This is an interactive real-time Mandelbrot fractal zoomer. You can watch a video of it in action, here:
(Click on picture to play the video)
Windows users can download and run a pre-compiled Windows binary here.
After decompressing, you can simply execute either one of the two .bat files. The 'autopilot' one zooms in a specific location, while the other one allows you to zoom interactively using your mouse (left-click/hold zooms in, right-click/hold zooms out).
For those of you that want to build from source code, there are cross-compilation instructions later in this document.
Make sure you have libSDL2 installed. In Debian and its derivatives,
like Ubuntu, just sudo apt install libsdl2-dev
.
Then, build the code - with...
$ ./configure
$ make
You can also use a WASM port that runs in modern browsers. But please note that the native code is dramatically faster, since it uses AVX/SSE instructions, and utilises all cores available in your machine. WASM is a poor substitute :-)
You can then try these:
$ src/mandelSSE
(Runs in autopilot mode, in a 1024x768 window)
$ src/mandelSSE -m 1280 720
(Runs in mouse-driven mode, in a 1280x720 window)
(left-click/hold zooms-in, right-click/hold zooms out)
Option -h
gives you additional information about how to control
the Mandelbrot zoomer:
$ ./src/mandelSSE -h
Usage: ./src/mandelSSE [-a|-m] [-h] [-b] [-v|-s|-d] [-i iter] [-p pct] [-f rate] [WIDTH HEIGHT]
Where:
-h Show this help message
-m Run in mouse-driven mode
-a Run in autopilot mode (default)
-b Run in benchmark mode (implies autopilot)
-v Force use of AVX
-s Force use of SSE
-d Force use of non-AVX, non-SSE code
-i iter The maximum number of iterations of the Mandelbrot loop (default: 2048)
-p pct The percentage of pixels computed per frame (default: 0.75)
(the rest are copied from the previous frame)
-f fps Enforce upper bound of frames per second (default: 60)
(use 0 to run at full possible speed)
If WIDTH and HEIGHT are not provided, they default to: 1024 768
For ultimate rendering speed, you can disable the frame limiter (option -f
).
By default, you are limited to 60fps:
$ src/mandelSSE -m -f 0 1280 720
The benchmarking mode (-b) does this automatically. If you want to benchmark your CPU only (and not display anything) tell SDL you don't care about displaying the fractal:
$ SDL_VIDEODRIVER=dummy src/mandelSSE -b 512 384
Be mindful of your CPU's thermal throttling if you are benchmarking :-) Note that you can force AVX (-v), SSE (-s) or dumb floating point (-d) to see the speed impact made by our usage of special Intel instructions.
You can also control:
-
the percentage of pixels actually computed per frame, with option
-p
. If you e.g. pass-p 0.5
, then 100-0.5 = 99.5% of the pixels will be copied from the previous frame, and only 0.5% will be actually derived through the Mandelbrot computations. Amazingly, this is enough for a decent quality fly-through zoom in the fractal. By default, this is set to 0.75. -
the number of Mandelbrot iterations (option
-i
). By default this is set to 2048 to allow for decent zoom levels, but if you want to see insane speeds, set this to something low, like 128; and disable the frame limiter; i.e. use-f 0 -i 128
.
Long story.
When I got my hands on an SSE enabled processor (an Athlon-XP, back in 2002), I wanted to try out SSE programming... And over the better part of a weekend, I created a simple implementation of a Mandelbrot zoomer in SSE assembly. I was glad to see that my code was almost 3 times faster than pure C.
But that was just the beginning.
Over the last two decades, I kept coming back to this, enhancing it.
-
I learned how to use the GNU autotools, and made it work on most Intel platforms: checked with Linux, Windows (MinGW) and OpenBSD. A decade later, I also tested it on Raspbian and Armbian; it works fine in ARM machines as well. Autotools also allow me to cross-compile for Windows (more on that below).
-
After getting acquainted with OpenMP, in Nov 2009 I added OpenMP #pragmas to run both the C and the SSE code in all cores/CPUs. The SSE code had to be moved from a separate assembly file into inlined code - but the effort was worth it. The resulting frame rate - on a tiny Atom 330 running Arch Linux - sped up from 58 to 160 frames per second.
-
I then coded it in CUDA - a 75$ GPU card gave me almost two orders of magnitude of speedup!
-
Then in May 2011, I made the code switch automatically from single precision floating point to double precision - when one zooms "deep enough".
-
Around 2012 I added a significant optimization: avoiding fully calculating the Mandelbrot lake areas (black color) by drawing at 1/16 resolution and skipping black areas in the full resolution render.
-
I learned enough VHDL in 2018 to code the algorithm inside a Spartan3 FPGA. That was quite a learning experience.
-
In September 2020 I ported a fixed-point arithmetic version of the algorithm inside a 1.4$ microcontroller.
-
In October 2020, I implemented what I understood to be the XaoS algorithm; that is, re-using pixels from the previous frame to optimally update the next one. Especially in deep-dives and large windows, this delivered amazing speedups; between 2 and 3 orders of magnitude.
-
In July 2022, I optimised further with AVX instructions (+80% speed in CoreLoopDouble). I also ported the code to libSDL2, which stopped video tearing.
This used to be my main loop, right after I ported to SSE back in 2002:
; x' = x^2 - y^2 + a
; y' = 2xy + b
;
mov ecx, 0
movaps xmm5, [fours] ; 4. 4. 4. 4. ; xmm5
movaps xmm6, [re] ; a0 a1 a2 a3 ; xmm6
movaps xmm7, [im] ; b0 b1 b2 b3 ; xmm7
xorps xmm0, xmm0 ; 0. 0. 0. 0.
xorps xmm1, xmm1 ; 0. 0. 0. 0.
xorps xmm3, xmm3 ; 0. 0. 0. 0. ; xmm3
loop1:
movaps xmm2, xmm0 ; x0 x1 x2 x3 ; xmm2
mulps xmm2, xmm1 ; x0*y0 x1*y1 x2*y2 x3*y3 ; xmm2
mulps xmm0, xmm0 ; x0^2 x1^2 x2^2 x3^2 ; xmm0
mulps xmm1, xmm1 ; y0^2 y1^2 y2^2 y3^2 ; xmm1
movaps xmm4, xmm0
addps xmm4, xmm1 ; x0^2+y0^2 x1... ; xmm4
subps xmm0, xmm1 ; x0^2-y0^2 x1... ; xmm0
addps xmm0, xmm6 ; x0' x1' x2' x3' ; xmm0
movaps xmm1, xmm2 ; x0*y0 x1*y1 x2*y2 x3*y3 ; xmm1
addps xmm1, xmm1 ; 2x0*y0 2x1*y1 2x2*y2 2x3*y3 ; xmm1
addps xmm1, xmm7 ; y0' y1' y2' y3' ; xmm1
cmpltps xmm4, xmm5 ; <4 <4 <4 <4 ? ; xmm2
movaps xmm2, xmm4
; at this point, xmm2 has all 1s in the non-overflowed pixels
movmskps eax, xmm4 ; (lower 4 bits reflect comparisons)
andps xmm4, [ones] ; so, prepare to increase the non-over
addps xmm3, xmm4 ; by updating the 4 bailout counters
or eax, eax ; have all 4 pixels overflowed ?
jz short nomore ; yes, we're done
inc ecx
cmp ecx, ITERATIONS
jnz short loop1
The new AVX code (inside CoreLoopDoubleAVX) follows the same motif; except that it also includes periodicity checking, and uses the YMM registers.
The comments should help you follow what's happening... Basically, we compute 4 pixels at a time.
The idea behind the XaoS algorithm is simple: don't redraw the pixels; instead re-use as many as you can from the previous frame.
The devil, as ever, is in the details.
The way I implemented this is as follows: the topmost scaline goes
from X coordinate xld
to xru
- in xstep
steps (see code
for details). I store these computed coordinates in array xcoord
;
and in the next frame, I compare the new coordinates with the old
ones. For each pixel, I basically find the closest X coordinate match.
I do the same for the Y coordinates. In both cases, we are talking about a 1-dimensional array, of MAXX or MAXY length.
After I have the matches, I sort them - based on distance to the
coordinates of the previous frame. The mandel
function then forces
a redraw for the worst N columns/rows - where N comes as a percentage
parameter in the function call. Simply put, if the pixel's
X and Y coordinates fall on "slots" that are close enough to the
old frame's xcoord
and ycoord
, the pixel color is taken
from the previous frame without doing the expensive Mandelbrot
calculation.
This works perfectly - the zoom becomes nice and smooth, and is also improved with a full Mandelbrot render the moment the user stops zoooming.
The code has a lot of comments explaining the inner-workings in detail. Have a look!
After decompressing the SDL 2.0.22 tarball, install MinGW:
$ sudo apt install gcc-mingw-w64
Then download the source code of libSDL and compile it as follows:
$ cd SDL-2.0.22
$ ./configure --host=x86_64-w64-mingw32 \
--disable-video-x11 --disable-x11-shared \
--prefix=/usr/local/packages/SDL-2.0.22-win32
$ make
$ sudo make install
Finally, come back to this source folder, and configure it like this:
$ ./configure --host=x86_64-w64-mingw32 \
--with-sdl-prefix=/usr/local/packages/SDL-2.0.22-win32 \
--disable-sdltest
$ make
$ cp src/mandelSSE.exe \
/usr/local/packages/SDL-2.0.22-win32/bin/SDL2.dll \
/some/path/for/Windows/
You can also get the "ingredients" (DLLs for SDL2, OpenMP, libstd++, etc) from the packaged release here.
Since it reports frame rate at the end (option -b
), you can use this as
a benchmark for AVX instructions - it puts the AVX registers under quite a load.
I've also coded a CUDA version, which you can play with, if you have an NVIDIA card. Some details about it, in the blog post I wrote back in 2009 about it here.