dbsrsm - block sparse row format triangular solve
SUBROUTINE DBSRSM( TRANSA, MB, N, UNITD, DV, ALPHA, DESCRA, * VAL, BINDX, BPNTRB, BPNTRE, LB, * B, LDB, BETA, C, LDC, WORK, LWORK) INTEGER TRANSA, MB, N, UNITD, DESCRA(5), LB, * LDB, LDC, LWORK INTEGER BINDX(BNNZ), BPNTRB(MB), BPNTRE(MB) DOUBLE PRECISION ALPHA, BETA DOUBLE PRECISION DV(MB*LB*LB), VAL(LB*LB*BNNZ), B(LDB,*), C(LDC,*), WORK(LWORK) SUBROUTINE DBSRSM_64( TRANSA, MB, N, UNITD, DV, ALPHA, DESCRA, * VAL, BINDX, BPNTRB, BPNTRE, LB, * B, LDB, BETA, C, LDC, WORK, LWORK) INTEGER*8 TRANSA, MB, N, UNITD, DESCRA(5), LB, * LDB, LDC, LWORK INTEGER*8 BINDX(BNNZ), BPNTRB(MB), BPNTRE(MB) DOUBLE PRECISION ALPHA, BETA DOUBLE PRECISION DV(MB*LB*LB), VAL(LB*LB*BNNZ), B(LDB,*), C(LDC,*), WORK(LWORK) where: BNNZ = BPNTRE(MB)-BPNTRB(1) F95 INTERFACE SUBROUTINE BSRSM(TRANSA, MB, N, UNITD, DV, ALPHA, DESCRA, VAL, BINDX, * BPNTRB, BPNTRE, LB, B, LDB, BETA, C, LDC, WORK, LWORK) INTEGER TRANSA, MB, N, UNITD, LB INTEGER, DIMENSION(:) :: DESCRA, BINDX, BPNTRB, BPNTRE DOUBLE PRECISION ALPHA, BETA DOUBLE PRECISION, DIMENSION(:) :: VAL, DV DOUBLE PRECISION, DIMENSION(:, :) :: B, C SUBROUTINE BSRSM_64(TRANSA, MB, N, UNITD, DV, ALPHA, DESCRA, VAL, BINDX, * BPNTRB, BPNTRE, LB, B, LDB, BETA, C, LDC, WORK, LWORK) INTEGER*8 TRANSA, MB, N, UNITD, LB INTEGER*8, DIMENSION(:) :: DESCRA, BINDX, BPNTRB, BPNTRE DOUBLE PRECISION ALPHA, BETA DOUBLE PRECISION, DIMENSION(:) :: VAL, DV DOUBLE PRECISION, DIMENSION(:, :) :: B, C C INTERFACE #include <sunperf.h> void dbsrsm (const int transa, const int mb, const int n, const int unitd, const double* dv, const double alpha, const int* descra, const double* val, const int* bindx, const int* bpn- trb, const int* bpntre, const int lb, const double* b, const int ldb, const double beta, double* c, const int ldc); void dbsrsm_64 (const long transa, const long mb, const long n, const long unitd, const double* dv, const double alpha, const long* descra, const double* val, const long* bindx, const long* bpntrb, const long* bpntre, const long lb, const double* b, const long ldb, const double beta, double* c, const long ldc);
Oracle Solaris Studio Performance Library dbsrsm(3P) NAME dbsrsm - block sparse row format triangular solve SYNOPSIS SUBROUTINE DBSRSM( TRANSA, MB, N, UNITD, DV, ALPHA, DESCRA, * VAL, BINDX, BPNTRB, BPNTRE, LB, * B, LDB, BETA, C, LDC, WORK, LWORK) INTEGER TRANSA, MB, N, UNITD, DESCRA(5), LB, * LDB, LDC, LWORK INTEGER BINDX(BNNZ), BPNTRB(MB), BPNTRE(MB) DOUBLE PRECISION ALPHA, BETA DOUBLE PRECISION DV(MB*LB*LB), VAL(LB*LB*BNNZ), B(LDB,*), C(LDC,*), WORK(LWORK) SUBROUTINE DBSRSM_64( TRANSA, MB, N, UNITD, DV, ALPHA, DESCRA, * VAL, BINDX, BPNTRB, BPNTRE, LB, * B, LDB, BETA, C, LDC, WORK, LWORK) INTEGER*8 TRANSA, MB, N, UNITD, DESCRA(5), LB, * LDB, LDC, LWORK INTEGER*8 BINDX(BNNZ), BPNTRB(MB), BPNTRE(MB) DOUBLE PRECISION ALPHA, BETA DOUBLE PRECISION DV(MB*LB*LB), VAL(LB*LB*BNNZ), B(LDB,*), C(LDC,*), WORK(LWORK) where: BNNZ = BPNTRE(MB)-BPNTRB(1) F95 INTERFACE SUBROUTINE BSRSM(TRANSA, MB, N, UNITD, DV, ALPHA, DESCRA, VAL, BINDX, * BPNTRB, BPNTRE, LB, B, LDB, BETA, C, LDC, WORK, LWORK) INTEGER TRANSA, MB, N, UNITD, LB INTEGER, DIMENSION(:) :: DESCRA, BINDX, BPNTRB, BPNTRE DOUBLE PRECISION ALPHA, BETA DOUBLE PRECISION, DIMENSION(:) :: VAL, DV DOUBLE PRECISION, DIMENSION(:, :) :: B, C SUBROUTINE BSRSM_64(TRANSA, MB, N, UNITD, DV, ALPHA, DESCRA, VAL, BINDX, * BPNTRB, BPNTRE, LB, B, LDB, BETA, C, LDC, WORK, LWORK) INTEGER*8 TRANSA, MB, N, UNITD, LB INTEGER*8, DIMENSION(:) :: DESCRA, BINDX, BPNTRB, BPNTRE DOUBLE PRECISION ALPHA, BETA DOUBLE PRECISION, DIMENSION(:) :: VAL, DV DOUBLE PRECISION, DIMENSION(:, :) :: B, C C INTERFACE #include <sunperf.h> void dbsrsm (const int transa, const int mb, const int n, const int unitd, const double* dv, const double alpha, const int* descra, const double* val, const int* bindx, const int* bpn- trb, const int* bpntre, const int lb, const double* b, const int ldb, const double beta, double* c, const int ldc); void dbsrsm_64 (const long transa, const long mb, const long n, const long unitd, const double* dv, const double alpha, const long* descra, const double* val, const long* bindx, const long* bpntrb, const long* bpntre, const long lb, const double* b, const long ldb, const double beta, double* c, const long ldc); DESCRIPTION dbsrsm performs one of the matrix-matrix operations C <- alpha op(A) B + beta C, C <-alpha D op(A) B + beta C, C <- alpha op(A) D B + beta C, where alpha and beta are scalars, C and B are mb*lb by n dense matrices, D is a block diagonal matrix, A is a sparse mb*lb by mb*lb unit, or non-unit, upper or lower triangular matrix represented in the block sparse row format and op( A ) is one of op( A ) = inv(A) or op( A ) = inv(A') or op( A ) =inv(conjg( A' )) (inv denotes matrix inverse, ' indicates matrix transpose). ARGUMENTS TRANSA(input) On entry, integer TRANSA specifies the form of op(A) to be used in the sparse matrix inverse as follows:. 0 : operate with matrix 1 : operate with transpose matrix 2 : operate with the conjugate transpose of matrix. 2 is equivalent to 1 if matrix is real. Unchanged on exit. MB(input) On entry, MB specifies the number of block rows in the matrix A. Unchanged on exit. N(input) On entry, N specifies the number of columns in the matrix C. Unchanged on exit. UNITD(input) On entry, integer UNITD specifies the type of scaling: 1 : Identity matrix (argument DV[] is ignored) 2 : Scale on left (row scaling) 3 : Scale on right (column scaling) Unchanged on exit. DV(input) On entry, DV is an array of length MB*LB*LB consisting of the elements of the diagonal blocks of the matrix D. The size of each square block is LB-by-LB and each block is stored in standard column-major form. Unchanged on exit. ALPHA(input) On entry, ALPHA specifies the scalar alpha. Unchanged on exit. DESCRA (input) Descriptor argument. Five element integer array: DESCRA(1) matrix structure 0 : general 1 : symmetric (A=A') 2 : Hermitian (A= CONJG(A')) 3 : Triangular 4 : Skew(Anti)-Symmetric (A=-A') 5 : Diagonal 6 : Skew-Hermitian (A= -CONJG(A')) Note: For the routine, DESCRA(1)=3 is only supported. DESCRA(2) upper/lower triangular indicator 1 : lower 2 : upper DESCRA(3) main diagonal type 0 : non-identity blocks on the main diagonal 1 : identity diagonal blocks 2 : diagonal blocks are dense matrices DESCRA(4) Array base (NOT IMPLEMENTED) 0 : C/C++ compatible 1 : Fortran compatible DESCRA(5) repeated indices? (NOT IMPLEMENTED) 0 : unknown 1 : no repeated indices VAL(input) On entry, VAL is a scalar array of length LB*LB*BNNZ consisting of the non-zero block entries stored column-major within each dense block where BNNZ = BPNTRE(MB)-BPNTRB(1). Unchanged on exit. BINDX(input) On entry, BINDX is an integer array of length BNNZ consisting of the block column indices of the block entries of A where BNNZ = BPNTRE(MB)-BPNTRB(1). The block column indices MUST be sorted in increasing order for each block column. Unchanged on exit. BPNTRB(input) On entry,BPNTRB is an integer array of length MB such that BPNTRB(J)-BPNTRB(1)+1 points to location in BINDX of the first block entry of the J-th block row of A. Unchanged on exit. BPNTRE(input) On entry, BPNTRE is an integer array of length MB such that BPNTRE(J)-BPNTRB(1) points to location in BINDX of the last block entry of the J-th block row of A. Unchanged on exit. LB (input) On entry, LB specifies the dimension of dense blocks composing A. Unchanged on exit. B (input) Array of DIMENSION ( LDB, N ). On entry, the leading mb*lb by n part of the array B must contain the matrix B. Unchanged on exit. LDB (input) On entry, LDB specifies the first dimension of B as declared in the calling (sub) program. Unchanged on exit. BETA (input) On entry, BETA specifies the scalar beta. Unchanged on exit. C(input/output) Array of DIMENSION ( LDC, N ). On entry, the leading mb*lb by n part of the array C must contain the matrix C. On exit, the array C is overwritten. LDC (input) On entry, LDC specifies the first dimension of C as declared in the calling (sub) program. Unchanged on exit. WORK(workspace) Scratch array of length LWORK. On exit, if LWORK= -1, WORK(1) returns the optimum size of LWORK. LWORK (input) On entry, LWORK specifies the length of WORK array. LWORK should be at least MB*LB. For good performance, LWORK should generally be larger. For optimum performance on multiple processors, LWORK >=MB*LB*N_CPUS where N_CPUS is the maximum number of processors available to the program. If LWORK=0, the routine is to allocate workspace needed. If LWORK = -1, then a workspace query is assumed; the routine only calculates the optimum size of the WORK array, returns this value as the first entry of the WORK array, and no error message related to LWORK is issued by XERBLA. SEE ALSO Libsunperf SPARSE BLAS is parallelized with the help of OPENMP and it is fully compatible with NIST FORTRAN Sparse Blas but the sources are different. Libsunperf SPARSE BLAS is free of bugs found in NIST FORTRAN Sparse Blas. Besides several new features and routines are implemented. NIST FORTRAN Sparse Blas User's Guide available at: http://math.nist.gov/mcsd/Staff/KRemington/fspblas/ Based on the standard proposed in "Document for the Basic Linear Algebra Subprograms (BLAS) Standard", University of Tennessee, Knoxville, Tennessee, 1996: http://www.netlib.org/utk/papers/sparse.ps NOTES/BUGS 1. No test for singularity or near-singularity is included in this rou- tine. Such tests must be performed before calling this routine. 2. If DESCRA(3)=0 , the lower or upper triangular part of each diagonal block is used by the routine depending on DESCRA(2) . 3. If DESCRA(3)=1 , the diagonal blocks in the block sparse row repre- sentation of A don't need to be the identity matrices because these block entries are not used by the routine in this case. 4. If DESCRA(3)=2 , the diagonal blocks are considered as dense matri- ces and the LU factorization with partial pivoting is used by the rou- tine. WORK(1)=0 on return if the factorization for all diagonal blocks has been completed successfully, otherwise WORK(1) = - i where i is the block number for which the LU factorization could not be computed. 5. The routine is designed so that it checks the validity of each sparse block entry given in the sparse blas representation. Block entries with incorrect indices are not used and no error message related to the entries is issued. The feature also provides a possibility to use the sparse matrix repre- sentation of a general matrix A for solving triangular systems with the upper or lower block triangle of A. But DESCRA(1) MUST be equal to 3 even in this case. Assume that there is the sparse matrix representation a general matrix A decomposed in the form A = L + D + U where L is the strictly block lower triangle of A, U is the strictly block upper triangle of A, D is the block diagonal matrix. Let's I denotes the identity matrix. Then the correspondence between the first three values of DESCRA and the result matrix for the sparse representation of A is DESCRA(1) DESCRA(2) DESCRA(3) RESULT 3 1 1 alpha*op(L+I)*B+beta*C 3 1 0 alpha*op(L+D)*B+beta*C 3 2 1 alpha*op(U+I)*B+beta*C 3 2 0 alpha*op(U+D)*B+beta*C 6. It is known that there exists another representation of the block sparse row format (see for example Y.Saad, "Iterative Methods for Sparse Linear Systems", WPS, 1996). Its data structure consists of three array instead of the four used in the current implementation. The main difference is that only one array, IA, containing the pointers to the beginning of each block row in the arrays VAL and BINDX is used instead of two arrays BPNTRB and BPNTRE. To use the routine with this kind of block sparse row format the following calling sequence should be used CALL DBSRSM( TRANSA, MB, N, UNITD, DV, ALPHA, DESCRA, * VAL, BINDX, IA, IA(2), LB, * B, LDB, BETA, C, LDC, WORK, LWORK ) 3rd Berkeley Distribution 7 Nov 2015 dbsrsm(3P)