In high-performance computing, sums, products, etc are often calculated using a "parallel reduction" that takes n elements and completes in O(log n) time (given enough parallelism). In Haskell, we usually use a fold for this kind of calculation, but evaluation time is always linear in the length of the list.
Data Parallel Haskell has some of this built in, but what ab开发者_如何学Cout in the common framework of a list? Can we do it with Control.Parallel.Strategies
?
So, assuming f
is associative, how do we write
parFold :: (a -> a -> a) -> [a] -> a
so that parFold f xs
only needs time logarithmic in length xs
?
I don't think a list is the right data type for this. Because it's just a linked list, the data will necessarily be accessed sequentially. Although you can evaluate the items in parallel, you won't gain much in the reduction step. If you really need a List, I think the best function would be just
parFold f = foldl1' f . withStrategy (parList rseq)
or maybe
parFold f = foldl1' f . withStrategy (parBuffer 5 rseq)
If the reduction step is complex, you might get a gain by subdividing the list like this:
parReduce f = foldl' f mempty . reducedList . chunkList . withStrategy (parList rseq)
where
chunkList list = let (l,ls) = splitAt 1000 list in l : chunkList ls
reducedList = parMap rseq (foldl' f mempty)
I've taken the liberty of assuming your data is a Monoid
for mempty, if this isn't possible you can either replace mempty with your own empty type, or worse case use foldl1'
.
There are two operators from Control.Parallel.Strategies
in use here. The parList
evaluates all items of the list in parallel. After that, the chunkList
divides the list into chunks of 1000 elements. Each of those chunks is then reduced in parallel by the parMap
.
You might also try
parReduce2 f = foldl' f mempty . reducedList . chunkList
where
chunkList list = let (l,ls) = splitAt 1000 list in l : chunkList ls
reducedList = parMap rseq (foldl' f mempty)
Depending on exactly how the work is distributed, one of these may be more efficient than the others.
If you can use a data structure that has good support for indexing though (Array, Vector, Map, etc.), then you can do binary subdivisions for the reduction step, which will probably be better overall.
This seems like a good start:
parFold :: (a -> a -> a) -> [a] -> a
parFold f = go
where
strategy = parList rseq
go [x] = x
go xs = go (reduce xs `using` strategy)
reduce (x:y:xs) = f x y : reduce xs
reduce list = list -- empty or singleton list
It works, but parallelism is not so great. Replacing parList
with something like parListChunks 1000
helps a bit, but speedup is still limited to under 1.5x on an 8-core machine.
Not sure what your parFold
function is supposed to do. If that is intended to be a parallel version of foldr or foldl, I think its definition is wrong.
parFold :: (a -> a -> a) -> [a] -> a
// fold right in haskell (takes 3 arguments)
foldr :: (a -> b -> b) -> b -> [a] -> b
Fold applies the same function to each element of the list and accumulates the result of each application. Coming up with a parallel version of it, i guess, would require that the function application to the elements are done in parallel - a bit like what parList
does.
par_foldr :: (NFData a, NFData b) => (a -> b -> b) -> b -> [a] -> b
par_foldr f z [] = z
par_foldr f z (x:xs) = res `using` \ _ -> rseq x' `par` rdeepseq res
where x' = par_foldr f z xs
res = x `f` x'
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