namespace tf {
/** @page ParallelReduction Parallel Reduction
%Taskflow provides template function that constructs a task to perform parallel reduction over a range of items.
@tableofcontents
@section ParallelReductionInclude Include the Header
You need to include the header file, taskflow/algorithm/reduce.hpp,
for creating a parallel-reduction task.
@code{.cpp}
#include
@endcode
@section A2ParallelReduction Create a Parallel-Reduction Task
The reduction task created by
tf::Taskflow::reduce(B first, E last, T& result, O bop, P&& part) performs
parallel reduction over a range of elements specified by [first, last) using the binary operator @c bop and stores the reduced result in @c result.
It represents the parallel execution of the following reduction loop:
@code{.cpp}
for(auto itr=first; itr vec = {1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10};
tf::Task task = taskflow.reduce(vec.begin(), vec.end(), sum,
[] (int l, int r) { return l + r; } // binary reducer operator
);
executor.run(taskflow).wait();
assert(sum == 100 + 55);
@endcode
The order in which the binary operator is applied to pairs of elements is @em unspecified.
In other words, the elements of the range may be grouped and rearranged in arbitrary order.
The result and the argument types of the binary operator must be consistent with the input data type.
@section ParallelReductionCaptureIteratorsByReference Capture Iterators by Reference
You can pass iterators by reference using @std_ref
to marshal parameter update between dependent tasks.
This is especially useful when the range is unknown
at the time of creating a parallel-reduction task,
but needs initialization from another task.
@code{.cpp}
int sum = 100;
std::vector vec;
std::vector::iterator first, last;
tf::Task init = taskflow.emplace([&](){
vec = {1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10};
first = vec.begin();
last = vec.end();
});
tf::Task task = taskflow.reduce(std::ref(first), std::ref(last), sum,
[] (int l, int r) { return l + r; } // binary reducer operator
);
// wrong! must use std::ref, or first and last are captured by copy
// tf::Task task = taskflow.reduce(first, last, sum, [] (int l, int r) {
// return l + r; // binary reducer operator
// });
init.precede(task);
executor.run(taskflow).wait();
assert(sum == 100 + 55);
@endcode
In the above example, when @c init finishes, @c vec has been initialized to 10 elements with
@c first and @c last pointing to the data range of @c vec.
The reduction task will then work on this initialized range
as a result of passing iterators by reference.
@section A2ParallelTransformationReduction Create a Parallel-Transform-Reduction Task
It is common to transform each element into a new data type and
then perform reduction on the transformed elements.
%Taskflow provides a method,
tf::Taskflow::transform_reduce(B first, E last, T& result, BOP bop, UOP uop, P&& part),
that applies @c uop to transform each element in the specified range
and then perform parallel reduction over @c result and transformed elements.
It represents the parallel execution of the following reduction loop:
@code{.cpp}
for(auto itr=first; itr int { // unary transformation operator
return c - '0';
}
);
executor.run(taskflow).wait();
assert(sum == 1 + 2 + 3 + 4 + 5 + 6 + 7 + 8); // sum will be 36
@endcode
The order in which we apply the binary operator on the transformed elements is @em unspecified.
It is possible that the binary operator will take @em r-value in both arguments, for example,
bop(uop(*itr1), uop(*itr2)), due to the transformed temporaries.
When data passing is expensive,
you may define the result type @c T to be move-constructible.
@section ParallelReductionCfigureAPartitioner Configure a Partitioner
You can configure a partitioner for parallel-reduction tasks to run with different
scheduling methods, such as guided partitioning, dynamic partitioning, and static partitioning.
The following example creates two parallel-reduction tasks using two different
partitioners, one with the static partitioning algorithm and
another one with the guided partitioning algorithm:
@code{.cpp}
tf::StaticPartitioner static_partitioner;
tf::GuidedPartitioner guided_partitioner;
int sum1 = 100, sum2 = 100;
std::vector vec = {1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10};
// create a parallel-reduction task with static partitioner
taskflow.reduce(vec.begin(), vec.end(), sum1,
[] (int l, int r) { return l + r; },
static_partitioner
);
// create a parallel-reduction task with guided partitioner
taskflow.reduce(vec.begin(), vec.end(), sum2,
[] (int l, int r) { return l + r; },
guided_partitioner
);
@endcode
@note
By default, parallel-reduction tasks use tf::DefaultPartitioner
if no partitioner is specified.
*/
}