Efficient Multiplication of Submatrices whose results are to be safed in Submatrices
7 visualizaciones (últimos 30 días)
Mostrar comentarios más antiguos
Hey Guys,
trying to find an efficient solution for quite some time now.
Given two matrices A,B, say both of size 1000x1000, compute A(1:100,1:100)*B(1:100,1:100) and safe that in (overwrite) A(1:100,1:100).
What's the most efficient way to do that? Since it is a mantra for Matlab to always preallocate, I precisely did that with worse results than before (before: appending new row and column in each loop). I've read about efficient BLAS-routines in Fortran and C for multiplying submatrices and saving the result in submatrices since there they don't actually "extract" a submatrix but merely point to which parts of the matrices you want to multiply and therefore you can still make use of the efficient routines available. Are there similar routines for Matlab or could you provide me with a mex-file since I can't program in C?
Original way without preallocation (exemplary, simplified code, say matrix A consists of my data):
The first part takes roughly 16 seconds, the second 14 seconds even though I preallocated. Having read some threads, I've heard that this is due to Matlab having to copy the submatrix at every extraction step and therefore having to find new memory.
In my real code, actually the latter variant is way slower than the first one. I can post it, if anyone is interested.
Thanks in advance!
tic
A=1;
for j=1:1000
A=[A zeros(j,1);zeros(1,j) 1]*rand(j+1,j+1);
end
toc
tic
B=zeros(1000,1000);
for j=1:1000
B(j+1,j+1)=1;
B(1:j+1,1:j+1)=B(1:j+1,1:j+1)*rand(j+1,j+1);
end
toc
2 comentarios
James Tursa
el 14 de Mzo. de 2019
Yes, the BLAS library that MATLAB uses is already set up to work with sub-matrices without copying them first. That part can easily be done in a mex routine. The difficult part is stuffing the result back into one of the inputs. Because of the data sharing model that MATLAB uses, you might end up inadvertently overwriting other variables in the background. There are no official API functions available that can tell you when this data sharing is taking place, either. So you would be left with hacks for this, or you take special care to make sure the variables are not shared prior to entering the mex routine.
Respuestas (1)
Ver también
Categorías
Más información sobre Matrix Indexing en Help Center y File Exchange.
Community Treasure Hunt
Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!
Start Hunting!