Net Slope Scaling Code Replacement
You can define code replacement entries for multiplication and division operations on fixed-point data types such that they match the net slope between operator inputs and output. The net slope entries can map a range of slope and bias values to a replacement function for multiplication or division.
This example shows how to develop a code replacement library to optimize the
performance of fixed point net slope operations by providing
information on how to define code replacement for a divide
operation. To
develop a code replacement library use either the interactive or programmatic approach. For
more information, see Develop a Code Replacement Library.
Interactively Develop a Code Replacement Library
Open the Code Replacement Tool (crtool), from the MATLAB command line with the following command:
>>crtool
Create a table.
From the crtool context menu, select File > New Table.
In the right pane, name the table
crl_table_netslopeScaling
. Click Apply.
Create an entry. From the crtool context menu, select File > New entry > Fixed Point Net Slope Operation.
Create entry parameters. In the Operation drop-down list, select
Divide
.Create the conceptual representation. The conceptual representation describes the signature of the function that you want to replace. In the Conceptual function subsection of the crtool, specify the return argument,
y1
, and the input argument,u1
andu2
with the Data Type offixdt(true,16,*,*)
and the Argument Type of Scalar.Create the implementation representation. The implementation representation describes the signature of the optimization function. In the Function arguments subsection of the crtool, specify the return argument,
y1
, and the input argument,u1
andu2
with the Data Type ofint 16
. Also set the Net slope Adjustment Factor as 1 and Net Fixed Exponent as 0.Specify a Name for the replacement function under Function prototype.
Specify build information. Click the Build Information tab to open the build requirements pane. Specify the files (source, header, object) that the code generator requires for code replacement. For this example, you do not need to specify build information.
Validate and save the table. In the Mapping Information tab, click Validate entry. In the crtool context menu, select File > Save table > Save.
Register a code replacement library. Registration creates a library composed of the tables that you specify. Select File > Generate registration file. In the Generate registration file dialog box, fill out these fields:
To use your code replacement library, refresh your current MATLAB session with the command:
>>sl_refresh_customizations
Verify the code replacement library. From the MATLAB command line, open the library by using the Code Replacement Viewer and verify that the table and entry are correctly specified. For more information, see Verify Code Replacement Library. Configure your model to use the code replacement library, generate code, and verify that replacement occurs as expected. If unexpected behavior occurs, examine the hit and miss logs to troubleshoot the issues.
Programmatically Develop a Code Replacement Library
Open the programmatic interface from the MATLAB menu by selecting New > Function.
Create a table.
Create a function with the name of your code replacement library table that does not have arguments and returns a table object. You can use this function to call your code replacement library table.
Create a table object by calling
RTW.TflTable
.
function hTable = crl_table_netslopeScaling % Create a function to call the code replacement library table %% Create a table object hTable = RTW.TflTable;
Create an entry. Because this example replaces a function, create a code replacement entry in your table by calling the entry function
RTW.TflCOperationEntryGenerator_NetSlope
.function hTable = crl_table_netslopeScaling % Create a function to call the code replacement library table %% Create a table object hTable = RTW.TflTable; %% Create an entry hEntry = RTW.TflCOperationEntryGenerator_NetSlope;
Set operator entry parameters with a call to the
setTflCOperationEntryParameters
function. The parameters specify the type of operation as division, the saturation mode as wrap on overflow, rounding modes as unspecified, and the name of the replacement function asuser_div_*
.NetSlopeAdjustmentFactor
andNetFixedExponent
specify theF
andE
parts of the net slope
.F
2E
function hTable = crl_table_netslopeScaling % Create a function to call the code replacement library table %% Create a table object hTable = RTW.TflTable; %% Create an entry hEntry = RTW.TflCOperationEntryGenerator_NetSlope; %% Create entry parameters hEntry.setTflCOperationEntryParameters(... 'Key', 'RTW_OP_DIV', ... 'Priority', 90, ... 'SaturationMode', 'RTW_WRAP_ON_OVERFLOW', ... 'RoundingModes', {'RTW_ROUND_CEILING'}, ... 'NetSlopeAdjustmentFactor', 1.0, ... 'NetFixedExponent', 0.0, ... 'ImplementationName', 's16_div_s16_s16', ... 'ImplementationHeaderFile', 's16_div_s16_s16.h', ... 'ImplementationSourceFile', 's16_div_s16_s16.c');
Create conceptual arguments
y1
,u1
, andu2
. This example uses calls to thecreateAndAddConceptualArg
function to create and add an argument with one function call. Specify each argument as fixed-point, 16 bits, and signed. Also, for each argument, specify that code replacement request processing does not check for an exact match to the call-site slope and bias values.function hTable = crl_table_netslopeScaling % Create a function to call the code replacement library table %% Create a table object hTable = RTW.TflTable; %% Create an entry hEntry = RTW.TflCOperationEntryGenerator_NetSlope; %% Create entry parameters hEntry.setTflCOperationEntryParameters(... 'Key', 'RTW_OP_DIV', ... 'Priority', 90, ... 'SaturationMode', 'RTW_WRAP_ON_OVERFLOW', ... 'RoundingModes', {'RTW_ROUND_CEILING'}, ... 'NetSlopeAdjustmentFactor', 1.0, ... 'NetFixedExponent', 0.0, ... 'ImplementationName', 's16_div_s16_s16', ... 'ImplementationHeaderFile', 's16_div_s16_s16.h', ... 'ImplementationSourceFile', 's16_div_s16_s16.c'); %% Create the conceptual representation createAndAddConceptualArg(hEntry, 'RTW.TflArgNumeric', ... 'Name', 'y1', ... 'IOType', 'RTW_IO_OUTPUT', ... 'CheckSlope', false, ... 'CheckBias', false, ... 'DataType', 'Fixed', ... 'IsSigned', true, ... 'WordLength', 16); createAndAddConceptualArg(hEntry, 'RTW.TflArgNumeric', ... 'Name', 'u1', ... 'IOType', 'RTW_IO_INPUT', ... 'CheckSlope', false, ... 'CheckBias', false, ... 'DataType', 'Fixed', ... 'IsSigned', true, ... 'WordLength', 16); createAndAddConceptualArg(hEntry, 'RTW.TflArgNumeric', ... 'Name', 'u2', ... 'IOType', 'RTW_IO_INPUT', ... 'CheckSlope', false, ... 'CheckBias', false, ... 'DataType', 'Fixed', ... 'IsSigned', true, ... 'WordLength', 16);
Create the implementation representation. The implementation representation describes the signature of the optimization function. This example uses calls to the
createAndSetCImplementationReturn
andcreateAndAddImplementationArg
functions to create and add implementation arguments to the entry. Implementation arguments must describe fundamental numeric data types (not fixed-point data types). In this case, the output and input arguments are 16 bits and signed (int16
).function hTable = crl_table_netslopeScaling % Create a function to call the code replacement library table %% Create a table object hTable = RTW.TflTable; %% Create an entry hEntry = RTW.TflCOperationEntryGenerator_NetSlope; %% Create entry parameters hEntry.setTflCOperationEntryParameters(... 'Key', 'RTW_OP_DIV', ... 'Priority', 90, ... 'SaturationMode', 'RTW_WRAP_ON_OVERFLOW', ... 'RoundingModes', {'RTW_ROUND_CEILING'}, ... 'NetSlopeAdjustmentFactor', 1.0, ... 'NetFixedExponent', 0.0, ... 'ImplementationName', 's16_div_s16_s16', ... 'ImplementationHeaderFile', 's16_div_s16_s16.h', ... 'ImplementationSourceFile', 's16_div_s16_s16.c'); %% Create the conceptual representation createAndAddConceptualArg(hEntry, 'RTW.TflArgNumeric', ... 'Name', 'y1', ... 'IOType', 'RTW_IO_OUTPUT', ... 'CheckSlope', false, ... 'CheckBias', false, ... 'DataType', 'Fixed', ... 'IsSigned', true, ... 'WordLength', 16); createAndAddConceptualArg(hEntry, 'RTW.TflArgNumeric', ... 'Name', 'u1', ... 'IOType', 'RTW_IO_INPUT', ... 'CheckSlope', false, ... 'CheckBias', false, ... 'DataType', 'Fixed', ... 'IsSigned', true, ... 'WordLength', 16); createAndAddConceptualArg(hEntry, 'RTW.TflArgNumeric', ... 'Name', 'u2', ... 'IOType', 'RTW_IO_INPUT', ... 'CheckSlope', false, ... 'CheckBias', false, ... 'DataType', 'Fixed', ... 'IsSigned', true, ... 'WordLength', 16); %% Create the Implementation Representation createAndSetCImplementationReturn(hEntry, 'RTW.TflArgNumeric', ... 'Name', 'y1', ... 'IOType', 'RTW_IO_OUTPUT', ... 'IsSigned', true, ... 'WordLength', 16, ... 'FractionLength', 0); createAndAddImplementationArg(hEntry, 'RTW.TflArgNumeric',... 'Name', 'u1', ... 'IOType', 'RTW_IO_INPUT', ... 'IsSigned', true, ... 'WordLength', 16, ... 'FractionLength', 0); createAndAddImplementationArg(hEntry, 'RTW.TflArgNumeric',... 'Name', 'u2', ... 'IOType', 'RTW_IO_INPUT', ... 'IsSigned', true, ... 'WordLength', 16, ... 'FractionLength', 0); %% Add the entry to the table addEntry(hTable, hEntry);
Specify build information. In the entry parameters, specify files (header, source, object) that the code generator needs for code replacement. For this example, build information is not required.
Validate and save the customization file. From the MATLAB menu, save this customization file by selecting File > Save. From the command line, validate the code replacement library table by calling it:
>> hTable = crl_table_netslopeScaling
Register the code replacement library. Registration creates a code replacement library by defining the library name, code replacement tables, and other information. Create a registration file by using these specifications:
function rtwTargetInfo(cm) cm.registerTargetInfo(@loc_register_crl); end function this = loc_register_crl this(1) = RTW.TflRegistry; this(1).Name = 'CRL for net slope scaling’; this(1).TableList = {'crl_table_netslopeScaling.m'}; % table created in this example this(1).TargetHWDeviceType = {'*'}; this(1).Description = 'Example code replacement library'; end
To use your code replacement library, refresh your current MATLAB session with the command:
>>sl_refresh_customizations
Verify the code replacement library. From the MATLAB command line, open the library by using the Code Replacement Viewer and verify that the table and entry are correctly specified. For more information, see Verify Code Replacement Library. Configure your model to use the code replacement library, generate code, and verify that replacement occurs as expected. If unexpected behavior occurs, examine the hit and miss logs to troubleshoot the issues.