Compute the value of X in A'AX = B for complex-valued matrices using Q-less QR decomposition
Fixed-Point Designer / Matrices and Linear Algebra / Linear System Solvers
The Complex Partial-Systolic Matrix Solve Using Q-less QR Decomposition block solves the system of linear equations, A'AX = B, using Q-less QR decomposition, where A and B are complex-valued matrices.
A(i,:)
— Rows of matrix ARows of matrix A, specified as a vector. A is an m-by-n matrix where m ≥ 2 and m ≥ n. If B is single or double, A must be the same data type as B. If A is a fixed point data type, A must be signed, use binary-point scaling, and have the same word length as B. Slope-bias representation is not supported for fixed-point data types.
Data Types: single
| double
| fixed point
Complex Number Support: Yes
B
— Matrix BMatrix B, specified as a vector. B is an m-by-p matrix where m ≥ 2. If A is single or double, B must be the same data type as A. If B is a fixed-point data type, B must be signed, use binary-point scaling, and have the same word length as A. Slope-bias representation is not supported for fixed-point data types.
Data Types: single
| double
| fixed point
Complex Number Support: Yes
validInA
— Whether input A is validWhether input A is valid, specified as a Boolean scalar. This
control signal indicates when the data from the A(i,:) input port
is valid. When this value is 1 (true
) and the value at
readyA is 1 (true
), the block captures the
values at the A(i,:) input port. When this value is 0
(false
), the block ignores the input samples.
Data Types: Boolean
validInB
— Whether input B is validWhether input B is valid, specified as a Boolean scalar. This
control signal indicates when the data from the B input port is
valid. When this value is 1 (true
) and the value at
readyB is 1 (true
), the block captures the
values at the B input port. When this value is 0
(false
), the block ignores the input samples.
Data Types: Boolean
restart
— Whether to clear internal statesWhether to clear internal states, specified as a Boolean scalar. When this value
is 1 (true
), the block stops the current calculation and clears all
internal states. When this value is 0 (false
) and the
validIn value is 1 (true
), the block begins
a new subframe.
Data Types: Boolean
X
— Matrix XMatrix X, returned as a vector or matrix.
Data Types: single
| double
| fixed point
validOut
— Whether output data is validWhether the output data is valid, returned as a Boolean scalar. This control
signal indicates when the data at the output port X is valid.
When this value is 1 (true
), the block has successfully computed a
row of matrix X. When this value is 0 (false
),
the output data is not valid.
Data Types: Boolean
readyA
— Whether block is ready for input AWhether the block is ready for input A, returned as a Boolean scalar. This control
signal indicates when the block is ready for new input data. When this value is 1
(true
) and validInA value is 1
(true
), the block accepts input data in the next time step. When
this value is 0 (false
), the block ignores input data in the next
time step.
Data Types: Boolean
readyB
— Whether block is ready for input BWhether the block is ready for input B, returned as a Boolean scalar. This control
signal indicates when the block is ready for new input data. When this value is 1
(true
) and validInB value is 1
(true
), the block accepts input data in the next time step. When
this value is 0 (false
), the block ignores input data in the next
time step.
Data Types: Boolean
Number of rows in matrix A
— Number of rows in matrix A4
(default) | positive integer-valued scalarNumber of rows in matrix A, specified as a positive integer-valued scalar.
Block Parameter:
m |
Type: character vector |
Values: positive integer-valued scalar |
Default:
4 |
Number of columns in matrix A and rows in matrix B
— Number of columns in matrix A and rows in matrix B4
(default) | positive integer-valued scalarNumber of columns in matrix A and rows in matrix B, specified as a positive integer-valued scalar.
Block Parameter:
n |
Type: character vector |
Values: positive integer-valued scalar |
Default:
4 |
Number of columns in matrix B
— Number of columns in matrix B1
(default) | positive integer-valued scalarNumber of columns in matrix B, specified as a positive integer-valued scalar.
Block Parameter:
p |
Type: character vector |
Values: positive integer-valued scalar |
Default:
1 |
Output datatype
— Data type of output matrix Xfixdt(1,18,14)
(default) | double
| single
| fixdt(1,16,0)
| <data type expression>
Data type of the output matrix X, specified as
fixdt(1,18,14)
, double
,
single
, fixdt(1,16,0)
, or as a user-specified
data type expression. The type can be specified directly, or expressed as a data type
object such as Simulink.NumericType
.
Block Parameter:
OutputType |
Type: character vector |
Values:
'fixdt(1,18,14)' | 'double' |
'single' | 'fixdt(1,16,0)' |
'<data type expression>' |
Default:
'fixdt(1,18,14)' |
Partial-systolic implementations prioritize speed of computations over space constraints, while burst implementations prioritize space constraints at the expense of speed of the operations. The following table illustrates the tradeoffs between the implementations available for matrix decompositions and solving systems of linear equations.
Implementation | Ready | Latency | Area | Sample block or example |
---|---|---|---|---|
Systolic | C | O(n) | O(mn2) | Implement Hardware-Efficient QR Decomposition Using CORDIC in a Systolic Array |
Partial-Systolic | C | O(m) | O(n2) | |
Partial-Systolic with Forgetting Factor | C | O(n) | O(n2) | Fixed-Point HDL-Optimized Minimum-Variance Distortionless-Response (MVDR) Beamformer |
Burst | O(n) | O(mn2) | O(n) |
Where C is a constant proportional to the word length of the data, m is the number of rows in matrix A, and n is the number of columns in matrix A.
HDL Coder™ provides additional configuration options that affect HDL implementation and synthesized logic.
This block has a single, default HDL architecture.
General | |
---|---|
ConstrainedOutputPipeline | Number of registers to place at
the outputs by moving existing delays within your design. Distributed
pipelining does not redistribute these registers. The default is
|
InputPipeline | Number of input pipeline stages
to insert in the generated code. Distributed pipelining and constrained
output pipelining can move these registers. The default is
|
OutputPipeline | Number of output pipeline stages
to insert in the generated code. Distributed pipelining and constrained
output pipelining can move these registers. The default is
|
Supports fixed-point data types only.
A and B must be signed, use binary-point scaling, and have the same word length. Slope-bias representation is not supported for fixed-point data types.