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OpenMP – Introduction* *UHEM yaz çalıştayı notlarından derlenmiştir. (uhem.itu.edu.tr)
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Outline What is OpenMP? –Introduction (Code Structure, Directives, Threads etc.) –Limitations –Data Scope Clauses Shared, Private –Work-sharing constructs –Synchronization
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What is OpenMP? An Application Program Interface (API) that may be used to explicitly direct multithreaded, shared memory parallelism OpenMP is managed by the nonprofit technology consortium OpenMP Architecture Review Board (or OpenMP ARB), jointly defined by a group of major computer hardware and software vendors, including AMD, IBM, Intel, Cray, HP, Fujitsu, Nvidia, NEC, Red Hat, Texas Instruments, Oracle Corporation, and more. Portable & Standardized –API exist both C/C++ and Fortan 90/77 –Multi platform Support (Unix, Linux etc.)
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OpenMP Specifications Version 3.1, Complete Specifications, July 2011 Version 3.0, May 2008 Version 2.5, May 2005 (C/C++ & Fortran) Version 2.0 –C/C++, March 2002 –Fortran, November 2000 Version 1.0 –C/C++, October 1998 –Fortran, October 1997 Detailed Info: http://www.openmp.org/wp/openmp-specifications/
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Intel & GNU OpenMP Intel Compilers –OpenMP 2.5 conforming –Nested parallelisim –Workqueuing extension to OpenMP –Interoperability with POSIX and Windows threads –OMP_DYNAMIC support GNU OpenMP (OpenMP+gcc) –OpenMP 3.0 Support (gcc 4.4 and later)
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OpenMP Programming Model Explicit parallelism Thread based parallelism; program runs with user specified number of multiple thread Uses fork & join model Synchronization Point (“barrier”, “critical region”, “single processor region”)
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Shared Memory Model –Each thread must be reach a shared memory (SMP) Limitations of OpenMP
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Terminology and Behavior OpenMP Team = Master + Worker Parallel Region is a block of code executed by all threads simultaneously (has implicit barrier) –The master thread always has thread id 0 –Parallel regions can be nested –If clause can be used to guard the parallel region
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Terminology and Behavior A Work-Sharing construct divides the execution of the enclosed code region among the members of the team. (Loop, Section etc.)
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OpenMP Code Structure #include main () { int var1, var2, var3; /* Serial code */. /* Beginning of parallel section. Fork a team of threads.Specify variable scoping */ #pragma omp parallel private(var1, var2) shared(var3) { Parallel section executed by all threads. All threads join master thread and disband } /* Resume serial code */. } #include main () { int var1, var2, var3; /* Serial code */. /* Beginning of parallel section. Fork a team of threads.Specify variable scoping */ #pragma omp parallel private(var1, var2) shared(var3) { Parallel section executed by all threads. All threads join master thread and disband } /* Resume serial code */. } C/C++
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OpenMP Directives Format in C/C++: #pragma omp : Required for all OpenMP C/C++ directives. directivename : A valid OpenMP directive. Must appear after the pragma and before any clauses. [clause,...] : Optional. Clauses can be in any order, and repeated as necessary unless otherwise restricted. #pragma omp directivename [clause,...] \
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OpenMP Directives Example: General Rules: Directives follow conventions of the C/C++ standards for compiler directives. Case sensitive Only one directivename may be specified per directive Long directive lines can be "continued" on succeeding lines by escaping the newline character with a backslash ("\") at the end of a directive line. #pragma omp parallel default(shared) private(beta,pi)
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OpenMP Directives PARALLEL Region Construct: A parallel region is a block of code that will be executed by multiple threads. This is the fundamental OpenMP parallel construct. #pragma omp parallel [clause...]
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OpenMP Directives C/C++ OpenMP structured block definition. #pragma omp parallel [clause...] { structured_block }
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When a thread reaches a PARALLEL directive It creates a term of threads and becomes the master of the team The master is a member of that team, it has thread number 0 within that team (THREAD ID) Starting from the beginning of this parallel region, the code is duplicated and all threads will execute that code There is an implied barrier at the end of a parallel section Only the master thread continues execution past this point
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Lab: Helloworld
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Lab: Compiling Helloworld $ gcc -fopenmp omp_hello.c -o omp_hello $ export OMP_NUM_THREADS=2 $./omp_hello Hello World from thread = 0 Hello World from thread = 1
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Lab: Helloworld Set environment variables (export) Run your OpenMP compile bash: $./omp_hello Hello OpenMP! bash: $ export OMP_NUM_THREADS=4 Optional Exercise: 1 - set OMP_NUM_THREADS to an higher value (such as 10) 2- repeat example.
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OpenMP Constructs
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Data Scope Attribute Clauses SHARED Clause: –It declares variables in its list to be shared to each thread. –Behavior The pointer of the object of the same type is declared once for each thread in the team All threads reference to the original object shared (list) C/C++
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Data Scope Attribute Clauses PRIVATE Clause: –It declares variables in its list to be private to each thread. –Behavior A new object of the same type is declared once for each thread in the team All references to the original object are replaced with references to the new object Variables declared PRIVATE are uninitialized for each thread (FIRSTPRIVATE can be used for initialization of variables) private (list) C/C++
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A work-sharing construct divides the execution of the enclosed code region among the members of team that encounter it. Must be enclosed in a parallel region otherwise it is simply ignored. Work-sharing constructs do not launch/create new threads. There is no implied barrier upon entry to a work-sharing construct. However there is an implicit barrier at the end of a work-sharing construct. Work-Sharing Constructs
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Types Work-Sharing Constructs
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shares iterations of a loop across the team. Represents a type of "data parallelism". breaks work into separate, discrete sections. Each section is executed by a thread. Can be used to implement a type of "functional parallelism". serializes a section of code Work-Sharing Constructs
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for directive (C/C++) #pragma omp for [clause...] { for_loop }
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schedule clause: schedule(kind [,chunk_size]) –static: less overhead, default on many OpenMP compilers –dynamic & guided: useful for poorly balanced and unpredictable workload. In guided the size of chunk decreases over time. –runtime: If this schedule is selected, the decision regarding scheduling kind is made at run time. The schedule and (optional) chunk size are set through the OMP_SCHEDULE environment variable. Work-Sharing Constructs
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schedule clause: –describes how iterations of the loop are divided among the threads in the team Loop iterations are divided into pieces of size chunk statically When a thread finishes one chunk, it is dynamically assigned another. The default chunk size is 1. The chunk size is exponentially reduced with each dispatched piece of the iteration space. The default chunk size is 1. Work-Sharing Constructs
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nowait (C/C++) clause: –If specified, then threads do not synchronize at the end of the parallel loop. Threads proceed directly to the next statements after the loop. Work-Sharing Constructs
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Work-Sharing Lab : nowait
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