Copyright © 2012 Intel Corporation. All Rights Reserved.
Invoke the Intel C compiler for IA32 applications.
You need binutils 2.16.91.0.7 or later with this compiler to support new instructions on Intel Core 2 processors
Invoke the Intel C++ compiler for IA32 and Intel 64 applications.
You need binutils 2.16.91.0.7 or later with this compiler to support new instructions on Intel Core 2 processors
Invoke the Intel Fortran compiler for IA32 and Intel 64 applications.
You need binutils 2.16.91.0.7 or later with this compiler to support new instructions on Intel Core 2 processors
specify source files are in free format. Same as -FR. -nofree indicates fixed format
-mcmodel=<size>
use a specific memory model to generate code and store data
small - Restricts code and data to the first 2GB of address space (DEFAULT)
medium - Restricts code to the first 2GB; it places no memory restriction on data
large - Places no memory restriction on code or data
-mcmodel=<size>
use a specific memory model to generate code and store data
small - Restricts code and data to the first 2GB of address space (DEFAULT)
medium - Restricts code to the first 2GB; it places no memory restriction on data
large - Places no memory restriction on code or data
enable language support for
c99 enable C99 support for C programs
c++11 enable C++11 experimental support for C++ programs
c++0x same as c++11
Enables O2 optimizations plus more aggressive optimizations,
such as prefetching, scalar replacement, and loop and memory
access transformations. Enables optimizations for maximum speed,
such as:
- Loop unrolling, including instruction scheduling
- Code replication to eliminate branches
- Padding the size of certain power-of-two arrays to allow
more efficient cache use.
On IA-32 and Intel EM64T processors, when O3 is used with options
-ax or -x (Linux) or with options /Qax or /Qx (Windows), the compiler
performs more aggressive data dependency analysis than for O2, which
may result in longer compilation times.
The O3 optimizations may not cause higher performance unless loop and
memory access transformations take place. The optimizations may slow
down code in some cases compared to O2 optimizations.
The O3 option is recommended for applications that have loops that heavily
use floating-point calculations and process large data sets. On IA-32
Windows platforms, -O3 sets the following:
/GF (/Qvc7 and above), /Gf (/Qvc6 and below), and /Ob2
Enable the compiler to generate multi-threaded code based on the OpenMP* directives(New option.)
May generate instructions for processors that support the specified Intel® processor or microarchitecture code name.
Keywords knl and silvermont are only available on Linux* systems.
Keyword icelake is deprecated and may be removed in a future release.
core-avx2Generates code for processors that support Intel® Advanced Vector Extensions 2 (Intel® AVX2), Intel® AVX, SSE4.2, SSE4.1, SSE3, SSE2, SSE, and SSSE3 instructions.
core-avx-iGenerates code for processors that support Float-16 conversion instructions and the RDRND instruction, Intel® Advanced Vector Extensions (Intel® AVX), Intel® SSE4.2, SSE4.1, SSE3, SSE2, SSE, and SSSE3 instructions.
corei7-avxGenerates code for processors that support Intel® Advanced Vector Extensions (Intel® AVX), Intel® SSE4.2, SSE4.1, SSE3, SSE2, SSE, and SSSE3 instructions.
corei7Generates code for processors that support Intel® SSE4 Efficient Accelerated String and Text Processing instructions. May also generate code for Intel® SSE4 Vectorizing Compiler and Media Accelerator, Intel® SSE3, SSE2, SSE, and SSSE3 instructions.
atomGenerates code for processors that support MOVBE instructions, depending on the setting of option -minstruction (Linux* and macOS*) or /Qinstruction (Windows*). May also generate code for SSSE3 instructions and Intel® SSE3, SSE2, and SSE instructions.
core2Generates code for the Intel® Core™2 processor family.
pentim4mGenerates for Intel® Pentium® 4 processors with MMX technology.
pentium-m/pentium4/pentium3/pentiumGenerates code for Intel® Pentium® processors. Value pentium3 is only available on Linux* systems.
-prec-div improves precision of floating-point divides. It has a slight impact on speed. -no-prec-div disables this option and enables optimizations that give slightly less precise results than full IEEE division.
Specifies whether streaming stores are generated:
always - enables generation of streaming stores under the assumption that the application is memory bound
auto - compiler decides when streaming stores are used (DEFAULT)
never - disables generation of streaming stores
Determines whethre the compiler assumes that there are no "large" integers being used or being computed inside loops.
Determines whether the compiler uses more aggressive unrolling for certain loops. This option determines whether the compiler uses more aggressive unrolling for certain loops. The positive form of the option may improve performance. This option enables aggressive, complete unrolling for loops with small constant trip counts.
Enable/disable(DEFAULT) use of ANSI aliasing rules in optimizations; user asserts that the program adheres to these rules.
Enables O2 optimizations plus more aggressive optimizations,
such as prefetching, scalar replacement, and loop and memory
access transformations. Enables optimizations for maximum speed,
such as:
- Loop unrolling, including instruction scheduling
- Code replication to eliminate branches
- Padding the size of certain power-of-two arrays to allow
more efficient cache use.
On IA-32 and Intel EM64T processors, when O3 is used with options
-ax or -x (Linux) or with options /Qax or /Qx (Windows), the compiler
performs more aggressive data dependency analysis than for O2, which
may result in longer compilation times.
The O3 optimizations may not cause higher performance unless loop and
memory access transformations take place. The optimizations may slow
down code in some cases compared to O2 optimizations.
The O3 option is recommended for applications that have loops that heavily
use floating-point calculations and process large data sets. On IA-32
Windows platforms, -O3 sets the following:
/GF (/Qvc7 and above), /Gf (/Qvc6 and below), and /Ob2
Enable the compiler to generate multi-threaded code based on the OpenMP* directives(New option.)
May generate instructions for processors that support the specified Intel® processor or microarchitecture code name.
Keywords knl and silvermont are only available on Linux* systems.
Keyword icelake is deprecated and may be removed in a future release.
core-avx2Generates code for processors that support Intel® Advanced Vector Extensions 2 (Intel® AVX2), Intel® AVX, SSE4.2, SSE4.1, SSE3, SSE2, SSE, and SSSE3 instructions.
core-avx-iGenerates code for processors that support Float-16 conversion instructions and the RDRND instruction, Intel® Advanced Vector Extensions (Intel® AVX), Intel® SSE4.2, SSE4.1, SSE3, SSE2, SSE, and SSSE3 instructions.
corei7-avxGenerates code for processors that support Intel® Advanced Vector Extensions (Intel® AVX), Intel® SSE4.2, SSE4.1, SSE3, SSE2, SSE, and SSSE3 instructions.
corei7Generates code for processors that support Intel® SSE4 Efficient Accelerated String and Text Processing instructions. May also generate code for Intel® SSE4 Vectorizing Compiler and Media Accelerator, Intel® SSE3, SSE2, SSE, and SSSE3 instructions.
atomGenerates code for processors that support MOVBE instructions, depending on the setting of option -minstruction (Linux* and macOS*) or /Qinstruction (Windows*). May also generate code for SSSE3 instructions and Intel® SSE3, SSE2, and SSE instructions.
core2Generates code for the Intel® Core™2 processor family.
pentim4mGenerates for Intel® Pentium® 4 processors with MMX technology.
pentium-m/pentium4/pentium3/pentiumGenerates code for Intel® Pentium® processors. Value pentium3 is only available on Linux* systems.
-prec-div improves precision of floating-point divides. It has a slight impact on speed. -no-prec-div disables this option and enables optimizations that give slightly less precise results than full IEEE division.
Specifies whether streaming stores are generated:
always - enables generation of streaming stores under the assumption that the application is memory bound
auto - compiler decides when streaming stores are used (DEFAULT)
never - disables generation of streaming stores
Determines whethre the compiler assumes that there are no "large" integers being used or being computed inside loops.
Determines whether the compiler uses more aggressive unrolling for certain loops. This option determines whether the compiler uses more aggressive unrolling for certain loops. The positive form of the option may improve performance. This option enables aggressive, complete unrolling for loops with small constant trip counts.
Enable/disable(DEFAULT) use of ANSI aliasing rules in optimizations; user asserts that the program adheres to these rules.
Enables O2 optimizations plus more aggressive optimizations,
such as prefetching, scalar replacement, and loop and memory
access transformations. Enables optimizations for maximum speed,
such as:
- Loop unrolling, including instruction scheduling
- Code replication to eliminate branches
- Padding the size of certain power-of-two arrays to allow
more efficient cache use.
On IA-32 and Intel EM64T processors, when O3 is used with options
-ax or -x (Linux) or with options /Qax or /Qx (Windows), the compiler
performs more aggressive data dependency analysis than for O2, which
may result in longer compilation times.
The O3 optimizations may not cause higher performance unless loop and
memory access transformations take place. The optimizations may slow
down code in some cases compared to O2 optimizations.
The O3 option is recommended for applications that have loops that heavily
use floating-point calculations and process large data sets. On IA-32
Windows platforms, -O3 sets the following:
/GF (/Qvc7 and above), /Gf (/Qvc6 and below), and /Ob2
Enable the compiler to generate multi-threaded code based on the OpenMP* directives(New option.)
May generate instructions for processors that support the specified Intel® processor or microarchitecture code name.
Keywords knl and silvermont are only available on Linux* systems.
Keyword icelake is deprecated and may be removed in a future release.
core-avx2Generates code for processors that support Intel® Advanced Vector Extensions 2 (Intel® AVX2), Intel® AVX, SSE4.2, SSE4.1, SSE3, SSE2, SSE, and SSSE3 instructions.
core-avx-iGenerates code for processors that support Float-16 conversion instructions and the RDRND instruction, Intel® Advanced Vector Extensions (Intel® AVX), Intel® SSE4.2, SSE4.1, SSE3, SSE2, SSE, and SSSE3 instructions.
corei7-avxGenerates code for processors that support Intel® Advanced Vector Extensions (Intel® AVX), Intel® SSE4.2, SSE4.1, SSE3, SSE2, SSE, and SSSE3 instructions.
corei7Generates code for processors that support Intel® SSE4 Efficient Accelerated String and Text Processing instructions. May also generate code for Intel® SSE4 Vectorizing Compiler and Media Accelerator, Intel® SSE3, SSE2, SSE, and SSSE3 instructions.
atomGenerates code for processors that support MOVBE instructions, depending on the setting of option -minstruction (Linux* and macOS*) or /Qinstruction (Windows*). May also generate code for SSSE3 instructions and Intel® SSE3, SSE2, and SSE instructions.
core2Generates code for the Intel® Core™2 processor family.
pentim4mGenerates for Intel® Pentium® 4 processors with MMX technology.
pentium-m/pentium4/pentium3/pentiumGenerates code for Intel® Pentium® processors. Value pentium3 is only available on Linux* systems.
-prec-div improves precision of floating-point divides. It has a slight impact on speed. -no-prec-div disables this option and enables optimizations that give slightly less precise results than full IEEE division.
Specifies whether streaming stores are generated:
always - enables generation of streaming stores under the assumption that the application is memory bound
auto - compiler decides when streaming stores are used (DEFAULT)
never - disables generation of streaming stores
Determines whethre the compiler assumes that there are no "large" integers being used or being computed inside loops.
Determines whether the compiler uses more aggressive unrolling for certain loops. This option determines whether the compiler uses more aggressive unrolling for certain loops. The positive form of the option may improve performance. This option enables aggressive, complete unrolling for loops with small constant trip counts.
specify how data items are aligned
keywords: all (same as -align), none (same as -noalign),
[no]commons, [no]dcommons,
[no]qcommons, [no]zcommons,
rec1byte, rec2byte, rec4byte,
rec8byte, rec16byte, rec32byte,
array8byte, array16byte, array32byte,
array64byte, array128byte, array256byte,
[no]records, [no]sequence
This section contains descriptions of flags that were included implicitly by other flags, but which do not have a permanent home at SPEC.
This option enables read only string-pooling optimization.
This option enables read/write string-pooling optimization.
Specifies the level of inline function expansion.
Ob0 - Disables inlining of user-defined functions. Note that statement functions are always inlined.
Ob1 - Enables inlining when an inline keyword or an inline attribute is specified. Also enables inlining according to the C++ language.
Ob2 - Enables inlining of any function at the compiler's discretion.
Enables optimizations for speed. This is the generally recommended
optimization level. This option also enables:
- Inlining of intrinsics
- Intra-file interprocedural optimizations, which include:
- inlining
- constant propagation
- forward substitution
- routine attribute propagation
- variable address-taken analysis
- dead static function elimination
- removal of unreferenced variables
- The following capabilities for performance gain:
- constant propagation
- copy propagation
- dead-code elimination
- global register allocation
- global instruction scheduling and control speculation
- loop unrolling
- optimized code selection
- partial redundancy elimination
- strength reduction/induction variable simplification
- variable renaming
- exception handling optimizations
- tail recursions
- peephole optimizations
- structure assignment lowering and optimizations
- dead store elimination
On IA-32 Windows platforms, -O2 sets the following:
/Og, /Oi-, /Os, /Oy, /Ob2, /GF (/Qvc7 and above), /Gf (/Qvc6 and below), /Gs, and /Gy.
Disables inline expansion of all intrinsic functions.
This option disables stack-checking for routines with 4096 bytes of local variables and compiler temporaries.
Allows use of EBP as a general-purpose register in optimizations.
This option tells the compiler to separate functions into COMDATs for the linker.
This option enables most speed optimizations, but disables some that increase code size for a small speed benefit.
This option enables global optimizations.
Enables optimizations for speed and disables some optimizations that
increase code size and affect speed.
To limit code size, this option:
- Enables global optimization; this includes data-flow analysis,code motion, strength reduction and test replacement, split-lifetime analysis, and instruction scheduling.
- Disables intrinsic recognition and intrinsics inlining.
The O1 option may improve performance for applications with very large code size, many branches, and execution time not dominated by code within loops.
On IA-32 Windows platforms, -O1 sets the following:
/Qunroll0, /Oi-, /Op-, /Oy, /Gy, /Os, /GF (/Qvc7 and above), /Gf (/Qvc6 and below), /Ob2, and /Og
Tells the compiler the maximum number of times to unroll loops.
Disables conformance to the ANSI C and IEEE 754 standards for floating-point arithmetic.
KMP_AFFINITY
The KMP_AFFINITY environment variable uses the following general syntax:
Syntax |
---|
KMP_AFFINITY=[<modifier>,...]<type>[,<permute>][,<offset>] |
For example, to list a machine topology map, specify KMP_AFFINITY=verbose,none to use a modifier of verbose and a type of none.
The following table describes the supported specific arguments.
Argument |
Default |
Description |
---|---|---|
noverbose respect granularity=core |
Optional. String consisting of keyword and specifier.
|
|
none |
Required string. Indicates the thread affinity to use.
The logical and physical types are deprecated but supported for backward compatibility. |
|
0 |
Optional. Positive integer value. Not valid with type values of explicit, none, or disabled. | |
0 |
Optional. Positive integer value. Not valid with type values of explicit, none, or disabled. |
Type is the only required argument.
Does not bind OpenMP threads to particular thread contexts; however, if the operating system supports affinity, the compiler still uses the OpenMP thread affinity interface to determine machine topology. Specify KMP_AFFINITY=verbose,none to list a machine topology map.
Specifying compact assigns the OpenMP thread <n>+1 to a free thread context as close as possible to the thread context where the <n> OpenMP thread was placed. For example, in a topology map, the nearer a node is to the root, the more significance the node has when sorting the threads.
Specifying disabled completely disables the thread affinity interfaces. This forces the OpenMP run-time library to behave as if the affinity interface was not supported by the operating system. This includes the low-level API interfaces such as kmp_set_affinity and kmp_get_affinity, which have no effect and will return a nonzero error code.
Specifying explicit assigns OpenMP threads to a list of OS proc IDs that have been explicitly specified by using the proclist= modifier, which is required for this affinity type.
Specifying scatter distributes the threads as evenly as possible across the entire system. scatter is the opposite of compact; so the leaves of the node are most significant when sorting through the machine topology map.
Types logical and physical are deprecated and may become unsupported in a future release. Both are supported for backward compatibility.
For logical and physical affinity types, a single trailing integer is interpreted as an offset specifier instead of a permute specifier. In contrast, with compact and scatter types, a single trailing integer is interpreted as a permute specifier.
Specifying logical assigns OpenMP threads to consecutive logical processors, which are also called hardware thread contexts. The type is equivalent to compact, except that the permute specifier is not allowed. Thus, KMP_AFFINITY=logical,n is equivalent to KMP_AFFINITY=compact,0,n (this equivalence is true regardless of the whether or not a granularity=fine modifier is present).
For both compact and scatter, permute and offset are allowed; however, if you specify only one integer, the compiler interprets the value as a permute specifier. Both permute and offset default to 0.
The permute specifier controls which levels are most significant when sorting the machine topology map. A value for permute forces the mappings to make the specified number of most significant levels of the sort the least significant, and it inverts the order of significance. The root node of the tree is not considered a separate level for the sort operations.
The offset specifier indicates the starting position for thread assignment.
Modifiers are optional arguments that precede type. If you do not specify a modifier, the noverbose, respect, and granularity=core modifiers are used automatically.
Modifiers are interpreted in order from left to right, and can negate each other. For example, specifying KMP_AFFINITY=verbose,noverbose,scatter is therefore equivalent to setting KMP_AFFINITY=noverbose,scatter, or just KMP_AFFINITY=scatter.
Does not print verbose messages.
Prints messages concerning the supported affinity. The messages include information about the number of packages, number of cores in each package, number of thread contexts for each core, and OpenMP thread bindings to physical thread contexts.
Information about binding OpenMP threads to physical thread contexts is indirectly shown in the form of the mappings between hardware thread contexts and the operating system (OS) processor (proc) IDs. The affinity mask for each OpenMP thread is printed as a set of OS processor IDs.
KMP_LIBRARY
The serial mode forces parallel applications to run on a single processor.
KMP_LIBRARY = { throughput | turnaround | serial }, Selects the OpenMP run-time library execution mode. The options for the variable value are throughput, turnaround, and serial.The compiler with OpenMP enables you to run an application under different execution modes that can be specified at run time. The libraries support the serial, turnaround, and throughput modes.
In a dedicated (batch or single user) parallel environment where all processors are exclusively allocated to the program for its entire run, it is most important to effectively utilize all of the processors all of the time. The turnaround mode is designed to keep active all of the processors involved in the parallel computation in order to minimize the execution time of a single job. In this mode, the worker threads actively wait for more parallel work, without yielding to other threads.
Avoid over-allocating system resources. This occurs if either too many threads have been specified, or if too few processors are available at run time. If system resources are over-allocated, this mode will cause poor performance. The throughput mode should be used instead if this occurs.
In a multi-user environment where the load on the parallel machine is not constant or where the job stream is not predictable, it may be better to design and tune for throughput. This minimizes the total time to run multiple jobs simultaneously. In this mode, the worker threads will yield to other threads while waiting for more parallel work.
The throughput mode is designed to make the program aware of its environment (that is, the system load) and to adjust its resource usage to produce efficient execution in a dynamic environment. This mode is the default.
KMP_BLOCKTIME
KMP_BLOCKTIME = value. Sets the time, in milliseconds, that a thread should wait, after completing the execution of a parallel region, before sleeping.Use the optional character suffixes: s (seconds), m (minutes), h (hours), or d (days) to specify the units.Specify infinite for an unlimited wait time.
KMP_STACKSIZE
KMP_STACKSIZE = value. Sets the number of bytes to allocate for each OpenMP* thread to use as the private stack for the thread. Recommended size is 16m. Use the optional suffixes: b (bytes), k (kilobytes), m (megabytes), g (gigabytes), or t (terabytes) to specify the units. This variable does not affect the native operating system threads created by the user program nor the thread executing the sequential part of an OpenMP* program or parallel programs created using -parallel.
OMP_NUM_THREADS
Sets the maximum number of threads to use for OpenMP* parallel regions if no other value is specified in the application. This environment variable applies to both -openmp and -parallel. Example syntax on a Linux system with 8 cores: export OMP_NUM_THREADS=8
OMP_DYNAMIC
OMP_DYNAMIC={ 1 | 0 } Enables (1, true) or disables (0,false) the dynamic adjustment of the number of threads.
OMP_SCHEDULE
OMP_SCHEDULE={ type,[chunk size]} Controls the scheduling of the for-loop work-sharing construct. type can be either of static,dynamic,guided,runtime chunk size should be positive integer
OMP_NESTED
OMP_NESTED={ 1 | 0 } Enables creation of new teams in case of nested parallel regions (1,true) or serializes (0,false) all nested parallel regions. Default is 0.
Flag description origin markings:
For questions about the meanings of these flags, please contact the tester.
For other inquiries, please contact webmaster@spec.org
Copyright 2012-2019 Standard Performance Evaluation Corporation
Tested with SPEC OMP2012 v1.0.
Report generated on Wed Aug 7 18:57:44 2019 by SPEC OMP2012 flags formatter v538.