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268 lines
13 KiB
Org Mode
268 lines
13 KiB
Org Mode
#+TITLE: Introduction
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#+PROPERTY: comments org
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#+SETUPFILE: ../tools/theme.setup
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# -*- mode: org -*-
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* Using QMCkl
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The =qmckl.h= header file installed in the =${prefix}/include= directory
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has to be included in C codes when QMCkl functions are used:
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#+begin_src c :tangle no
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#include "qmckl.h"
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#+end_src
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In Fortran programs, the =qmckl_f.f90= installed in
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=${prefix}/share/qmckl/fortran= interface file should be copied in the source
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code using the library, and the Fortran codes should use the ~qmckl~ module as
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#+begin_src f90 :tangle no
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use qmckl
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#+end_src
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Both files are located in the =include/= directory.
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* Developing in QMCkl
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** Literate programming
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In a traditional source code, most of the lines of source files of a program
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are code, scripts, Makefiles, and only a few lines are comments explaining
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parts of the code that are non-trivial to understand. The documentation of
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the prorgam is usually written in a separate directory, and is often outdated
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compared to the code.
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Literate programming is a different approach to programming,
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where the program is considered as a publishable-quality document. Most of
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the lines of the source files are text, mathematical formulas, tables,
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figures, /etc/, and the lines of code are just the translation in a computer
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language of the ideas and algorithms expressed in the text. More importantly,
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the "document" is structured like a text document with sections, subsections,
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a bibliography, a table of contents /etc/, and the place where pieces of code
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appear are the places where they should belong for the reader to understand
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the logic of the program, not the places where the compiler expects to find
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them. Both the publishable-quality document and the binary executable are
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produced from the same source files.
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Literate programming is particularly well adapted in this context, as the
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central part of this project is the documentation of an API. The
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implementation of the algorithms is just an expression of the algorithms in a
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language that can be compiled, so that the correctness of the algorithms can
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be tested.
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We have chosen to write the source files in [[https://karl-voit.at/2017/09/23/orgmode-as-markup-only/][org-mode]] format,
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as any text editor can be used to edit org-mode files. To
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produce the documentation, there exists multiple possibilities to convert
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org-mode files into different formats such as HTML or PDF. The source code is
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easily extracted from the org-mode files invoking the Emacs text editor from
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the command-line in the =Makefile=, and then the produced files are compiled.
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Moreover, within the Emacs text editor the source code blocks can be executed
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interactively, in the same spirit as Jupyter notebooks.
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** Source code editing
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For a tutorial on literate programming with org-mode, follow [[http://www.howardism.org/Technical/Emacs/literate-programming-tutorial.html][this link]].
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Any text editor can be used to edit org-mode files. For a better
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user experience Emacs is recommended. For users hating Emacs, it
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is good to know that Emacs can behave like Vim when switched into
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``Evil'' mode.
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In the =tools/init.el= file, we provide a minimal Emacs configuration
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file for vim users. This file should be copied into =.emacs.d/init.el=.
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For users with a preference for Jupyter notebooks, we also provide the =tools/nb_to_org.sh= script can convert jupyter notebooks into org-mode
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files.
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Note that pandoc can be used to convert multiple markdown formats into
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org-mode.
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** Choice of the programming language
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Most of the codes of the [[https://trex-coe.eu][TREX CoE]] are written in Fortran with some scripts in
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Bash and Python. Outside of the CoE, Fortran is also important (Casino, Amolqc),
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and other important languages used by the community are C and C++ (QMCPack,
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QWalk), and Julia is gaining in popularity. The library we design should be
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compatible with all of these languages. The QMCkl API has to be compatible
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with the C language since libraries with a C-compatible API can be used in
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every other language.
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High-performance versions of the QMCkl, with the same API, will be rewritten by
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the experts in HPC. These optimized libraries will be tuned for specific
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architectures, among which we can cite x86 based processors, and GPU
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accelerators. Nowadays, the most efficient software tools to take advantage of
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low-level features of the processor (intrinsics) and of GPUs are for C++
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developers. It is highly probable that the optimized implementations will be
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written in C++, and this is agreement with our choice to make the API
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C-compatible.
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Fortran is one of the most common languages used by the community, and is simple
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enough to make the algorithms readable both by experts in QMC, and experts in
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HPC. Hence we propose in this pedagogical implementation of QMCkl to use Fortran
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to express the QMC algorithms. As the main languages of the library is C, this
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implies that the exposed C functions call the Fortran routine. However, for
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internal functions related to system programming, the C language is more natural
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than Fortran.
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The Fortran source files should provide a C interface using the ~iso_c_binding~ module. The name of the Fortran source files should end with =_f.f90= to be properly handled by the =Makefile=. The names of the functions
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defined in Fortran should be the same as those exposed in the API suffixed by =_f=.
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For more guidelines on using Fortran to generate a C interface, see
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[[http://fortranwiki.org/fortran/show/Generating+C+Interfaces][this link]].
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** Coding rules
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The authors should follow the recommendations of the C99
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[[https://wiki.sei.cmu.edu/confluence/display/c/SEI+CERT+C+Coding+Standard][SEI+CERT C Coding Standard]].
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Compliance can be checked with =cppcheck= as:
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#+begin_src bash
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cppcheck --addon=cert --enable=all *.c &> cppcheck.out
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#+end_src
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** Design of the library
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The proposed API should allow the library to: deal with memory transfers
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between CPU and accelerators, and to use different levels of floating-point
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precision. We chose a multi-layered design with low-level and high-level
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functions (see below).
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** Naming conventions
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To avoid namespace collisions, we use =qmckl_= as a prefix for all exported
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functions and variables. All exported header files should have a file name
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prefixed with =qmckl_=.
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If the name of the org-mode file is =xxx.org=, the name of the
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produced C files should be =xxx.c= and =xxx.h= and the name of the
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produced Fortran file should be =xxx.f90=.
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Arrays are in uppercase and scalars are in lowercase.
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In the names of the variables and functions, only the singular
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form is allowed.
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** Application programming interface
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In the C language, the number of bits used by the integer types can change
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from one architecture to another one. To circumvent this problem, we choose to
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use the integer types defined in ~<stdint.h>~ where the number of bits used for
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the integers are fixed.
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To ensure that the library will be easily usable in /any/ other language
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than C, we restrict the data types in the interfaces to the following:
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- 32-bit and 64-bit integers, scalars and and arrays (~int32_t~ and ~int64_t~)
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- 32-bit and 64-bit floats, scalars and and arrays (~float~ and ~double~)
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- Pointers are always casted into 64-bit integers, even on legacy 32-bit architectures
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- ASCII strings are represented as a pointers to character arrays
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and terminated by a ~'\0'~ character (C convention).
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- Complex numbers can be represented by an array of 2 floats.
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- Boolean variables are stored as integers, ~1~ for ~true~ and ~0~ for ~false~
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- Floating point variables should be by default ~double~ unless explicitly mentioned
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- integers used for counting should always be ~int64_t~
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To facilitate the use in other languages than C, we will provide some
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bindings in other languages in other repositories.
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# TODO : Link to repositories for bindings
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# To facilitate the use in other languages than C, we provide some
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# bindings in other languages in other repositories.
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** Global state
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Global variables should be avoided in the library, because it is
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possible that one single program needs to use multiple instances
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of the library. To solve this problem we propose to use a pointer
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to a [[./qmckl_context.html][=context=]] variable, built by the library with the =qmckl_context_create= function. The <<<=context=>>> contains the global
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state of the library, and is used as the first argument of many
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QMCkl functions.
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The internal structure of the context is not specified, to give a
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maximum of freedom to the different implementations. Modifying
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the state is done by setters and getters, prefixed by =qmckl_set_= an =qmckl_get_=.
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** Headers
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A single =qmckl.h= header to be distributed by the library
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is built by concatenating some of the produced header files.
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To facilitate building the =qmckl.h= file, we separate types from
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function declarations in headers. Types should be defined in header
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files suffixed by =_type.h=, and functions in files suffixed by =_func.h=.
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As these files will be concatenated in a single file, they should
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not be guarded by ~#ifndef *_H~, and they should not include other
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produced headers.
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Some particular types that are not exported need to be known by the
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context, and there are some functions to update instances of these
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types contained inside the context. For example, a ~qmckl_numprec_struct~ is present in the context, and the function ~qmckl_set_numprec_range~ takes a context as a parameter, and set a
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value in the ~qmckl_numprec_struct~ contained in the context.
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Because of these intricate dependencies, a private header is
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created, containing the ~qmckl_numprec_struct~. This header is
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included in the private header file which defines the type of the
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context. Header files for private types are suffixed by =_private_type.h=
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and header files for private functions are suffixed by =_private_func.h=.
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Fortran interfaces should also be written in the =*fh_func.f90= file,
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and the types definitions should be written in the =*fh_type.f90= file.
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| File | Scope | Description |
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|--------------------+---------+------------------------------|
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| =*_type.h= | Public | Type definitions |
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| =*_func.h= | Public | Function definitions |
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| =*_private_type.h= | Private | Type definitions |
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| =*_private_func.h= | Private | Function definitions |
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| =*fh_type.f90= | Public | Fortran type definitions |
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| =*fh_func.f90= | Public | Fortran function definitions |
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** Low-level functions
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Low-level functions are very simple functions which are leaves of
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the function call tree (they don't call any other QMCkl function).
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These functions are /pure/, and unaware of the QMCkl =context=. They are not allowed to allocate/deallocate memory, and
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if they need temporary memory it should be provided in input.
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** High-level functions
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High-level functions are at the top of the function call tree.
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They are able to choose which lower-level function to call
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depending on the required precision, and do the corresponding type
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conversions. These functions are also responsible for allocating
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temporary storage, to simplify the use of accelerators.
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The high-level functions should be pure, unless the introduction
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of non-purity is justified. All the side effects should be made in
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the =context= variable.
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# TODO : We need an identifier for impure functions
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# Suggestion (VJ): using *_unsafe_* for impure functions ?
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** Numerical precision
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The number of bits of precision required for a function should be
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given as an input of low-level computational functions. This input
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will be used to define the values of the different thresholds that
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might be used to avoid computing unnecessary noise. High-level
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functions will use the precision specified in the =context=
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variable.
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** Algorithms
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Reducing the scaling of an algorithm usually implies also reducing
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its arithmetic complexity (number of flops per byte). Therefore,
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for small sizes \(\mathcal{O}(N^3)\) and \(\mathcal{O}(N^2)\)
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algorithms are better adapted than linear scaling algorithms. As
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QMCkl is a general purpose library, multiple algorithms should be
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implemented adapted to different problem sizes.
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