Commit 8b1df9a0 by Christian Kern

Merge branch 'development' of https://github.com/siemens/embb into development

parents 3efbe80e 3038fff8
......@@ -14,6 +14,8 @@ build*
# Latex output files
*.aux
*.bbl
*.blg
*.log
*.out
*.pdf
......
# Copyright (c) 2014, Siemens AG. All rights reserved.
# SPDX-License-Identifier: BSD-2-Clause
language: cpp
compiler:
- gcc
- clang
install:
- sudo apt-get install -qq cppcheck
- sudo add-apt-repository --yes ppa:kalakris/cmake
- sudo apt-get update -qq
- sudo apt-get install cmake
script:
- cppcheck -q --enable=all *_c*
- mkdir build && cd build
- cmake ..
- make
- chmod a+x binaries/run_tests.sh
- ./binaries/run_tests.sh
Embedded Multicore Building Blocks (EMBB)
Embedded Multicore Building Blocks (EMB²)
=========================================
Version 0.2.1
-------------
### Bug fixes:
- Fixed implementation of atomic operations on ARM.
- Fixed bug in HelpScan routine of hazard pointer implementation.
- Replaced inclusion of non-standard header malloc.h with stdlib.h.
### Features:
- Added embb_core_count_available() implementation for FreeBSD.
### Build system:
- Added initial support for Clang.
- Added initial support for Travis.
- Fixed "Policy CMP0026 is not set" warning of CMake >= 3.0.2.
- Made build independent of build-dir / source-dir location.
- Fixed remaining GCC, Clang, MSVC, and cpplint warnings.
- Replaced /bin/bash with /usr/bin/env bash in scripts.
- Added executable flag to shell scripts.
- Omitted Doxygen "Makefiles" from tarball.
- Included patchlevel in name of installation directory on Linux.
- Added LaTeX .bbl and .blg files to ignore list.
### Documentation:
- Updated README file, created CHANGELOG file, and added markdown support.
- Corrected license in COPYING.md (BSD 2-clause).
- Changed default Doxygen level for API to two.
- Added check for Doxyfile.in (if not present, do not add Doxygen target).
- Added PDF image of building blocks and updated tutorial.tex.
- Fixed typos and wording.
Version 0.2.0
-------------
......
Embedded Multicore Building Blocks (EMBB)
Embedded Multicore Building Blocks (EMB²)
=========================================
Overview
......
Embedded Multicore Building Blocks (EMBB)
Embedded Multicore Building Blocks (EMB²)
=========================================
Overview
========
--------
The Embedded Multicore Building Blocks (EMBB) are an easy to use yet powerful
and efficient C/C++ library for the development of parallel applications. EMBB
The Embedded Multicore Building Blocks (EMB²) are an easy to use yet powerful
and efficient C/C++ library for the development of parallel applications. EMB²
has been specifically designed for embedded systems and the typical
requirements that accompany them, such as real-time capability and constraints
on memory consumption. As a major advantage, low-level operations are hidden
......@@ -15,18 +15,18 @@ management and synchronization. This not only improves productivity of
parallel software development, but also results in increased reliability and
performance of the applications.
EMBB is independent of the hardware architecture (x86, ARM, ...) and runs on
EMB² is independent of the hardware architecture (x86, ARM, ...) and runs on
various platforms, from small devices to large systems containing numerous
processor cores. It builds on MTAPI, a standardized programming interface for
leveraging task parallelism in embedded systems containing symmetric or
asymmetric multicore processors. A core feature of MTAPI is low-overhead
scheduling of fine-grained tasks among the available cores during runtime.
Unlike existing libraries, EMBB supports task priorities, which allows the
Unlike existing libraries, EMB² supports task priorities, which allows the
creation of soft real-time systems. Additionally, the scheduling strategy can
be optimized for non-functional requirements such as minimal latency and
fairness.
Besides the task scheduler, EMBB provides basic parallel algorithms, concurrent
Besides the task scheduler, EMB² provides basic parallel algorithms, concurrent
data structures, and skeletons for implementing stream processing
applications. These building blocks are largely implemented in a non-blocking
fashion, thus preventing frequently encountered pitfalls like lock contention,
......@@ -38,7 +38,7 @@ of any other concurrent operations on the same data structure.
Community and Contact
=====================
---------------------
Project home:
- https://github.com/siemens/embb
......@@ -61,13 +61,13 @@ Contact:
License
=======
-------
See the file "COPYING.md" in the project's root directory.
Requirements
============
------------
This project is based on the standards C99 (for C code) and C++03 (for C++
code) to be usable on a wide range of target systems. It has been tested on
......@@ -81,18 +81,18 @@ the following OS/compiler/architecture combinations:
Other compilers and operating systems may be supported without any changes to
the source code. The project includes unit tests that can be used to find out
whether a system not officially supported is suitable to run EMBB. If there is
whether a system not officially supported is suitable to run EMB². If there is
a requirement to support a system on which the unit tests do not pass, please
contact us: embb-dev@googlegroups.com.
Directory Structure
===================
-------------------
EMBB is a technology stack consisting of various building blocks. For some of
EMB² is a technology stack consisting of various building blocks. For some of
them, there exist C and C++ versions, others are only implemented in C++. The
directory names are postfixed with either "_cpp" or "_c" for the C++ and C
versions, respectively. Currently, EMBB contains the following components:
versions, respectively. Currently, EMB² contains the following components:
- base: base_c, base_cpp
- mtapi: mtapi_c, mtapi_cpp
......@@ -115,9 +115,13 @@ data structures for storing object in an organized and thread-safe way.
Build and Installation
======================
----------------------
Note: It is recommended to build from a packaged release file and not from a
snapshot of the repository in order to get the documentation and the examples
out-of-the box.
EMBB is built using CMake (version 2.8.9 or higher). CMake is a build file
EMB² is built using CMake (version 2.8.9 or higher). CMake is a build file
generator which allows to abstract from the concrete build tools. To generate
and invoke the platform-specific build files, open a shell (on Windows, use
the Visual Studio developer shell to have the correct environment variables)
......@@ -125,8 +129,7 @@ and change to the project's root directory. Create a subdirectory, where you
want to build the library, e.g., "build". Change to that subdirectory. It is
assumed that the project's root directory is now the parent directory.
1. Generation of native build files
-----------------------------------
### 1. Generation of native build files
Choose an appropriate build file generator for your system.
......@@ -147,12 +150,12 @@ option -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=[Release|Debug]. If no build mode is given on Linux,
the default (Release) is used. The Visual Studio generators create build files
for both modes (the selection is done at build time).
EMBB can be built with and without C++ exception handling, which has to be
EMB² can be built with and without C++ exception handling, which has to be
specified on build file generation. When exceptions are turned off, an error
message is emitted and the program aborts in case of an exception within EMBB.
message is emitted and the program aborts in case of an exception within EMB².
To disable exceptions, add the option -DUSE_EXCEPTIONS=OFF.
The tutorial of EMBB comes with example source files in doc/examples/. These
The tutorial of EMB² comes with example source files in doc/examples/. These
can be built with the other source files using CMake option -DBUILD_EXAMPLES=ON
in the generation step. Note, however, that the examples use C++11 features and
require a corresponding compiler.
......@@ -170,8 +173,7 @@ For a Windows build (VS 2013, x86) without exception handling, type
Note that "Visual Studio 12" refers to the version number of Visual Studio and
not to the year in which it was released (2013).
2. Compiling and linking
------------------------
### 2. Compiling and linking
As the next step, you can compile the library using the generated build files.
On Linux, the build mode (Release|Debug) is already given in the build files,
......@@ -185,10 +187,9 @@ For a Windows Release build, type
cmake --build . --config Release
3. Running the tests
--------------------
### 3. Running the tests
To check whether EMBB was compiled correctly, run the tests. The test
To check whether EMB² was compiled correctly, run the tests. The test
executables are contained in the subfolder "binaries".
On Linux, type
......@@ -199,10 +200,9 @@ On Windows, type
binaries\run_tests.bat
If no error message occurs, EMBB is working fine.
If no error message occurs, EMB² is working fine.
4. Installation
---------------
### 4. Installation
The default installation path on Linux is
......@@ -230,15 +230,14 @@ installation has to be run with administrator / root privileges.
Using the Library
=================
-----------------
To use EMBB, the include files have to be made available during compilation of
To use EMB², the include files have to be made available during compilation of
your application and the libraries have to be added during linking.
1. Using C++
------------
### 1. Using C++
If you want to use the C++ functionalities of EMBB, you have to link the
If you want to use the C++ functionalities of EMB², you have to link the
following libraries (names will be different on Windows and on Linux) in the
given order:
......@@ -252,8 +251,7 @@ The C++ header files can be included as follows:
#include<embb/containers/containers.h>
#include<embb/dataflow/dataflow.h>
2. Using C
----------
### 2. Using C
The following libraries have to be linked in the given order:
......@@ -266,17 +264,17 @@ The C header files can be included as follows:
Documentation
=============
-------------
EMBB comes with a tutorial, example programs, and an HTML reference
EMB² comes with a tutorial, example programs, and an HTML reference
documentation describing the APIs, which can be found in the "doc" folder.
The root document of the HTML reference is "doc/reference/index.html".
Code Quality
============
------------
For the C++ parts of EMBB, we respect most rules of the "Google C++ Style
For the C++ parts of EMB², we respect most rules of the "Google C++ Style
Guide" which are checked using the cpplint tool. However, we ignore some
rules, as they are not applicable or yield false results for this project.
For example, we respect the include order of the Google Style Guide, but use
......@@ -286,18 +284,26 @@ code using Cppcheck, a static analysis tool for C++.
Known Bugs and Limitations
==========================
--------------------------
- The MTAPI implementation is currently limited to homogeneous systems.
Support for heterogeneous systems will be added in the near future.
- For memory management reasons, the number of threads EMBB can deal with
- For memory management reasons, the number of threads EMB² can deal with
is bounded by a predefined but modifiable constant (see functions
embb_thread_get_max_count() / embb_thread_set_max_count() and class
embb::base::Thread).
Development and Contribution
----------------------------
The EMB² team welcomes all kinds of contributions, preferably as pull requests
or patches via the development mailing lists (see above). If possible, please
refer to a current snapshot of the development branch.
Links
=====
-----
- Multicore Association:
http://www.multicore-association.org
......@@ -305,7 +311,7 @@ Links
http://www.multicore-association.org/workgroup/mtapi.php
- CMake:
http://www.cmake.org/
- Google C++ Style Guide
- Google C++ Style Guide:
http://google-styleguide.googlecode.com/svn/trunk/cppguide.html
- cpplint:
http://google-styleguide.googlecode.com/svn/trunk/cpplint/
......
......@@ -91,7 +91,7 @@ class ForEachFunctor {
};
template<typename RAI, typename Function>
void ForEachRecurcive(RAI first, RAI last, Function unary,
void ForEachRecursive(RAI first, RAI last, Function unary,
const ExecutionPolicy& policy, size_t block_size) {
typedef typename std::iterator_traits<RAI>::difference_type difference_type;
difference_type distance = std::distance(first, last);
......@@ -121,7 +121,7 @@ template<typename RAI, typename Function>
void ForEachIteratorCheck(RAI first, RAI last, Function unary,
const ExecutionPolicy& policy, size_t block_size,
std::random_access_iterator_tag) {
return ForEachRecurcive(first, last, unary, policy, block_size);
return ForEachRecursive(first, last, unary, policy, block_size);
}
} // namespace internal
......
......@@ -105,7 +105,7 @@ class ReduceFunctor {
template<typename RAI, typename ReturnType, typename ReductionFunction,
typename TransformationFunction>
ReturnType ReduceRecurcive(RAI first, RAI last, ReturnType neutral,
ReturnType ReduceRecursive(RAI first, RAI last, ReturnType neutral,
ReductionFunction reduction,
TransformationFunction transformation,
const ExecutionPolicy& policy, size_t block_size) {
......@@ -144,7 +144,7 @@ ReturnType ReduceIteratorCheck(RAI first, RAI last, ReductionFunction reduction,
ReturnType neutral,
const ExecutionPolicy& policy, size_t block_size,
std::random_access_iterator_tag) {
return ReduceRecurcive(first, last, neutral, reduction, transformation,
return ReduceRecursive(first, last, neutral, reduction, transformation,
policy, block_size);
}
......
......@@ -103,9 +103,9 @@ unsigned int embb_core_count_available() {
#ifdef EMBB_HAS_HEADER_SYSINFO
return get_nprocs();
#elif defined __FreeBSD__
const size_t bs = sizeof(unsigned int);
char buf[bs];
size_t len = bs;
const size_t kBufferSize = sizeof(unsigned int);
char buf[kBufferSize];
size_t len = kBufferSize;
sysctlbyname("hw.ncpu", buf, &len, NULL, 0);
return *(unsigned int*)&buf;
#else
......
......@@ -15,7 +15,7 @@
\usepackage{pifont} % for \myCheck, \myCross
\usepackage[hyphens]{url}
\usepackage[hidelinks]{hyperref} % hyperref without colored links
%\usepackage{draftwatermark}
\usepackage{draftwatermark}
\usepackage{xspace}
\usepackage{pgf}
\usepackage{tikz}
......@@ -36,7 +36,7 @@
\def\lstwidth{0.8\columnwidth}
\def\embb{EMB$^\mathsf{2}$\xspace}
%\SetWatermarkColor[gray]{0.9}
\SetWatermarkColor[gray]{0.95}
\newcommand{\leadingzero}[1]{\ifnum #1<10 0\the#1\else\the#1\fi}
\newcommand{\monthword}[1]{\ifcase#1\or January\or February\or March\or April\or May\or June\or July\or August\or September\or October\or November\or December\fi}
......@@ -73,7 +73,7 @@
% Set title and author
% short title is used on the front cover and on each page header
\renewcommand{\shorttitle}{\embb Tutorial (Draft)}
\renewcommand{\shorttitle}{\embb Introduction and Tutorial}
% short date is printed on each page header, right next to short title
\renewcommand{\shortdate}{\monthword{\month} \the\year}
% copyright date is printed on the back cover
......@@ -81,7 +81,7 @@
% 1st paramter: a square(!) picture
% 2nd parameter: short tile (one line)
% 3rd parameter: long title (up to two lines)
\gentitlepage{pics/chicago-square.jpg}{\LARGE Siemens Corporate Technology | \monthword{\month} 2014}{\scalebox{0.9}{Embedded Multicore Building Blocks}\\\scalebox{0.9}{Introduction and Tutorial (Draft)}}
\gentitlepage{pics/chicago-square.jpg}{\LARGE Siemens Corporate Technology | \monthword{\month} 2014}{\scalebox{0.9}{Embedded Multicore Building Blocks}\\\scalebox{0.9}{Introduction and Tutorial}}
% List the authors and contributors on the second page, right after the cover page
% 1st parameter: contributors (optional)
......
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