clatdf (l) - Linux Manuals

clatdf: computes the contribution to the reciprocal Dif-estimate by solving for x in Z * x = b, where b is chosen such that the norm of x is as large as possible

NAME

CLATDF - computes the contribution to the reciprocal Dif-estimate by solving for x in Z * x = b, where b is chosen such that the norm of x is as large as possible

SYNOPSIS

SUBROUTINE CLATDF(
IJOB, N, Z, LDZ, RHS, RDSUM, RDSCAL, IPIV, JPIV )

    
INTEGER IJOB, LDZ, N

    
REAL RDSCAL, RDSUM

    
INTEGER IPIV( * ), JPIV( * )

    
COMPLEX RHS( * ), Z( LDZ, * )

PURPOSE

CLATDF computes the contribution to the reciprocal Dif-estimate by solving for x in Z * x = b, where b is chosen such that the norm of x is as large as possible. It is assumed that LU decomposition of Z has been computed by CGETC2. On entry RHS = f holds the contribution from earlier solved sub-systems, and on return RHS = x. The factorization of Z returned by CGETC2 has the form
Z = P * L * U * Q, where P and Q are permutation matrices. L is lower triangular with unit diagonal elements and U is upper triangular.

ARGUMENTS

IJOB (input) INTEGER
IJOB = 2: First compute an approximative null-vector e of Z using CGECON, e is normalized and solve for Zx = +-e - f with the sign giving the greater value of 2-norm(x). About 5 times as expensive as Default. IJOB .ne. 2: Local look ahead strategy where all entries of the r.h.s. b is choosen as either +1 or -1. Default.
N (input) INTEGER
The number of columns of the matrix Z.
Z (input) REAL array, dimension (LDZ, N)
On entry, the LU part of the factorization of the n-by-n matrix Z computed by CGETC2: Z = P * L * U * Q
LDZ (input) INTEGER
The leading dimension of the array Z. LDA >= max(1, N).
RHS (input/output) REAL array, dimension (N).
On entry, RHS contains contributions from other subsystems. On exit, RHS contains the solution of the subsystem with entries according to the value of IJOB (see above).
RDSUM (input/output) REAL
On entry, the sum of squares of computed contributions to the Dif-estimate under computation by CTGSYL, where the scaling factor RDSCAL (see below) has been factored out. On exit, the corresponding sum of squares updated with the contributions from the current sub-system. If TRANS = aqTaq RDSUM is not touched. NOTE: RDSUM only makes sense when CTGSY2 is called by CTGSYL.
RDSCAL (input/output) REAL
On entry, scaling factor used to prevent overflow in RDSUM. On exit, RDSCAL is updated w.r.t. the current contributions in RDSUM. If TRANS = aqTaq, RDSCAL is not touched. NOTE: RDSCAL only makes sense when CTGSY2 is called by CTGSYL.
IPIV (input) INTEGER array, dimension (N).
The pivot indices; for 1 <= i <= N, row i of the matrix has been interchanged with row IPIV(i).
JPIV (input) INTEGER array, dimension (N).
The pivot indices; for 1 <= j <= N, column j of the matrix has been interchanged with column JPIV(j).

FURTHER DETAILS

Based on contributions by

Bo Kagstrom and Peter Poromaa, Department of Computing Science,
Umea University, S-901 87 Umea, Sweden.
This routine is a further developed implementation of algorithm BSOLVE in [1] using complete pivoting in the LU factorization.
 [1]   Bo Kagstrom and Lars Westin,

 Generalized Schur Methods with Condition Estimators for
 Solving the Generalized Sylvester Equation, IEEE Transactions
 on Automatic Control, Vol. 34, No. 7, July 1989, pp 745-751.
 [2]   Peter Poromaa,

 On Efficient and Robust Estimators for the Separation
 between two Regular Matrix Pairs with Applications in
 Condition Estimation. Report UMINF-95.05, Department of
 Computing Science, Umea University, S-901 87 Umea, Sweden,
 1995.