6

I am trying different kinds of parallelization using OpenMP. As a result I have several lines of #pragma omp parallel for in my code which I (un-)comment alternating. Is there a way to make these lines conditional with something like the following, not working code?

   define OMPflag 1 
   #if OMPFlag pragma omp parallel for
   for ...
Framester
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2 Answers2

7

C99 has the _Pragma keyword that allows you to place what otherwise would be #pragma inside macros. Something like

#define OMP_PARA_INTERNAL _Pragma("omp parallel for")
#if [your favorite condition]
#define OMP_FOR OMP_PARA_INTERNAL for
#else
#define OMP_FOR for
#endif

and then in your code

OMP_FOR (unsigned i; i < n; ++i) {
  ...
}
Jens Gustedt
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5

An OpenMP parallel construct can have an if clause specified. In Fortran I'd write something like this:

!$omp parallel if(n>25) ... 

I sometimes use this when a problem might be too small to bother parallelising. I guess you could use the same approach to check a debug flag at run time. I'll leave it up to you to figure out the C++ syntax but it's probably exactly the same.

High Performance Mark
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