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Efficient Run-Time Dispatching in Generic Programming with Minimal Code Bloat

Efficient Run-Time Dispatching in Generic Programming with Minimal Code Bloat. Lubomir Bourdev Advanced Technology Labs Adobe Systems. Jaakko J ä rvi Computer Science Department Texas A&M University. Agenda. Context & problem statement Background – previous approaches

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Efficient Run-Time Dispatching in Generic Programming with Minimal Code Bloat

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  1. Efficient Run-Time Dispatching in Generic Programming with Minimal Code Bloat Lubomir Bourdev Advanced Technology Labs Adobe Systems Jaakko Järvi Computer Science Department Texas A&M University

  2. Agenda • Context & problem statement • Background – previous approaches • Our approach to code bloat reduction • Code bloat reduction in run-time dispatch • Results & conclusion

  3. Agenda • Context & problem statement • Background – previous approaches • Our approach to code bloat reduction • Code bloat reduction in run-time dispatch • Results & conclusion

  4. Context: Image Manipulation • Images vary in many different ways • Writing generic and efficient image processing algorithms is challenging

  5. Color space (RGB, CMYK…) optional padding at the end of rows channel order (RGB vs. BGR) planar vs. interleaved channel depth 8-bit, 16-bit… Image Representations • 4x3 image in which the second pixel is hilighted • In interleaved form: • In planar form:

  6. Generic Image Library (GIL) • Adobe’s Open Source Image Library http://opensource.adobe.com/gil • Abstracts image representations from algorithms on images • Allows for writing the algorithm once & having it work on images of any representation, without loss of performance

  7. Problem Statement • How do we write image processing algorithms that are: • Generic • Efficient • Compact • Run-Time Flexible

  8. Agenda • Context & problem statement • Background – previous approaches • Our approach to code bloat reduction • Code bloat reduction in run-time dispatch • Results & conclusion

  9. Image algorithms via inheritance & polymorphism struct pixel { virtual void invert()=0; }; struct rgb_pixel : public pixel { virtual void invert(); }; struct gray_pixel : public pixel { virtual void invert(); }; struct image { pixel* operator[](size_t i); }; void invert(image* img) { for (i=0; i<img.size(); ++i) img[i]->invert(); } Generic X Efficient X Compact √ Run-Time Flexible √ Performance problem: dynamic dispatch once per pixel

  10. Image Algorithms via Generic Programming struct rgb_pixel {…}; struct gray_pixel {…}; void invert_pixel(rgb_pixel&) {…} void invert_pixel(gray_pixel&) {…} template <typename Pixel> struct image { Pixel& operator[](size_t i); }; template <typename Image> void invert(Image& img) { for (i=0; i<img.size(); ++i) invert_pixel(img[i]); } Generic √ Efficient √ Compact √ Run-Time Flexible X

  11. Generic Code Lacks Flexibility • We need run-time flexibility: typedef boost::mpl::vector<rgb8_image, gray8_image> images; gil::any_image<images> runtime_image; gil::jpeg_read_image(runtime_image, “test.jpg”); invert(runtime_image); • How can we do that without loss of performance? • Variant construct (see boost::variant) • runtime_image holds: • index: index to the type of image • bits: buffer containing the currently instantiated image • To invoke an algorithm, go through a switch statement & cast • Efficient: invoke dynamic dispatch only once per algorithm

  12. Variant invocation void invert_image(void* bits, int index) { switch (index) { case kLAB: invert(*(image<lab_pixel>*)(bits)); case kRGB: invert(*(image<rgb_pixel>*)(bits)); } } Generic version: template <typename Op> void apply_operation(void* bits, int index, Op op) { switch (index) { case kLAB: op(*(image<lab_pixel>*)(bits)); case kRGB: op(*(image<rgb_pixel>*)(bits)); } } Generic √ Efficient √ Compactx Run-Time Flexible √

  13. Solution: Template Hoisting • Define a class hierarchy: template <int k> class k_channel_image {…}; class rgb_image : public k_channel_image<3> {}; class lab_image : public k_channel_image<3> {}; • Define the algorithm at the appropriate level of the hierarchy: template <int k> void invert(k_channel_image<k>&) {…} Genericx Efficient √ Compact Run-Time Flexible √ - enforces a specific hierarchy - different algorithms may need different hierarchies • - switch statement overhead remains • does not help when the function is inlined

  14. Agenda • Context & problem statement • Background – previous approaches • Our approach to code bloat reduction • Code bloat reduction in run-time dispatch • Results & conclusion

  15. Type Reduction • Every algorithm partitions the space of its argument types into a set of equivalence classes • Members of an equivalence result in the same assembly when instantiated • The algorithm is instantiated only with one representative from each equivalence class

  16. Type Reduction Implementation • Metafunction to define the partition: template <typename Op, typename T> struct reduce { typedef T type; }; • Generic algorithm invocation: template <typename Op, typename T> inline void apply_operation(const T& argument, Op op) {     typedef typename reduce<Op,T>::type base_t;     op(reinterpret_cast<const base_t&>(argument)); }

  17. Example: The invert algorithm • Define the algorithm as a function object: struct invert_op { template <typename Image> void operator()(Image&){…} }; • Provide a function overload to invoke it: template <typename Image> inline void invert(Image& image) { apply_operation(image, invert_op()); } • Inverting RGB and LAB images is assembly-level identical: template<> struct reduce<invert_op, lab8_image_t> { typedef rgb8_image_t; };

  18. The technique generalizes to multiple dimensions template <typename Op, typename T1, typename T2> void apply_operation(T1& arg1, T2& arg2, Op op) {     typedef typename reduce<Op,T1>::type base1_t;     typedef typename reduce<Op,T2>::type base2_t;     typedef std::pair<T1*, T2*> pair_t;     typedef typename reduce<Op,pair_t>::type base_pair_t;     std::pair<void*,void*> p(&arg1,&arg2);     op(reinterpret_cast<base_pair_t&>(p)); } template <> struct reduce<copy_pixels_op,lab8_image_t> {…}; template <> struct reduce<copy_pixels_op, std::pair<lab8_image_t,lab8_image_t> > {…};

  19. Defining Reduce Specializations • Reduce dimensions separately, then combine: template <typename Image> struct reduce<invert_pixels_op, Image> { typedef reduce_cs<Image::color_space_t>::type cs; typedef reduce_ch<Image::channel_t>::type channel; typedef image_type<cs,channel,…>::type type; }; • Reuse structures via metafunction forwarding: template <typename T1, typename T2> struct reduce<resample_pixels_op, std::pair<T1,T2> > : public reduce<copy_pixels_op, std::pair<T1,T2> > {};

  20. Agenda • Context & problem statement • Background – previous approaches • Our approach to code bloat reduction • Code bloat reduction in run-time dispatch • Results & conclusion

  21. Reduction in variants Input: a variant of: input_types: [rgb8_image, lab8_image, cmyk16_image, rgba16_image] input_index: 2 • Step 1: Reduce each member of the vector: reduced_t: [rgb8_image, rgb8_image, rgba16_image, rgba16_image] • Step 2: Remove duplicates: output_types_t: [rgb8_image, rgba16_image] • Step 3: Create index vector from reduced_t to output_types_t: indices_t: [0, 0, 1, 1] • Step 4: Use indices_t to map the input index to an output index: output_index = indices_t[input_index] = indices[2] = 1 Invoke the algorithm on a variant of: output_types_t: [rgb8_image, rgba16_image] output_index: 1

  22. Binary reduction in variants • Step 1: Perform unary pre-reduction on each argument [A1, A2, A3, A4] with index 2 -> [A1, A3] with out_index1 = 1 [B1, B2, B3] with index 3 -> [B1, B2] with out_index2 = 0 • Step 2: Compute a vector of the cross-products of types [(A1,B1), (A1,B2), (A3,B1), (A3,B2)] • Step 3: Apply unary reduction on it: output_types_t = [(A1,B1), (A1,B2), (A3,B2)] • Step 4: Compute the index in the output vector out_index = out_index1 * size(Vec1) + out_index2 Invoke the algorithm on a single variant of: output_types_t = [(A1,B1), (A1,B2), (A3,B2)] out_index

  23. Agenda • Context & problem statement • Background – previous approaches • Our approach to code bloat reduction • Code bloat reduction in run-time dispatch • Results & conclusion

  24. Tests • Test sets • Set A: 90 types (10 color spaces, 3 channel types, other variations) • Set B: 10 types (4 color spaces, other) • Set C: 12 types (3 color spaces, planar/interleaved, step/nonstep) • Tests • Test 1: copy_pixels on Set B (inlined binary algorithm) • Test 2: copy_pixels on Set C (inlined binary algorithm) • Test 3: resample_pixels on Set B (non-inlined binary algorithm) • Test 4: resample_pixels on Set C (non-inlined binary algorithm) • Test 5: invert_pixels on Set A (inlined unary algorithm)

  25. Results Reduction in code bloat Effect on compile time

  26. Conclusion • Drawbacks • Unsafe • Requires intimate knowledge of the types and the algorithm • Some compilers can optimize most of the code bloat • Benefits • Works even when functions are inlined • Simplifies code generated by variants (especially double dispatch) • Does not impose class hierarchy (essential for generic code!) • Works when algorithms differ in requirements

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