Tasking and Data Scoping (OpenMP)
OpenMP in Small Bites/Tasking and Data Scoping /
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Revision as of 16:40, 4 December 2020 by Marc-andre-hermanns-bc32@rwth-aachen.de (talk | contribs) (Tweak page sporting and title)
| Tutorial | |
|---|---|
| Title: | OpenMP in Small Bites |
| Provider: | HPC.NRW
|
| Contact: | tutorials@hpc.nrw |
| Type: | Multi-part video |
| Topic Area: | Programming Paradigms |
| License: | CC-BY-SA |
| Syllabus
| |
| 1. Overview | |
| 2. Worksharing | |
| 3. Data Scoping | |
| 4. False Sharing | |
| 5. Tasking | |
| 6. Tasking and Data Scoping | |
| 7. Tasking and Synchronization | |
| 8. Loops and Tasks | |
| 9. Tasking Example: Sudoku Solver | |
| 10. Task Scheduling | |
| 11. Non-Uniform Memory Access | |
This video deepens the knowledge of OpenMP Tasking and Data Scoping by using an example which includes typical scenarios. Furthermore, aspects of the lifetime of a variable are discussed.
Video
Quiz
1. Consider the following code snippet
int x = 42;
#pragma omp parallel private(x)
{
#pragma omp task { x = 3; }}
printf("x=%d\n", x);
x in the task region and what is printed at the end?
2. Consider the following code snippet
int x = 42;
int y = 0;
#pragma omp parallel num_threads(4)
{
#pragma omp task { #pragma omp critical { y += x; } }}
printf("y=%d\n", y);
x in the task region and what is printed out at the end?
3. Consider the following code snippet
int x = 42;
int y = 0;
#pragma omp parallel num_threads(4)
{
#pragma omp single { #pragma omp task { #pragma omp critical { y += x; } } }}
printf("y=%d\n", y);
x in the task region and what is printed out at the end?