Visible to Intel only — GUID: GUID-DC950BA9-5F67-4838-B360-C6EC4632FEC3
Visible to Intel only — GUID: GUID-DC950BA9-5F67-4838-B360-C6EC4632FEC3
Known Limitations
This page outlines the known limitations of oneTBB to help you better understand its capabilities.
Freestanding Compilation Mode
Limitation: oneTBB does not support the freestanding compilation mode.
Risk: Compiling an application that utilizes oneTBB headers using the Intel(R) oneAPI DPC+/C+ Compiler may result in failure on Windows* OS if the /Qfreestanding compiler option is employed.
Static Assert
Limitation: A static assert causes the compilation failures in oneTBB headers if the following conditions are satisfied:
Compilation is done with Clang 12.0.0 or a more recent version.
The LLVM standard library is employed, coupled with the use of the -ffreestanding flag and C++11/14 compiler options.
Risk: The compilation failures.
Interface Incompatibilities: TBB vs oneTBB
Limitation: An application using Parallel STL algorithms in the libstdc++ versions 9 and 10 may fail to compile due to incompatible interface changes between earlier versions of Threading Building Blocks (TBB) and oneAPI Threading Building Blocks (oneTBB).
Solution: Disable support for Parallel STL algorithms by defining PSTL_USE_PARALLEL_POLICIES (in libstdc++ 9) or _GLIBCXX_USE_TBB_PAR_BACKEND (in libstdc++ 10) macro to zero before inclusion of the first standard header file in each translation unit.
Incorrect Installation Location
Limitation: On Linux* OS, if oneAPI Threading Building Blocks (oneTBB) or Threading Building Blocks (TBB) are installed in a system folder, such as /usr/lib64, the application may fail to link due to the order in which the linker searches for libraries.
Risk: The issue does not affect the program execution.
Solution: Use the -L linker option to specify the correct location of oneTBB library.
fork() Support
Limitation: oneTBB does not support fork().
Solution: To work-around the issue, consider using task_scheduler_handle to join oneTBB worker threads before using fork().