The linear clause declares one or more list items to be private to a SIMD lane and to have a linear relationship with respect to the iteration space of a loop.
'linear' '(' <linear-list> [ ':' <linear-step> ] ')'
When a linear-step expression is specified in a linear clause it must be
either a constant integer expression or an integer-typed parameter that is specified in a uniform clause on the directive.
The special this pointer can be used as if was one of the arguments to the function in any of the linear, aligned, or uniform clauses.
llvm-svn: 266056
The aligned clause declares that the object to which each list item points is aligned to the number of bytes expressed in the optional parameter of the aligned clause.
'aligned' '(' <argument-list> [ ':' <alignment> ] ')'
The optional parameter of the aligned clause, alignment, must be a constant positive integer expression. If no optional parameter is specified, implementation-defined default alignments for SIMD instructions on the target platforms are assumed.
The special this pointer can be used as if was one of the arguments to the function in any of the linear, aligned, or uniform clauses.
llvm-svn: 266052
OpenMP 4.0 defines clause 'uniform' in 'declare simd' directive:
'uniform' '(' <argument-list> ')'
The uniform clause declares one or more arguments to have an invariant value for all concurrent invocations of the function in the execution of a single SIMD loop.
The special this pointer can be used as if was one of the arguments to the function in any of the linear, aligned, or uniform clauses.
llvm-svn: 266041
construct.
OpenMP 4.0 defines '#pragma omp declare simd' construct that may have
associated 'simdlen' clause with constant positive expression as an
argument:
simdlen(<const_expr>)
Patch adds parsin and semantic analysis for simdlen clause.
llvm-svn: 265668
Initial parsing/sema/serialization/deserialization support for '#pragma
omp declare simd' directive.
The 'declare simd' construct can be applied to a function to enable the
creation of one or more versions that can process multiple arguments
using SIMD instructions from a single invocation from a SIMD loop.
If the function has any declarations, then the declare simd construct
for any declaration that has one must be equivalent to the one specified
for the definition. Otherwise, the result is unspecified.
This pragma can be applied many times to the same declaration.
Internally this pragma is represented as an attribute. But we need special processing for this pragma because it must be used before function declaration, this directive is applied to.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10599
llvm-svn: 264853