Examples | Doxygen Documentation (TODO) |
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cuCollections
(cuco
) is an open-source, header-only library of GPU-accelerated, concurrent data structures.
Similar to how Thrust and CUB provide STL-like, GPU accelerated algorithms and primitives, cuCollections
provides STL-like concurrent data structures. cuCollections
is not a one-to-one, drop-in replacement for STL data structures like std::unordered_map
. Instead, it provides functionally similar data structures tailored for efficient use with GPUs.
cuCollections
is still under heavy development. Users should expect breaking changes and refactoring to be common.
11/01/2024 Refined the term window
as bucket
01/08/2024 Deprecated the experimental
namespace
01/02/2024 Moved the legacy static_map
to cuco::legacy
namespace
cuCollections
is header only and can be incorporated manually into your project by downloading the headers and placing them into your source tree.
cuCollections
is designed to make it easy to include within another CMake project.
The CMakeLists.txt
exports a cuco
target that can be linked1
into a target to setup include directories, dependencies, and compile flags necessary to use cuCollections
in your project.
We recommend using CMake Package Manager (CPM) to fetch cuCollections
into your project.
With CPM, getting cuCollections
is easy:
cmake_minimum_required(VERSION 3.23.1 FATAL_ERROR)
include(path/to/CPM.cmake)
CPMAddPackage(
NAME cuco
GITHUB_REPOSITORY NVIDIA/cuCollections
GIT_TAG dev
OPTIONS
"BUILD_TESTS OFF"
"BUILD_BENCHMARKS OFF"
"BUILD_EXAMPLES OFF"
)
target_link_libraries(my_library cuco)
This will take care of downloading cuCollections
from GitHub and making the headers available in a location that can be found by CMake. Linking against the cuco
target will provide everything needed for cuco
to be used by the my_library
target.
1: cuCollections
is header-only and therefore there is no binary component to "link" against. The linking terminology comes from CMake's target_link_libraries
which is still used even for header-only library targets.
nvcc 11.5+
- C++17
- Volta+
- Pascal is partially supported. Any data structures that require blocking algorithms are not supported. See libcu++ documentation for more details.
cuCollections
depends on the following libraries:
No action is required from the user to satisfy these dependencies. cuCollections
's CMake script is configured to first search the system for these libraries, and if they are not found, to automatically fetch them from GitHub.
Since cuCollections
is header-only, there is nothing to build to use it.
To build the tests, benchmarks, and examples:
cd $CUCO_ROOT
mkdir -p build
cd build
cmake .. # configure
make # build
ctest --test-dir tests # run tests
Binaries will be built into:
build/tests/
build/benchmarks/
build/examples/
Alternatively, you can use the build script located at ci/build.sh
. Calling this script with no arguments will trigger a full build which will be located at build/local
.
cd $CUCO_ROOT
ci/build.sh # configure and build
ctest --test-dir build/local/tests # run tests
For a comprehensive list of all available options along with descriptions and examples, you can use the option ci/build.sh -h
.
By default, cuCollections
uses pre-commit.ci
along with mirrors-clang-format
to automatically format the C++/CUDA files in a pull request.
Users should enable the Allow edits by maintainers
option to get auto-formatting to work.
Optionally, you may wish to setup a pre-commit
hook to automatically run clang-format
when you make a git commit. This can be done by installing pre-commit
via conda
or pip
:
conda install -c conda-forge pre_commit
pip install pre-commit
and then running:
pre-commit install
from the root of the cuCollections
repository. Now code formatting will be run each time you commit changes.
You may also wish to manually format the code:
pre-commit run clang-format --all-files
mirrors-clang-format
guarantees the correct version of clang-format
and avoids version mismatches.
Users should NOT use clang-format
directly on the command line to format the code.
Doxygen
is used to generate HTML pages from the C++/CUDA comments in the source code.
The following example covers most of the Doxygen block comment and tag styles
for documenting C++/CUDA code in cuCollections
.
/**
* @file source_file.cpp
* @brief Description of source file contents
*
* Longer description of the source file contents.
*/
/**
* @brief Short, one sentence description of the class.
*
* Longer, more detailed description of the class.
*
* A detailed description must start after a blank line.
*
* @tparam T Short description of each template parameter
* @tparam U Short description of each template parameter
*/
template <typename T, typename U>
class example_class {
void get_my_int(); ///< Simple members can be documented like this
void set_my_int( int value ); ///< Try to use descriptive member names
/**
* @brief Short, one sentence description of the member function.
*
* A more detailed description of what this function does and what
* its logic does.
*
* @param[in] first This parameter is an input parameter to the function
* @param[in,out] second This parameter is used both as an input and output
* @param[out] third This parameter is an output of the function
*
* @return The result of the complex function
*/
T complicated_function(int first, double* second, float* third)
{
// Do not use doxygen-style block comments
// for code logic documentation.
}
private:
int my_int; ///< An example private member variable
};
cuCollections
also uses Doxygen as a documentation linter. To check the Doxygen style locally, run
./ci/pre-commit/doxygen.sh
We plan to add many GPU-accelerated, concurrent data structures to cuCollections
. As of now, the two flagships are variants of hash tables.
cuco::static_set
is a fixed-size container that stores unique elements in no particular order. See the Doxygen documentation in static_set.cuh
for more detailed information.
- Host-bulk APIs (see live example in godbolt)
- Device-ref APIs for individual operations (see live example in godbolt)
- One single storage for multiple sets (see live example in godbolt)
- Using shared memory as storage (see live example in godbolt)
- Using set as mapping table to handle large keys or indeterministic sentinels (see live example in godbolt)
cuco::static_map
is a fixed-size hash table using open addressing with linear probing. See the Doxygen documentation in static_map.cuh
for more detailed information.
- Host-bulk APIs (see live example in godbolt)
- Device-ref APIs for individual operations (see live example in godbolt)
- Custom data types, key equality operators and hash functions (see live example in godbolt)
- Key histogram (see live example in godbolt)
cuco::static_multimap
is a fixed-size hash table that supports storing equivalent keys. It uses double hashing by default and supports switching to linear probing. See the Doxygen documentation in static_multimap.cuh
for more detailed information.
cuco::static_multiset
is a fixed-size container that supports storing equivalent keys. It uses double hashing by default and supports switching to linear probing. See the Doxygen documentation in static_multiset.cuh
for more detailed information.
cuco::dynamic_map
links together multiple cuco::static_map
s to provide a hash table that can grow as key-value pairs are inserted. It currently only provides host-bulk APIs. See the Doxygen documentation in dynamic_map.cuh
for more detailed information.
cuco::hyperloglog
implements the well-established HyperLogLog++ algorithm for approximating the count of distinct items in a multiset/stream.
cuco::bloom_filter
implements a Blocked Bloom Filter for approximate set membership queries.