Intel® C++ Compiler 16.0 User and Reference Guide
Instructs the compiler to ignore assumed vector dependencies.
#pragma ivdep |
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The ivdep pragma instructs the compiler to ignore assumed vector dependencies. To ensure correct code, the compiler treats an assumed dependence as a proven dependence, which prevents vectorization. This pragma overrides that decision. Use this pragma only when you know that the assumed loop dependencies are safe to ignore.
In addition to the ivdep pragma, the vector pragma can be used to override the efficiency heuristics of the vectorizer.
The proven dependencies that prevent vectorization are not ignored, only assumed dependencies are ignored.
Example |
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void ignore_vec_dep(int *a, int k, int c, int m) { #pragma ivdep for (int i = 0; i < m; i++) a[i] = a[i + k] * c; } |
The loop in this example will not vectorize without the ivdep pragma, since the value of k is not known; vectorization would be illegal if k<0.
The pragma binds only the for loop contained in current function. This includes a for loop contained in a sub-function called by the current function.
Example |
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#pragma ivdep for (i=1; i<n; i++) { e[ix[2][i]] = e[ix[2][i]]+1.0; e[ix[3][i]] = e[ix[3][i]]+2.0; } |
This loop requires the parallel option in addition to the ivdep pragma to indicate there is no loop-carried dependencies:
Example |
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#pragma ivdep for (j=0; j<n; j++) { a[b[j]] = a[b[j]] + 1; } |
This loop requires the parallel option in addition to the ivdep pragma to ensure there is no loop-carried dependency for the store into a().