Book Image

Hands-On GPU Computing with Python

By : Avimanyu Bandyopadhyay
Book Image

Hands-On GPU Computing with Python

By: Avimanyu Bandyopadhyay

Overview of this book

GPUs are proving to be excellent general purpose-parallel computing solutions for high-performance tasks such as deep learning and scientific computing. This book will be your guide to getting started with GPU computing. It begins by introducing GPU computing and explaining the GPU architecture and programming models. You will learn, by example, how to perform GPU programming with Python, and look at using integrations such as PyCUDA, PyOpenCL, CuPy, and Numba with Anaconda for various tasks such as machine learning and data mining. In addition to this, you will get to grips with GPU workflows, management, and deployment using modern containerization solutions. Toward the end of the book, you will get familiar with the principles of distributed computing for training machine learning models and enhancing efficiency and performance. By the end of this book, you will be able to set up a GPU ecosystem for running complex applications and data models that demand great processing capabilities, and be able to efficiently manage memory to compute your application effectively and quickly.
Table of Contents (17 chapters)
Free Chapter
1
Section 1: Computing with GPUs Introduction, Fundamental Concepts, and Hardware
5
Section 2: Hands-On Development with GPU Programming
11
Section 3: Containerization and Machine Learning with GPU-Powered Python

Introducing TensorFlow

TensorFlow is an open source framework for dataflow and differentiable programming in diverse areas. Based on Theano (another machine learning framework), it is a symbolic math library, used mostly for deep learning applications. It was originally developed by the Google Brain team for internal purposes but later released under the Apache 2.0 license on 9th November, 2015.

Dataflow programming

In mathematical graph theory, a directed graph is a graph of vertices connected by edges, where each edge has a direction associated with itself, as shown in the following diagram:

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There can also be two way edges, as shown in the following diagram:

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