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CUDA: Difference between revisions

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==Hardware/Emulation==
==Hardware/Emulation==
* NVIDIA's list of [http://www.nvidia.com/object/cuda_learn_products.html supported hardware]
NVIDIA maintains a list of [http://www.nvidia.com/object/cuda_learn_products.html supported hardware]. Otherwise, there's emulation...
* Otherwise, there's emulation...<pre>[recombinator](0) $ ~/local/cuda/C/bin/linux/emurelease/deviceQuery
<pre>[recombinator](0) $ ~/local/cuda/C/bin/linux/emurelease/deviceQuery
CUDA Device Query (Runtime API) version (CUDART static linking)
CUDA Device Query (Runtime API) version (CUDART static linking)
There is no device supporting CUDA.
There is no device supporting CUDA.
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Test PASSED</pre>
Test PASSED</pre>
==Installation on [[Debian]]==
==Installation on [[Debian]]==
[http://packages.debian.org/sid/libdevel/libcuda1-dev libcuda-dev] packages exist in the <tt>non-free</tt> archive area, and supply the core library <tt>libcuda.so</tt>. Together with the upstream toolkit and SDK from NVIDIA, this provides a full CUDA development environment for 64-bit Debian Unstable systems. I installed CUDA 2.3 on 2010-01-25 (hand-rolled 2.6.32.6 kernel, built with gcc-4.4). This machine did not have CUDA-compatible hardware (it uses [[Intel 965]]).
[http://packages.debian.org/sid/libdevel/libcuda1-dev libcuda-dev] packages exist in the <tt>non-free</tt> archive area, and supply the core library <tt>libcuda.so</tt>. Together with the upstream toolkit and SDK from NVIDIA, this provides a full CUDA development environment for 64-bit Debian Unstable systems. I installed CUDA 2.3 on 2010-01-25 (hand-rolled 2.6.32.6 kernel, built with gcc-4.4). This machine did not have CUDA-compatible hardware (it uses [[Intel 965]]).

Revision as of 04:33, 26 January 2010

Hardware/Emulation

NVIDIA maintains a list of supported hardware. Otherwise, there's emulation...

[recombinator](0) $ ~/local/cuda/C/bin/linux/emurelease/deviceQuery
CUDA Device Query (Runtime API) version (CUDART static linking)
There is no device supporting CUDA.

Device 0: "Device Emulation (CPU)"
  CUDA Driver Version:                           2.30
  CUDA Runtime Version:                          2.30
  CUDA Capability Major revision number:         9999
  CUDA Capability Minor revision number:         9999
  Total amount of global memory:                 4294967295 bytes
  Number of multiprocessors:                     16
  Number of cores:                               128
  Total amount of constant memory:               65536 bytes
  Total amount of shared memory per block:       16384 bytes
  Total number of registers available per block: 8192
  Warp size:                                     1
  Maximum number of threads per block:           512
  Maximum sizes of each dimension of a block:    512 x 512 x 64
  Maximum sizes of each dimension of a grid:     65535 x 65535 x 1
  Maximum memory pitch:                          262144 bytes
  Texture alignment:                             256 bytes
  Clock rate:                                    1.35 GHz
  Concurrent copy and execution:                 No
  Run time limit on kernels:                     No
  Integrated:                                    Yes
  Support host page-locked memory mapping:       Yes
  Compute mode:                                  Default (multiple host threads can use this device simultaneously)

Test PASSED

Installation on Debian

libcuda-dev packages exist in the non-free archive area, and supply the core library libcuda.so. Together with the upstream toolkit and SDK from NVIDIA, this provides a full CUDA development environment for 64-bit Debian Unstable systems. I installed CUDA 2.3 on 2010-01-25 (hand-rolled 2.6.32.6 kernel, built with gcc-4.4). This machine did not have CUDA-compatible hardware (it uses Intel 965).

  • Download the Ubuntu 9.04 files from NVIDIA's "CUDA Zone".
  • Run the toolkit installer (sh cudatoolkit_2.3_linux_64_ubuntu9.04.run)
    • For a user-mode install, supply $HOME/local or somesuch
* Please make sure your PATH includes /home/dank/local/cuda/bin
* Please make sure your LD_LIBRARY_PATH
*   for 32-bit Linux distributions includes /home/dank/local/cuda/lib
*   for 64-bit Linux distributions includes /home/dank/local/cuda/lib64
* OR
*   for 32-bit Linux distributions add /home/dank/local/cuda/lib
*   for 64-bit Linux distributions add /home/dank/local/cuda/lib64
* to /etc/ld.so.conf and run ldconfig as root

* Please read the release notes in /home/dank/local/cuda/doc/

* To uninstall CUDA, delete /home/dank/local/cuda
* Installation Complete
  • Run the SDK installer (sh cudasdk_2.3_linux.run)
    • I just installed it to the same directory as the toolkit, which seems to work fine.
========================================

Configuring SDK Makefile (/home/dank/local/cuda/shared/common.mk)...

========================================

* Please make sure your PATH includes /home/dank/local/cuda/bin
* Please make sure your LD_LIBRARY_PATH includes /home/dank/local/cuda/lib

* To uninstall the NVIDIA GPU Computing SDK, please delete /home/dank/local/cuda
* Installation Complete

Building

SDK's common.mk

This assumes use of the SDK's common.mk, as recommended by the documentation.

  • Add the library path to LD_LIBRARY_PATH, assuming CUDA's been installed to a non-standard directory.
  • Set the CUDA_INSTALL_PATH and ROOTDIR (yeargh!) if outside the SDK.
  • I keep the following in bin/cudasetup of my home directory. Source its output, ala eval `cudasetup`:
#!/bin/sh

CUDA=$HOME/local/cuda

[ -d "$CUDA" ] || { echo "$CUDA is not a directory, exiting" >&2 ; exit 1 ; }

echo "# run \"eval \`$0\`\" to source these exports"
echo "export CUDA_INSTALL_PATH=$CUDA"
echo "export ROOTDIR=$CUDA/C/common/"
# check for its current presence? FIXME
if [ -n "$LD_LIBRARY_PATH" ] ; then
	echo "export LD_LIBRARY_PATH=$LD_LIBRARY_PATH:$CUDA/lib64"
else
	echo "export LD_LIBRARY_PATH=$CUDA/lib64"
fi

Handrolled builds