Book Image

OpenCL Programming by Example

Book Image

OpenCL Programming by Example

Overview of this book

Research in parallel programming has been a mainstream topic for a decade, and will continue to be so for many decades to come. Many parallel programming standards and frameworks exist, but only take into account one type of hardware architecture. Today computing platforms come with many heterogeneous devices. OpenCL provides royalty free standard to program heterogeneous hardware. This guide offers you a compact coverage of all the major topics of OpenCL programming. It explains optimization techniques and strategies in-depth, using illustrative examples and also provides case studies from diverse fields. Beginners and advanced application developers will find this book very useful. Beginning with the discussion of the OpenCL models, this book explores their architectural view, programming interfaces and primitives. It slowly demystifies the process of identifying the data and task parallelism in diverse algorithms. It presents examples from different domains to show how the problems within different domains can be solved more efficiently using OpenCL. You will learn about parallel sorting, histogram generation, JPEG compression, linear and parabolic regression and k-nearest neighborhood, a clustering algorithm in pattern recognition. Following on from this, optimization strategies are explained with matrix multiplication examples. You will also learn how to do an interoperation of OpenGL and OpenCL. "OpenCL Programming by Example" explains OpenCL in the simplest possible language, which beginners will find it easy to understand. Developers and programmers from different domains who want to achieve acceleration for their applications will find this book very useful.
Table of Contents (18 chapters)
OpenCL Programming by Example
Credits
About the Authors
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

About the Reviewers

Thomas Gall had his first experience with accelerated coprocessors on the Amiga back in 1986. After working with IBM for twenty years, now he is working as a Principle Engineer and serves as Linaro.org's technical lead for the Graphics Working Group. He manages the Graphics and GPGPU teams. The GPGPU team is dedicated to optimize existing open source software to take advantage of GPGPU technologies such as OpenCL, as well as the implementation of GPGPU drivers for ARM based SoC systems.

Erik Rainey works at Texas Instruments, Inc. as a Senior Software Engineer on Computer Vision software frameworks in embedded platforms in the automotive, safety, industrial, and robotics markets. He has a young son, who he loves playing with when not working, and enjoys other pursuits such as music, drawing, crocheting, painting, and occasionally a video game. He is currently involved in creating the Khronos Group's OpenVX, the specification for computer vision acceleration.

Erik Smistad is a PhD candidate at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology, where he uses OpenCL and GPUs to quickly locate organs and other anatomical structures in medical images for the purpose of helping surgeons navigate inside the body during surgery. He writes about OpenCL and his projects on his blog, thebigblob.com, and shares his code at github.com/smistad.