oneDNN
Bullet
oneDNN | Bullet | |
---|---|---|
5 | 41 | |
3,461 | 11,942 | |
1.7% | 1.2% | |
10.0 | 4.5 | |
7 days ago | 24 days ago | |
C++ | C++ | |
Apache License 2.0 | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
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oneDNN
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Blaze: A High Performance C++ Math library
If you are talking about non-small matrix multiplication in MKL, is now in opensource as a part of oneDNN. It literally has exactly the same code, as in MKL (you can see this by inspecting constants or doing high-precision benchmarks).
For small matmul there is libxsmm. It may take tremendous efforts make something faster than oneDNN and libxsmm, as jit-based approach of https://github.com/oneapi-src/oneDNN/blob/main/src/gpu/jit/g... is too flexible: if someone finds a better sequence, oneDNN can reuse it without major change of design.
But MKL is not limited to matmul, I understand it...
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Arc & Deep Learning Frameworks
For completeness, it looks like this question was posted to the oneDNN GitHub repo and the response was to stay tune for updates.
- Keeping POWER relevant in the open source world
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Intel oneDNN 2.5 released with experimental RISC-V support
From the release note of oneDNN v2.5:
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Is gpu hardware tied to cpu ISA ?
Intel are trying to support their oneAPI compute framework on Arm and IBM POWER and z/Architecture (s390x) but since they ever released only a single discrete GPU with the Xe architecture it's unclear whether they'll support Xe GPU compute on e.g. ARM https://github.com/oneapi-src/oneDNN
Bullet
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Blaze: A High Performance C++ Math library
For typical game physics engines... not that much. Math libraries like Eigen or Blaze use lots of template metaprogramming techniques under the hood that can help when you're doing large batched matrix multiplications (since it can remove temporary allocations at compile-time and can also fuse operations efficiently, as well as applying various SIMD optimizations), but it doesn't really help when you need lots of small operations (with mat3 / mat4 / vec3 / quat / etc.). Typical game physics engines tend to use iterative algorithms for their solvers (Gauss-Seidel, PBD, etc...) instead of batched "matrix"-oriented ones, so you'll get less benefits out of Eigen / Blaze compared to what you typically see in deep learning / scientific computing workloads.
The codebases I've seen in many game physics engines seem to all roll their own math libraries for these stuff, or even just use SIMD (SSE / AVX) intrinsics directly. Examples: PhysX (https://github.com/NVIDIA-Omniverse/PhysX), Box2D (https://github.com/erincatto/box2d), Bullet (https://github.com/bulletphysics/bullet3)...
- Looking for specific pre-Microsoft Havok Physics SDK version (2013, 2014)
- Software for Mechanism Analysis
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Does anyone know any good open source project to optimize?
I suspect most C++ physics libraries like Box2D (https://github.com/erincatto/box2d) or Bullet3 (https://github.com/bulletphysics/bullet3) could really benefit a lot from SIMD.
- After months of work, I'm excited to share the first release of Godot Jolt, an extension that integrates the Jolt physics engine into Godot, demonstrated using GDQuest's RoboBlast
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X4's Upcoming Multiplayer Features Are a Huge Step Forward
No, they replaced Bullet with Jolt. That is considerably more than "some adjustment", regardless of what you think of the result.
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Brick Breaker
Vulkan graphics via Intel GVK, and physics via Bullet
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Ive been programming for four years and I told my dad to watch long videos and complete your own projects to learn most efficiently. He thinks he’s ready to tackle any project after a ten minute video…
The first two have a bunch of great examples, and I’m tying them together by refactoring some of the THREE examples to fit the ECS paradigm defined in AFrame. then upping the ante by adding physics using AMMO, which is more challenging since it’s only a partial implementation of Bullet, and already poorly documented (yet popular) physics engine.
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Their music is just too good
Plus, SM uses a system called bullet physics, I imagine this would be rather complex to rework into a modern engine such as Unreal or Unity (after all, the majority of performance issues come from the physics engine rather than the graphics engine)
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Is anyone working on more effecient HDT-SMP?
The physics in HDT-SMP are actually being calculated outside of Skyrim's engine with Bullet, an open-source physics engine. So this isn't some limitation of Skyrim's engine.
What are some alternatives?
oneMKL - oneAPI Math Kernel Library (oneMKL) Interfaces
PhysX - NVIDIA PhysX SDK
CTranslate2 - Fast inference engine for Transformer models
Box2D - Box2D is a 2D physics engine for games
oneDPL - oneAPI DPC++ Library (oneDPL) https://software.intel.com/content/www/us/en/develop/tools/oneapi/components/dpc-library.html
CHRONO - High-performance C++ library for multiphysics and multibody dynamics simulations
highway - Highway - A Modern Javascript Transitions Manager
Newton Dynamics - Newton Dynamics is an integrated solution for real time simulation of physics environments.
asmjit - Low-latency machine code generation
ODE
librealsense - Intel® RealSense™ SDK
mujoco - Multi-Joint dynamics with Contact. A general purpose physics simulator.