Reputation: 33817
I have C++ code with OpenMP pragmas inside. I want to test this code both for multithread mode (with OpenMP) and in single thread mode (no OpenMP).
For now, to switch between modes I need to comment #pragma omp
(or at least parallel
).
What is the cleanest, or default, way to enable / disable OpenMP?
Upvotes: 21
Views: 21966
Reputation: 691
If you do not compile with -fopenmp option, you won't get the parallel code. You can do it with an appropiate define and makefile that generates all codes.
The OpenMP documentation says (only an example):
#ifdef _OPENMP
#include <omp.h>
#else
#define omp_get_thread_num() 0
#endif
See http://www.openmp.org/mp-documents/spec30.pdf (conditional compilation).
Upvotes: 30
Reputation: 33273
The way such things are usually handled (the general case) is with #define
s and #ifdef
:
In your header file:
#ifndef SINGLETHREADED
#pragma omp
#endif
When you compile, add -DSINGLETHREADED to disable OpenMP:
cc -DSINGLETHREADED <other flags go here> code.c
Upvotes: 4
Reputation: 37188
Look into the compiler manual for the switch that disables OpenMP. For GCC, OpenMP is disabled by default and enabled with the -fopenmp option.
Another option would be to run the code with the OMP_NUM_THREADS environment variable set to 1, though that is not exactly the same as compiling without OpenMP in the first place.
Upvotes: 17