LSSTApplications
18.0.0+106,18.0.0+50,19.0.0,19.0.0+1,19.0.0+10,19.0.0+11,19.0.0+13,19.0.0+17,19.0.0+2,19.0.0-1-g20d9b18+6,19.0.0-1-g425ff20,19.0.0-1-g5549ca4,19.0.0-1-g580fafe+6,19.0.0-1-g6fe20d0+1,19.0.0-1-g7011481+9,19.0.0-1-g8c57eb9+6,19.0.0-1-gb5175dc+11,19.0.0-1-gdc0e4a7+9,19.0.0-1-ge272bc4+6,19.0.0-1-ge3aa853,19.0.0-10-g448f008b,19.0.0-12-g6990b2c,19.0.0-2-g0d9f9cd+11,19.0.0-2-g3d9e4fb2+11,19.0.0-2-g5037de4,19.0.0-2-gb96a1c4+3,19.0.0-2-gd955cfd+15,19.0.0-3-g2d13df8,19.0.0-3-g6f3c7dc,19.0.0-4-g725f80e+11,19.0.0-4-ga671dab3b+1,19.0.0-4-gad373c5+3,19.0.0-5-ga2acb9c+2,19.0.0-5-gfe96e6c+2,w.2020.01
LSSTDataManagementBasePackage
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This file contains functions for space-filling curves. More...
#include <cstdint>
#include <tuple>
Go to the source code of this file.
Namespaces | |
lsst | |
A base class for image defects. | |
lsst::sphgeom | |
Functions | |
uint64_t | lsst::sphgeom::mortonIndex (uint32_t x, uint32_t y) |
mortonIndex interleaves the bits of x and y. More... | |
std::tuple< uint32_t, uint32_t > | lsst::sphgeom::mortonIndexInverse (uint64_t z) |
mortonIndexInverse separates the even and odd bits of z. More... | |
uint64_t | lsst::sphgeom::mortonToHilbert (uint64_t z, int m) |
mortonToHilbert converts the 2m-bit Morton index z to the corresponding Hilbert index. More... | |
uint64_t | lsst::sphgeom::hilbertToMorton (uint64_t h, int m) |
hilbertToMorton converts the 2m-bit Hilbert index h to the corresponding Morton index. More... | |
uint64_t | lsst::sphgeom::hilbertIndex (uint32_t x, uint32_t y, int m) |
hilbertIndex returns the index of (x, y) in a 2-D Hilbert curve. More... | |
std::tuple< uint32_t, uint32_t > | lsst::sphgeom::hilbertIndexInverse (uint64_t h, int m) |
hilbertIndexInverse returns the point (x, y) with Hilbert index h, where x and y are m bit integers. More... | |
uint8_t | lsst::sphgeom::log2 (uint64_t x) |
uint8_t | lsst::sphgeom::log2 (uint32_t x) |
This file contains functions for space-filling curves.
Mappings between 2-D points with non-negative integer coordinates and their corresponding Morton or Hilbert indexes are provided.
The Morton order implementation, mortonIndex, is straightforward. The Hilbert order implementation is derived from Algorithm 2 in:
C. Hamilton. Compact Hilbert indices. Technical Report CS-2006-07, Dalhousie University, Faculty of Computer Science, Jul 2006. https://www.cs.dal.ca/research/techreports/cs-2006-07
Using the variable names from that paper, n is fixed at 2. As a first step, the arithmetic in the loop over the bits of the input coordinates is replaced by a table lookup. In particular, the lookup maps the values of (e, d, l) at the beginning of a loop iteration to the values (e, d, w) at the end. Since e and d can both be represented by a single bit, and l and w are 2 bits wide, the lookup table has 16 4 bit entries and fits in a single 64 bit integer constant (0x8d3ec79a6b5021f4). The implementation then looks like:
inline uint64_t hilbertIndex(uint32_t x, uint32_t y, uint32_t m) { uint64_t const z = mortonIndex(x, y); uint64_t h = 0; uint64_t i = 0; for (m = 2 * m; m != 0;) { m -= 2; i = (i & 0xc) | ((z >> m) & 3); i = UINT64_C(0x8d3ec79a6b5021f4) >> (i * 4); h = (h << 2) | (i & 3); } return h; }
Note that interleaving x and y with mortonIndex beforehand allows the loop to extract 2 bits at a time from z, rather than extracting bits from x and y and then pasting them together. This lowers the total operation count.
Performance is further increased by executing j loop iterations at a time. This requires using a larger lookup table that maps the values of e and d at the beginning of a loop iteration, along with 2j input bits, to the values of e and d after j iterations, along with 2j output bits. In this implementation, j = 3, which corresponds to a 256 byte LUT. On recent Intel CPUs the LUT fits in 4 cache lines, and, because of adjacent cache line prefetch, should become cache resident after just 2 misses.
For a helpful presentation of the technical report, as well as a reference implementation of its algorithms in Python, see Pierre de Buyl's notebook. The Hilbert curve lookup tables below were generated by a modification of that code (available in makeHilbertLuts.py).
Definition in file curve.h.