OpenMP introduces additional semantics that are not present in the underlying serial language. Consider the OpenMP sections as an obvious example. In a serial program sections are simply consecutive blocks of code that execute in a strongly predetermined way: from the first one to the last one. With OpenMP all sections could execute in parallel if there are enough threads to handle them. This could lead to causalities that are simply not possible in the sequential case - for example a later code block cannot influence the execution of a previous one when the program runs sequentially.
Highly artificial example:
int flag = 0;
#pragma omp parallel sections
{
#pragma omp section
{
while (!flag) {}
}
#pragma omp section
{
flag = 1;
}
}
This code executes perfectly well with 2 or more OpenMP threads and falls into an endless loop when compiled as serial or if run with OMP_NUM_THREADS
set to 1. If both sections do not run in parallel, the while
loop never ends since setting flag
to true happens after the loop in the sequential code.