Visible to Intel only — GUID: GUID-28F19C15-D059-4709-AE63-E5CC30543210
Visible to Intel only — GUID: GUID-28F19C15-D059-4709-AE63-E5CC30543210
OpenMP* Support
The Intel® oneAPI DPC++/C++ Compiler supports OpenMP* C++ pragmas that comply with OpenMP C++ Application Program Interface (API) specification 5.0, most of the OpenMP Version 5.1 and OpenMP Version 5.2 specifications, and some of the OpenMP 6.0 Version TR12 specifications.
For the complete OpenMP specification, read the specifications available from the OpenMP web site. The descriptions of OpenMP language characteristics in this documentation often use terms defined in that specification.
The OpenMP API provides symmetric multiprocessing (SMP) with the following major features:
Relieves you from implementing the low-level details of iteration space partitioning, data sharing, thread creation, scheduling, or synchronization.
Provides the benefit of performance available from shared memory multiprocessor and multi-core processor systems on all supported Intel architectures, including those processors with Intel® Hyper-Threading Technology (Intel® HT Technology).
The compiler performs transformations to generate multithreaded code based on your placement of OpenMP pragmas in the source program, making it simple to add threading to existing software. The compiler compiles parallel programs and supports the industry-standard OpenMP pragmas.
The compiler provides Intel®-specific extensions to the OpenMP specification including runtime library routines and environment variables. A summary of the compiler options appear in the OpenMP Options Quick Reference.
Parallel Processing with OpenMP
To compile with the OpenMP API, add the pragmas to your code. The compiler processes the code and internally produces a multithreaded version that is then compiled into an executable with the parallelism implemented by threads that execute parallel regions or constructs.
Using Other Compilers
The OpenMP specification does not define interoperability of multiple implementations, so the OpenMP implementation supported by other compilers and OpenMP support in the Intel® oneAPI DPC++/C++ Compiler might not be interoperable. Even if you compile and build the entire application with one compiler, be aware that different compilers might not provide OpenMP source compatibility that enable you to compile and link the same set of application sources with a different compiler and get the expected parallel execution results.