Data Parallel Control or dpctl
is a Python library that allows users
to control the execution placement of a compute
kernel on an
XPU.
The compute kernel can be a code:
- written by the user, e.g., using
numba-dpex
- that is part of a library, such as oneMKL
The dpctl
library is built upon the SYCL
standard. It also implements Python
bindings for a subset of the standard runtime
classes that allow users to:
- query platforms
- discover and represent devices and sub-devices
- construct contexts and queues
dpctl
features classes for SYCL Unified Shared Memory
(USM)
management and implements a tensor array
API.
The library helps authors of Python native extensions written
in C, Cython, or pybind11 to access dpctl
objects representing SYCL
devices, queues, memory, and tensors.
Dpctl
is the core part of a larger family of data-parallel Python
libraries and tools
to program on XPUs.
You can install the library with conda and pip. It is also available in the Intel(R) Distribution for Python (IDP).
You can find the most recent release of dpctl
every quarter as part of the Intel(R) oneAPI releases.
To get the library from the latest oneAPI release, follow the instructions from Intel(R) oneAPI installation guide.
NOTE: You need to install the Intel(R) oneAPI Basekit to get IDP and
dpctl
.
To install dpctl
from the Intel(R) channel on Anaconda
cloud, use the following command:
conda install dpctl -c intel
To install dpctl
from PyPi, run the following command:
pip3 install dpctl
To try out the current master, install it from our development channel on Anaconda cloud:
conda install dpctl -c dppy\label\dev
Refer to our Documentation for more information on
setting up a development environment and building dpctl
from the source.
Find our examples here.
To run these examples, use:
for script in `ls examples/python/`;
do echo "executing ${script}";
python examples/python/${script};
done
See examples of building Cython extensions with DPC++ compiler that interoperates
with dpctl
in the cython folder.
To build these examples, run:
CC=icx CXX=dpcpp python setup.py build_ext --inplace
To execute extensions, refer to the run.py
script in each folder.
Tests are located here.
To run the tests, use:
pytest --pyargs dpctl