command_queue
A valid host command-queue. The kernel will be queued for execution on
the device associated with command_queue
.
kernel
A valid kernel object. The
OpenCL context associated with kernel
and
command_queue
must be the same.
work_dim
The number of dimensions
used to specify the global work-items and work-items in the
work-group. work_dim
must be greater than zero and less
than or equal to CL_DEVICE_MAX_WORK_ITEM_DIMENSIONS
.
If global_work_size
is NULL, or the value in
any passed dimension is 0 then the kernel
command will trivially succeed after its event
dependencies are satisfied and subsequently
update its completion event. The behavior in this
situation is similar to that of an enqueued
marker, except that unlike a marker, an enqueued
kernel with no events passed to
event_wait_list
may run at any time.
global_work_offset
global_work_offset
can be used to specify an array of work_dim
unsigned
values that describe the offset used to calculate the global ID of a
work-item. If global_work_offset
is NULL, the global
IDs start at offset (0, 0, ... 0).
global_work_size
Points to an array of
work_dim
unsigned values that describe the number
of global work-items in work_dim
dimensions
that will execute the kernel function. The total number of global
work-items is computed as global_work_size
[0] *...*
global_work_size
[work_dim
- 1].
local_work_size
Points to an array of
work_dim
unsigned values that describe the number
of work-items that make up a work-group (also referred to as the
size of the work-group) that will execute the kernel specified
by kernel
. The total number of work-items in
a work-group is computed as local_work_size
[0]
*... * local_work_size
[work_dim
-
1]. The total number of work-items in the work-group must be less than
or equal to the CL_KERNEL_WORK_GROUP_SIZE
value specified in table of OpenCL Device Queries for
clGetDeviceInfo
and the number of work-items specified
in local_work_size
[0],...
local_work_size
[work_dim
- 1]
must be less than or equal to the corresponding values specified
by CL_DEVICE_MAX_WORK_ITEM_SIZES
[0],....
CL_DEVICE_MAX_WORK_ITEM_SIZES
[work_dim
- 1]. The explicitly specified local_work_size
will be used to determine how to break the global work-items specified
by global_work_size
into appropriate work-group
instances.
Enabling non-uniform work-groups requires a kernel to be compiled with the -cl-std=CL2.0 flag and without the -cl-uniform-work-group-size flag. If the program was created using clLinkProgram and any of the linked programs were compiled in a way that only supports uniform work-group sizes, the linked program only supports uniform work group sizes. If local_work_size is specified and the OpenCL kernel is compiled without non-uniform work- groups enabled, the values specified in global_work_size[0], ... global_work_size[work_dim - 1] must be evenly divisible by the corresponding values specified in local_work_ size[0], ... local_work_size[work_dim – 1].
If non-uniform work-groups are enabled for the kernel, any single dimension for which the global size is not divisible by the local size will be partitioned into two regions. One region will have work-groups that have the same number of work items as was specified by the local size parameter in that dimension. The other region will have work-groups with less than the number of work items specified by the local size parameter in that dimension. The global IDs and group IDs of the work items in the first region will be numerically lower than those in the second, and the second region will be at most one work-group wide in that dimension. Work-group sizes could be non-uniform in multiple dimensions, potentially producing work-groups of up to 4 different sizes in a 2D range and 8 different sizes in a 3D range.
If local_work_size
is NULL and the
kernel is compiled without support for non-uniform work-
groups, the OpenCL runtime will implement the
ND-range with uniform work-group sizes. If
local_work_size
is NULL and
non-uniform-work-groups are enabled, the OpenCL runtime is
free to implement the ND-range using uniform or
non-uniform work-group sizes, regardless of
the divisibility of the global work size. If the
ND-range is implemented using non-uniform
work-group sizes, the work-group sizes, global
IDs and group IDs will follow the same pattern
as described in above paragraph.
The work-group size to be used for
kernel
can also be
specified in the program source or
intermediate language. In this case the size
of work group specified by local_work_size
must
match the value specified in the program source.
These work-group instances are executed in parallel across multiple compute units or concurrently on the same compute unit.
Each work-item is uniquely identified by a global identifier. The global ID,
which can be read inside the kernel, is computed using the value given by
global_work_size
and global_work_offset
.
In addition, a work-item is also identified within a work-group by a unique local ID.
The local ID, which can also be read by the kernel, is computed using the value given
by local_work_size
. The starting local ID is always (0, 0, ... 0).
event_wait_list
and
num_events_in_wait_list
Specify events that need
to complete before this particular command can be executed. If
event_wait_list
is NULL, then this particular command does
not wait on any event to complete. If event_wait_list
is NULL, num_events_in_wait_list
must be 0. If
event_wait_list
is not NULL, the list of events
pointed to by event_wait_list
must be valid
and num_events_in_wait_list
must be greater
than 0. The events specified in event_wait_list
act as synchronization points. The context associated with events in
event_wait_list
and command_queue
must
be the same. The memory associated with event_wait_list
can be reused or freed after the function returns.
event
Returns an event object that identifies
this particular kernel-instance. Event objects are unique and
can be used to identify a particular kernel execution instance later on. If
event
is NULL, no event will be created for this kernel
execution instance and therefore it will not be possible for the application
to query or queue a wait for this particular kernel execution instance.
If the event_wait_list
and the
event
arguments are not NULL, the
event
argument
should not refer to an element of the
event_wait_list
array.
Returns CL_SUCCESS if the kernel execution was successfully queued. Otherwise, it returns one of the following errors:
command_queue
.
command_queue
is not a valid host command-queue.
kernel
is
not a valid kernel object.
command_queue
and kernel
are not the same
or if the context associated with command_queue
and events in
event_wait_list
are not the same.
work_dim
is not a valid value (i.e. a value between 1 and 3).
global_work_size
[0], ...global_work_size
[work_dim
- 1] exceed the range given by the
sizeof(size_t)
for the device on which the kernel execution will
be enqueued.
global_work_size
+ the corresponding values in
global_work_offset
for any dimensions is greater than the
sizeof(size_t)
for the device on which the kernel execution will
be enqueued.
local_work_size
is specified and does not match
the required work-group size for kernel
in the program source.
local_work_size
is specified and is not
consistent with the required number of sub-groups for
kernel
in the program source.
local_work_size
is
specified and the total number
of work-items in the work-group computed as
local_work_size
[0] * ...
local_work_size
[work_dim
– 1]
is greater than the value specified by
CL_KERNEL_WORK_GROUP_SIZE
in table 5.21.
–cl-uniform-work-group-size
and the number of work-items
specified by global_work_size
is not
evenly divisible by size of work-group given by local_work_size
or by the required work-
group size specified in the kernel source.
local_work_size
[0],
... local_work_size
[work_dim
- 1] is greater than the corresponding values specified by
CL_DEVICE_MAX_WORK_ITEM_SIZES
[0], ....
CL_DEVICE_MAX_WORK_ITEM_SIZES
[work_dim
- 1].
offset
specified when the sub-buffer object is created is not
aligned to CL_DEVICE_MEM_BASE_ADDR_ALIGN
value for device
associated with queue
.
queue
.
queue
.
kernel
on the command-queue because of
insufficient resources needed to execute the kernel. For example, the explicitly
specified local_work_size
causes a failure to execute the kernel
because of insufficient resources such as registers or local memory. Another example
would be the number of read-only image args used in kernel
exceed the CL_DEVICE_MAX_READ_IMAGE_ARGS
value for
device or the number of write-only image args used in kernel
exceed the CL_DEVICE_MAX_READ_WRITE_IMAGE_ARGS
value for
device or the number of samplers used in kernel
exceed
CL_DEVICE_MAX_SAMPLERS
for device.
kernel
.
event_wait_list
is NULL and
num_events_in_wait_list
> 0,
or event_wait_list
is not NULL and
num_events_in_wait_list
is 0, or if event objects in
event_wait_list
are not valid events.
clCreateCommandQueueWithProperties, clGetDeviceInfo, clEnqueueNativeKernel, Work-Item Functions