Surge is a Swift library that uses the Accelerate framework to provide high-performance functions for matrix math, digital signal processing, and image manipulation.
Accelerate exposes SIMD instructions available in modern CPUs to significantly improve performance of certain calculations. Because of its relative obscurity and inconvenient APIs, Accelerate is not commonly used by developers, which is a shame, since many applications could benefit from these performance optimizations.
Surge aims to bring Accelerate to the mainstream, making it as easy (and nearly as fast, in most cases) to perform computation over a set of numbers as for a single member.
Though, keep in mind: Accelerate is not a silver bullet. Under certain conditions, such as performing simple calculations over a small data set, Accelerate can be out-performed by conventional algorithms. Always benchmark to determine the performance characteristics of each potential approach.
Curious about the name Surge? Back in the mid 90's, Apple, IBM, and Motorola teamed up to create AltiVec (a.k.a the Velocity Engine), which provided a SIMD instruction set for the PowerPC architecture. When Apple made the switch to Intel CPUs, AltiVec was ported to the x86 architecture and rechristened Accelerate. The derivative of Accelerate (and second derivative of Velocity) is known as either jerk, jolt, surge, or lurch, hence the name of this library.
The infrastructure and best practices for distributing Swift libraries are currently in flux during this beta period of Swift & Xcode. In the meantime, you can add Surge as a git submodule, drag the Surge.xcodeproj
file into your Xcode project, and add Surge.framework
as a dependency for your target.
Surge uses Swift 5. This means that your code has to be written in Swift 5 due to current binary compatibility limitations.
To use Swift Package Manager add Surge to your Package.swift
file:
let package = Package(
name: "myproject",
dependencies: [
.package(url: "https://github.com/mattt/Surge.git", .upToNextMajor(from: "2.0.0")),
],
targets: [
.target(
name: "myproject",
dependencies: ["Surge"]),
]
)
Then run swift build
.
To use CocoaPods add Surge to your Podfile
:
source 'https://github.com/CocoaPods/Specs.git'
platform :ios, '10.0'
use_frameworks!
target '<Your Target Name>' do
pod 'Surge', '~> 2.0.0'
end
Then run pod install
.
To use Carthage add Surge to your Cartfile
:
github "mattt/Surge" ~> 2.0.0
Then run carthage update
and use the framework in Carthage/Build/<platform>
.
Surge functions are named according to their corresponding "Math.h" functions, where applicable (omitting
f
andd
affixes, since type information is communicated and enforced by the language's type system).
sum
: Summationasum
: Absolute summationmax
: Maximummin
: Minimummean
: Arithmetic meanmeamg
: Mean of magnitudesmeasq
: Mean of squaresadd
: Additionsub
: Subtractionmul
: Multiplicationdiv
: Divisionmod
: Moduloremainder
: Remaindersqrt
: Square root
abs
: Absolute valueceil
: Ceiling functioncopysign
: Signum functionfloor
: Floor functionrec
: Multiplicative inverseround
: Rounding functiontrunc
: Integer truncation
conv
: Convolutionxcorr
: Cross correlation
exp
: Exponential functionexp2
: Base-2 exponential functionlog
: Base-e logarithmlog2
: Base-2 logarithmlog10
: Base-10 logarithmlogb
: Base-radix logarithm
sinh
: Hyperbolic sinecosh
: Hyperbolic cosinetanh
: Hyperbolic tangentasinh
: Inverse hyperbolic cosineacosh
: Inverse hyperbolic cosineatanh
: Inverse hyperbolic cosine
sum
: Axis-wise summationadd
: Matrix additionsub
: Matrix subtractionmul
: Matrix multiplicationdiv
: Matrix divisioninv
: Matrix inversiontranspose
: Matrix transposedet
: Determinantpow
: Element-wise powerexp
: Element-wise exponential functionelmul
: Element-wise matrix multiplication
pow
: Power
sincos
sin
: Sine functioncos
: Cosine functiontan
: Tangent functionasin
: Arc sine functionacos
: Arc cosine functionatan
: Arc tangent functionrad2deg
: Radians to degreesdeg2rad
: degrees to radians
import Surge
let n = [1.0, 2.0, 3.0, 4.0, 5.0]
let sum = Surge.sum(n) // 15.0
import Surge
let a = [1.0, 3.0, 5.0, 7.0]
let b = [2.0, 4.0, 6.0, 8.0]
let product = Surge.mul(a, b) // [2.0, 12.0, 30.0, 56.0]
Surge is available under the MIT license. See the LICENSE file for more info.