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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 OPENCL 1.1 VS. OPENCL 1.2
103
104 This module supports both OpenCL version 1.1 and 1.2, although the OpenCL
105 1.2 interface hasn't been tested much for lack of availability of an
106 actual implementation.
107
108 Every function or method in this manual page that interfaces to a
109 particular OpenCL function has a link to the its C manual page.
110
111 If the link contains a F<1.1>, then this function is an OpenCL 1.1
112 function. Most but not all also exist in OpenCL 1.2, and this module
113 tries to emulate the missing ones for you, when told to do so at
114 compiletime. You cna check whether a function was removed in OpenCL 1.2 by
115 replacing the F<1.1> component in the URL by F<1.2>.
116
117 If the link contains a F<1.2>, then this is a OpenCL 1.2-only
118 function. Even if the module was compiled with OpenCL 1.2 header files
119 and has an 1.2 OpenCL library, calling such a function on a platform that
120 doesn't implement 1.2 causes undefined behaviour, usually a crash (But
121 this is not guaranteed).
122
123 You can find out whether this module was compiled to prefer 1.1
124 functionality by ooking at C<OpenCL::PREFER_1_1> - if it is true, then
125 1.1 functions generally are implemented using 1.1 OpenCL functions. If it
126 is false, then 1.1 functions missing from 1.2 are emulated by calling 1.2
127 fucntions.
128
129 This is a somewhat sorry state of affairs, but the Khronos group choose to
130 make every release of OpenCL source and binary incompatible with previous
131 releases.
132
133 =head1 EXAMPLES
134
135 =head2 Enumerate all devices and get contexts for them.
136
137 Best run this once to get a feel for the platforms and devices in your
138 system.
139
140 for my $platform (OpenCL::platforms) {
141 printf "platform: %s\n", $platform->name;
142 printf "extensions: %s\n", $platform->extensions;
143 for my $device ($platform->devices) {
144 printf "+ device: %s\n", $device->name;
145 my $ctx = $platform->context (undef, [$device]);
146 # do stuff
147 }
148 }
149
150 =head2 Get a useful context and a command queue.
151
152 This is a useful boilerplate for any OpenCL program that only wants to use
153 one device,
154
155 my ($platform) = OpenCL::platforms; # find first platform
156 my ($dev) = $platform->devices; # find first device of platform
157 my $ctx = $platform->context (undef, [$dev]); # create context out of those
158 my $queue = $ctx->queue ($dev); # create a command queue for the device
159
160 =head2 Print all supported image formats of a context.
161
162 Best run this once for your context, to see whats available and how to
163 gather information.
164
165 for my $type (OpenCL::MEM_OBJECT_IMAGE2D, OpenCL::MEM_OBJECT_IMAGE3D) {
166 print "supported image formats for ", OpenCL::enum2str $type, "\n";
167
168 for my $f ($ctx->supported_image_formats (0, $type)) {
169 printf " %-10s %-20s\n", OpenCL::enum2str $f->[0], OpenCL::enum2str $f->[1];
170 }
171 }
172
173 =head2 Create a buffer with some predefined data, read it back synchronously,
174 then asynchronously.
175
176 my $buf = $ctx->buffer_sv (OpenCL::MEM_COPY_HOST_PTR, "helmut");
177
178 $queue->read_buffer ($buf, 1, 1, 3, my $data);
179 print "$data\n";
180
181 my $ev = $queue->read_buffer ($buf, 0, 1, 3, my $data);
182 $ev->wait;
183 print "$data\n"; # prints "elm"
184
185 =head2 Create and build a program, then create a kernel out of one of its
186 functions.
187
188 my $src = '
189 kernel void
190 squareit (global float *input, global float *output)
191 {
192 $id = get_global_id (0);
193 output [id] = input [id] * input [id];
194 }
195 ';
196
197 my $prog = $ctx->build_program ($src);
198 my $kernel = $prog->kernel ("squareit");
199
200 =head2 Create some input and output float buffers, then call the
201 'squareit' kernel on them.
202
203 my $input = $ctx->buffer_sv (OpenCL::MEM_COPY_HOST_PTR, pack "f*", 1, 2, 3, 4.5);
204 my $output = $ctx->buffer (0, OpenCL::SIZEOF_FLOAT * 5);
205
206 # set buffer
207 $kernel->set_buffer (0, $input);
208 $kernel->set_buffer (1, $output);
209
210 # execute it for all 4 numbers
211 $queue->nd_range_kernel ($kernel, undef, [4], undef);
212
213 # enqueue a synchronous read
214 $queue->read_buffer ($output, 1, 0, OpenCL::SIZEOF_FLOAT * 4, my $data);
215
216 # print the results:
217 printf "%s\n", join ", ", unpack "f*", $data;
218
219 =head2 The same enqueue operations as before, but assuming an out-of-order queue,
220 showing off barriers.
221
222 # execute it for all 4 numbers
223 $queue->nd_range_kernel ($kernel, undef, [4], undef);
224
225 # enqueue a barrier to ensure in-order execution
226 $queue->barrier;
227
228 # enqueue an async read
229 $queue->read_buffer ($output, 0, 0, OpenCL::SIZEOF_FLOAT * 4, my $data);
230
231 # wait for all requests to finish
232 $queue->finish;
233
234 =head2 The same enqueue operations as before, but assuming an out-of-order queue,
235 showing off event objects and wait lists.
236
237 # execute it for all 4 numbers
238 my $ev = $queue->nd_range_kernel ($kernel, undef, [4], undef);
239
240 # enqueue an async read
241 $ev = $queue->read_buffer ($output, 0, 0, OpenCL::SIZEOF_FLOAT * 4, my $data, $ev);
242
243 # wait for the last event to complete
244 $ev->wait;
245
246 =head2 Use the OpenGL module to share a texture between OpenCL and OpenGL and draw some julia
247 set flight effect.
248
249 This is quite a long example to get you going - you can download it from
250 L<http://cvs.schmorp.de/OpenCL/examples/juliaflight>.
251
252 use OpenGL ":all";
253 use OpenCL;
254
255 my $S = $ARGV[0] || 256; # window/texture size, smaller is faster
256
257 # open a window and create a gl texture
258 OpenGL::glpOpenWindow width => $S, height => $S;
259 my $texid = glGenTextures_p 1;
260 glBindTexture GL_TEXTURE_2D, $texid;
261 glTexImage2D_c GL_TEXTURE_2D, 0, GL_RGBA8, $S, $S, 0, GL_RGBA, GL_UNSIGNED_BYTE, 0;
262
263 # find and use the first opencl device that let's us get a shared opengl context
264 my $platform;
265 my $dev;
266 my $ctx;
267
268 for (OpenCL::platforms) {
269 $platform = $_;
270 for ($platform->devices) {
271 $dev = $_;
272 $ctx = $platform->context ([OpenCL::GLX_DISPLAY_KHR, undef, OpenCL::GL_CONTEXT_KHR, undef], [$dev])
273 and last;
274 }
275 }
276
277 $ctx
278 or die "cannot find suitable OpenCL device\n";
279
280 my $queue = $ctx->queue ($dev);
281
282 # now attach an opencl image2d object to the opengl texture
283 my $tex = $ctx->gl_texture2d (OpenCL::MEM_WRITE_ONLY, GL_TEXTURE_2D, 0, $texid);
284
285 # now the boring opencl code
286 my $src = <<EOF;
287 kernel void
288 juliatunnel (write_only image2d_t img, float time)
289 {
290 int2 xy = (int2)(get_global_id (0), get_global_id (1));
291 float2 p = convert_float2 (xy) / $S.f * 2.f - 1.f;
292
293 float2 m = (float2)(1.f, p.y) / fabs (p.x); // tunnel
294 m.x = fabs (fmod (m.x + time * 0.05f, 4.f) - 2.f);
295
296 float2 z = m;
297 float2 c = (float2)(sin (time * 0.01133f), cos (time * 0.02521f));
298
299 for (int i = 0; i < 25 && dot (z, z) < 4.f; ++i) // standard julia
300 z = (float2)(z.x * z.x - z.y * z.y, 2.f * z.x * z.y) + c;
301
302 float3 colour = (float3)(z.x, z.y, atan2 (z.y, z.x));
303 write_imagef (img, xy, (float4)(colour * p.x * p.x, 1.));
304 }
305 EOF
306
307 my $prog = $ctx->build_program ($src);
308 my $kernel = $prog->kernel ("juliatunnel");
309
310 # program compiled, kernel ready, now draw and loop
311
312 for (my $time; ; ++$time) {
313 # acquire objects from opengl
314 $queue->acquire_gl_objects ([$tex]);
315
316 # configure and run our kernel
317 $kernel->setf ("mf", $tex, $time*2); # mf = memory object, float
318 $queue->nd_range_kernel ($kernel, undef, [$S, $S], undef);
319
320 # release objects to opengl again
321 $queue->release_gl_objects ([$tex]);
322
323 # wait
324 $queue->finish;
325
326 # now draw the texture, the defaults should be all right
327 glTexParameterf GL_TEXTURE_2D, GL_TEXTURE_MIN_FILTER, GL_NEAREST;
328
329 glEnable GL_TEXTURE_2D;
330 glBegin GL_QUADS;
331 glTexCoord2f 0, 1; glVertex3i -1, -1, -1;
332 glTexCoord2f 0, 0; glVertex3i 1, -1, -1;
333 glTexCoord2f 1, 0; glVertex3i 1, 1, -1;
334 glTexCoord2f 1, 1; glVertex3i -1, 1, -1;
335 glEnd;
336
337 glXSwapBuffers;
338
339 select undef, undef, undef, 1/60;
340 }
341
342 =head2 How to modify the previous example to not rely on GL sharing.
343
344 For those poor souls with only a sucky CPU OpenCL implementation, you
345 currently have to read the image into some perl scalar, and then modify a
346 texture or use glDrawPixels or so).
347
348 First, when you don't need gl sharing, you can create the context much simpler:
349
350 $ctx = $platform->context (undef, [$dev])
351
352 To use a texture, you would modify the above example by creating an
353 OpenCL::Image manually instead of deriving it from a texture:
354
355 my $tex = $ctx->image2d (OpenCL::MEM_WRITE_ONLY, OpenCL::RGBA, OpenCL::UNORM_INT8, $S, $S);
356
357 And in the draw loop, intead of acquire_gl_objects/release_gl_objects, you
358 would read the image2d after the kernel has written it:
359
360 $queue->read_image ($tex, 0, 0, 0, 0, $S, $S, 1, 0, 0, my $data);
361
362 And then you would upload the pixel data to the texture (or use glDrawPixels):
363
364 glTexSubImage2D_s GL_TEXTURE_2D, 0, 0, 0, $S, $S, GL_RGBA, GL_UNSIGNED_BYTE, $data;
365
366 The fully modified example can be found at
367 L<http://cvs.schmorp.de/OpenCL/examples/juliaflight-nosharing>.
368
369 =head2 Julia sets look soooo 80ies.
370
371 Then colour them differently, e.g. using orbit traps! Replace the loop and
372 colour calculation from the previous examples by this:
373
374 float2 dm = (float2)(1.f, 1.f);
375
376 for (int i = 0; i < 25; ++i)
377 {
378 z = (float2)(z.x * z.x - z.y * z.y, 2.f * z.x * z.y) + c;
379 dm = fmin (dm, (float2)(fabs (dot (z, z) - 1.f), fabs (z.x - 1.f)));
380 }
381
382 float3 colour = (float3)(dm.x * dm.y, dm.x * dm.y, dm.x);
383
384 Also try C<-10.f> instead of C<-1.f>.
385
386 =head1 DOCUMENTATION
387
388 =head2 BASIC CONVENTIONS
389
390 This is not a one-to-one C-style translation of OpenCL to Perl - instead
391 I attempted to make the interface as type-safe as possible by introducing
392 object syntax where it makes sense. There are a number of important
393 differences between the OpenCL C API and this module:
394
395 =over 4
396
397 =item * Object lifetime managament is automatic - there is no need
398 to free objects explicitly (C<clReleaseXXX>), the release function
399 is called automatically once all Perl references to it go away.
400
401 =item * OpenCL uses CamelCase for function names
402 (e.g. C<clGetPlatformIDs>, C<clGetPlatformInfo>), while this module
403 uses underscores as word separator and often leaves out prefixes
404 (C<OpenCL::platforms>, C<< $platform->info >>).
405
406 =item * OpenCL often specifies fixed vector function arguments as short
407 arrays (C<size_t origin[3]>), while this module explicitly expects the
408 components as separate arguments (C<$orig_x, $orig_y, $orig_z>) in
409 function calls.
410
411 =item * Structures are often specified by flattening out their components
412 as with short vectors, and returned as arrayrefs.
413
414 =item * When enqueuing commands, the wait list is specified by adding
415 extra arguments to the function - anywhere a C<$wait_events...> argument
416 is documented this can be any number of event objects. As an extsnion
417 implemented by this module, C<undef> values will be ignored in the event
418 list.
419
420 =item * When enqueuing commands, if the enqueue method is called in void
421 context, no event is created. In all other contexts an event is returned
422 by the method.
423
424 =item * This module expects all functions to return C<CL_SUCCESS>. If any
425 other status is returned the function will throw an exception, so you
426 don't normally have to to any error checking.
427
428 =back
429
430 =head2 PERL AND OPENCL TYPES
431
432 This handy(?) table lists OpenCL types and their perl, PDL and pack/unpack
433 format equivalents:
434
435 OpenCL perl PDL pack/unpack
436 char IV - c
437 uchar IV byte C
438 short IV short s
439 ushort IV ushort S
440 int IV long? l
441 uint IV - L
442 long IV longlong q
443 ulong IV - Q
444 float NV float f
445 half IV ushort S
446 double NV double d
447
448 =head2 GLX SUPPORT
449
450 Due to the sad state that OpenGL support is in in Perl (mostly the OpenGL
451 module, which has little to no documentation and has little to no support
452 for glX), this module, as a special extension, treats context creation
453 properties C<OpenCL::GLX_DISPLAY_KHR> and C<OpenCL::GL_CONTEXT_KHR>
454 specially: If either or both of these are C<undef>, then the OpenCL
455 module tries to dynamically resolve C<glXGetCurrentDisplay> and
456 C<glXGetCurrentContext>, call these functions and use their return values
457 instead.
458
459 For this to work, the OpenGL library must be loaded, a GLX context must
460 have been created and be made current, and C<dlsym> must be available and
461 capable of finding the function via C<RTLD_DEFAULT>.
462
463 =head2 EVENT SYSTEM
464
465 OpenCL can generate a number of (potentially) asynchronous events, for
466 example, after compiling a program, to signal a context-related error or,
467 perhaps most important, to signal completion of queued jobs (by setting
468 callbacks on OpenCL::Event objects).
469
470 The OpenCL module converts all these callbacks into events - you can
471 still register callbacks, but they are not executed when your OpenCL
472 implementation calls the actual callback, but only later. Therefore, none
473 of the limitations of OpenCL callbacks apply to the perl implementation:
474 it is perfectly safe to make blocking operations from event callbacks, and
475 enqueued operations don't need to be flushed.
476
477 To facilitate this, this module maintains an event queue - each
478 time an asynchronous event happens, it is queued, and perl will be
479 interrupted. This is implemented via the L<Async::Interrupt> module. In
480 addition, this module has L<AnyEvent> support, so it can seamlessly
481 integrate itself into many event loops.
482
483 Since L<Async::Interrupt> is a bit hard to understand, here are some case examples:
484
485 =head3 Don't use callbacks.
486
487 When your program never uses any callbacks, then there will never be any
488 notifications you need to take care of, and therefore no need to worry
489 about all this.
490
491 You can achieve a great deal by explicitly waiting for events, or using
492 barriers and flush calls. In many programs, there is no need at all to
493 tinker with asynchronous events.
494
495 =head3 Use AnyEvent
496
497 This module automatically registers a watcher that invokes all outstanding
498 event callbacks when AnyEvent is initialised (and block asynchronous
499 interruptions). Using this mode of operations is the safest and most
500 recommended one.
501
502 To use this, simply use AnyEvent and this module normally, make sure you
503 have an event loop running:
504
505 use Gtk2 -init;
506 use AnyEvent;
507
508 # initialise AnyEvent, by creating a watcher, or:
509 AnyEvent::detect;
510
511 my $e = $queue->marker;
512 $e->cb (sub {
513 warn "opencl is finished\n";
514 })
515
516 main Gtk2;
517
518 Note that this module will not initialise AnyEvent for you. Before
519 AnyEvent is initialised, the module will asynchronously interrupt perl
520 instead. To avoid any surprises, it's best to explicitly initialise
521 AnyEvent.
522
523 You can temporarily enable asynchronous interruptions (see next paragraph)
524 by calling C<$OpenCL::INTERRUPT->unblock> and disable them again by
525 calling C<$OpenCL::INTERRUPT->block>.
526
527 =head3 Let yourself be interrupted at any time
528
529 This mode is the default unless AnyEvent is loaded and initialised. In
530 this mode, OpenCL asynchronously interrupts a running perl program. The
531 emphasis is on both I<asynchronously> and I<running> here.
532
533 Asynchronously means that perl might execute your callbacks at any
534 time. For example, in the following code (I<THAT YOU SHOULD NOT COPY>),
535 the C<until> loop following the marker call will be interrupted by the
536 callback:
537
538 my $e = $queue->marker;
539 my $flag;
540 $e->cb (sub { $flag = 1 });
541 1 until $flag;
542 # $flag is now 1
543
544 The reason why you shouldn't blindly copy the above code is that
545 busy waiting is a really really bad thing, and really really bad for
546 performance.
547
548 While at first this asynchronous business might look exciting, it can be
549 really hard, because you need to be prepared for the callback code to be
550 executed at any time, which limits the amount of things the callback code
551 can do safely.
552
553 This can be mitigated somewhat by using C<<
554 $OpenCL::INTERRUPT->scope_block >> (see the L<Async::Interrupt>
555 documentation for details).
556
557 The other problem is that your program must be actively I<running> to be
558 interrupted. When you calculate stuff, your program is running. When you
559 hang in some C functions or other block execution (by calling C<sleep>,
560 C<select>, running an event loop and so on), your program is waiting, not
561 running.
562
563 One way around that would be to attach a read watcher to your event loop,
564 listening for events on C<< $OpenCL::INTERRUPT->pipe_fileno >>, using a
565 dummy callback (C<sub { }>) to temporarily execute some perl code.
566
567 That is then awfully close to using the built-in AnyEvent support above,
568 though, so consider that one instead.
569
570 =head3 Be creative
571
572 OpenCL exports the L<Async::Interrupt> object it uses in the global
573 variable C<$OpenCL::INTERRUPT>. You can configure it in any way you like.
574
575 So if you want to feel like a real pro, err, wait, if you feel no risk
576 menas no fun, you can experiment by implementing your own mode of
577 operations.
578
579 =cut
580
581 package OpenCL;
582
583 use common::sense;
584 use Carp ();
585 use Async::Interrupt ();
586
587 our $POLL_FUNC; # set by XS
588
589 BEGIN {
590 our $VERSION = '0.99';
591
592 require XSLoader;
593 XSLoader::load (__PACKAGE__, $VERSION);
594
595 @OpenCL::Platform::ISA =
596 @OpenCL::Device::ISA =
597 @OpenCL::Context::ISA =
598 @OpenCL::Queue::ISA =
599 @OpenCL::Memory::ISA =
600 @OpenCL::Sampler::ISA =
601 @OpenCL::Program::ISA =
602 @OpenCL::Kernel::ISA =
603 @OpenCL::Event::ISA = OpenCL::Object::;
604
605 @OpenCL::SubDevice::ISA = OpenCL::Device::;
606
607 @OpenCL::Buffer::ISA =
608 @OpenCL::Image::ISA = OpenCL::Memory::;
609
610 @OpenCL::BufferObj::ISA = OpenCL::Buffer::;
611
612 @OpenCL::Image2D::ISA =
613 @OpenCL::Image3D::ISA =
614 @OpenCL::Image2DArray::ISA =
615 @OpenCL::Image1D::ISA =
616 @OpenCL::Image1DArray::ISA =
617 @OpenCL::Image1DBuffer::ISA = OpenCL::Image::;
618
619 @OpenCL::UserEvent::ISA = OpenCL::Event::;
620
621 @OpenCL::MappedBuffer::ISA =
622 @OpenCL::MappedImage::ISA = OpenCL::Mapped::;
623 }
624
625 =head2 THE OpenCL PACKAGE
626
627 =over 4
628
629 =item $int = OpenCL::errno
630
631 The last error returned by a function - it's only valid after an error occured
632 and before calling another OpenCL function.
633
634 =item $str = OpenCL::err2str [$errval]
635
636 Converts an error value into a human readable string. IF no error value is
637 given, then the last error will be used (as returned by OpenCL::errno).
638
639 =item $str = OpenCL::enum2str $enum
640
641 Converts most enum values (of parameter names, image format constants,
642 object types, addressing and filter modes, command types etc.) into a
643 human readable string. When confronted with some random integer it can be
644 very helpful to pass it through this function to maybe get some readable
645 string out of it.
646
647 =item @platforms = OpenCL::platforms
648
649 Returns all available OpenCL::Platform objects.
650
651 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clGetPlatformIDs.html>
652
653 =item $ctx = OpenCL::context_from_type $properties, $type = OpenCL::DEVICE_TYPE_DEFAULT, $callback->($err, $pvt) = $print_stderr
654
655 Tries to create a context from a default device and platform type - never worked for me.
656 Consider using C<< $platform->context_from_type >> instead.
657
658 type: OpenCL::DEVICE_TYPE_DEFAULT, OpenCL::DEVICE_TYPE_CPU, OpenCL::DEVICE_TYPE_GPU,
659 OpenCL::DEVICE_TYPE_ACCELERATOR, OpenCL::DEVICE_TYPE_CUSTOM, OpenCL::DEVICE_TYPE_ALL.
660
661 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clCreateContextFromType.html>
662
663 =item $ctx = OpenCL::context $properties, \@devices, $callback->($err, $pvt) = $print_stderr)
664
665 Create a new OpenCL::Context object using the given device object(s).
666 Consider using C<< $platform->context >> instead.
667
668 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clCreateContext.html>
669
670 =item OpenCL::wait_for_events $wait_events...
671
672 Waits for all events to complete.
673
674 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clWaitForEvents.html>
675
676 =item OpenCL::poll
677
678 Checks if there are any outstanding events (see L<EVENT SYSTEM>) and
679 invokes their callbacks.
680
681 =item $OpenCL::INTERRUPT
682
683 The L<Async::Interrupt> object used to signal asynchronous events (see
684 L<EVENT SYSTEM>).
685
686 =cut
687
688 our $INTERRUPT = new Async::Interrupt c_cb => [$POLL_FUNC, 0];
689
690 &_eq_initialise ($INTERRUPT->signal_func);
691
692 =item $OpenCL::WATCHER
693
694 The L<AnyEvent> watcher object used to watch for asynchronous events (see
695 L<EVENT SYSTEM>). This variable is C<undef> until L<AnyEvent> has been
696 loaded I<and> initialised (e.g. by calling C<AnyEvent::detect>).
697
698 =cut
699
700 our $WATCHER;
701
702 sub _init_anyevent {
703 $INTERRUPT->block;
704 $WATCHER = AE::io ($INTERRUPT->pipe_fileno, 0, sub { $INTERRUPT->handle });
705 }
706
707 if (defined $AnyEvent::MODEL) {
708 _init_anyevent;
709 } else {
710 push @AnyEvent::post_detect, \&_init_anyevent;
711 }
712
713 =back
714
715 =head2 THE OpenCL::Object CLASS
716
717 This is the base class for all objects in the OpenCL module. The only
718 method it implements is the C<id> method, which is only useful if you want
719 to interface to OpenCL on the C level.
720
721 =over 4
722
723 =item $iv = $obj->id
724
725 OpenCL objects are represented by pointers or integers on the C level. If
726 you want to interface to an OpenCL object directly on the C level, then
727 you need this value, which is returned by this method. You should use an
728 C<IV> type in your code and cast that to the correct type.
729
730 =cut
731
732 sub OpenCL::Object::id {
733 ref $_[0] eq "SCALAR"
734 ? ${ $_[0] }
735 : $_[0][0]
736 }
737
738 =back
739
740 =head2 THE OpenCL::Platform CLASS
741
742 =over 4
743
744 =item @devices = $platform->devices ($type = OpenCL::DEVICE_TYPE_ALL)
745
746 Returns a list of matching OpenCL::Device objects.
747
748 =item $ctx = $platform->context_from_type ($properties, $type = OpenCL::DEVICE_TYPE_DEFAULT, $callback->($err, $pvt) = $print_stderr)
749
750 Tries to create a context. Never worked for me, and you need devices explicitly anyway.
751
752 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clCreateContextFromType.html>
753
754 =item $ctx = $platform->context ($properties, \@devices, $callback->($err, $pvt) = $print_stderr)
755
756 Create a new OpenCL::Context object using the given device object(s)- a
757 CL_CONTEXT_PLATFORM property is supplied automatically.
758
759 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clCreateContext.html>
760
761 =item $packed_value = $platform->info ($name)
762
763 Calls C<clGetPlatformInfo> and returns the packed, raw value - for
764 strings, this will be the string (possibly including terminating \0), for
765 other values you probably need to use the correct C<unpack>.
766
767 It's best to avoid this method and use one of the following convenience
768 wrappers.
769
770 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clGetPlatformInfo.html>
771
772 =item $platform->unload_compiler
773
774 Attempts to unload the compiler for this platform, for endless
775 profit. Does nothing on OpenCL 1.1.
776
777 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.2/docs/man/xhtml/clUnloadPlatformCompiler.html>
778
779 =for gengetinfo begin platform
780
781 =item $string = $platform->profile
782
783 Calls C<clGetPlatformInfo> with C<OpenCL::PLATFORM_PROFILE> and returns the result.
784
785 =item $string = $platform->version
786
787 Calls C<clGetPlatformInfo> with C<OpenCL::PLATFORM_VERSION> and returns the result.
788
789 =item $string = $platform->name
790
791 Calls C<clGetPlatformInfo> with C<OpenCL::PLATFORM_NAME> and returns the result.
792
793 =item $string = $platform->vendor
794
795 Calls C<clGetPlatformInfo> with C<OpenCL::PLATFORM_VENDOR> and returns the result.
796
797 =item $string = $platform->extensions
798
799 Calls C<clGetPlatformInfo> with C<OpenCL::PLATFORM_EXTENSIONS> and returns the result.
800
801 =for gengetinfo end platform
802
803 =back
804
805 =head2 THE OpenCL::Device CLASS
806
807 =over 4
808
809 =item $packed_value = $device->info ($name)
810
811 See C<< $platform->info >> for details.
812
813 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clGetDeviceInfo.html>
814
815 =item @devices = $device->sub_devices (\@properties)
816
817 Creates OpencL::SubDevice objects by partitioning an existing device.
818
819 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.2/docs/man/xhtml/clCreateSubDevices.html>
820
821 =for gengetinfo begin device
822
823 =item $device_type = $device->type
824
825 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_TYPE> and returns the result.
826
827 =item $uint = $device->vendor_id
828
829 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_VENDOR_ID> and returns the result.
830
831 =item $uint = $device->max_compute_units
832
833 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_MAX_COMPUTE_UNITS> and returns the result.
834
835 =item $uint = $device->max_work_item_dimensions
836
837 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_MAX_WORK_ITEM_DIMENSIONS> and returns the result.
838
839 =item $int = $device->max_work_group_size
840
841 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_MAX_WORK_GROUP_SIZE> and returns the result.
842
843 =item @ints = $device->max_work_item_sizes
844
845 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_MAX_WORK_ITEM_SIZES> and returns the result.
846
847 =item $uint = $device->preferred_vector_width_char
848
849 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_PREFERRED_VECTOR_WIDTH_CHAR> and returns the result.
850
851 =item $uint = $device->preferred_vector_width_short
852
853 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_PREFERRED_VECTOR_WIDTH_SHORT> and returns the result.
854
855 =item $uint = $device->preferred_vector_width_int
856
857 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_PREFERRED_VECTOR_WIDTH_INT> and returns the result.
858
859 =item $uint = $device->preferred_vector_width_long
860
861 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_PREFERRED_VECTOR_WIDTH_LONG> and returns the result.
862
863 =item $uint = $device->preferred_vector_width_float
864
865 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_PREFERRED_VECTOR_WIDTH_FLOAT> and returns the result.
866
867 =item $uint = $device->preferred_vector_width_double
868
869 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_PREFERRED_VECTOR_WIDTH_DOUBLE> and returns the result.
870
871 =item $uint = $device->max_clock_frequency
872
873 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_MAX_CLOCK_FREQUENCY> and returns the result.
874
875 =item $bitfield = $device->address_bits
876
877 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_ADDRESS_BITS> and returns the result.
878
879 =item $uint = $device->max_read_image_args
880
881 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_MAX_READ_IMAGE_ARGS> and returns the result.
882
883 =item $uint = $device->max_write_image_args
884
885 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_MAX_WRITE_IMAGE_ARGS> and returns the result.
886
887 =item $ulong = $device->max_mem_alloc_size
888
889 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_MAX_MEM_ALLOC_SIZE> and returns the result.
890
891 =item $int = $device->image2d_max_width
892
893 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_IMAGE2D_MAX_WIDTH> and returns the result.
894
895 =item $int = $device->image2d_max_height
896
897 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_IMAGE2D_MAX_HEIGHT> and returns the result.
898
899 =item $int = $device->image3d_max_width
900
901 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_IMAGE3D_MAX_WIDTH> and returns the result.
902
903 =item $int = $device->image3d_max_height
904
905 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_IMAGE3D_MAX_HEIGHT> and returns the result.
906
907 =item $int = $device->image3d_max_depth
908
909 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_IMAGE3D_MAX_DEPTH> and returns the result.
910
911 =item $uint = $device->image_support
912
913 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_IMAGE_SUPPORT> and returns the result.
914
915 =item $int = $device->max_parameter_size
916
917 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_MAX_PARAMETER_SIZE> and returns the result.
918
919 =item $uint = $device->max_samplers
920
921 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_MAX_SAMPLERS> and returns the result.
922
923 =item $uint = $device->mem_base_addr_align
924
925 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_MEM_BASE_ADDR_ALIGN> and returns the result.
926
927 =item $uint = $device->min_data_type_align_size
928
929 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_MIN_DATA_TYPE_ALIGN_SIZE> and returns the result.
930
931 =item $device_fp_config = $device->single_fp_config
932
933 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_SINGLE_FP_CONFIG> and returns the result.
934
935 =item $device_mem_cache_type = $device->global_mem_cache_type
936
937 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_GLOBAL_MEM_CACHE_TYPE> and returns the result.
938
939 =item $uint = $device->global_mem_cacheline_size
940
941 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_GLOBAL_MEM_CACHELINE_SIZE> and returns the result.
942
943 =item $ulong = $device->global_mem_cache_size
944
945 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_GLOBAL_MEM_CACHE_SIZE> and returns the result.
946
947 =item $ulong = $device->global_mem_size
948
949 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_GLOBAL_MEM_SIZE> and returns the result.
950
951 =item $ulong = $device->max_constant_buffer_size
952
953 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_MAX_CONSTANT_BUFFER_SIZE> and returns the result.
954
955 =item $uint = $device->max_constant_args
956
957 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_MAX_CONSTANT_ARGS> and returns the result.
958
959 =item $device_local_mem_type = $device->local_mem_type
960
961 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_LOCAL_MEM_TYPE> and returns the result.
962
963 =item $ulong = $device->local_mem_size
964
965 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_LOCAL_MEM_SIZE> and returns the result.
966
967 =item $boolean = $device->error_correction_support
968
969 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_ERROR_CORRECTION_SUPPORT> and returns the result.
970
971 =item $int = $device->profiling_timer_resolution
972
973 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_PROFILING_TIMER_RESOLUTION> and returns the result.
974
975 =item $boolean = $device->endian_little
976
977 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_ENDIAN_LITTLE> and returns the result.
978
979 =item $boolean = $device->available
980
981 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_AVAILABLE> and returns the result.
982
983 =item $boolean = $device->compiler_available
984
985 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_COMPILER_AVAILABLE> and returns the result.
986
987 =item $device_exec_capabilities = $device->execution_capabilities
988
989 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_EXECUTION_CAPABILITIES> and returns the result.
990
991 =item $command_queue_properties = $device->properties
992
993 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_QUEUE_PROPERTIES> and returns the result.
994
995 =item $ = $device->platform
996
997 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_PLATFORM> and returns the result.
998
999 =item $string = $device->name
1000
1001 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_NAME> and returns the result.
1002
1003 =item $string = $device->vendor
1004
1005 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_VENDOR> and returns the result.
1006
1007 =item $string = $device->driver_version
1008
1009 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DRIVER_VERSION> and returns the result.
1010
1011 =item $string = $device->profile
1012
1013 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_PROFILE> and returns the result.
1014
1015 =item $string = $device->version
1016
1017 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_VERSION> and returns the result.
1018
1019 =item $string = $device->extensions
1020
1021 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_EXTENSIONS> and returns the result.
1022
1023 =item $uint = $device->preferred_vector_width_half
1024
1025 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_PREFERRED_VECTOR_WIDTH_HALF> and returns the result.
1026
1027 =item $uint = $device->native_vector_width_char
1028
1029 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_NATIVE_VECTOR_WIDTH_CHAR> and returns the result.
1030
1031 =item $uint = $device->native_vector_width_short
1032
1033 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_NATIVE_VECTOR_WIDTH_SHORT> and returns the result.
1034
1035 =item $uint = $device->native_vector_width_int
1036
1037 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_NATIVE_VECTOR_WIDTH_INT> and returns the result.
1038
1039 =item $uint = $device->native_vector_width_long
1040
1041 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_NATIVE_VECTOR_WIDTH_LONG> and returns the result.
1042
1043 =item $uint = $device->native_vector_width_float
1044
1045 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_NATIVE_VECTOR_WIDTH_FLOAT> and returns the result.
1046
1047 =item $uint = $device->native_vector_width_double
1048
1049 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_NATIVE_VECTOR_WIDTH_DOUBLE> and returns the result.
1050
1051 =item $uint = $device->native_vector_width_half
1052
1053 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_NATIVE_VECTOR_WIDTH_HALF> and returns the result.
1054
1055 =item $device_fp_config = $device->double_fp_config
1056
1057 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_DOUBLE_FP_CONFIG> and returns the result.
1058
1059 =item $device_fp_config = $device->half_fp_config
1060
1061 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_HALF_FP_CONFIG> and returns the result.
1062
1063 =item $boolean = $device->host_unified_memory
1064
1065 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_HOST_UNIFIED_MEMORY> and returns the result.
1066
1067 =item $device = $device->parent_device_ext
1068
1069 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_PARENT_DEVICE_EXT> and returns the result.
1070
1071 =item @device_partition_property_exts = $device->partition_types_ext
1072
1073 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_PARTITION_TYPES_EXT> and returns the result.
1074
1075 =item @device_partition_property_exts = $device->affinity_domains_ext
1076
1077 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_AFFINITY_DOMAINS_EXT> and returns the result.
1078
1079 =item $uint = $device->reference_count_ext
1080
1081 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_REFERENCE_COUNT_EXT> and returns the result.
1082
1083 =item @device_partition_property_exts = $device->partition_style_ext
1084
1085 Calls C<clGetDeviceInfo> with C<OpenCL::DEVICE_PARTITION_STYLE_EXT> and returns the result.
1086
1087 =for gengetinfo end device
1088
1089 =back
1090
1091 =head2 THE OpenCL::Context CLASS
1092
1093 An OpenCL::Context is basically a container, or manager, for a number of
1094 devices of a platform. It is used to create all sorts of secondary objects
1095 such as buffers, queues, programs and so on.
1096
1097 All context creation functions and methods take a list of properties
1098 (type-value pairs). All property values can be specified as integers -
1099 some additionally support other types:
1100
1101 =over 4
1102
1103 =item OpenCL::CONTEXT_PLATFORM
1104
1105 Also accepts OpenCL::Platform objects.
1106
1107 =item OpenCL::GLX_DISPLAY_KHR
1108
1109 Also accepts C<undef>, in which case a deep and troubling hack is engaged
1110 to find the current glx display (see L<GLX SUPPORT>).
1111
1112 =item OpenCL::GL_CONTEXT_KHR
1113
1114 Also accepts C<undef>, in which case a deep and troubling hack is engaged
1115 to find the current glx context (see L<GLX SUPPORT>).
1116
1117 =back
1118
1119 =over 4
1120
1121 =item $prog = $ctx->build_program ($program, $options = "")
1122
1123 This convenience function tries to build the program on all devices in
1124 the context. If the build fails, then the function will C<croak> with the
1125 build log. Otherwise ti returns the program object.
1126
1127 The C<$program> can either be a C<OpenCL::Program> object or a string
1128 containing the program. In the latter case, a program objetc will be
1129 created automatically.
1130
1131 =cut
1132
1133 sub OpenCL::Context::build_program {
1134 my ($self, $prog, $options) = @_;
1135
1136 $prog = $self->program_with_source ($prog)
1137 unless ref $prog;
1138
1139 eval { $prog->build (undef, $options); 1 }
1140 or errno == BUILD_PROGRAM_FAILURE
1141 or errno == INVALID_BINARY # workaround nvidia bug
1142 or Carp::croak "OpenCL::Context->build_program: " . err2str;
1143
1144 # we check status for all devices
1145 for my $dev ($self->devices) {
1146 $prog->build_status ($dev) == BUILD_SUCCESS
1147 or Carp::croak "Building OpenCL program for device '" . $dev->name . "' failed:\n"
1148 . $prog->build_log ($dev);
1149 }
1150
1151 $prog
1152 }
1153
1154 =item $queue = $ctx->queue ($device, $properties)
1155
1156 Create a new OpenCL::Queue object from the context and the given device.
1157
1158 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clCreateCommandQueue.html>
1159
1160 Example: create an out-of-order queue.
1161
1162 $queue = $ctx->queue ($device, OpenCL::QUEUE_OUT_OF_ORDER_EXEC_MODE_ENABLE);
1163
1164 =item $ev = $ctx->user_event
1165
1166 Creates a new OpenCL::UserEvent object.
1167
1168 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clCreateUserEvent.html>
1169
1170 =item $buf = $ctx->buffer ($flags, $len)
1171
1172 Creates a new OpenCL::Buffer (actually OpenCL::BufferObj) object with the
1173 given flags and octet-size.
1174
1175 flags: OpenCL::MEM_READ_WRITE, OpenCL::MEM_WRITE_ONLY, OpenCL::MEM_READ_ONLY,
1176 OpenCL::MEM_USE_HOST_PTR, OpenCL::MEM_ALLOC_HOST_PTR, OpenCL::MEM_COPY_HOST_PTR,
1177 OpenCL::MEM_HOST_WRITE_ONLY, OpenCL::MEM_HOST_READ_ONLY, OpenCL::MEM_HOST_NO_ACCESS.
1178
1179 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clCreateBuffer.html>
1180
1181 =item $buf = $ctx->buffer_sv ($flags, $data)
1182
1183 Creates a new OpenCL::Buffer (actually OpenCL::BufferObj) object and
1184 initialise it with the given data values.
1185
1186 =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)
1187
1188 Creates a new OpenCL::Image object and optionally initialises it with
1189 the given data values.
1190
1191 channel_order: OpenCL::R, OpenCL::A, OpenCL::RG, OpenCL::RA, OpenCL::RGB,
1192 OpenCL::RGBA, OpenCL::BGRA, OpenCL::ARGB, OpenCL::INTENSITY, OpenCL::LUMINANCE,
1193 OpenCL::Rx, OpenCL::RGx, OpenCL::RGBx.
1194
1195 channel_type: OpenCL::SNORM_INT8, OpenCL::SNORM_INT16, OpenCL::UNORM_INT8,
1196 OpenCL::UNORM_INT16, OpenCL::UNORM_SHORT_565, OpenCL::UNORM_SHORT_555,
1197 OpenCL::UNORM_INT_101010, OpenCL::SIGNED_INT8, OpenCL::SIGNED_INT16,
1198 OpenCL::SIGNED_INT32, OpenCL::UNSIGNED_INT8, OpenCL::UNSIGNED_INT16,
1199 OpenCL::UNSIGNED_INT32, OpenCL::HALF_FLOAT, OpenCL::FLOAT.
1200
1201
1202 type: OpenCL::MEM_OBJECT_BUFFER, OpenCL::MEM_OBJECT_IMAGE2D,
1203 OpenCL::MEM_OBJECT_IMAGE3D, OpenCL::MEM_OBJECT_IMAGE2D_ARRAY,
1204 OpenCL::MEM_OBJECT_IMAGE1D, OpenCL::MEM_OBJECT_IMAGE1D_ARRAY,
1205 OpenCL::MEM_OBJECT_IMAGE1D_BUFFER.
1206
1207 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.2/docs/man/xhtml/clCreateImage.html>
1208
1209 =item $img = $ctx->image2d ($flags, $channel_order, $channel_type, $width, $height, $row_pitch = 0, $data = undef)
1210
1211 Creates a new OpenCL::Image2D object and optionally initialises it with
1212 the given data values.
1213
1214 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clCreateImage2D.html>
1215
1216 =item $img = $ctx->image3d ($flags, $channel_order, $channel_type, $width, $height, $depth, $row_pitch = 0, $slice_pitch = 0, $data = undef)
1217
1218 Creates a new OpenCL::Image3D object and optionally initialises it with
1219 the given data values.
1220
1221 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clCreateImage3D.html>
1222
1223 =item $buffer = $ctx->gl_buffer ($flags, $bufobj)
1224
1225 Creates a new OpenCL::Buffer (actually OpenCL::BufferObj) object that refers to the given
1226 OpenGL buffer object.
1227
1228 flags: OpenCL::MEM_READ_WRITE, OpenCL::MEM_READ_ONLY, OpenCL::MEM_WRITE_ONLY.
1229
1230 http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clCreateFromGLBuffer.html
1231
1232 =item $img = $ctx->gl_texture ($flags, $target, $miplevel, $texture)
1233
1234 Creates a new OpenCL::Image object that refers to the given OpenGL
1235 texture object or buffer.
1236
1237 target: GL_TEXTURE_1D, GL_TEXTURE_1D_ARRAY, GL_TEXTURE_BUFFER,
1238 GL_TEXTURE_2D, GL_TEXTURE_2D_ARRAY, GL_TEXTURE_3D,
1239 GL_TEXTURE_CUBE_MAP_POSITIVE_X, GL_TEXTURE_CUBE_MAP_POSITIVE_Y,
1240 GL_TEXTURE_CUBE_MAP_POSITIVE_Z, GL_TEXTURE_CUBE_MAP_NEGATIVE_X,
1241 GL_TEXTURE_CUBE_MAP_NEGATIVE_Y, GL_TEXTURE_CUBE_MAP_NEGATIVE_Z,
1242 GL_TEXTURE_RECTANGLE/GL_TEXTURE_RECTANGLE_ARB.
1243
1244 http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.2/docs/man/xhtml/clCreateFromGLTexture.html
1245
1246 =item $img = $ctx->gl_texture2d ($flags, $target, $miplevel, $texture)
1247
1248 Creates a new OpenCL::Image2D object that refers to the given OpenGL
1249 2D texture object.
1250
1251 http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clCreateFromGLTexture2D.html
1252
1253 =item $img = $ctx->gl_texture3d ($flags, $target, $miplevel, $texture)
1254
1255 Creates a new OpenCL::Image3D object that refers to the given OpenGL
1256 3D texture object.
1257
1258 http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clCreateFromGLTexture3D.html
1259
1260 =item $ctx->gl_renderbuffer ($flags, $renderbuffer)
1261
1262 Creates a new OpenCL::Image2D object that refers to the given OpenGL
1263 render buffer.
1264
1265 http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clCreateFromGLRenderbuffer.html
1266
1267 =item @formats = $ctx->supported_image_formats ($flags, $image_type)
1268
1269 Returns a list of matching image formats - each format is an arrayref with
1270 two values, $channel_order and $channel_type, in it.
1271
1272 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clGetSupportedImageFormats.html>
1273
1274 =item $sampler = $ctx->sampler ($normalized_coords, $addressing_mode, $filter_mode)
1275
1276 Creates a new OpenCL::Sampler object.
1277
1278 addressing_mode: OpenCL::ADDRESS_NONE, OpenCL::ADDRESS_CLAMP_TO_EDGE,
1279 OpenCL::ADDRESS_CLAMP, OpenCL::ADDRESS_REPEAT, OpenCL::ADDRESS_MIRRORED_REPEAT.
1280
1281 filter_mode: OpenCL::FILTER_NEAREST, OpenCL::FILTER_LINEAR.
1282
1283 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clCreateSampler.html>
1284
1285 =item $program = $ctx->program_with_source ($string)
1286
1287 Creates a new OpenCL::Program object from the given source code.
1288
1289 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clCreateProgramWithSource.html>
1290
1291 =item ($program, \@status) = $ctx->program_with_binary (\@devices, \@binaries)
1292
1293 Creates a new OpenCL::Program object from the given binaries.
1294
1295 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clCreateProgramWithBinary.html>
1296
1297 Example: clone an existing program object that contains a successfully
1298 compiled program, no matter how useless this is.
1299
1300 my $clone = $ctx->program_with_binary ([$prog->devices], [$prog->binaries]);
1301
1302 =item $program = $ctx->program_with_built_in_kernels (\@devices, $kernel_names)
1303
1304 Creates a new OpenCL::Program object from the given built-in kernel names.
1305
1306 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.2/docs/man/xhtml/clCreateProgramWithBuiltInKernels.html>
1307
1308 =item $program = $ctx->link_program (\@devices, $options, \@programs, $cb->($program) = undef)
1309
1310 Links all (already compiled) program objects specified in C<@programs>
1311 together and returns a new OpenCL::Program object with the result.
1312
1313 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.2/docs/man/xhtml/clLinkProgram.html>
1314
1315 =item $packed_value = $ctx->info ($name)
1316
1317 See C<< $platform->info >> for details.
1318
1319 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clGetContextInfo.html>
1320
1321 =for gengetinfo begin context
1322
1323 =item $uint = $context->reference_count
1324
1325 Calls C<clGetContextInfo> with C<OpenCL::CONTEXT_REFERENCE_COUNT> and returns the result.
1326
1327 =item @devices = $context->devices
1328
1329 Calls C<clGetContextInfo> with C<OpenCL::CONTEXT_DEVICES> and returns the result.
1330
1331 =item @property_ints = $context->properties
1332
1333 Calls C<clGetContextInfo> with C<OpenCL::CONTEXT_PROPERTIES> and returns the result.
1334
1335 =item $uint = $context->num_devices
1336
1337 Calls C<clGetContextInfo> with C<OpenCL::CONTEXT_NUM_DEVICES> and returns the result.
1338
1339 =for gengetinfo end context
1340
1341 =back
1342
1343 =head2 THE OpenCL::Queue CLASS
1344
1345 An OpenCL::Queue represents an execution queue for OpenCL. You execute
1346 requests by calling their respective method and waiting for it to complete
1347 in some way.
1348
1349 Most methods that enqueue some request return an event object that can
1350 be used to wait for completion (optionally using a callback), unless
1351 the method is called in void context, in which case no event object is
1352 created.
1353
1354 They also allow you to specify any number of other event objects that this
1355 request has to wait for before it starts executing, by simply passing the
1356 event objects as extra parameters to the enqueue methods. To simplify
1357 program design, this module ignores any C<undef> values in the list of
1358 events. This makes it possible to code operations such as this, without
1359 having to put a valid event object into C<$event> first:
1360
1361 $event = $queue->xxx (..., $event);
1362
1363 Queues execute in-order by default, without any parallelism, so in most
1364 cases (i.e. you use only one queue) it's not necessary to wait for or
1365 create event objects, althoguh an our of order queue is often a bit
1366 faster.
1367
1368 =over 4
1369
1370 =item $ev = $queue->read_buffer ($buffer, $blocking, $offset, $len, $data, $wait_events...)
1371
1372 Reads data from buffer into the given string.
1373
1374 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clEnqueueReadBuffer.html>
1375
1376 =item $ev = $queue->write_buffer ($buffer, $blocking, $offset, $data, $wait_events...)
1377
1378 Writes data to buffer from the given string.
1379
1380 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clEnqueueWriteBuffer.html>
1381
1382 =item $ev = $queue->copy_buffer ($src, $dst, $src_offset, $dst_offset, $len, $wait_events...)
1383
1384 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clEnqueueCopyBuffer.html>
1385
1386 =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...)
1387
1388 http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clEnqueueReadBufferRect.html
1389
1390 =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...)
1391
1392 http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clEnqueueWriteBufferRect.html
1393
1394 =item $ev = $queue->copy_buffer_to_image ($src_buffer, $dst_image, $src_offset, $dst_x, $dst_y, $dst_z, $width, $height, $depth, $wait_events...)
1395
1396 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clEnqueueCopyBufferToImage.html>
1397
1398 =item $ev = $queue->read_image ($src, $blocking, $x, $y, $z, $width, $height, $depth, $row_pitch, $slice_pitch, $data, $wait_events...)
1399
1400 C<$row_pitch> (and C<$slice_pitch>) can be C<0>, in which case the OpenCL
1401 module uses the image width (and height) to supply default values.
1402
1403 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clEnqueueReadImage.html>
1404
1405 =item $ev = $queue->write_image ($src, $blocking, $x, $y, $z, $width, $height, $depth, $row_pitch, $slice_pitch, $data, $wait_events...)
1406
1407 C<$row_pitch> (and C<$slice_pitch>) can be C<0>, in which case the OpenCL
1408 module uses the image width (and height) to supply default values.
1409 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clEnqueueWriteImage.html>
1410
1411 =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...)
1412
1413 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clEnqueueCopyImage.html>
1414
1415 =item $ev = $queue->copy_image_to_buffer ($src_image, $dst_image, $src_x, $src_y, $src_z, $width, $height, $depth, $dst_offset, $wait_events...)
1416
1417 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clEnqueueCopyImageToBuffer.html>
1418
1419 =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...)
1420
1421 Yeah.
1422
1423 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clEnqueueCopyBufferToImage.html>.
1424
1425 =item $ev = $queue->fill_buffer ($mem, $pattern, $offset, $size, ...)
1426
1427 Fills the given buffer object with repeated applications of C<$pattern>,
1428 starting at C<$offset> for C<$size> octets.
1429
1430 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.2/docs/man/xhtml/clEnqueueFillBuffer.html>
1431
1432 =item $ev = $queue->fill_image ($img, $r, $g, $b, $a, $x, $y, $z, $width, $height, $depth, ...)
1433
1434 Fills the given image area with the given rgba colour components. The
1435 components are normally floating point values between C<0> and C<1>,
1436 except when the image channel data type is a signe dor unsigned
1437 unnormalised format, in which case the range is determined by the format.
1438
1439 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.2/docs/man/xhtml/clEnqueueFillImage.html>
1440
1441 =item $ev = $queue->task ($kernel, $wait_events...)
1442
1443 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clEnqueueTask.html>
1444
1445 =item $ev = $queue->nd_range_kernel ($kernel, \@global_work_offset, \@global_work_size, \@local_work_size, $wait_events...)
1446
1447 Enqueues a kernel execution.
1448
1449 \@global_work_size must be specified as a reference to an array of
1450 integers specifying the work sizes (element counts).
1451
1452 \@global_work_offset must be either C<undef> (in which case all offsets
1453 are C<0>), or a reference to an array of work offsets, with the same number
1454 of elements as \@global_work_size.
1455
1456 \@local_work_size must be either C<undef> (in which case the
1457 implementation is supposed to choose good local work sizes), or a
1458 reference to an array of local work sizes, with the same number of
1459 elements as \@global_work_size.
1460
1461 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clEnqueueNDRangeKernel.html>
1462
1463 =item $ev = $queue->migrate_mem_objects (\@mem_objects, $flags, $wait_events...)
1464
1465 Migrates a number of OpenCL::Memory objects to or from the device.
1466
1467 flags: OpenCL::MIGRATE_MEM_OBJECT_HOST, OpenCL::MIGRATE_MEM_OBJECT_CONTENT_UNDEFINED
1468
1469 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.2/docs/man/xhtml/clEnqueueMigrateMemObjects.html>
1470
1471 =item $ev = $queue->acquire_gl_objects ([object, ...], $wait_events...)
1472
1473 Enqueues a list (an array-ref of OpenCL::Memory objects) to be acquired
1474 for subsequent OpenCL usage.
1475
1476 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clEnqueueAcquireGLObjects.html>
1477
1478 =item $ev = $queue->release_gl_objects ([object, ...], $wait_events...)
1479
1480 Enqueues a list (an array-ref of OpenCL::Memory objects) to be released
1481 for subsequent OpenGL usage.
1482
1483 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clEnqueueReleaseGLObjects.html>
1484
1485 =item $ev = $queue->wait_for_events ($wait_events...)
1486
1487 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clEnqueueWaitForEvents.html>
1488
1489 =item $ev = $queue->marker ($wait_events...)
1490
1491 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.2/docs/man/xhtml/clEnqueueMarkerWithWaitList.html>
1492
1493 =item $ev = $queue->barrier ($wait_events...)
1494
1495 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.2/docs/man/xhtml/clEnqueueBarrierWithWaitList.html>
1496
1497 =item $queue->flush
1498
1499 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clFlush.html>
1500
1501 =item $queue->finish
1502
1503 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clFinish.html>
1504
1505 =item $packed_value = $queue->info ($name)
1506
1507 See C<< $platform->info >> for details.
1508
1509 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clGetCommandQueueInfo.html>
1510
1511 =for gengetinfo begin command_queue
1512
1513 =item $ctx = $command_queue->context
1514
1515 Calls C<clGetCommandQueueInfo> with C<OpenCL::QUEUE_CONTEXT> and returns the result.
1516
1517 =item $device = $command_queue->device
1518
1519 Calls C<clGetCommandQueueInfo> with C<OpenCL::QUEUE_DEVICE> and returns the result.
1520
1521 =item $uint = $command_queue->reference_count
1522
1523 Calls C<clGetCommandQueueInfo> with C<OpenCL::QUEUE_REFERENCE_COUNT> and returns the result.
1524
1525 =item $command_queue_properties = $command_queue->properties
1526
1527 Calls C<clGetCommandQueueInfo> with C<OpenCL::QUEUE_PROPERTIES> and returns the result.
1528
1529 =for gengetinfo end command_queue
1530
1531 =back
1532
1533 =head3 MEMORY MAPPED BUFFERS
1534
1535 OpenCL allows you to map buffers and images to host memory (read: perl
1536 scalars). This is done much like reading or copying a buffer, by enqueuing
1537 a map or unmap operation on the command queue.
1538
1539 The map operations return an C<OpenCL::Mapped> object - see L<THE
1540 OpenCL::Mapped CLASS> section for details on what to do with these
1541 objects.
1542
1543 The object will be unmapped automatically when the mapped object is
1544 destroyed (you can use a barrier to make sure the unmap has finished,
1545 before using the buffer in a kernel), but you can also enqueue an unmap
1546 operation manually.
1547
1548 =over 4
1549
1550 =item $mapped_buffer = $queue->map_buffer ($buf, $blocking=1, $map_flags=OpenCL::MAP_READ|OpenCL::MAP_WRITE, $offset=0, $size=undef, $wait_events...)
1551
1552 Maps the given buffer into host memory and returns an
1553 C<OpenCL::MappedBuffer> object. If C<$size> is specified as undef, then
1554 the map will extend to the end of the buffer.
1555
1556 map_flags: OpenCL::MAP_READ, OpenCL::MAP_WRITE, OpenCL::MAP_WRITE_INVALIDATE_REGION.
1557
1558 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clEnqueueMapBuffer.html>
1559
1560 Example: map the buffer $buf fully and replace the first 4 bytes by "abcd", then unmap.
1561
1562 {
1563 my $mapped = $queue->map_buffer ($buf, 1, OpenCL::MAP_WRITE);
1564 substr $$mapped, 0, 4, "abcd";
1565 } # asynchronously unmap because $mapped is destroyed
1566
1567 =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...)
1568
1569 Maps the given image area into host memory and return an
1570 C<OpenCL::MappedImage> object.
1571
1572 If any of C<$width>, C<$height> and/or C<$depth> are C<undef> then they
1573 will be replaced by the maximum possible value.
1574
1575 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clEnqueueMapImage.html>
1576
1577 Example: map an image (with OpenCL::UNSIGNED_INT8 channel type) and set
1578 the first channel of the leftmost column to 5, then explicitly unmap
1579 it. You are not necessarily meant to do it this way, this example just
1580 shows you the accessors to use :)
1581
1582 my $mapped = $queue->map_image ($image, 1, OpenCL::MAP_WRITE);
1583
1584 $mapped->set ($_ * $mapped->row_pitch, pack "C", 5)
1585 for 0..$image->height;
1586
1587 $mapped->unmap;.
1588 $mapped->wait; # only needed for out of order queues normally
1589
1590 =item $ev = $queue->unmap ($mapped, $wait_events...)
1591
1592 Unmaps the data from host memory. You must not call any methods that
1593 modify the data, or modify the data scalar directly, after calling this
1594 method.
1595
1596 The mapped event object will always be passed as part of the
1597 $wait_events. The mapped event object will be replaced by the new event
1598 object that this request creates.
1599
1600 =back
1601
1602 =head2 THE OpenCL::Memory CLASS
1603
1604 This the superclass of all memory objects - OpenCL::Buffer, OpenCL::Image,
1605 OpenCL::Image2D and OpenCL::Image3D.
1606
1607 =over 4
1608
1609 =item $packed_value = $memory->info ($name)
1610
1611 See C<< $platform->info >> for details.
1612
1613 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clGetMemObjectInfo.html>
1614
1615 =for gengetinfo begin mem
1616
1617 =item $mem_object_type = $mem->type
1618
1619 Calls C<clGetMemObjectInfo> with C<OpenCL::MEM_TYPE> and returns the result.
1620
1621 =item $mem_flags = $mem->flags
1622
1623 Calls C<clGetMemObjectInfo> with C<OpenCL::MEM_FLAGS> and returns the result.
1624
1625 =item $int = $mem->size
1626
1627 Calls C<clGetMemObjectInfo> with C<OpenCL::MEM_SIZE> and returns the result.
1628
1629 =item $ptr_value = $mem->host_ptr
1630
1631 Calls C<clGetMemObjectInfo> with C<OpenCL::MEM_HOST_PTR> and returns the result.
1632
1633 =item $uint = $mem->map_count
1634
1635 Calls C<clGetMemObjectInfo> with C<OpenCL::MEM_MAP_COUNT> and returns the result.
1636
1637 =item $uint = $mem->reference_count
1638
1639 Calls C<clGetMemObjectInfo> with C<OpenCL::MEM_REFERENCE_COUNT> and returns the result.
1640
1641 =item $ctx = $mem->context
1642
1643 Calls C<clGetMemObjectInfo> with C<OpenCL::MEM_CONTEXT> and returns the result.
1644
1645 =item $mem = $mem->associated_memobject
1646
1647 Calls C<clGetMemObjectInfo> with C<OpenCL::MEM_ASSOCIATED_MEMOBJECT> and returns the result.
1648
1649 =item $int = $mem->offset
1650
1651 Calls C<clGetMemObjectInfo> with C<OpenCL::MEM_OFFSET> and returns the result.
1652
1653 =for gengetinfo end mem
1654
1655 =item ($type, $name) = $mem->gl_object_info
1656
1657 Returns the OpenGL object type (e.g. OpenCL::GL_OBJECT_TEXTURE2D) and the
1658 object "name" (e.g. the texture name) used to create this memory object.
1659
1660 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clGetGLObjectInfo.html>
1661
1662 =back
1663
1664 =head2 THE OpenCL::Buffer CLASS
1665
1666 This is a subclass of OpenCL::Memory, and the superclass of
1667 OpenCL::BufferObj. Its purpose is simply to distinguish between buffers
1668 and sub-buffers.
1669
1670 =head2 THE OpenCL::BufferObj CLASS
1671
1672 This is a subclass of OpenCL::Buffer and thus OpenCL::Memory. It exists
1673 because one cna create sub buffers of OpenLC::BufferObj objects, but not
1674 sub buffers from these sub buffers.
1675
1676 =over 4
1677
1678 =item $subbuf = $buf_obj->sub_buffer_region ($flags, $origin, $size)
1679
1680 Creates an OpenCL::Buffer objects from this buffer and returns it. The
1681 C<buffer_create_type> is assumed to be C<CL_BUFFER_CREATE_TYPE_REGION>.
1682
1683 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clCreateSubBuffer.html>
1684
1685 =back
1686
1687 =head2 THE OpenCL::Image CLASS
1688
1689 This is the superclass of all image objects - OpenCL::Image1D,
1690 OpenCL::Image1DArray, OpenCL::Image1DBuffer, OpenCL::Image2D,
1691 OpenCL::Image2DArray and OpenCL::Image3D.
1692
1693 =over 4
1694
1695 =item $packed_value = $image->image_info ($name)
1696
1697 See C<< $platform->info >> for details.
1698
1699 The reason this method is not called C<info> is that there already is an
1700 C<< ->info >> method inherited from C<OpenCL::Memory>.
1701
1702 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clGetImageInfo.html>
1703
1704 =item ($channel_order, $channel_data_type) = $image->format
1705
1706 Returns the channel order and type used to create the image by calling
1707 C<clGetImageInfo> with C<CL_IMAGE_FORMAT>.
1708
1709 =for gengetinfo begin image
1710
1711 =item $int = $image->element_size
1712
1713 Calls C<clGetImageInfo> with C<OpenCL::IMAGE_ELEMENT_SIZE> and returns the result.
1714
1715 =item $int = $image->row_pitch
1716
1717 Calls C<clGetImageInfo> with C<OpenCL::IMAGE_ROW_PITCH> and returns the result.
1718
1719 =item $int = $image->slice_pitch
1720
1721 Calls C<clGetImageInfo> with C<OpenCL::IMAGE_SLICE_PITCH> and returns the result.
1722
1723 =item $int = $image->width
1724
1725 Calls C<clGetImageInfo> with C<OpenCL::IMAGE_WIDTH> and returns the result.
1726
1727 =item $int = $image->height
1728
1729 Calls C<clGetImageInfo> with C<OpenCL::IMAGE_HEIGHT> and returns the result.
1730
1731 =item $int = $image->depth
1732
1733 Calls C<clGetImageInfo> with C<OpenCL::IMAGE_DEPTH> and returns the result.
1734
1735 =for gengetinfo end image
1736
1737 =for gengetinfo begin gl_texture
1738
1739 =item $GLenum = $gl_texture->target
1740
1741 Calls C<clGetGLTextureInfo> with C<OpenCL::GL_TEXTURE_TARGET> and returns the result.
1742
1743 =item $GLint = $gl_texture->gl_mipmap_level
1744
1745 Calls C<clGetGLTextureInfo> with C<OpenCL::GL_MIPMAP_LEVEL> and returns the result.
1746
1747 =for gengetinfo end gl_texture
1748
1749 =back
1750
1751 =head2 THE OpenCL::Sampler CLASS
1752
1753 =over 4
1754
1755 =item $packed_value = $sampler->info ($name)
1756
1757 See C<< $platform->info >> for details.
1758
1759 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clGetSamplerInfo.html>
1760
1761 =for gengetinfo begin sampler
1762
1763 =item $uint = $sampler->reference_count
1764
1765 Calls C<clGetSamplerInfo> with C<OpenCL::SAMPLER_REFERENCE_COUNT> and returns the result.
1766
1767 =item $ctx = $sampler->context
1768
1769 Calls C<clGetSamplerInfo> with C<OpenCL::SAMPLER_CONTEXT> and returns the result.
1770
1771 =item $addressing_mode = $sampler->normalized_coords
1772
1773 Calls C<clGetSamplerInfo> with C<OpenCL::SAMPLER_NORMALIZED_COORDS> and returns the result.
1774
1775 =item $filter_mode = $sampler->addressing_mode
1776
1777 Calls C<clGetSamplerInfo> with C<OpenCL::SAMPLER_ADDRESSING_MODE> and returns the result.
1778
1779 =item $boolean = $sampler->filter_mode
1780
1781 Calls C<clGetSamplerInfo> with C<OpenCL::SAMPLER_FILTER_MODE> and returns the result.
1782
1783 =for gengetinfo end sampler
1784
1785 =back
1786
1787 =head2 THE OpenCL::Program CLASS
1788
1789 =over 4
1790
1791 =item $program->build (\@devices = undef, $options = "", $cb->($program) = undef)
1792
1793 Tries to build the program with the given options. See also the
1794 C<$ctx->build> convenience function.
1795
1796 If a callback is specified, then it will be called when compilation is
1797 finished. Note that many OpenCL implementations block your program while
1798 compiling whether you use a callback or not. See C<build_async> if you
1799 want to make sure the build is done in the background.
1800
1801 Note that some OpenCL implementations act up badly, and don't call the
1802 callback in some error cases (but call it in others). This implementation
1803 assumes the callback will always be called, and leaks memory if this is
1804 not so. So best make sure you don't pass in invalid values.
1805
1806 Some implementations fail with C<OpenCL::INVALID_BINARY> when the
1807 compilation state is successful but some later stage fails.
1808
1809 options: C<-D name>, C<-D name=definition>, C<-I dir>,
1810 C<-cl-single-precision-constant>, C<-cl-denorms-are-zero>,
1811 C<-cl-fp32-correctly-rounded-divide-sqrt>, C<-cl-opt-disable>,
1812 C<-cl-mad-enable>, C<-cl-no-signed-zeros>, C<-cl-unsafe-math-optimizations>,
1813 C<-cl-finite-math-only>, C<-cl-fast-relaxed-math>,
1814 C<-w>, C<-Werror>, C<-cl-std=CL1.1/CL1.2>, C<-cl-kernel-arg-info>,
1815 C<-create-library>, C<-enable-link-options>.
1816
1817 build_status: OpenCL::BUILD_SUCCESS, OpenCL::BUILD_NONE,
1818 OpenCL::BUILD_ERROR, OpenCL::BUILD_IN_PROGRESS.
1819
1820 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clBuildProgram.html>
1821
1822 =item $program->build_async (\@devices = undef, $options = "", $cb->($program) = undef)
1823
1824 Similar to C<< ->build >>, except it starts a thread, and never fails (you
1825 need to check the compilation status form the callback, or by polling).
1826
1827 =item $program->compile (\@devices = undef, $options = "", \%headers = undef, $cb->($program) = undef)
1828
1829 Compiles the given program for the given devices (or all devices if
1830 undef). If C<$headers> is given, it must be a hashref with include name =>
1831 OpenCL::Program pairs.
1832
1833 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.2/docs/man/xhtml/clCompileProgram.html>
1834
1835 =item $packed_value = $program->build_info ($device, $name)
1836
1837 Similar to C<< $platform->info >>, but returns build info for a previous
1838 build attempt for the given device.
1839
1840 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clGetBuildInfo.html>
1841
1842 =item $kernel = $program->kernel ($function_name)
1843
1844 Creates an OpenCL::Kernel object out of the named C<__kernel> function in
1845 the program.
1846
1847 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clCreateKernel.html>
1848
1849 =item @kernels = $program->kernels_in_program
1850
1851 Returns all kernels successfully compiled for all devices in program.
1852
1853 http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clCreateKernelsInProgram.html
1854
1855 =for gengetinfo begin program_build
1856
1857 =item $build_status = $program->build_status ($device)
1858
1859 Calls C<clGetProgramBuildInfo> with C<OpenCL::PROGRAM_BUILD_STATUS> and returns the result.
1860
1861 =item $string = $program->build_options ($device)
1862
1863 Calls C<clGetProgramBuildInfo> with C<OpenCL::PROGRAM_BUILD_OPTIONS> and returns the result.
1864
1865 =item $string = $program->build_log ($device)
1866
1867 Calls C<clGetProgramBuildInfo> with C<OpenCL::PROGRAM_BUILD_LOG> and returns the result.
1868
1869 =for gengetinfo end program_build
1870
1871 =item $packed_value = $program->info ($name)
1872
1873 See C<< $platform->info >> for details.
1874
1875 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clGetProgramInfo.html>
1876
1877 =for gengetinfo begin program
1878
1879 =item $uint = $program->reference_count
1880
1881 Calls C<clGetProgramInfo> with C<OpenCL::PROGRAM_REFERENCE_COUNT> and returns the result.
1882
1883 =item $ctx = $program->context
1884
1885 Calls C<clGetProgramInfo> with C<OpenCL::PROGRAM_CONTEXT> and returns the result.
1886
1887 =item $uint = $program->num_devices
1888
1889 Calls C<clGetProgramInfo> with C<OpenCL::PROGRAM_NUM_DEVICES> and returns the result.
1890
1891 =item @devices = $program->devices
1892
1893 Calls C<clGetProgramInfo> with C<OpenCL::PROGRAM_DEVICES> and returns the result.
1894
1895 =item $string = $program->source
1896
1897 Calls C<clGetProgramInfo> with C<OpenCL::PROGRAM_SOURCE> and returns the result.
1898
1899 =item @ints = $program->binary_sizes
1900
1901 Calls C<clGetProgramInfo> with C<OpenCL::PROGRAM_BINARY_SIZES> and returns the result.
1902
1903 =for gengetinfo end program
1904
1905 =item @blobs = $program->binaries
1906
1907 Returns a string for the compiled binary for every device associated with
1908 the program, empty strings indicate missing programs, and an empty result
1909 means no program binaries are available.
1910
1911 These "binaries" are often, in fact, informative low-level assembly
1912 sources.
1913
1914 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clGetProgramInfo.html>
1915
1916 =back
1917
1918 =head2 THE OpenCL::Kernel CLASS
1919
1920 =over 4
1921
1922 =item $packed_value = $kernel->info ($name)
1923
1924 See C<< $platform->info >> for details.
1925
1926 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clGetKernelInfo.html>
1927
1928 =for gengetinfo begin kernel
1929
1930 =item $string = $kernel->function_name
1931
1932 Calls C<clGetKernelInfo> with C<OpenCL::KERNEL_FUNCTION_NAME> and returns the result.
1933
1934 =item $uint = $kernel->num_args
1935
1936 Calls C<clGetKernelInfo> with C<OpenCL::KERNEL_NUM_ARGS> and returns the result.
1937
1938 =item $uint = $kernel->reference_count
1939
1940 Calls C<clGetKernelInfo> with C<OpenCL::KERNEL_REFERENCE_COUNT> and returns the result.
1941
1942 =item $ctx = $kernel->context
1943
1944 Calls C<clGetKernelInfo> with C<OpenCL::KERNEL_CONTEXT> and returns the result.
1945
1946 =item $program = $kernel->program
1947
1948 Calls C<clGetKernelInfo> with C<OpenCL::KERNEL_PROGRAM> and returns the result.
1949
1950 =for gengetinfo end kernel
1951
1952 =item $packed_value = $kernel->work_group_info ($device, $name)
1953
1954 See C<< $platform->info >> for details.
1955
1956 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clGetKernelWorkGroupInfo.html>
1957
1958 =for gengetinfo begin kernel_work_group
1959
1960 =item $int = $kernel->work_group_size ($device)
1961
1962 Calls C<clGetKernelWorkGroupInfo> with C<OpenCL::KERNEL_WORK_GROUP_SIZE> and returns the result.
1963
1964 =item @ints = $kernel->compile_work_group_size ($device)
1965
1966 Calls C<clGetKernelWorkGroupInfo> with C<OpenCL::KERNEL_COMPILE_WORK_GROUP_SIZE> and returns the result.
1967
1968 =item $ulong = $kernel->local_mem_size ($device)
1969
1970 Calls C<clGetKernelWorkGroupInfo> with C<OpenCL::KERNEL_LOCAL_MEM_SIZE> and returns the result.
1971
1972 =item $int = $kernel->preferred_work_group_size_multiple ($device)
1973
1974 Calls C<clGetKernelWorkGroupInfo> with C<OpenCL::KERNEL_PREFERRED_WORK_GROUP_SIZE_MULTIPLE> and returns the result.
1975
1976 =item $ulong = $kernel->private_mem_size ($device)
1977
1978 Calls C<clGetKernelWorkGroupInfo> with C<OpenCL::KERNEL_PRIVATE_MEM_SIZE> and returns the result.
1979
1980 =for gengetinfo end kernel_work_group
1981
1982 =item $packed_value = $kernel->arg_info ($idx, $name)
1983
1984 See C<< $platform->info >> for details.
1985
1986 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.2/docs/man/xhtml/clGetKernelArgInfo.html>
1987
1988 =for gengetinfo begin kernel_arg
1989
1990 =item $kernel_arg_address_qualifier = $kernel->arg_address_qualifier ($idx)
1991
1992 Calls C<clGetKernelArgInfo> with C<OpenCL::KERNEL_ARG_ADDRESS_QUALIFIER> and returns the result.
1993
1994 =item $kernel_arg_access_qualifier = $kernel->arg_access_qualifier ($idx)
1995
1996 Calls C<clGetKernelArgInfo> with C<OpenCL::KERNEL_ARG_ACCESS_QUALIFIER> and returns the result.
1997
1998 =item $string = $kernel->arg_type_name ($idx)
1999
2000 Calls C<clGetKernelArgInfo> with C<OpenCL::KERNEL_ARG_TYPE_NAME> and returns the result.
2001
2002 =item $kernel_arg_type_qualifier = $kernel->arg_type_qualifier ($idx)
2003
2004 Calls C<clGetKernelArgInfo> with C<OpenCL::KERNEL_ARG_TYPE_QUALIFIER> and returns the result.
2005
2006 =item $string = $kernel->arg_name ($idx)
2007
2008 Calls C<clGetKernelArgInfo> with C<OpenCL::KERNEL_ARG_NAME> and returns the result.
2009
2010 =for gengetinfo end kernel_arg
2011
2012 =item $kernel->setf ($format, ...)
2013
2014 Sets the arguments of a kernel. Since OpenCL 1.1 doesn't have a generic
2015 way to set arguments (and with OpenCL 1.2 it might be rather slow), you
2016 need to specify a format argument, much as with C<printf>, to tell OpenCL
2017 what type of argument it is.
2018
2019 The format arguments are single letters:
2020
2021 c char
2022 C unsigned char
2023 s short
2024 S unsigned short
2025 i int
2026 I unsigned int
2027 l long
2028 L unsigned long
2029
2030 h half float (0..65535)
2031 f float
2032 d double
2033
2034 z local (octet size)
2035
2036 m memory object (buffer or image)
2037 a sampler
2038 e event
2039
2040 Space characters in the format string are ignored.
2041
2042 Example: set the arguments for a kernel that expects an int, two floats, a buffer and an image.
2043
2044 $kernel->setf ("i ff mm", 5, 0.5, 3, $buffer, $image);
2045
2046 =item $kernel->set_TYPE ($index, $value)
2047
2048 =item $kernel->set_char ($index, $value)
2049
2050 =item $kernel->set_uchar ($index, $value)
2051
2052 =item $kernel->set_short ($index, $value)
2053
2054 =item $kernel->set_ushort ($index, $value)
2055
2056 =item $kernel->set_int ($index, $value)
2057
2058 =item $kernel->set_uint ($index, $value)
2059
2060 =item $kernel->set_long ($index, $value)
2061
2062 =item $kernel->set_ulong ($index, $value)
2063
2064 =item $kernel->set_half ($index, $value)
2065
2066 =item $kernel->set_float ($index, $value)
2067
2068 =item $kernel->set_double ($index, $value)
2069
2070 =item $kernel->set_memory ($index, $value)
2071
2072 =item $kernel->set_buffer ($index, $value)
2073
2074 =item $kernel->set_image ($index, $value)
2075
2076 =item $kernel->set_sampler ($index, $value)
2077
2078 =item $kernel->set_local ($index, $value)
2079
2080 =item $kernel->set_event ($index, $value)
2081
2082 This is a family of methods to set the kernel argument with the number
2083 C<$index> to the give C<$value>.
2084
2085 Chars and integers (including the half type) are specified as integers,
2086 float and double as floating point values, memory/buffer/image must be
2087 an object of that type or C<undef>, local-memory arguments are set by
2088 specifying the size, and sampler and event must be objects of that type.
2089
2090 Note that C<set_memory> works for all memory objects (all types of buffers
2091 and images) - the main purpose of the more specific C<set_TYPE> functions
2092 is type checking.
2093
2094 Setting an argument for a kernel does NOT keep a reference to the object -
2095 for example, if you set an argument to some image object, free the image,
2096 and call the kernel, you will run into undefined behaviour.
2097
2098 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clSetKernelArg.html>
2099
2100 =back
2101
2102 =head2 THE OpenCL::Event CLASS
2103
2104 This is the superclass for all event objects (including OpenCL::UserEvent
2105 objects).
2106
2107 =over 4
2108
2109 =item $ev->wait
2110
2111 Waits for the event to complete.
2112
2113 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clWaitForEvents.html>
2114
2115 =item $ev->cb ($exec_callback_type, $callback->($event, $event_command_exec_status))
2116
2117 Adds a callback to the callback stack for the given event type. There is
2118 no way to remove a callback again.
2119
2120 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clSetEventCallback.html>
2121
2122 =item $packed_value = $ev->info ($name)
2123
2124 See C<< $platform->info >> for details.
2125
2126 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clGetEventInfo.html>
2127
2128 =for gengetinfo begin event
2129
2130 =item $queue = $event->command_queue
2131
2132 Calls C<clGetEventInfo> with C<OpenCL::EVENT_COMMAND_QUEUE> and returns the result.
2133
2134 =item $command_type = $event->command_type
2135
2136 Calls C<clGetEventInfo> with C<OpenCL::EVENT_COMMAND_TYPE> and returns the result.
2137
2138 =item $uint = $event->reference_count
2139
2140 Calls C<clGetEventInfo> with C<OpenCL::EVENT_REFERENCE_COUNT> and returns the result.
2141
2142 =item $uint = $event->command_execution_status
2143
2144 Calls C<clGetEventInfo> with C<OpenCL::EVENT_COMMAND_EXECUTION_STATUS> and returns the result.
2145
2146 =item $ctx = $event->context
2147
2148 Calls C<clGetEventInfo> with C<OpenCL::EVENT_CONTEXT> and returns the result.
2149
2150 =for gengetinfo end event
2151
2152 =item $packed_value = $ev->profiling_info ($name)
2153
2154 See C<< $platform->info >> for details.
2155
2156 The reason this method is not called C<info> is that there already is an
2157 C<< ->info >> method.
2158
2159 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clGetProfilingInfo.html>
2160
2161 =for gengetinfo begin profiling
2162
2163 =item $ulong = $event->profiling_command_queued
2164
2165 Calls C<clGetEventProfilingInfo> with C<OpenCL::PROFILING_COMMAND_QUEUED> and returns the result.
2166
2167 =item $ulong = $event->profiling_command_submit
2168
2169 Calls C<clGetEventProfilingInfo> with C<OpenCL::PROFILING_COMMAND_SUBMIT> and returns the result.
2170
2171 =item $ulong = $event->profiling_command_start
2172
2173 Calls C<clGetEventProfilingInfo> with C<OpenCL::PROFILING_COMMAND_START> and returns the result.
2174
2175 =item $ulong = $event->profiling_command_end
2176
2177 Calls C<clGetEventProfilingInfo> with C<OpenCL::PROFILING_COMMAND_END> and returns the result.
2178
2179 =for gengetinfo end profiling
2180
2181 =back
2182
2183 =head2 THE OpenCL::UserEvent CLASS
2184
2185 This is a subclass of OpenCL::Event.
2186
2187 =over 4
2188
2189 =item $ev->set_status ($execution_status)
2190
2191 Sets the execution status of the user event. Can only be called once,
2192 either with OpenCL::COMPLETE or a negative number as status.
2193
2194 execution_status: OpenCL::COMPLETE or a negative integer.
2195
2196 L<http://www.khronos.org/registry/cl/sdk/1.1/docs/man/xhtml/clSetUserEventStatus.html>
2197
2198 =back
2199
2200 =head2 THE OpenCL::Mapped CLASS
2201
2202 This class represents objects mapped into host memory. They are
2203 represented by a blessed string scalar. The string data is the mapped
2204 memory area, that is, if you read or write it, then the mapped object is
2205 accessed directly.
2206
2207 You must only ever use operations that modify the string in-place - for
2208 example, a C<substr> that doesn't change the length, or maybe a regex that
2209 doesn't change the length. Any other operation might cause the data to be
2210 copied.
2211
2212 When the object is destroyed it will enqueue an implicit unmap operation
2213 on the queue that was used to create it.
2214
2215 Keep in mind that you I<need> to unmap (or destroy) mapped objects before
2216 OpenCL sees the changes, even if some implementations don't need this
2217 sometimes.
2218
2219 Example, replace the first two floats in the mapped buffer by 1 and 2.
2220
2221 my $mapped = $queue->map_buffer ($buf, ...
2222 $mapped->event->wait; # make sure it's there
2223
2224 # now replace first 8 bytes by new data, which is exactly 8 bytes long
2225 # we blindly assume device endianness to equal host endianness
2226 # (and of course, we assume iee 754 single precision floats :)
2227 substr $$mapped, 0, 8, pack "f*", 1, 2;
2228
2229 =over 4
2230
2231 =item $ev = $mapped->unmap ($wait_events...)
2232
2233 Unmaps the mapped memory object, using the queue originally used to create
2234 it, quite similarly to C<< $queue->unmap ($mapped, ...) >>.
2235
2236 =item $bool = $mapped->mapped
2237
2238 Returns whether the object is still mapped - true before an C<unmap> is
2239 enqueued, false afterwards.
2240
2241 =item $ev = $mapped->event
2242
2243 Return the event object associated with the mapped object. Initially, this
2244 will be the event object created when mapping the object, and after an
2245 unmap, this will be the event object that the unmap operation created.
2246
2247 =item $mapped->wait
2248
2249 Same as C<< $mapped->event->wait >> - makes sure no operations on this
2250 mapped object are outstanding.
2251
2252 =item $bytes = $mapped->size
2253
2254 Returns the size of the mapped area, in bytes. Same as C<length $$mapped>.
2255
2256 =item $ptr = $mapped->ptr
2257
2258 Returns the raw memory address of the mapped area.
2259
2260 =item $mapped->set ($offset, $data)
2261
2262 Replaces the data at the given C<$offset> in the memory area by the new
2263 C<$data>. This method is safer than direct manipulation of C<$mapped>
2264 because it does bounds-checking, but also slower.
2265
2266 =item $data = $mapped->get ($offset, $length)
2267
2268 Returns (without copying) a scalar representing the data at the given
2269 C<$offset> and C<$length> in the mapped memory area. This is the same as
2270 the following substr, except much slower;
2271
2272 $data = substr $$mapped, $offset, $length
2273
2274 =cut
2275
2276 sub OpenCL::Mapped::get {
2277 substr ${$_[0]}, $_[1], $_[2]
2278 }
2279
2280 =back
2281
2282 =head2 THE OpenCL::MappedBuffer CLASS
2283
2284 This is a subclass of OpenCL::Mapped, representing mapped buffers.
2285
2286 =head2 THE OpenCL::MappedImage CLASS
2287
2288 This is a subclass of OpenCL::Mapped, representing mapped images.
2289
2290 =over 4
2291
2292 =item $bytes = $mapped->row_pitch
2293
2294 =item $bytes = $mapped->slice_pitch
2295
2296 Return the row or slice pitch of the image that has been mapped.
2297
2298 =back
2299
2300
2301 =cut
2302
2303 1;
2304
2305 =head1 AUTHOR
2306
2307 Marc Lehmann <schmorp@schmorp.de>
2308 http://home.schmorp.de/
2309
2310 =cut
2311