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Distinctly Useful Code Collection (DUCC)

This is a collection of basic programming tools for numerical computation, including Fast Fourier Transforms, Spherical Harmonic Transforms, non-equispaced Fourier transforms, as well as some concrete applications like 4pi convolution on the sphere and gridding/degridding of radio interferometry data.

The code is written in C++17, but provides a simple and comprehensive Python interface.

Requirements

  • Python >= 3.6
  • pybind11
  • a C++17-capable compiler (tested with g++ version 7 or newer, clang++, MSVC 2019 and Intel icpx 2021.1.2)

Sources

The latest version of DUCC can be obtained by cloning the repository via

git clone https://gitlab.mpcdf.mpg.de/mtr/ducc.git

Installation

In the following, we assume a Debian-based distribution. For other distributions, the "apt" lines will need slight changes.

DUCC and its mandatory dependencies can be installed via:

sudo apt-get install git python3 python3-pip python3-dev python3-pybind11 pybind11-dev
pip3 install --user git+https://gitlab.mpcdf.mpg.de/mtr/ducc.git

NOTE: compilation of the code will take a significant amount of time (several minutes). Binary packages are deliberately not made available, since much better performance can be achieved by compiling the code specifically for the detected target CPU.

Installing multiple versions simultaneously

The interfaces of the DUCC components are expected to evolve over time; whenever an interface changes in a manner that is not backwards compatible, the DUCC version number will increase. As a consequence it might happen that one part of a Python code may use an older version of DUCC while at the same time another part requires a newer version. Since DUCC's version number is included in the module name itself (the module is not called ducc, but rather ducc<X>), this is not a problem, as multiple DUCC versions can be installed simultaneously. The latest patch levels of a given DUCC version will always be available at the HEAD of the git branch with the respective name. In other words, if you need the latest incarnation of DUCC 0, this will be on branch "ducc0" of the git repository, and it will be installed as the package "ducc0". Later versions will be maintained on new branches and will be installed as "ducc1" and "ducc2", so that there will be no conflict with potentially installed older versions.

DUCC components

ducc.fft

This package provides Fast Fourier, trigonometric and Hartley transforms with a simple Python interface. It is an evolution of pocketfft and pypocketfft which are currently used by numpy and scipy.

The central algorithms are derived from Paul Swarztrauber's FFTPACK code.

Features

  • supports fully complex and half-complex (i.e. complex-to-real and real-to-complex) FFTs, discrete sine/cosine transforms and Hartley transforms
  • achieves very high accuracy for all transforms
  • supports multidimensional arrays and selection of the axes to be transformed
  • supports single, double, and long double precision
  • makes use of CPU vector instructions when performing 2D and higher-dimensional transforms
  • supports prime-length transforms without degrading to O(N**2) performance
  • has optional multi-threading support for multidimensional transforms

Design decisions and performance characteristics

  • there is no internal caching of plans and twiddle factors, making the interface as simple as possible
  • 1D transforms are significantly slower than those provided by FFTW (if FFTW's plan generation overhead is ignored)
  • multi-D transforms in double precision perform fairly similar to FFTW with FFTW_MEASURE; in single precision ducc.fft can be significantly faster.

ducc.sht

This package provides efficient spherical harmonic trasforms (SHTs). Its code is derived from libsharp, with accelerated recurrence algorithms presented in https://www.jstage.jst.go.jp/article/jmsj/96/2/96_2018-019/_pdf.

ducc.healpix

This library provides Python bindings for the most important functionality related to the HEALPix tesselation, except for spherical harmonic transforms, which are covered by ducc.sht.

The design goals are

  • similarity to the interface of the HEALPix C++ library (while respecting some Python peculiarities)
  • simplicity (no optional function parameters)
  • low function calling overhead

ducc.totalconvolve

Library for high-accuracy 4pi convolution on the sphere, which generates a total convolution data cube from a set of sky and beam a_lm and computes interpolated values for a given list of detector pointings. This code has evolved from the original totalconvolver algorithm via the conviqt code.

Algorithmic details:

  • the code uses ducc.sht SHTs and ducc.fft FFTs to compute the data cube
  • shared-memory parallelization is provided via standard C++ threads.
  • for interpolation, the algorithm and kernel described in https://arxiv.org/abs/1808.06736 are used. This allows very efficient interpolation with user-adjustable accuracy.

ducc.wgridder

Library for high-accuracy gridding/degridding of radio interferometry datasets (code paper available at https://arxiv.org/abs/2010.10122). This code has also been integrated into wsclean (https://arxiv.org/abs/1407.1943) as the wgridder component.

Programming aspects

  • shared-memory parallelization via standard C++ threads.
  • kernel computation is performed on the fly, avoiding inaccuracies due to table lookup and reducing overall memory bandwidth

Numerical aspects

  • uses the analytical gridding kernel presented in https://arxiv.org/abs/1808.06736
  • uses the "improved W-stacking method" described in https://arxiv.org/abs/2101.11172
  • in combination these two aspects allow extremely accurate gridding/degridding operations (L2 error compared to explicit DFTs can go below 1e-12) with reasonable resource consumption

ducc.misc

Various unsorted functionality which will hopefully be categorized in the future.

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • C++ 87.6%
  • Python 11.6%
  • Other 0.8%