Simple program which demonstrates SLI with Direct3D10 Texture interoperability with CUDA. The program creates a D3D10 Texture which is written to from a CUDA kernel. Direct3D then renders the results on the screen. A Direct3D Capable device is required.
Performance Strategies, Graphics Interop, Image Processing, 2D Textures
SM 5.0 SM 5.2 SM 5.3 SM 6.0 SM 6.1 SM 7.0 SM 7.2 SM 7.5 SM 8.0 SM 8.6 SM 8.7 SM 9.0
Windows
x86_64
cuCtxPushCurrent, cuCtxPopCurrent
cudaGraphicsUnmapResources, cudaMalloc, cudaMallocPitch, cudaGetErrorString, cudaFree, cudaGraphicsResourceSetMapFlags, cudaGetLastError, cudaGraphicsMapResources, cudaGetDeviceCount, cudaMemset, cudaGraphicsUnregisterResource, cudaGraphicsSubResourceGetMappedArray, cudaGetDeviceProperties
Download and install the CUDA Toolkit 12.0 for your corresponding platform. Make sure the dependencies mentioned in Dependencies section above are installed.
The Windows samples are built using the Visual Studio IDE. Solution files (.sln) are provided for each supported version of Visual Studio, using the format:
*_vs<version>.sln - for Visual Studio <version>
Each individual sample has its own set of solution files in its directory:
To build/examine all the samples at once, the complete solution files should be used. To build/examine a single sample, the individual sample solution files should be used.
Note: Some samples require that the Microsoft DirectX SDK (June 2010 or newer) be installed and that the VC++ directory paths are properly set up (Tools > Options...). Check DirectX Dependencies section for details."