Question

I have a list of words, my goal is to match each word in a very very long phrase. I'm having no problem in matching each word, my only problem is to return a vector of structures containing informations about each match.

In code:

typedef struct {
    int A, B, C; } Match;

__global__ void Find(veryLongPhrase * _phrase, Words * _word_list, vector<Match> * _matches)
{
    int a, b, c;

    [...] //Parallel search for each word in the phrase

    if(match) //When an occurrence is found
    {
        _matches.push_back(new Match{ A = a, B = b, C = c }); //Here comes the unknown, what should I do here???
    }
}

main()
{
    [...]

    veryLongPhrase * myPhrase = "The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog etc etc etc..."

    Words * wordList = {"the", "lazy"};

    vector<Match> * matches; //Obviously I can't pass a vector to a kernel

    Find<<< X, Y >>>(myPhrase, wordList, matches);

    [...]

}

I have tried Thrust library but without any success, can you suggest me any kind of solution?

Thank you very much.

Was it helpful?

Solution

something like this should work (coded in browser, not tested):

// N is the maximum number of structs to insert
#define N 10000

typedef struct {
    int A, B, C; } Match;

__device__ Match dev_data[N];
__device__ int dev_count = 0;

__device__ int my_push_back(Match * mt) {
  int insert_pt = atomicAdd(&dev_count, 1);
  if (insert_pt < N){
    dev_data[insert_pt] = *mt;
    return insert_pt;}
  else return -1;}

__global__ void Find(veryLongPhrase * _phrase, Words * _word_list, vector<Match> * _matches)
{
    int a, b, c;

    [...] //Parallel search for each word in the phrase

    if(match) //When an occurrence is found
    {
        my_push_back(new Match{ A = a, B = b, C = c });    }
}


main()
{
    [...]

    veryLongPhrase * myPhrase = "The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog etc etc etc..."

    Words * wordList = {"the", "lazy"};

    Find<<< X, Y >>>(myPhrase, wordList);

    int dsize;
    cudaMemcpyFromSymbol(&dsize, dev_count, sizeof(int));
    vector<Match> results(dsize);
    cudaMemcpyFromSymbol(&(results[0]), dev_data, dsize*sizeof(Match));

    [...]

}

This will require compute capability 1.1 or better for the atomic operation.

nvcc -arch=sm_11 ...

Here's a worked example:

$ cat t347.cu
#include <iostream>
#include <vector>

// N is the maximum number of structs to insert
#define N 10000

typedef struct {
    int A, B, C; } Match;

__device__ Match dev_data[N];
__device__ int dev_count = 0;

__device__ int my_push_back(Match & mt) {
  int insert_pt = atomicAdd(&dev_count, 1);
  if (insert_pt < N){
    dev_data[insert_pt] = mt;
    return insert_pt;}
  else return -1;}

__global__ void Find()
{

    if(threadIdx.x < 10) //Simulate a found occurrence
    {
        Match a = { .A = 1, .B = 2, .C = 3 };
        my_push_back(a);    }
}


main()
{

    Find<<< 2, 256 >>>();

    int dsize;
    cudaMemcpyFromSymbol(&dsize, dev_count, sizeof(int));
    if (dsize >= N) {printf("overflow error\n"); return 1;}
    std::vector<Match> results(dsize);
    cudaMemcpyFromSymbol(&(results[0]), dev_data, dsize*sizeof(Match));
    std::cout << "number of matches = " << dsize << std::endl;
    std::cout << "A  =  " << results[dsize-1].A << std:: endl;
    std::cout << "B  =  " << results[dsize-1].B << std:: endl;
    std::cout << "C  =  " << results[dsize-1].C << std:: endl;

}
$ nvcc -arch=sm_11 -o t347 t347.cu
$ ./t347
number of matches = 20
A  =  1
B  =  2
C  =  3
$

Note that in this case my Match result struct creation is different, and I am passing by reference, but the concept is the same.

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