Difference between revisions of "Par"

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Line 15: Line 15:
  
 
  #include <io>
 
  #include <io>
  var p;
+
  function void main() {
par p from 0 to 9 {
+
    var p;
    print("Hello world\n");
+
    par p from 0 to 9 {
 +
      print("Hello world\n");
 +
    };
 
  };
 
  };
  

Revision as of 14:07, 15 April 2013

Syntax

par p from a to b
{
par body
};

Semantics

The parallel equivalent of the for loop, each iteration will execute concurrently on different processes. This allows the programmer to write code MPMD style, with the limitation that bounds a and b must be known during compilation. Variables declared to be multiply allocated within parallel scope, such as a par block, will automatically be allocated just to the subgroup of processes within that scope.

Note: There is no guarantee as to the ranks of the processes involved within a par block and such as block will be distributed over the ranks which are most appropriate at that time.
Note: This is a blocking construct and regardless of arguments involves all processes who will either ignore it or execute the block.

Example

#include <io>
function void main() {
   var p;
   par p from 0 to 9 {
      print("Hello world\n");
   };
};

The code fragment will involve 10 processes (0 to 9 inclusive) and each will display a Hello world message.

Since: Version 0.41b