Visible to Intel only — GUID: GUID-C7A523F1-B43D-4AF7-920A-5B155E0823EE
Visible to Intel only — GUID: GUID-C7A523F1-B43D-4AF7-920A-5B155E0823EE
vec-threshold, Qvec-threshold
Sets a threshold for the vectorization of loops.
Linux: |
-vec-threshold[n] |
macOS: |
-vec-threshold[n] |
Windows: |
/Qvec-threshold[[:]n] |
n |
Is an integer whose value is the threshold for the vectorization of loops. Possible values are 0 through 100. If n is 0, loops get vectorized always, regardless of computation work volume. If n is 100, loops get vectorized when performance gains are predicted based on the compiler analysis data. Loops get vectorized only if profitable vector-level parallel execution is almost certain. The intermediate 1 to 99 values represent the percentage probability for profitable speed-up. For example, n=50 directs the compiler to vectorize only if there is a 50% probability of the code speeding up if executed in vector form. |
-vec-threshold100 |
Loops get vectorized only if profitable vector-level parallel execution is almost certain. This is also the default if you do not specify n. |
This option sets a threshold for the vectorization of loops based on the probability of profitable execution of the vectorized loop in parallel.
This option is useful for loops whose computation work volume cannot be determined at compile-time. The threshold is usually relevant when the loop trip count is unknown at compile-time.
The compiler applies a heuristic that tries to balance the overhead of creating multiple threads versus the amount of work available to be shared amongst the threads.
This option only applies to host compilation. When offloading is enabled, it does not impact device-specific compilation. Offloading can only be enabled when using ifx.
Visual Studio: Optimization > Threshold For Vectorization
None