Intel® C++ Compiler 16.0 User and Reference Guide
Lets you specify the mode for offloading or tell the compiler to ignore language constructs for offloading. This option only applies to Intel® MIC Architecture. Options /Qoffload- and /Qoffload:none are also available for Intel® Graphics Technology. Option -q[no-]offload is the replacement option for -[no-]offload, which is deprecated.
Keywords mandatory and optional: Only available on Intel® 64 architecture targeting Intel® MIC Architecture
/Qoffload- and /Qoffload:none: Only available on Intel® 64 architecture targeting Intel® MIC Architecture, on IA-32 architecture targeting Intel® Graphics Technology, or on Intel® 64 architecture targeting Intel® Graphics Technology
Linux: | -qoffload[=keyword] -qno-offload |
OS X: | None |
Windows: | /Qoffload[:keyword] /Qoffload- |
keyword |
Specifies the mode for offloading or it disables offloading. Possible values are:
|
mandatory |
The compiler recognizes language constructs for offloading if they are specified. If option -qoffload (Linux*) or /Qoffload (Windows*) is specified with no keyword, the default is mandatory. |
This option lets you specify the mode for offloading or tell the compiler to ignore language constructs for offloading.
Option -q[no-]offload is the replacement option for -[no-]offload, which is deprecated.
On Intel® Graphics Technology, the only options you can specify are /Qoffload- or /Qoffload:none, which tells the compiler to ignore language constructs for offloading. By default, offloading is optional for Intel® Graphics Technology.
If no -qoffload (Linux*) or /Qoffload (Windows*) option appears on the command line, then offload pragmas are processed and:
The mandatory or optional clauses are obeyed if present
If no mandatory or optional clause is present, the offload is mandatory
If any of the following appears on the command line, then offload pragmas are ignored:
Linux* OS: -qoffload=none or -qno-offload
Windows* OS: /offload:none or /Qoffload-
However, OpenMP* pragmas for coprocessor control (for example, omp target) are recognized if the [q or Q]openmp option is specified, regardless of whether or not offload pragmas are recognized or ignored.
If keyword mandatory or optional appears for [Q]offload, then offload pragmas are processed and:
The mandatory or optional clauses are obeyed, regardless of the -qoffload (Linux*) or /Qoffload (Windows*) keyword
If no mandatory or optional clause is present, then the -qoffload (Linux*) or /Qoffload (Windows*) keyword is obeyed
If the status clause is specified for an offload pragma, it affects run-time behavior.
Visual Studio: Code Generation [Intel C++] > Offload Constructs
Eclipse: Language > Generate Only CPU code (-qno-offload)
Xcode: None
None