Intel® Fortran Compiler Classic and Intel® Fortran Compiler Developer Guide and Reference

ID 767251
Date 11/07/2023
Public

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Document Table of Contents

par-threshold, Qpar-threshold

Sets a threshold for the auto-parallelization of loops. This feature is only available for ifort.

Syntax

Linux:

-par-threshold[n]

Windows:

/Qpar-threshold[[:]n]

Arguments

n

Is an integer whose value is the threshold for the auto-parallelization of loops. Possible values are 0 through 100.

If n is 0, loops get auto-parallelized always, regardless of computation work volume.

If n is 100, loops get auto-parallelized when performance gains are predicted based on the compiler analysis data. Loops get auto-parallelized only if profitable 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 parallelize only if there is a 50% probability of the code speeding up if executed in parallel.

Default

-par-threshold100
or /Qpar-threshold100

Loops get auto-parallelized only if profitable parallel execution is almost certain. This is also the default if you do not specify n.

Description

This option sets a threshold for the auto-parallelization of loops based on the probability of profitable execution of the loop in parallel. To use this option, you must also specify option [Q]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.

NOTE:

This option may behave differently on Intel® microprocessors than on non-Intel microprocessors.

IDE Equivalent

Visual Studio: Optimization > Threshold For Auto-Parallelization

Alternate Options

None