dgelsd (3) - Linux Manuals

NAME

dgelsd.f -

SYNOPSIS


Functions/Subroutines


subroutine dgelsd (M, N, NRHS, A, LDA, B, LDB, S, RCOND, RANK, WORK, LWORK, IWORK, INFO)
DGELSD computes the minimum-norm solution to a linear least squares problem for GE matrices

Function/Subroutine Documentation

subroutine dgelsd (integerM, integerN, integerNRHS, double precision, dimension( lda, * )A, integerLDA, double precision, dimension( ldb, * )B, integerLDB, double precision, dimension( * )S, double precisionRCOND, integerRANK, double precision, dimension( * )WORK, integerLWORK, integer, dimension( * )IWORK, integerINFO)

DGELSD computes the minimum-norm solution to a linear least squares problem for GE matrices

Purpose:

 DGELSD computes the minimum-norm solution to a real linear least
 squares problem:
     minimize 2-norm(| b - A*x |)
 using the singular value decomposition (SVD) of A. A is an M-by-N
 matrix which may be rank-deficient.

 Several right hand side vectors b and solution vectors x can be
 handled in a single call; they are stored as the columns of the
 M-by-NRHS right hand side matrix B and the N-by-NRHS solution
 matrix X.

 The problem is solved in three steps:
 (1) Reduce the coefficient matrix A to bidiagonal form with
     Householder transformations, reducing the original problem
     into a "bidiagonal least squares problem" (BLS)
 (2) Solve the BLS using a divide and conquer approach.
 (3) Apply back all the Householder tranformations to solve
     the original least squares problem.

 The effective rank of A is determined by treating as zero those
 singular values which are less than RCOND times the largest singular
 value.

 The divide and conquer algorithm makes very mild assumptions about
 floating point arithmetic. It will work on machines with a guard
 digit in add/subtract, or on those binary machines without guard
 digits which subtract like the Cray X-MP, Cray Y-MP, Cray C-90, or
 Cray-2. It could conceivably fail on hexadecimal or decimal machines
 without guard digits, but we know of none.


 

Parameters:

M

          M is INTEGER
          The number of rows of A. M >= 0.


N

          N is INTEGER
          The number of columns of A. N >= 0.


NRHS

          NRHS is INTEGER
          The number of right hand sides, i.e., the number of columns
          of the matrices B and X. NRHS >= 0.


A

          A is DOUBLE PRECISION array, dimension (LDA,N)
          On entry, the M-by-N matrix A.
          On exit, A has been destroyed.


LDA

          LDA is INTEGER
          The leading dimension of the array A.  LDA >= max(1,M).


B

          B is DOUBLE PRECISION array, dimension (LDB,NRHS)
          On entry, the M-by-NRHS right hand side matrix B.
          On exit, B is overwritten by the N-by-NRHS solution
          matrix X.  If m >= n and RANK = n, the residual
          sum-of-squares for the solution in the i-th column is given
          by the sum of squares of elements n+1:m in that column.


LDB

          LDB is INTEGER
          The leading dimension of the array B. LDB >= max(1,max(M,N)).


S

          S is DOUBLE PRECISION array, dimension (min(M,N))
          The singular values of A in decreasing order.
          The condition number of A in the 2-norm = S(1)/S(min(m,n)).


RCOND

          RCOND is DOUBLE PRECISION
          RCOND is used to determine the effective rank of A.
          Singular values S(i) <= RCOND*S(1) are treated as zero.
          If RCOND < 0, machine precision is used instead.


RANK

          RANK is INTEGER
          The effective rank of A, i.e., the number of singular values
          which are greater than RCOND*S(1).


WORK

          WORK is DOUBLE PRECISION array, dimension (MAX(1,LWORK))
          On exit, if INFO = 0, WORK(1) returns the optimal LWORK.


LWORK

          LWORK is INTEGER
          The dimension of the array WORK. LWORK must be at least 1.
          The exact minimum amount of workspace needed depends on M,
          N and NRHS. As long as LWORK is at least
              12*N + 2*N*SMLSIZ + 8*N*NLVL + N*NRHS + (SMLSIZ+1)**2,
          if M is greater than or equal to N or
              12*M + 2*M*SMLSIZ + 8*M*NLVL + M*NRHS + (SMLSIZ+1)**2,
          if M is less than N, the code will execute correctly.
          SMLSIZ is returned by ILAENV and is equal to the maximum
          size of the subproblems at the bottom of the computation
          tree (usually about 25), and
             NLVL = MAX( 0, INT( LOG_2( MIN( M,N )/(SMLSIZ+1) ) ) + 1 )
          For good performance, LWORK should generally be larger.

          If LWORK = -1, then a workspace query is assumed; the routine
          only calculates the optimal size of the WORK array, returns
          this value as the first entry of the WORK array, and no error
          message related to LWORK is issued by XERBLA.


IWORK

          IWORK is INTEGER array, dimension (MAX(1,LIWORK))
          LIWORK >= max(1, 3 * MINMN * NLVL + 11 * MINMN),
          where MINMN = MIN( M,N ).
          On exit, if INFO = 0, IWORK(1) returns the minimum LIWORK.


INFO

          INFO is INTEGER
          = 0:  successful exit
          < 0:  if INFO = -i, the i-th argument had an illegal value.
          > 0:  the algorithm for computing the SVD failed to converge;
                if INFO = i, i off-diagonal elements of an intermediate
                bidiagonal form did not converge to zero.


 

Author:

Univ. of Tennessee

Univ. of California Berkeley

Univ. of Colorado Denver

NAG Ltd.

Date:

November 2011

Contributors:

Ming Gu and Ren-Cang Li, Computer Science Division, University of California at Berkeley, USA

 Osni Marques, LBNL/NERSC, USA 

 

Definition at line 209 of file dgelsd.f.

Author

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