When loading libomptarget, the init function in libomptarget/src/rtl.cpp
will search for the libomptarget_start_tool function using libdl.
libomptarget_start_tool will pass those OMPT callbacks related to target
constructs to libomptarget
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99803
Two-level distributed barrier is a new experimental barrier designed
for Intel hardware that has better performance in some cases than the
default hyper barrier.
This barrier is designed to handle fine granularity parallelism where
barriers are used frequently with little compute and memory access
between barriers. There is no need to use it for codes with few
barriers and large granularity compute, or memory intensive
applications, as little difference will be seen between this barrier
and the default hyper barrier. This barrier is designed to work
optimally with a fixed number of threads, and has a significant setup
time, so should NOT be used in situations where the number of threads
in a team is varied frequently.
The two-level distributed barrier is off by default -- hyper barrier
is used by default. To use this barrier, you must set all barrier
patterns to use this type, because it will not work with other barrier
patterns. Thus, to turn it on, the following settings are required:
KMP_FORKJOIN_BARRIER_PATTERN=dist,dist
KMP_PLAIN_BARRIER_PATTERN=dist,dist
KMP_REDUCTION_BARRIER_PATTERN=dist,dist
Branching factors (set with KMP_FORKJOIN_BARRIER, KMP_PLAIN_BARRIER,
and KMP_REDUCTION_BARRIER) are ignored by the two-level distributed
barrier.
Patch fixed for ITTNotify disabled builds and non-x86 builds
Co-authored-by: Jonathan Peyton <jonathan.l.peyton@intel.com>
Co-authored-by: Vladislav Vinogradov <vlad.vinogradov@intel.com>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103121
Several variables were left unused as a result of different patches removing
their use.
Two variables have some use:
`poll_count` is used by the KMP_BLOCKING macro only under certain conditions.
Adding (void) to tell the compiler to ignore the unused variable.
`padding` is a dummy stack allocation with no intent to be used. Also adding
(void) to make the compiler ignore the unused variable.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104303
This silences warnings like these, in mingw builds with clang:
runtime/src/kmp_atomic.h:1021:13: warning: '__kmpc_atomic_cmplx8_rd' has C-linkage specified, but returns user-defined type 'kmp_cmplx64' (aka '__kmp_cmplx64_t') which is incompatible with C [-Wreturn-type-c-linkage]
runtime/src/z_Windows_NT_util.cpp:479:17: warning: cast from 'volatile void *' to 'type-parameter-0-0 *' drops volatile qualifier [-Wcast-qual]
flag = (C *)th->th.th_sleep_loc;
runtime/src/z_Windows_NT_util.cpp:1321:14: warning: cast to 'void *' from smaller integer type 'DWORD' (aka 'unsigned long') [-Wint-to-void-pointer-cast]
} else if ((void *)exit_val != (void *)th) {
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96585
check_library_exists fails for stdcall functions, because that
check doesn't include the necessary headers (and thus fails with
an undefined reference to _EnumProcessModules, when the import
library symbol actually is called _EnumProcessModules@16).
Merge the two previous checks check_include_files and
check_library_exists into one with check_c_source_compiles, and
merge the variables that indicate whether it succeeded.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96580
This patch enables omp_get_num_devices() and omp_get_initial_device() on
Windows by providing an alternative to dlsym on Windows, and proposes to
add a new libomptarget entry, __tgt_get_num_devices().
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96182
Fugaku supercomputer is built with the Fujitsu A64FX microprocessor, whose cache line is 256. In current libomp, we only have cache line size 128 for PPC64 and otherwise 64. This patch added the support of cache line 256 for A64FX. It's worth noting that although A64FX is a variant of AArch64, this property is not shared. As a result, in light of UCX source code (392443ab92/src/ucs/arch/aarch64/cpu.c (L17)), we can only determine by checking whether the CPU is FUJITSU A64FX.
Reviewed By: jdoerfert, Hahnfeld
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93169
This patch partially prepares the runtime source code to be built with
-Wconversion, which should trigger warnings if any implicit conversions
can possibly change a value. For builds done with icc or gcc, all such
warnings are handled in this patch. clang gives a much longer list of
warnings, particularly for sign conversions, which the other compilers
don't report. The -Wconversion flag is commented into cmake files, but
I'm not going to turn it on. If someone thinks it is important, and wants
to fix all the clang warnings, they are welcome to.
Types of changes made here involve either improving the consistency of types
used so that no conversion is needed, or else performing careful explicit
conversions, when we're sure a problem won't arise.
Patch is a combination of changes by Terry Wilmarth and Johnny Peyton.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92942
These changes add support for Intel's umonitor/umwait usage in wait
code, for architectures that support those intrinsic functions. Usage of
umonitor/umwait is off by default, but can be turned on by setting the
KMP_USER_LEVEL_MWAIT environment variable.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91189
Additionally fix the copy if enabled on multi-config targets.
Summary:
This changes the copy command for libomp.so to use the output of the target as
the source of the copy, rather than trying to find it based on
${LIBOMP_LIBRARY_DIR}, which appears to be incorrect in multi-config generator
builds.
Reviewers: jdoerfert
Subscribers: mgorny, yaxunl, guansong, sstefan1, openmp-commits
Tags: #openmp
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84148
Summary:
The termination function duplicated the functionality of the
__attribute((destructor))-annotated function __kmp_internal_end_fini,
and we have no indication that this doesn't work.
The function might cause issues with link-time optimization turned on:
until very recently, none of the usual linkers was reporting functions
named in -Wl,-fini as used to the LTO plugin, so it might be dropped.
If the function is dropped, -Wl,-fini=__kmp_internal_end_fini doesn't
do what we want: with ld.bfd and lld it drops the FINI attribute from
.dynamic and with gold we get FINI = 0x0, which leads to a crash on
cleanup. This can be reproduced by building with
-DLLVM_ENABLE_PROJECTS="clang;openmp" \
-DLLVM_ENABLE_LTO=Thin \
-DLLVM_USE_LINKER=gold
The issue in lld has been fixed in f95273f75aa, but gold remains without
fix so far.
Fixes PR43927.
Reviewers: JonChesterfield, jdoerfert, AndreyChurbanov
Reviewed By: AndreyChurbanov
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69927
There's no need to initialize variables with static storage duration
because they're implicitly initialized to zero. See
https://en.cppreference.com/w/c/language/initialization#Implicit_initialization
I think that's already relied upon because the supplied 0 only sets
'kmp_time_global_t g_time;' in 'struct kmp_base_global'. The other fields
are not set in the code, but implicitly initialized by the compiler.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66292
llvm-svn: 370943
Fix last warned location in ittnotify_static.cpp using the defined
macro KMP_FALLTHROUGH().
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65871
llvm-svn: 369003
The variables in kmp_lock.cpp are really arrays of function pointers
that return void or int, not pointers to functions that return void*
or int*. The other changes are only cosmetic.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65870
llvm-svn: 369002
The implementation status can only be one of
ompt_event_UNIMPLEMENTED = ompt_set_never = 1
ompt_event_MAY_ALWAYS = ompt_set_always = 5
In both cases, the condition was already true, so just remove
the check.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65869
llvm-svn: 369001
Instead, maintain a list of disabled options to still build libomp and
libomptarget without warnings. This includes -Wno-error and -Wno-pedantic
to silence warnings that LLVM enables when building in-tree.
I tested the following compilers:
* Clang 6.0, 7.0, 8.0
* GCC 4.8.5 (CentOS 7), GCC 6, 7, 8, 9
* Intel Compiler 16, 17, 18, 19
RFC thread on openmp-dev mailing list:
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/openmp-dev/2019-August/002668.html
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65867
llvm-svn: 368999
All other files are already C++ and the build system has always
passed '-x c++' for C files, effectively compiling them as C++.
To stay warning free we need one fix in ittnotify_static.{c,cpp}:
The variable dll_path can be written to, so it must not be const.
GCC complained with -Wcast-qual and I think it's right.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65285
llvm-svn: 367343
This is a port of libomp for the RISC-V 64-bit Linux target.
We have tested this port on a HiFive Unleashed development board
using a downstream LLVM that has support for the missing bits in
upstream. As of now, all tests are passing, including OMPT.
Patch by Ferran Pallarès!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59880
llvm-svn: 367021
Remove all older OMP spec versioning from the runtime and build system.
Patch by Terry Wilmarth
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64534
llvm-svn: 365963
On most platforms, certain compiler and linker flags have to be passed
when using pthreads, otherwise linking against libomp.so might fail with
undefined references to several pthread functions.
Use CMake's `find_package(Threads)` to determine these for standalone
builds, or take them (and optionally modify them) from the top-level
LLVM cmake files.
Also, On FreeBSD, ensure that libomp.so is linked against libm.so,
similar to NetBSD.
Adjust test cases with hardcoded `-lpthread` flag to use the common
build flags, which should now have the required pthread flags.
Reviewers: emaste, jlpeyton, krytarowski, mgorny, protze.joachim, Hahnfeld
Reviewed By: Hahnfeld
Subscribers: AndreyChurbanov, tra, EricWF, Hahnfeld, jfb, jdoerfert, openmp-commits
Tags: #openmp
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59451
llvm-svn: 357618
The thread-limit-var and omp_get_thread_limit API was not perfectly handled for
teams construct. Now, when modified by thread_limit clause, omp_get_thread_limit
reports the correct value. In addition, the value is restored when leaving the
teams construct to what it was in the encountering context.
This is done partly by creating the notion of a Contention Group root (CG root)
that keeps track of the thread at the root of each separate CG, the
thread-limit-var associated with the CG, and associated counter of active
threads within the contention group.
thread-limits are passed from master to worker threads via an entry in the ICV
data structure. When a "contention group switch" occurs, a new CG root record is
made and passed from master to worker. A thread could potentially have several
CG root records if it encounters multiple nested teams constructs (but at the
moment the spec doesn't allow for nested teams, so the most one could have
currently is 2). The master of the teams masters gets the thread-limit clause
value stored to its local ICV structure, and the other teams masters copy it
from the master. The thread-limit is set from that ICV copy and restored to the
ICV copy when entering and leaving the teams construct.
This change also fixes a bug when the top-level teams construct team gets
reused, and OMP_DYNAMIC was true, which can cause the expected size of this team
to be smaller than what was actually allocated. The fix updates the size of the
team after its threads were reserved.
Patch by Terry Wilmarth
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56804
llvm-svn: 353747
to reflect the new license. These used slightly different spellings that
defeated my regular expressions.
We understand that people may be surprised that we're moving the header
entirely to discuss the new license. We checked this carefully with the
Foundation's lawyer and we believe this is the correct approach.
Essentially, all code in the project is now made available by the LLVM
project under our new license, so you will see that the license headers
include that license only. Some of our contributors have contributed
code under our old license, and accordingly, we have retained a copy of
our old license notice in the top-level files in each project and
repository.
llvm-svn: 351648
The omp-tools.h file is generated from the OpenMP spec to ensure that the interface
is implemented as specified.
The other changes are necessary to update the interface implementation to the
final version as published in 5.0.
The omp-tools.h header was previously called ompt.h, currently a copy under this name
is installed for legacy tools.
Patch partially perpared by @sconvent
Reviewers: AndreyChurbanov, hbae, Hahnfeld
Reviewed By: hbae
Tags: #openmp, #ompt
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55579
llvm-svn: 351197
Summary:
Additions mostly follow FreeBSD and NetBSD and are not intrusive.
There is similar patch for OpenBSD: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34280
The -lm was being omitted due to -Wl,--as-needed in cmake rule, similar patch is in freebsd-ports/devel/llvm-devel port.
Simple OpenMP programs compile and work as expected:
$ clang-devel ~/omp_hello.c -fopenmp -I/usr/local/llvm-devel/include
$ LD_LIBRARY_PATH=/usr/local/llvm-devel/lib OMP_NUM_THREADS=100 ./a.out
The assertion in LLVMgold.so when -fopenmp was used together with -flto in 20170524 snapshot is no longer triggered on current svn-trunk and works fine as in llvm-4.0 with our local patches.
Reviewers: #openmp, krytarowski
Reviewed By: krytarowski
Subscribers: dexonsmith, jfb, krytarowski, guansong, gregrodgers, emaste, mgorny, mehdi_amini
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35129
llvm-svn: 348725
This patch cleans up unused functions, variables, sign compare issues, and
addresses some -Warning flags which are now enabled including -Wcast-qual.
Not all the warning flags in LibompHandleFlags.cmake are enabled, but some
are with this patch.
Some __kmp_gtid_from_* macros in kmp.h are switched to static inline functions
which allows us to remove the awkward definition of KMP_DEBUG_ASSERT() and
KMP_ASSERT() macros which used the comma operator. This had to be done for the
innumerable -Wunused-value warnings related to KMP_DEBUG_ASSERT()
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49105
llvm-svn: 339393
GCC 8 produces false-positives with this:
In file included from <openmp>/src/runtime/src/kmp_os.h:950,
from <openmp>/src/runtime/src/kmp.h:78,
from <openmp>/src/runtime/src/kmp_environment.cpp:54:
<openmp>/src/runtime/src/kmp_environment.cpp: In function ‘char* __kmp_env_get(const char*)’:
<openmp>/src/runtime/src/kmp_safe_c_api.h:52:50: warning: ‘char* strncpy(char*, const char*, size_t)’ specified bound depends on the length of the source argument [-Wstringop-overflow=]
#define KMP_STRNCPY_S(dst, bsz, src, cnt) strncpy(dst, src, cnt)
~~~~~~~^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
<openmp>/src/runtime/src/kmp_environment.cpp:97:5: note: in expansion of macro ‘KMP_STRNCPY_S’
KMP_STRNCPY_S(result, len, value, len);
^~~~~~~~~~~~~
<openmp>/src/runtime/src/kmp_environment.cpp:92:28: note: length computed here
size_t len = KMP_STRLEN(value) + 1;
This is stupid because result is allocated with KMP_INTERNAL_MALLOC(len),
so the arguments are correct.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49904
llvm-svn: 338283
This patch enables OMPT by default if version 50 or later is built and the config says, that OMPT will be supported.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41508
llvm-svn: 321675
These are needed by both libraries, so we can do that in a
common namespace and unify configuration parameters.
Also make sure that the user isn't requesting libomptarget
if the library cannot be built on the system. Issue an error
in that case.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40081
llvm-svn: 319342
Traditionally, the library had a weak symbol for ompt_start_tool()
that served as fallback and disabled OMPT if called. Tools could
provide their own version and replace the default implementation
to register callbacks and lookup functions. This mechanism has
worked reasonably well on Linux systems where this interface was
initially developed.
On Darwin / Mac OS X the situation is a bit more complicated and
the weak symbol doesn't work out-of-the-box. In my tests, the
library with the tool needed to link against the OpenMP runtime
to make the process work. This would effectively mean that a tool
needed to choose a runtime library whereas one design goal of the
interface was to allow tools that are agnostic of the runtime.
The solution is to use dlsym() with the argument RTLD_DEFAULT so
that static implementations of ompt_start_tool() are found in the
main executable. This works because the linker on Mac OS X includes
all symbols of an executable in the global symbol table by default.
To use the same code path on Linux, the application would need to
be built with -Wl,--export-dynamic. To avoid this restriction, we
continue to use weak symbols on Linux systems as before.
Finally this patch extends the existing test to cover all possible
ways of initializing the tool as described by the standard. It
also fixes ompt_finalize() to not call omp_get_thread_num() when
the library is shut down which resulted in hangs on Darwin.
The changes have been tested on Linux to make sure that it passes
the current tests as well as the newly extended one.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39801
llvm-svn: 317980
Add build option LIBOMP_OMP_VERSION=50, 5.0 headers, and add the year/month
associated with OpenMP 5.0 in relevant source locations. Also, remove the
deprecated LIBOMP_OMP_VERSION=41 option.
Patch by Olga Malysheva
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30450
llvm-svn: 297083
This set of changes enables the affinity interface (Either the preexisting
native operating system or HWLOC) to be dynamically set at runtime
initialization. The point of this change is that we were seeing performance
degradations when using HWLOC. This allows the user to use the old affinity
mechanisms which on large machines (>64 cores) makes a large difference in
initialization time.
These changes mostly move affinity code under a small class hierarchy:
KMPAffinity
class Mask {}
KMPNativeAffinity : public KMPAffinity
class Mask : public KMPAffinity::Mask
KMPHwlocAffinity
class Mask : public KMPAffinity::Mask
Since all interface functions (for both affinity and the mask implementation)
are virtual, the implementation can be chosen at runtime initialization.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26356
llvm-svn: 286890
This patch allows ThreadSanitizer (Tsan) to verify OpenMP programs.
It means that no false positive will be reported by Tsan when
verifying an OpenMP programs.
This patch introduces annotations within the OpenMP runtime module to
provide information about thread synchronization to the Tsan runtime.
In order to enable the Tsan support when building the runtime, you must
enable the TSAN_SUPPORT option with the following environment variable:
-DLIBOMP_TSAN_SUPPORT=TRUE
The annotations will be enabled in the main shared library
(same mechanism of OMPT).
Patch by Simone Atzeni and Joachim Protze!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D13072
llvm-svn: 286115
UNICODE and _UNICODE defintions were added in the LLVM CMake build system.
While on Unices, the UNICODE/_UNICODE macros don't cause problems, on Windows
only ittnotify_static.c should be compiled using -DUNICODE. We are still
looking at a proper fix, but this change sets the build back to exactly what it
was doing before. Also, a comment and TODO were added in the src/CMakeLists.txt
file to help explain.
llvm-svn: 274052