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6.12.4 MPI Data Distribution Functions

As described above (see MPI Data Distribution), in order to allocate your arrays, before creating a plan, you must first call one of the following routines to determine the required allocation size and the portion of the array locally stored on a given process. The MPI_Comm communicator passed here must be equivalent to the communicator used below for plan creation.

The basic interface for multidimensional transforms consists of the functions:

     ptrdiff_t fftw_mpi_local_size_2d(ptrdiff_t n0, ptrdiff_t n1, MPI_Comm comm,
                                      ptrdiff_t *local_n0, ptrdiff_t *local_0_start);
     ptrdiff_t fftw_mpi_local_size_3d(ptrdiff_t n0, ptrdiff_t n1, ptrdiff_t n2,
                                      MPI_Comm comm,
                                      ptrdiff_t *local_n0, ptrdiff_t *local_0_start);
     ptrdiff_t fftw_mpi_local_size(int rnk, const ptrdiff_t *n, MPI_Comm comm,
                                   ptrdiff_t *local_n0, ptrdiff_t *local_0_start);
     
     ptrdiff_t fftw_mpi_local_size_2d_transposed(ptrdiff_t n0, ptrdiff_t n1, MPI_Comm comm,
                                                 ptrdiff_t *local_n0, ptrdiff_t *local_0_start,
                                                 ptrdiff_t *local_n1, ptrdiff_t *local_1_start);
     ptrdiff_t fftw_mpi_local_size_3d_transposed(ptrdiff_t n0, ptrdiff_t n1, ptrdiff_t n2,
                                                 MPI_Comm comm,
                                                 ptrdiff_t *local_n0, ptrdiff_t *local_0_start,
                                                 ptrdiff_t *local_n1, ptrdiff_t *local_1_start);
     ptrdiff_t fftw_mpi_local_size_transposed(int rnk, const ptrdiff_t *n, MPI_Comm comm,
                                              ptrdiff_t *local_n0, ptrdiff_t *local_0_start,
                                              ptrdiff_t *local_n1, ptrdiff_t *local_1_start);

These functions return the number of elements to allocate (complex numbers for DFT/r2c/c2r plans, real numbers for r2r plans), whereas the local_n0 and local_0_start return the portion (local_0_start to local_0_start + local_n0 - 1) of the first dimension of an n0 × n1 × n2 × … × nd-1 array that is stored on the local process. See Basic and advanced distribution interfaces. For FFTW_MPI_TRANSPOSED_OUT plans, the ‘_transposed’ variants are useful in order to also return the local portion of the first dimension in the n1 × n0 × n2 ×…× nd-1 transposed output. See Transposed distributions. The advanced interface for multidimensional transforms is:

     ptrdiff_t fftw_mpi_local_size_many(int rnk, const ptrdiff_t *n, ptrdiff_t howmany,
                                        ptrdiff_t block0, MPI_Comm comm,
                                        ptrdiff_t *local_n0, ptrdiff_t *local_0_start);
     ptrdiff_t fftw_mpi_local_size_many_transposed(int rnk, const ptrdiff_t *n, ptrdiff_t howmany,
                                                   ptrdiff_t block0, ptrdiff_t block1, MPI_Comm comm,
                                                   ptrdiff_t *local_n0, ptrdiff_t *local_0_start,
                                                   ptrdiff_t *local_n1, ptrdiff_t *local_1_start);

These differ from the basic interface in only two ways. First, they allow you to specify block sizes block0 and block1 (the latter for the transposed output); you can pass FFTW_MPI_DEFAULT_BLOCK to use FFTW's default block size as in the basic interface. Second, you can pass a howmany parameter, corresponding to the advanced planning interface below: this is for transforms of contiguous howmany-tuples of numbers (howmany = 1 in the basic interface).

The corresponding basic and advanced routines for one-dimensional transforms (currently only complex DFTs) are:

     ptrdiff_t fftw_mpi_local_size_1d(
                  ptrdiff_t n0, MPI_Comm comm, int sign, unsigned flags,
                  ptrdiff_t *local_ni, ptrdiff_t *local_i_start,
                  ptrdiff_t *local_no, ptrdiff_t *local_o_start);
     ptrdiff_t fftw_mpi_local_size_many_1d(
                  ptrdiff_t n0, ptrdiff_t howmany,
                  MPI_Comm comm, int sign, unsigned flags,
                  ptrdiff_t *local_ni, ptrdiff_t *local_i_start,
                  ptrdiff_t *local_no, ptrdiff_t *local_o_start);

As above, the return value is the number of elements to allocate (complex numbers, for complex DFTs). The local_ni and local_i_start arguments return the portion (local_i_start to local_i_start + local_ni - 1) of the 1d array that is stored on this process for the transform input, and local_no and local_o_start are the corresponding quantities for the input. The sign (FFTW_FORWARD or FFTW_BACKWARD) and flags must match the arguments passed when creating a plan. Although the inputs and outputs have different data distributions in general, it is guaranteed that the output data distribution of an FFTW_FORWARD plan will match the input data distribution of an FFTW_BACKWARD plan and vice versa; similarly for the FFTW_MPI_SCRAMBLED_OUT and FFTW_MPI_SCRAMBLED_IN flags. See One-dimensional distributions.