diff options
| author | Andrew M. B. Boktor <[email protected]> | 2012-04-25 12:16:44 -0800 |
|---|---|---|
| committer | Andrew Boktor <[email protected]> | 2014-08-14 13:19:06 -0700 |
| commit | aa6d26d41e88634f0c5143bf87154cef1db06dd7 (patch) | |
| tree | 0e9a8927cd0d904f52cece7a436928b048a63b1e /README | |
| parent | b82b724bfe5d48e6e915b6f5dff188138d9872fe (diff) | |
Specifying default behaviour of setup_environment
Clearer description of how to run
[git-p4: depot-paths = "//depot/gpgpu_sim_research/fermi/distribution/": change = 12119]
Diffstat (limited to 'README')
| -rw-r--r-- | README | 12 |
1 files changed, 7 insertions, 5 deletions
@@ -140,7 +140,8 @@ and run source setup_environment <build_type> replace <build_type> with debug or release. Use release if you need faster -simulation and debug if you need to run the simulator in gdb. +simulation and debug if you need to run the simulator in gdb. If nothing is +specified, release will be used by default. Now you are ready to build the simulator, just run @@ -178,11 +179,12 @@ file to "1" (Note: you need CUDA version 4.0 or higher). Now To run a CUDA application on the simulator, simply execute -source setup_environment <built_type>. +source setup_environment <build_type> -and just launch the executable as you would if it was to run on the hardware. -To revert back to running on the hardware, remove GPGPU-Sim from your -LD_LIBRARY_PATH environment variable. +Use the same <build_type> you used while building the simulator. Then just +launch the executable as you would if it was to run on the hardware. To revert +back to running on the hardware, remove GPGPU-Sim from your LD_LIBRARY_PATH +environment variable. Running OpenCL applications is identical to running CUDA applications. However, OpenCL applications need to communicate with the NVIDIA driver in order to |
