153 lines
7.4 KiB
C++
153 lines
7.4 KiB
C++
/*
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Copyright 2005-2016 Intel Corporation. All Rights Reserved.
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This file is part of Threading Building Blocks. Threading Building Blocks is free software;
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you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License
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version 2 as published by the Free Software Foundation. Threading Building Blocks is
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distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the
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implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
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See the GNU General Public License for more details. You should have received a copy of
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the GNU General Public License along with Threading Building Blocks; if not, write to the
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Free Software Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin St, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301 USA
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As a special exception, you may use this file as part of a free software library without
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restriction. Specifically, if other files instantiate templates or use macros or inline
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functions from this file, or you compile this file and link it with other files to produce
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an executable, this file does not by itself cause the resulting executable to be covered
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by the GNU General Public License. This exception does not however invalidate any other
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reasons why the executable file might be covered by the GNU General Public License.
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*/
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#ifndef __TBB_task_scheduler_init_H
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#define __TBB_task_scheduler_init_H
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#include "tbb_stddef.h"
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#include "limits.h"
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namespace tbb {
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typedef std::size_t stack_size_type;
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//! @cond INTERNAL
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namespace internal {
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//! Internal to library. Should not be used by clients.
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/** @ingroup task_scheduling */
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class scheduler;
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} // namespace internal
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//! @endcond
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//! Class delimiting the scope of task scheduler activity.
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/** A thread can construct a task_scheduler_init object and keep it alive
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while it uses TBB's tasking subsystem (including parallel algorithms).
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This class allows to customize properties of the TBB task pool to some extent.
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For example it can limit concurrency level of parallel work initiated by the
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given thread. It also can be used to specify stack size of the TBB worker threads,
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though this setting is not effective if the thread pool has already been created.
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If a parallel construct is used without task_scheduler_init object previously
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created, the scheduler will be initialized automatically with default settings,
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and will persist until this thread exits. Default concurrency level is defined
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as described in task_scheduler_init::initialize().
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@ingroup task_scheduling */
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class task_scheduler_init: internal::no_copy {
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enum ExceptionPropagationMode {
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propagation_mode_exact = 1u,
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propagation_mode_captured = 2u,
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propagation_mode_mask = propagation_mode_exact | propagation_mode_captured
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};
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#if __TBB_SUPPORTS_WORKERS_WAITING_IN_TERMINATE
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enum {
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wait_workers_in_terminate_flag = 128u
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};
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#endif
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/** NULL if not currently initialized. */
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internal::scheduler* my_scheduler;
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public:
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//! Typedef for number of threads that is automatic.
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static const int automatic = -1;
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//! Argument to initialize() or constructor that causes initialization to be deferred.
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static const int deferred = -2;
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//! Ensure that scheduler exists for this thread
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/** A value of -1 lets TBB decide on the number of threads, which is usually
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maximal hardware concurrency for this process, that is the number of logical
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CPUs on the machine (possibly limited by the processor affinity mask of this
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process (Windows) or of this thread (Linux, FreeBSD). It is preferable option
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for production code because it helps to avoid nasty surprises when several
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TBB based components run side-by-side or in a nested fashion inside the same
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process.
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The number_of_threads is ignored if any other task_scheduler_inits
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currently exist. A thread may construct multiple task_scheduler_inits.
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Doing so does no harm because the underlying scheduler is reference counted. */
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void __TBB_EXPORTED_METHOD initialize( int number_of_threads=automatic );
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//! The overloaded method with stack size parameter
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/** Overloading is necessary to preserve ABI compatibility */
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void __TBB_EXPORTED_METHOD initialize( int number_of_threads, stack_size_type thread_stack_size );
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//! Inverse of method initialize.
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void __TBB_EXPORTED_METHOD terminate();
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//! Shorthand for default constructor followed by call to initialize(number_of_threads).
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#if __TBB_SUPPORTS_WORKERS_WAITING_IN_TERMINATE
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task_scheduler_init( int number_of_threads=automatic, stack_size_type thread_stack_size=0, bool wait_workers_in_terminate = false ) : my_scheduler(NULL)
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#else
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task_scheduler_init( int number_of_threads=automatic, stack_size_type thread_stack_size=0 ) : my_scheduler(NULL)
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#endif
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{
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// Two lowest order bits of the stack size argument may be taken to communicate
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// default exception propagation mode of the client to be used when the
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// client manually creates tasks in the master thread and does not use
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// explicit task group context object. This is necessary because newer
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// TBB binaries with exact propagation enabled by default may be used
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// by older clients that expect tbb::captured_exception wrapper.
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// All zeros mean old client - no preference.
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__TBB_ASSERT( !(thread_stack_size & propagation_mode_mask), "Requested stack size is not aligned" );
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#if TBB_USE_EXCEPTIONS
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thread_stack_size |= TBB_USE_CAPTURED_EXCEPTION ? propagation_mode_captured : propagation_mode_exact;
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#endif /* TBB_USE_EXCEPTIONS */
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#if __TBB_SUPPORTS_WORKERS_WAITING_IN_TERMINATE
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if (wait_workers_in_terminate)
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my_scheduler = (internal::scheduler*)wait_workers_in_terminate_flag;
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#endif
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initialize( number_of_threads, thread_stack_size );
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}
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//! Destroy scheduler for this thread if thread has no other live task_scheduler_inits.
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~task_scheduler_init() {
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if( my_scheduler )
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terminate();
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internal::poison_pointer( my_scheduler );
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}
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//! Returns the number of threads TBB scheduler would create if initialized by default.
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/** Result returned by this method does not depend on whether the scheduler
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has already been initialized.
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Because tbb 2.0 does not support blocking tasks yet, you may use this method
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to boost the number of threads in the tbb's internal pool, if your tasks are
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doing I/O operations. The optimal number of additional threads depends on how
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much time your tasks spend in the blocked state.
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Before TBB 3.0 U4 this method returned the number of logical CPU in the
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system. Currently on Windows, Linux and FreeBSD it returns the number of
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logical CPUs available to the current process in accordance with its affinity
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mask.
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NOTE: The return value of this method never changes after its first invocation.
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This means that changes in the process affinity mask that took place after
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this method was first invoked will not affect the number of worker threads
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in the TBB worker threads pool. */
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static int __TBB_EXPORTED_FUNC default_num_threads ();
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//! Returns true if scheduler is active (initialized); false otherwise
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bool is_active() const { return my_scheduler != NULL; }
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};
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} // namespace tbb
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#endif /* __TBB_task_scheduler_init_H */
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