Hi Federico,
On 11.05.2016 21:09, Federico Larroca wrote: > Hello everyone, > We are on the stage of optimizing our project (gr-isdbt). Awesome! > One of the most consuming blocks is OFDM synchronization, and in > particular the equalization phase. This is simply the division between > the input signal and the estimated channel gains (two modestly big > arrays of ~5000 complexes for each OFDM symbol). > Until now, this was performed by a for loop, so my plan was to change > it for a volk function. However, there is no complex division in VOLK. > So I've done a rather indirect operation using the property that a/b = > a*conj(b)/|b|^2, resulting in six lines of code (a multiply conjugate, > a magnitude squared, a deinterleave, a couple of float divisions and > an interleave). Obviously the performance gain (measured with the > Performance Monitor) is marginal (to be optimistic)... I have to admit, I'd expect your "simple" for loop doing something like void yourclass::normalize(std::complex<float> *a, std::complex<float> *b) { for(size_t idx; idx < a_len; ++idx) a[idx] /= b[idx]; } to be neatly optimizable by the compiler, at least if it knows that a and b aren't pointing at the same memory- Your approach, $\frac ab = a \cdot \frac{b^*}{|b|^2}= a \cdot \frac{b^*}{b\,b^*} = a \cdot \frac 1b$ is correct; however, in C++ with std::complex<> a/b pretty much does that already (ugly std lib C++ ahead, from /usr/include/c++/<version>/complex): // XXX: This is a grammar school implementation. template<typename _Tp> template<typename _Up> complex<_Tp>& complex<_Tp>::operator/=(const complex<_Up>& __z) { const _Tp __r = _M_real * __z.real() + _M_imag * __z.imag(); const _Tp __n = std::norm(__z); _M_imag = (_M_imag * __z.real() - _M_real * __z.imag()) / __n; _M_real = __r / __n; return *this; } And the problem is that while doing that for every a and b separately might mean you can't make full use of SIMD instructions to eg. do four complex divisions at once, it avoids having to load and store original / intermediate values from/to RAM. Basically, your CPU might not be the bottleneck – RAM could be, and doing everything you need for a single division at once, even if done without any optimization, might be faster than incurring additional memory transfers. That's because your memory controller pre-fetches whole cache lines worth of values when getting the first elements of a and b, and working on values from cache is significantly (read: factor > 50) than a single memory transfer. So, my immediate recommendation really is to keep your loop as minimal as possible, giving your compiler a solid chance to see the potential for optimization. There might not be much you can do. Even hand-written VOLK kernels aren't always faster than automatically generated optimized machine code. > Does anyone has a better idea? Implementing a new kernel is simply out > of my knowledge scope. Ha! But it would mean endless (additional) fame! Soooo: look at the volk_32fc_x2_multiply_conjugate_32fc.h kernel source. Specifically, at the SSE3 implementation, volk_32fc_x2_multiply_conjugate_32fc_u_sse3(…). You'll notice line 134: z = _mm_complexconjugatemul_ps(x, y); As you can see, there's a a "VOLK intrinsic", _mm_complexconjugatemul_ps which is defined in volk_intrinsics.h. That same file contains _mm_magnitudesquared_ps_sse3 . Maybe you can make something clever out of that :) Best regards, Marcus [1] https://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc/Restricted-Pointers.html
_______________________________________________ Discuss-gnuradio mailing list Discuss-gnuradio@gnu.org https://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/discuss-gnuradio