5

Note: this is NOT a duplicate of this quesiton.

Given a complex software parallelized with TBB, how do I completely switch off threading? I'm aware of the task_scheduler_init:

int nthreads = tbb::task_scheduler_init::default_num_threads();
const char* cnthreads = getenv("TBB_NUM_THREADS");
if (cnthreads) nthreads = std::max(1, atoi(cnthreads));

tbb::task_arena arena(nthreads, 1);
tbb::task_scheduler_init init(nthreads);

However, this solution (related to this) does not switch off threading. TBB still creates lots of threads, nthreads just makes some of them not being used. Moreover, if one has nthreads = 1, TBB actually creates 1 extra thread - totaling 2 threads together with master thread.

Yes, there are certain situations when you'd want to really switch off threading completely, yet keeping the TBB code alive. My current solution is a sloppy wrapper around tbb:

namespace hddm {
bool enableTBB = true;
class task_group {
    unique_ptr<tbb::task_group> tbb;
public :
    task_group() {
        if (enableTBB)
            tbb.reset(new tbb::task_group());
    }

    template<typename F>
    void run(const F& f) {
        if (tbb)
            tbb->run(f);
        else
            f();
    }

    void wait() {
        if (tbb)
            tbb->wait();
    }
};

class task_arena {
    unique_ptr<tbb::task_arena> tbb;
public :
    task_arena(int nthreads, int dedicated) {
        if (enableTBB)
            tbb.reset(new tbb::task_arena(nthreads, dedicated));
    }

    template<typename F>
    void execute(const F& f) {
        if (tbb)
            tbb->execute(f);
    }
};

class task_scheduler_init {
    unique_ptr<tbb::task_scheduler_init> tbb;
public :
    task_scheduler_init(int nthreads) {
        if (enableTBB)
            tbb.reset(new tbb::task_scheduler_init(nthreads));
    }
};

class parallel_for {
public :
    template<typename F>
    parallel_for(const tbb::blocked_range<int>& r, const F& f) {
        if (enableTBB)
            tbb::parallel_for(r, f);
        else
            f(r);
    }
};

} // namespace hddm

I hope TBB/Intel experts can recommend a better solution, thank you!

2 Answers 2

4

Using tbb::task_scheduler_init has been deprecated since Intel TBB 4.3 Update 5 (see Documentation and this forum thread). You can now modify this behavior using the tbb::global_control class on a global scope.

2
  • 1
    unfortunately Intel's resources are full of nonsense. How come tbb::global_control example itself uses "deprecated" task_scheduler_init? The old forum thread you refer to actually was the source of my original sample code. But as stated in the question, it creates threads nonetheless. Jan 25, 2020 at 17:42
  • 1
    Please see a complete test case here: github.com/dmikushin/serial_tbb Note when tbb::global_control is uncommented, it looks like indeed a single thread is used, but is assigned to "master" and is doing nothing. As a result, there are 0 worker threads, and the application just deadlocks. Jan 25, 2020 at 18:02
4

For posterity,

#include <tbb/global_control.h>

// somewhere
tbb::global_control c(tbb::global_control::max_allowed_parallelism, 1);

https://spec.oneapi.com/versions/0.5.0/oneTBB/task_scheduler/tbb_global_control.html

2
  • 1
    Do you do this at global scope? And did you test it? The querent's comment on another answer says they tried something like that (github.com/dmikushin/serial_tbb/blob/…), but got 1 master thread an 0 workers, resulting in deadlock. May 28, 2021 at 19:25
  • 1
    From the docs : "The impact of the control variable ends when its lifetime is complete." I use it all the time for debugging.
    – scx
    May 29, 2021 at 22:30

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