MatX is a modern C++ library for numerical computing on NVIDIA GPUs and CPUs. Near-native performance can be achieved while using a simple syntax common in higher-level languages such as Python or MATLAB.
The above image shows the Python (Numpy) version of an FFT resampler next to the MatX version. The total runtimes of the NumPy version, CuPy version, and MatX version are shown below:
- Python/Numpy: 5360ms (Xeon(R) CPU E5-2698 v4 @ 2.20GHz)
- CuPy: 10.6ms (A100)
- MatX: 2.54ms (A100)
While the code complexity and length are roughly the same, the MatX version shows a 2100x over the Numpy version, and over 4x faster than the CuPy version on the same GPU.
Key features include:
-
⚡ MatX is fast. By using existing, optimized libraries as a backend, and efficient kernel generation when needed, no hand-optimizations are necessary
-
👐 MatX is easy to learn. Users familiar with high-level languages will pick up the syntax quickly
-
📑 MatX easily integrates with existing libraries and code
-
🎇 Visualize data from the GPU right on a web browser
-
↕️ IO capabilities for reading/writing files
- Requirements
- Installation
- Documentation
- Unit Tests
- Quick Start Guide
- Release History
- Filing Issues
- Contributing Guide
MatX is using features in C++17 and the latest CUDA compilers and libraries. For this reason, when running with GPU support, CUDA 11.4 and g++9 or newer is required. You can download the CUDA Toolkit here.
MatX has been tested on and supports Pascal, Turing, Volta, and Ampere GPU architectures. We currently do not support the Jetson embedded GPUs, as JetPack currently ships with CUDA 10.2. CPU support should work on any CPU that will compile the code.
Note for CUDA 11.4: A bug in libcuda++ that ships with CUDA 11.4 and below prevents MatX from compiling. This can be worked around by updating libcuda++ to at least version 1.7.0-ea, or upgrade to CUDA 11.5.
Note for CPU/Host support: CPU/Host execution is considered beta. Only operator execution is supported right now, but no functions that require libraries (FFT/GEMM, etc). If you find a bug in an operator on CPU, please report it in the issues above.
MatX is a header-only library that does not require compiling for using in your applications. However, building unit tests, benchmarks,
or examples must be compiled. CPM is used as a package manager for CMake to download and configure any dependencies. If MatX is to
be used in an air-gapped environment, CPM can be configured to search locally for files.
Depending on what options are enabled, compiling could take very long without parallelism enabled. Using the -j
flag on make
is
suggested with the highest number your system will accommodate.
To build all components, issue the standard cmake build commands in a cloned repo:
mkdir build && cd build
cmake -DMATX_BUILD_TESTS=ON -DMATX_BUILD_BENCHMARKS=ON -DMATX_BUILD_EXAMPLES=ON -DMATX_BUILD_DOCS=OFF ..
make -j
By default CMake will target the GPU architecture(s) of the system you're compiling on. If you wish to target other architectures, pass the CMAKE_CUDA_ARCHITECTURES flag with a list of architectures to build for:
cmake .. -CMAKE_CUDA_ARCHITECTURES="60;70"
By default nothing is compiled. If you wish to compile certain options, use the CMake flags below with ON or OFF values:
MATX_BUILD_TESTS
MATX_BUILD_BENCHMARKS
MATX_BUILD_EXAMPLES
MATX_BUILD_DOCS
For example, to enable unit test building:
mkdir build && cd build
cmake -DMATX_BUILD_TESTS=ON ..
make -j
Note that if documentation is selected all other build options are off. This eases the dependencies needed to build documentation so large libraries such as CUDA don't need to be installed.
MatX uses CMake as a first-class build generator, and therefore provides the proper config files to include into your own project. There are typically two ways to do this:
- Adding MatX as a subdirectory
- Installing MatX to the system
Adding the subdirectory is useful if you include the MatX source into the directory structure of your project. Using this method, you can simply add the MatX directory:
add_subdirectory(path/to/matx)
The other option is to install MatX and use the configuration file provided after building. This is typically done in a way similar to what is shown below:
cd /path/to/matx
mkdir build && cd build
cmake ..
make && make install
If you have the correct permissions, the headers and cmake packages will be installed on your system in the expected paths for your operating
system. With the package installed you can use find_package
as follows:
find_package(matx CONFIG REQUIRED)
An example of using this method can be found in the examples/cmake_sample_project directory
Once either of the two methods above are done, you can use the transitive target matx::matx
in your library inside of target_link_libraries
.
MatX may add other optional targets in the future inside the matx:: namespace as well.
Documentation for MatX can be built locally as shown above with the DBUILD_DOCS=ON
cmake flag. Building documentation requires the following to be installed:
doxygen, breathe, sphinx, sphinx-rtd-theme, libjs-mathjax, texlive-font-utils, flex, bison
- Current documentation can be found here
- A quick start guide can be found here
- Current library limitations are listed here
- A conversion from MATLAB and Python syntax is found here
- A self-guided Jupyer notebook training can be found here
MatX uses semantic versioning and reserve the right to introduce breaking API changes on major releases.
MatX supports all types that use standard C++ operators for math (+, -, etc). Unit tests are run against all common types shown below.
- Integer: int8_t, uint8_t, int16_t, uint16_t, int32_t, uint32_t, int64_t, uint64_t
- Floating Point: matxFp16 (fp16), matxBf16 (bfloat16), float, double
- Complex: matxfp16Complex, matxBf16Complex, cuda::std::complex, cuda::std::complex
Since CUDA half precision types (__half
and __nv_bfloat16
) do not support all C++ operators on the host side, MatX provides the matxFp16
and
matxBf16
types for scalars, and matxFp16Complex
and matxBf16Complex
for complex types. These wrappers are needed so that tensor
views can be evaluated on both the host and device, regardless of CUDA or hardware support. When possible, the half types will use hardware-
accelerated intrinsics automatically. Existing code using __half
and __nv_bfloat16
may be converted to the matx
equivalent types directly
and leverage all operators.
MatX contains a suite of unit tests to test functionality of the primitive functions, plus end-to-end tests of example code. MatX uses pybind11 to generate some of the unit test inputs and outputs. This avoids the need to store large test vector files in git, and instead can be generated as-needed.
To run the unit tests, from the cmake build directory run:
make test
This will execute all unit tests defined. If you wish to execute a subset of tests, or run with different options, you may run test/matx_test directly with parameters defined by Google Test. To run matx_test directly, you must be inside the build/test directory for the correct paths to be set. For example, to run only tests with the name FFT:
cd build/test
./matx_test --gtest_filter="*FFT*"
We provide a variety of training materials and examples to quickly learn the MatX API.
- A quick start guide can be found in the docs directory or from the main documentation site. The MatX quick start guide is modeled after NumPy's and demonstrates how to manipulate and create tensors.
- A set of MatX notebooks can be found in the docs directory. These four notebooks walk through the major MatX features and allow the developer to practice writing MatX code with guided examples and questions.
- Finally, for new MatX developers, browsing the example applications can provide familarity with the API and best practices.
v0.2.2:
- Arbitrary tensor ranks
v0.2.1:
- Generic storage and descriptor types
- Static tensor dimensions for compile-time sizes and strides
- Slew of new
make_
helper functions and documentation
We welcome and encourage the creation of issues against MatX. When creating a new issue, please use the following syntax in the title of your submission to help us prioritize responses and planned work.
- Bug Report: Append
[BUG]
to the beginning of the issue title, e.g.[BUG] MatX fails to build on P100 GPU
- Documentation Request: Append
[DOC]
to the beginning of the issue title - Feature Request: Append
[FEA]
to the beginning of the issue title - Submit a Question: Append
[QST]
to the beginning of the issue title
As with all issues, please be as verbose as possible and, if relevant, include a test script that demonstrates the bug or expected behavior. It's also helpful if you provide environment details about your system (bare-metal, cloud GPU, etc).
Please review the CONTRIBUTING.md file for information on how to contribute code and issues to MatX. We require all pull requests to have a linear history and rebase to main before merge.