Reputation: 881
I have following recursive function (NOTE: It is stripped of all unimportant details)
int recursion(...) {
int minimum = INFINITY;
for(int i=0; i<C; i++) {
int foo = recursion(...);
if (foo < minimum) {
minimum = foo;
}
}
return minimum;
}
Note 2: It is finite, but not in this simplified example, so please ignore it. Point of this question is how to aproach this problem correctly.
I was thinking about using tasks, but I am not sure, how to use it correctly - how to paralelize the inner cycle.
EDIT 1: The recursion tree isn't well balanced. It is being used with dynamic programing approach, so as time goes on, a lot of values are re-used from previous passes. This worries me a lot and I think it will be a big bottleneck.
C is somewhere around 20.
Metric for the best is fastest :)
It will run on 2x Xeon, so there is plenty of HW power availible.
Upvotes: 9
Views: 12617
Reputation: 22670
Yes, you can use OpenMP tasks exploit parallelism on multiple recursion levels and ensure that imbalances don't cause wasted cycles.
I would collect the results in a vector
and compute the minimum outside. You could also perform a guarded (critical / lock) minimum computation within the task.
Avoid spawning tasks / allocating memory for the minimum if you are too deep in the recursion, where the overhead / work ratio becomes too bad. The strongest solution it to create two separate (parallel/serial) recursive functions. That way you have zero runtime overhead once you switch to the serial function - as opposed to checking the recursion depth against a threshold every time in a unified function.
int recursion(...) {
#pragma omp parallel
#pragma omp single
return recursion_par(..., 0);
}
int recursion_ser(...) {
int minimum = INFINITY;
for(int i=0; i<C; i++) {
int foo = recursion_ser(...);
if (foo < minimum) {
minimum = foo;
}
}
return minimum;
}
int recursion_par(..., int depth) {
std::vector<int> foos(C);
for(int i=0; i<C; i++) {
#pragma omp task
{
if (depth < threshhold) {
foos[i] = recursion_par(..., depth + 1);
} else {
foos[i] = recursion_ser(...);
}
}
}
#pragma omp taskwait
return *std::min_element(std::begin(foos), std::end(foos));
}
Obviously you must not do any nasty things with global / shared state within the unimportant details.
Upvotes: 8