Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
 
 

thrust

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

parent directory

..
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Thrust: The C++ Parallel Algorithms Library

Thrust is the C++ parallel algorithms library which inspired the introduction of parallel algorithms to the C++ Standard Library. Thrust's high-level interface greatly enhances programmer productivity while enabling performance portability between GPUs and multicore CPUs. It builds on top of established parallel programming frameworks (such as CUDA, TBB, and OpenMP). It also provides a number of general-purpose facilities similar to those found in the C++ Standard Library.

Thrust is an open source project; it is available on [GitHub] and included in the NVIDIA HPC SDK and CUDA Toolkit. If you have one of those SDKs installed, no additional installation or compiler flags are needed to use Thrust.

Examples

Thrust is best learned through examples.

The following example generates random numbers serially and then transfers them to a parallel device where they are sorted.

#include <thrust/host_vector.h>
#include <thrust/device_vector.h>
#include <thrust/generate.h>
#include <thrust/sort.h>
#include <thrust/copy.h>
#include <thrust/random.h>

int main() {
  // Generate 32M random numbers serially.
  thrust::default_random_engine rng(1337);
  thrust::uniform_int_distribution<int> dist;
  thrust::host_vector<int> h_vec(32 << 20);
  thrust::generate(h_vec.begin(), h_vec.end(), [&] { return dist(rng); });

  // Transfer data to the device.
  thrust::device_vector<int> d_vec = h_vec;

  // Sort data on the device.
  thrust::sort(d_vec.begin(), d_vec.end());

  // Transfer data back to host.
  thrust::copy(d_vec.begin(), d_vec.end(), h_vec.begin());
}

See it on Godbolt

This example demonstrates computing the sum of some random numbers in parallel:

#include <thrust/host_vector.h>
#include <thrust/device_vector.h>
#include <thrust/generate.h>
#include <thrust/reduce.h>
#include <thrust/functional.h>
#include <thrust/random.h>

int main() {
  // Generate random data serially.
  thrust::default_random_engine rng(1337);
  thrust::uniform_real_distribution<double> dist(-50.0, 50.0);
  thrust::host_vector<double> h_vec(32 << 20);
  thrust::generate(h_vec.begin(), h_vec.end(), [&] { return dist(rng); });

  // Transfer to device and compute the sum.
  thrust::device_vector<double> d_vec = h_vec;
  double x = thrust::reduce(d_vec.begin(), d_vec.end(), 0, thrust::plus<int>());
}

See it on Godbolt

This example show how to perform such a reduction asynchronously:

#include <thrust/host_vector.h>
#include <thrust/device_vector.h>
#include <thrust/generate.h>
#include <thrust/async/copy.h>
#include <thrust/async/reduce.h>
#include <thrust/functional.h>
#include <thrust/random.h>
#include <numeric>

int main() {
  // Generate 32M random numbers serially.
  thrust::default_random_engine rng(123456);
  thrust::uniform_real_distribution<double> dist(-50.0, 50.0);
  thrust::host_vector<double> h_vec(32 << 20);
  thrust::generate(h_vec.begin(), h_vec.end(), [&] { return dist(rng); });

  // Asynchronously transfer to the device.
  thrust::device_vector<double> d_vec(h_vec.size());
  thrust::device_event e = thrust::async::copy(h_vec.begin(), h_vec.end(),
                                               d_vec.begin());

  // After the transfer completes, asynchronously compute the sum on the device.
  thrust::device_future<double> f0 = thrust::async::reduce(thrust::device.after(e),
                                                           d_vec.begin(), d_vec.end(),
                                                           0.0, thrust::plus<double>());

  // While the sum is being computed on the device, compute the sum serially on
  // the host.
  double f1 = std::accumulate(h_vec.begin(), h_vec.end(), 0.0, thrust::plus<double>());
}

See it on Godbolt

Getting The Thrust Source Code & Developing Thrust

Thrust started as a stand-alone project, but as of March 2024 Thrust is a part of the CUDA Core Compute Libraries (CCCL). Please refer to the [CCCL Getting Started section] and the Contributing Guide for instructions on how to get started developing the CCCL sources.