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simd-rand - SIMD implementations of random number generators

Provides SIMD implementations of common PRNGs in Rust. Categories:

  • [portable] - portable implementations using std::simd (nightly required)
  • [specific] - implementations using architecture-specific hardware intrinsics
    • [specific::avx2] - AVX2 for x86_64 architecture (4 lanes for 64bit)
      • Requires avx2 CPU flag, but has additional optimization if you have avx512dq and avx512vl
    • [specific::avx512] - AVX512 for x86_64 architecture (8 lanes for 64bit)
      • Requires avx512f, avx512dq CPU flags

Vectorized PRNG implementations may perform anywhere from 4-6 times faster in my experience, of course very dependent on hardware used ("old" CPUs with AVX512 for example may have excessive thermal throttling). I'm no expert in statistical testing, but I have ran some of these through practrand using random bytes from the rand crate as seeding, and vectorized and non-vectorized implementations seemed to perform identically.

This library is meant to be used in high performance codepaths typically using hardware intrisics to accelerate compute, for example Monte Carlo simulations.

This library is under active development. No version has been published to cargo yet.

Choice of PRNGs, unvectorized sources and general advice has been taken from the great PRNG shootout resource by Sebastiano Vigna.

Usage

[dependencies]
simd_rand = { git = "https://github.com/martinothamar/simd-rand" }
use rand_core::{RngCore, SeedableRng};
use simd_rand::portable::*;

fn main() {
    let mut seed: Xoshiro256PlusPlusX8Seed = Default::default();
    rand::thread_rng().fill_bytes(&mut *seed);
    let mut rng = Xoshiro256PlusPlusX8::from_seed(seed);

    let vector = rng.next_u64x8();
}

The portable module will be available on any architecture, e.g. even on x86_64 with only AVX2 you can still use Xoshiro256PlusPluxX8 which uses 8-lane/512bit vectors (u64x8 from std::simd). The compiler is able to make it reasonably fast even if using only 256bit wide registers (AVX2) in the generated code.

The specific submodules (AVX2 and AVX512 currently) are only compiled in depending on target arch/features.

In general, use the portable module. The only risk/drawback to using the portable module is that in principle the compiler isn't forced to use the "optimal" instructions and registers for your hardware. In practice, it probably will though. In the specific submodules the respective hardware intrinsics are "hardcoded" so to speak so we always know what the generated code looks like. In some contexts that may be useful.

Performance

The top performing generator (on my current hardware) is currently Xoshiro256+ using AVX512 instruction set. It is about 6x faster. The below benchmarks generates u64x8 numbers. Note that the RandVectorized variant uses simd_support from the rand crate, but this doesn't actually vectorize random number generation.

If you want to actually use these generators, you should benchmark them yourself on your own hardware. See the bench target in the Makefile. Benchmark results below is from a laptop with 11th Gen Intel(R) Core(TM) i7-11800H @ 2.30GHz CPU. There is a portable variant of Xoshiro256+ for u64x8/f64x8 as well, but in those cases no guarantees are made about performance. The compiler decides what to do with the vectors, whereas with AVX512 specific ones in the specific module will either not compile or run very fast.

Top/Rand/Xoshiro256+/1  time:   [5.8505 ns 5.8653 ns 5.8823 ns]
                        thrpt:  [10.133 GiB/s 10.162 GiB/s 10.188 GiB/s]
Found 13 outliers among 100 measurements (13.00%)
  8 (8.00%) high mild
  5 (5.00%) high severe
slope  [5.8505 ns 5.8823 ns] R^2            [0.9830550 0.9828000]
mean   [5.8567 ns 5.8866 ns] std. dev.      [55.633 ps 96.630 ps]
median [5.8421 ns 5.8533 ns] med. abs. dev. [23.662 ps 45.862 ps]


Top/RandVectorized/Xoshiro256+/1
                        time:   [7.1770 ns 7.1938 ns 7.2142 ns]
                        thrpt:  [8.2621 GiB/s 8.2855 GiB/s 8.3050 GiB/s]
Found 13 outliers among 100 measurements (13.00%)
  6 (6.00%) high mild
  7 (7.00%) high severe
slope  [7.1770 ns 7.2142 ns] R^2            [0.9858523 0.9855185]
mean   [7.1769 ns 7.2059 ns] std. dev.      [50.956 ps 94.011 ps]
median [7.1633 ns 7.1748 ns] med. abs. dev. [20.377 ps 38.094 ps]


Top/Portable/Xoshiro256+X8/1
                        time:   [916.36 ps 920.53 ps 925.57 ps]
                        thrpt:  [64.398 GiB/s 64.750 GiB/s 65.045 GiB/s]
Found 1 outliers among 100 measurements (1.00%)
  1 (1.00%) high severe
slope  [916.36 ps 925.57 ps] R^2            [0.9466915 0.9454417]
mean   [916.46 ps 923.16 ps] std. dev.      [13.352 ps 21.906 ps]
median [915.04 ps 925.21 ps] med. abs. dev. [12.841 ps 20.338 ps]


Top/Specific/Xoshiro256+X8/1
                        time:   [961.32 ps 965.08 ps 968.96 ps]
                        thrpt:  [61.514 GiB/s 61.761 GiB/s 62.003 GiB/s]
slope  [961.32 ps 968.96 ps] R^2            [0.9651056 0.9649879]
mean   [963.76 ps 971.23 ps] std. dev.      [16.813 ps 21.217 ps]
median [964.21 ps 975.76 ps] med. abs. dev. [16.026 ps 26.276 ps]

Safety

There is a decent amount of unsafe used, due to direct use of hardware intrisics (e.g. __m256{i|d} for AVX2). unsafe will also generally be used for performance optimizations, since the purpose of this library is to provide high performance in vectorized codepaths. If you don't need that kind of performance, stick to rand and rand_core

There is also some inline assembly used, where the C-style intrinsics haven't been exposed as Rust APIs in std::arch.

Notes

Prereqs for disassembly:

cargo install cargo-binutils
rustup component add llvm-tools-preview

Then you can run make dasm

TODO

  • Implement jumps between lanes for Xoshiro-variants?
  • More PRNGs
  • More docs
  • Cleanup code around seeding

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