IMAGE_WIDTH> and returns the result.
1680
1681 =item $int = $image->height
1682
1683 Calls C<clGetImageInfo> with C<OpenCL::IMAGE_HEIGHT> and returns the result.
1684
1685 =item $int = $image->depth
1686
1687 Calls C<clGetImageInfo> with C<OpenCL::IMAGE_DEPTH> and returns the result.
1688
1689 =for gengetinfo end image
1690
1691 =for gengetinfo begin gl_texture
1692
1693 =item $GLenum = $gl_texture->target
1694
1695 Calls C<clGetGLTextureInfo> with C<OpenCL::GL_TEXTURE_TARGET> and returns the result.
1696
1697 =item $GLint = $gl_texture->gl_mipmap_level
1698
1699 Calls C<clGetGLTextureInfo> with C<OpenCL::GL_MIPMAP_LEVEL> and returns the result.
1700
1701 =for gengetinfo end gl_texture
1702
1703 =back
1704
1705 =head2 THE OpenCL::Sampler CLASS
1706
1707 =over 4
1708
1709 =item $packed_value = $sampler->info ($name)
1710
1711 See C<< $platform->info >> for details.
1712
1713 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clGetSamplerInfo.html>
1714
1715 =for gengetinfo begin sampler
1716
1717 =item $uint = $sampler->reference_count
1718
1719 Calls C<clGetSamplerInfo> with C<OpenCL::SAMPLER_REFERENCE_COUNT> and returns the result.
1720
1721 =item $ctx = $sampler->context
1722
1723 Calls C<clGetSamplerInfo> with C<OpenCL::SAMPLER_CONTEXT> and returns the result.
1724
1725 =item $addressing_mode = $sampler->normalized_coords
1726
1727 Calls C<clGetSamplerInfo> with C<OpenCL::SAMPLER_NORMALIZED_COORDS> and returns the result.
1728
1729 =item $filter_mode = $sampler->addressing_mode
1730
1731 Calls C<clGetSamplerInfo> with C<OpenCL::SAMPLER_ADDRESSING_MODE> and returns the result.
1732
1733 =item $boolean = $sampler->filter_mode
1734
1735 Calls C<clGetSamplerInfo> with C<OpenCL::SAMPLER_FILTER_MODE> and returns the result.
1736
1737 =for gengetinfo end sampler
1738
1739 =back
1740
1741 =head2 THE OpenCL::Program CLASS
1742
1743 =over 4
1744
1745 =item $program->build (\@devices = undef, $options = "", $cb->($program) = undef)
1746
1747 Tries to build the program with the given options. See also the
1748 C<$ctx->build> convenience function.
1749
1750 If a callback is specified, then it will be called when compilation is
1751 finished. Note that many OpenCL implementations block your program while
1752 compiling whether you use a callback or not. See C<build_async> if you
1753 want to make sure the build is done in the background.
1754
1755 Note that some OpenCL implementations act up badly, and don't call the
1756 callback in some error cases (but call it in others). This implementation
1757 assumes the callback will always be called, and leaks memory if this is
1758 not so. So best make sure you don't pass in invalid values.
1759
1760 Some implementations fail with C<OpenCL::INVALID_BINARY> when the
1761 compilation state is successful but some later stage fails.
1762
1763 options: C<-D name>, C<-D name=definition>, C<-I dir>,
1764 C<-cl-single-precision-constant>, C<-cl-denorms-are-zero>,
1765 C<-cl-fp32-correctly-rounded-divide-sqrt>, C<-cl-opt-disable>,
1766 C<-cl-mad-enable>, C<-cl-no-signed-zeros>, C<-cl-unsafe-math-optimizations>,
1767 C<-cl-finite-math-only>, C<-cl-fast-relaxed-math>,
1768 C<-w>, C<-Werror>, C<-cl-std=CL1.1/CL1.2>, C<-cl-kernel-arg-info>,
1769 C<-create-library>, C<-enable-link-options>.
1770
1771 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clBuildProgram.html>
1772
1773 =item $program->build_async (\@devices = undef, $options = "", $cb->($program) = undef)
1774
1775 Similar to C<< ->build >>, except it starts a thread, and never fails (you
1776 need to check the compilation status form the callback, or by polling).
1777
1778 build_status: OpenCL::BUILD_SUCCESS, OpenCL::BUILD_NONE,
1779 OpenCL::BUILD_ERROR, OpenCL::BUILD_IN_PROGRESS.
1780
1781 =item $packed_value = $program->build_info ($device, $name)
1782
1783 Similar to C<< $platform->info >>, but returns build info for a previous
1784 build attempt for the given device.
1785
1786 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clGetBuildInfo.html>
1787
1788 =item $kernel = $program->kernel ($function_name)
1789
1790 Creates an OpenCL::Kernel object out of the named C<__kernel> function in
1791 the program.
1792
1793 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clCreateKernel.html>
1794
1795 =item @kernels = $program->kernels_in_program
1796
1797 Returns all kernels successfully compiled for all devices in program.
1798
1799 http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clCreateKernelsInProgram.html
1800
1801 =for gengetinfo begin program_build
1802
1803 =item $build_status = $program->build_status ($device)
1804
1805 Calls C<clGetProgramBuildInfo> with C<OpenCL::PROGRAM_BUILD_STATUS> and returns the result.
1806
1807 =item $string = $program->build_options ($device)
1808
1809 Calls C<clGetProgramBuildInfo> with C<OpenCL::PROGRAM_BUILD_OPTIONS> and returns the result.
1810
1811 =item $string = $program->build_log ($device)
1812
1813 Calls C<clGetProgramBuildInfo> with C<OpenCL::PROGRAM_BUILD_LOG> and returns the result.
1814
1815 =for gengetinfo end program_build
1816
1817 =item $packed_value = $program->info ($name)
1818
1819 See C<< $platform->info >> for details.
1820
1821 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clGetProgramInfo.html>
1822
1823 =for gengetinfo begin program
1824
1825 =item $uint = $program->reference_count
1826
1827 Calls C<clGetProgramInfo> with C<OpenCL::PROGRAM_REFERENCE_COUNT> and returns the result.
1828
1829 =item $ctx = $program->context
1830
1831 Calls C<clGetProgramInfo> with C<OpenCL::PROGRAM_CONTEXT> and returns the result.
1832
1833 =item $uint = $program->num_devices
1834
1835 Calls C<clGetProgramInfo> with C<OpenCL::PROGRAM_NUM_DEVICES> and returns the result.
1836
1837 =item @devices = $program->devices
1838
1839 Calls C<clGetProgramInfo> with C<OpenCL::PROGRAM_DEVICES> and returns the result.
1840
1841 =item $string = $program->source
1842
1843 Calls C<clGetProgramInfo> with C<OpenCL::PROGRAM_SOURCE> and returns the result.
1844
1845 =item @ints = $program->binary_sizes
1846
1847 Calls C<clGetProgramInfo> with C<OpenCL::PROGRAM_BINARY_SIZES> and returns the result.
1848
1849 =for gengetinfo end program
1850
1851 =item @blobs = $program->binaries
1852
1853 Returns a string for the compiled binary for every device associated with
1854 the program, empty strings indicate missing programs, and an empty result
1855 means no program binaries are available.
1856
1857 These "binaries" are often, in fact, informative low-level assembly
1858 sources.
1859
1860 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clGetProgramInfo.html>
1861
1862 =back
1863
1864 =head2 THE OpenCL::Kernel CLASS
1865
1866 =over 4
1867
1868 =item $packed_value = $kernel->info ($name)
1869
1870 See C<< $platform->info >> for details.
1871
1872 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clGetKernelInfo.html>
1873
1874 =for gengetinfo begin kernel
1875
1876 =item $string = $kernel->function_name
1877
1878 Calls C<clGetKernelInfo> with C<OpenCL::KERNEL_FUNCTION_NAME> and returns the result.
1879
1880 =item $uint = $kernel->num_args
1881
1882 Calls C<clGetKernelInfo> with C<OpenCL::KERNEL_NUM_ARGS> and returns the result.
1883
1884 =item $uint = $kernel->reference_count
1885
1886 Calls C<clGetKernelInfo> with C<OpenCL::KERNEL_REFERENCE_COUNT> and returns the result.
1887
1888 =item $ctx = $kernel->context
1889
1890 Calls C<clGetKernelInfo> with C<OpenCL::KERNEL_CONTEXT> and returns the result.
1891
1892 =item $program = $kernel->program
1893
1894 Calls C<clGetKernelInfo> with C<OpenCL::KERNEL_PROGRAM> and returns the result.
1895
1896 =for gengetinfo end kernel
1897
1898 =item $packed_value = $kernel->work_group_info ($device, $name)
1899
1900 See C<< $platform->info >> for details.
1901
1902 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clGetKernelWorkGroupInfo.html>
1903
1904 =for gengetinfo begin kernel_work_group
1905
1906 =item $int = $kernel->work_group_size ($device)
1907
1908 Calls C<clGetKernelWorkGroupInfo> with C<OpenCL::KERNEL_WORK_GROUP_SIZE> and returns the result.
1909
1910 =item @ints = $kernel->compile_work_group_size ($device)
1911
1912 Calls C<clGetKernelWorkGroupInfo> with C<OpenCL::KERNEL_COMPILE_WORK_GROUP_SIZE> and returns the result.
1913
1914 =item $ulong = $kernel->local_mem_size ($device)
1915
1916 Calls C<clGetKernelWorkGroupInfo> with C<OpenCL::KERNEL_LOCAL_MEM_SIZE> and returns the result.
1917
1918 =item $int = $kernel->preferred_work_group_size_multiple ($device)
1919
1920 Calls C<clGetKernelWorkGroupInfo> with C<OpenCL::KERNEL_PREFERRED_WORK_GROUP_SIZE_MULTIPLE> and returns the result.
1921
1922 =item $ulong = $kernel->private_mem_size ($device)
1923
1924 Calls C<clGetKernelWorkGroupInfo> with C<OpenCL::KERNEL_PRIVATE_MEM_SIZE> and returns the result.
1925
1926 =for gengetinfo end kernel_work_group
1927
1928 =item $packed_value = $kernel->arg_info ($idx, $name)
1929
1930 See C<< $platform->info >> for details.
1931
1932 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.2/docs/man/xhtml/clGetKernelArgInfo.html>
1933
1934 =for gengetinfo begin kernel_arg
1935
1936 =item $kernel_arg_address_qualifier = $kernel->arg_address_qualifier ($idx)
1937
1938 Calls C<clGetKernelArgInfo> with C<OpenCL::KERNEL_ARG_ADDRESS_QUALIFIER> and returns the result.
1939
1940 =item $kernel_arg_access_qualifier = $kernel->arg_access_qualifier ($idx)
1941
1942 Calls C<clGetKernelArgInfo> with C<OpenCL::KERNEL_ARG_ACCESS_QUALIFIER> and returns the result.
1943
1944 =item $string = $kernel->arg_type_name ($idx)
1945
1946 Calls C<clGetKernelArgInfo> with C<OpenCL::KERNEL_ARG_TYPE_NAME> and returns the result.
1947
1948 =item $kernel_arg_type_qualifier = $kernel->arg_type_qualifier ($idx)
1949
1950 Calls C<clGetKernelArgInfo> with C<OpenCL::KERNEL_ARG_TYPE_QUALIFIER> and returns the result.
1951
1952 =item $string = $kernel->arg_name ($idx)
1953
1954 Calls C<clGetKernelArgInfo> with C<OpenCL::KERNEL_ARG_NAME> and returns the result.
1955
1956 =for gengetinfo end kernel_arg
1957
1958 =item $kernel->setf ($format, ...)
1959
1960 Sets the arguments of a kernel. Since OpenCL 1.1 doesn't have a generic
1961 way to set arguments (and with OpenCL 1.2 it might be rather slow), you
1962 need to specify a format argument, much as with C<printf>, to tell OpenCL
1963 what type of argument it is.
1964
1965 The format arguments are single letters:
1966
1967 c char
1968 C unsigned char
1969 s short
1970 S unsigned short
1971 i int
1972 I unsigned int
1973 l long
1974 L unsigned long
1975
1976 h half float (0..65535)
1977 f float
1978 d double
1979
1980 z local (octet size)
1981
1982 m memory object (buffer or image)
1983 a sampler
1984 e event
1985
1986 Space characters in the format string are ignored.
1987
1988 Example: set the arguments for a kernel that expects an int, two floats, a buffer and an image.
1989
1990 $kernel->setf ("i ff mm", 5, 0.5, 3, $buffer, $image);
1991
1992 =item $kernel->set_TYPE ($index, $value)
1993
1994 =item $kernel->set_char ($index, $value)
1995
1996 =item $kernel->set_uchar ($index, $value)
1997
1998 =item $kernel->set_short ($index, $value)
1999
2000 =item $kernel->set_ushort ($index, $value)
2001
2002 =item $kernel->set_int ($index, $value)
2003
2004 =item $kernel->set_uint ($index, $value)
2005
2006 =item $kernel->set_long ($index, $value)
2007
2008 =item $kernel->set_ulong ($index, $value)
2009
2010 =item $kernel->set_half ($index, $value)
2011
2012 =item $kernel->set_float ($index, $value)
2013
2014 =item $kernel->set_double ($index, $value)
2015
2016 =item $kernel->set_memory ($index, $value)
2017
2018 =item $kernel->set_buffer ($index, $value)
2019
2020 =item $kernel->set_image ($index, $value)
2021
2022 =item $kernel->set_sampler ($index, $value)
2023
2024 =item $kernel->set_local ($index, $value)
2025
2026 =item $kernel->set_event ($index, $value)
2027
2028 This is a family of methods to set the kernel argument with the number
2029 C<$index> to the give C<$value>.
2030
2031 Chars and integers (including the half type) are specified as integers,
2032 float and double as floating point values, memory/buffer/image must be
2033 an object of that type or C<undef>, local-memory arguments are set by
2034 specifying the size, and sampler and event must be objects of that type.
2035
2036 Note that C<set_memory> works for all memory objects (all types of buffers
2037 and images) - the main purpose of the more specific C<set_TYPE> functions
2038 is type checking.
2039
2040 Setting an argument for a kernel does NOT keep a reference to the object -
2041 for example, if you set an argument to some image object, free the image,
2042 and call the kernel, you will run into undefined behaviour.
2043
2044 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clSetKernelArg.html>
2045
2046 =back
2047
2048 =head2 THE OpenCL::Event CLASS
2049
2050 This is the superclass for all event objects (including OpenCL::UserEvent
2051 objects).
2052
2053 =over 4
2054
2055 =item $ev->wait
2056
2057 Waits for the event to complete.
2058
2059 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clWaitForEvents.html>
2060
2061 =item $ev->cb ($exec_callback_type, $callback->($event, $event_command_exec_status))
2062
2063 Adds a callback to the callback stack for the given event type. There is
2064 no way to remove a callback again.
2065
2066 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clSetEventCallback.html>
2067
2068 =item $packed_value = $ev->info ($name)
2069
2070 See C<< $platform->info >> for details.
2071
2072 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clGetEventInfo.html>
2073
2074 =for gengetinfo begin event
2075
2076 =item $queue = $event->command_queue
2077
2078 Calls C<clGetEventInfo> with C<OpenCL::EVENT_COMMAND_QUEUE> and returns the result.
2079
2080 =item $command_type = $event->command_type
2081
2082 Calls C<clGetEventInfo> with C<OpenCL::EVENT_COMMAND_TYPE> and returns the result.
2083
2084 =item $uint = $event->reference_count
2085
2086 Calls C<clGetEventInfo> with C<OpenCL::EVENT_REFERENCE_COUNT> and returns the result.
2087
2088 =item $uint = $event->command_execution_status
2089
2090 Calls C<clGetEventInfo> with C<OpenCL::EVENT_COMMAND_EXECUTION_STATUS> and returns the result.
2091
2092 =item $ctx = $event->context
2093
2094 Calls C<clGetEventInfo> with C<OpenCL::EVENT_CONTEXT> and returns the result.
2095
2096 =for gengetinfo end event
2097
2098 =item $packed_value = $ev->profiling_info ($name)
2099
2100 See C<< $platform->info >> for details.
2101
2102 The reason this method is not called C<info> is that there already is an
2103 C<< ->info >> method.
2104
2105 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clGetProfilingInfo.html>
2106
2107 =for gengetinfo begin profiling
2108
2109 =item $ulong = $event->profiling_command_queued
2110
2111 Calls C<clGetEventProfilingInfo> with C<OpenCL::PROFILING_COMMAND_QUEUED> and returns the result.
2112
2113 =item $ulong = $event->profiling_command_submit
2114
2115 Calls C<clGetEventProfilingInfo> with C<OpenCL::PROFILING_COMMAND_SUBMIT> and returns the result.
2116
2117 =item $ulong = $event->profiling_command_start
2118
2119 Calls C<clGetEventProfilingInfo> with C<OpenCL::PROFILING_COMMAND_START> and returns the result.
2120
2121 =item $ulong = $event->profiling_command_end
2122
2123 Calls C<clGetEventProfilingInfo> with C<OpenCL::PROFILING_COMMAND_END> and returns the result.
2124
2125 =for gengetinfo end profiling
2126
2127 =back
2128
2129 =head2 THE OpenCL::UserEvent CLASS
2130
2131 This is a subclass of OpenCL::Event.
2132
2133 =over 4
2134
2135 =item $ev->set_status ($execution_status)
2136
2137 Sets the execution status of the user event. Can only be called once,
2138 either with OpenCL::COMPLETE or a negative number as status.
2139
2140 execution_status: OpenCL::COMPLETE or a negative integer.
2141
2142 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clSetUserEventStatus.html>
2143
2144 =back
2145
2146 =head2 THE OpenCL::Mapped CLASS
2147
2148 This class represents objects mapped into host memory. They are
2149 represented by a blessed string scalar. The string data is the mapped
2150 memory area, that is, if you read or write it, then the mapped object is
2151 accessed directly.
2152
2153 You must only ever use operations that modify the string in-place - for
2154 example, a C<substr> that doesn't change the length, or maybe a regex that
2155 doesn't change the length. Any other operation might cause the data to be
2156 copied.
2157
2158 When the object is destroyed it will enqueue an implicit unmap operation
2159 on the queue that was used to create it.
2160
2161 Keep in mind that you I<need> to unmap (or destroy) mapped objects before
2162 OpenCL sees the changes, even if some implementations don't need this
2163 sometimes.
2164
2165 Example, replace the first two floats in the mapped buffer by 1 and 2.
2166
2167 my $mapped = $queue->map_buffer ($buf, ...
2168 $mapped->event->wait; # make sure it's there
2169
2170 # now replace first 8 bytes by new data, which is exactly 8 bytes long
2171 # we blindly assume device endianness to equal host endianness
2172 # (and of course, we assume iee 754 single precision floats :)
2173 substr $$mapped, 0, 8, pack "f*", 1, 2;
2174
2175 =over 4
2176
2177 =item $ev = $mapped->unmap ($wait_events...)
2178
2179 Unmaps the mapped memory object, using the queue originally used to create
2180 it, quite similarly to C<< $queue->unmap ($mapped, ...) >>.
2181
2182 =item $bool = $mapped->mapped
2183
2184 Returns whether the object is still mapped - true before an C<unmap> is
2185 enqueued, false afterwards.
2186
2187 =item $ev = $mapped->event
2188
2189 Return the event object associated with the mapped object. Initially, this
2190 will be the event object created when mapping the object, and after an
2191 unmap, this will be the event object that the unmap operation created.
2192
2193 =item $mapped->wait
2194
2195 Same as C<< $mapped->event->wait >> - makes sure no operations on this
2196 mapped object are outstanding.
2197
2198 =item $bytes = $mapped->size
2199
2200 Returns the size of the mapped area, in bytes. Same as C<length $$mapped>.
2201
2202 =item $ptr = $mapped->ptr
2203
2204 Returns the raw memory address of the mapped area.
2205
2206 =item $mapped->set ($offset, $data)
2207
2208 Replaces the data at the given C<$offset> in the memory area by the new
2209 C<$data>. This method is safer than direct manipulation of C<$mapped>
2210 because it does bounds-checking, but also slower.
2211
2212 =item $data = $mapped->get ($offset, $length)
2213
2214 Returns (without copying) a scalar representing the data at the given
2215 C<$offset> and C<$length> in the mapped memory area. This is the same as
2216 the following substr, except much slower;
2217
2218 $data = substr $$mapped, $offset, $length
2219
2220 =cut
2221
2222 sub OpenCL::Mapped::get {
2223 substr ${$_[0]}, $_[1], $_[2]
2224 }
2225
2226 =back
2227
2228 =head2 THE OpenCL::MappedBuffer CLASS
2229
2230 This is a subclass of OpenCL::Mapped, representing mapped buffers.
2231
2232 =head2 THE OpenCL::MappedImage CLASS
2233
2234 This is a subclass of OpenCL::Mapped, representing mapped images.
2235
2236 =over 4
2237
2238 =item $bytes = $mapped->row_pitch
2239
2240 =item $bytes = $mapped->slice_pitch
2241
2242 Return the row or slice pitch of the image that has been mapped.
2243
2244 =back
2245
2246
2247 =cut
2248
2249 1;
2250
2251 =head1 AUTHOR
2252
2253 Marc Lehmann <schmorp@schmorp.de>
2254 http://home.schmorp.de/
2255
2256 =cut
2257