[Haskell-beginners] Calling a foreign function: superlinear comlexity

Antoine Latter aslatter at gmail.com
Mon Apr 11 06:05:23 CEST 2011


On Sun, Apr 10, 2011 at 6:26 PM, Serguei Son <serguei.son at gmail.com> wrote:
> I call GSL's gsl_ran_ugaussian function in the following way (using
> bindings-gsl):
>
> module Main where
>
> import Bindings.Gsl.RandomNumberGeneration
> import Bindings.Gsl.RandomNumberDistributions
> import Foreign
> import Control.Monad
> import Data.List
>
> main = do
>        let n = 100000
>        p <- peek p'gsl_rng_mt19937
>        rng <- c'gsl_rng_alloc p
>        lst <- replicateM n $ c'gsl_rng_uniform rng
>        print $ sum lst
>
> As I increase n from 10^4 to 10^5 to 10^6 execution time grows superlinearly.
>

Not sure if it is related, but this thread also documents issues folks
had with replicateM and performance:

http://www.haskell.org/pipermail/haskell-cafe/2011-March/090419.html

Antoine

> To forestall the answer that the reason is the overhead of List,
> this code scales approximately linearly:
>
> module Main where
>
>
> import Foreign
> import Control.Monad
> import Data.List
>
> main = do
>        let n = 100000
>        let lst = map sin [1..n]
>        print $ sum lst
>
> Another interesting observation: when I wrap the sin function
> of math.h with signature CDouble -> IO CDouble calling it
> repeatedly scales superlinearly, whereas when I wrap it as a pure
> function calling it repeatedly scales linearly.
>
> What is the reason for this performance and how can
> I make the first code scale linearly in execution time?
>
>
>
>
>
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