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								<HTML>
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								<BODY>
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								<H2>Overview</H2>
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								This directory contains the internal Makefile infrastructure for Intel® Threading Building Blocks (Intel® TBB).
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								<P>
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								See below for how to <A HREF=#build>build</A> Intel TBB and how to <A HREF=#port>port</A> Intel TBB
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								to a new platform, operating system or architecture.
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								</P>
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								<H2>Files</H2>
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								The files here are not intended to be used directly.  See below for usage.
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								<DL>
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								<DT><A HREF="Makefile.tbb">Makefile.tbb</A>
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								<DD>Main Makefile to build the Intel TBB library.
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								    Invoked via 'make tbb' from <A HREF=../Makefile>top-level Makefile</A>.
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								<DT><A HREF="Makefile.tbbmalloc">Makefile.tbbmalloc</A>
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								<DD>Main Makefile to build the Intel TBB scalable memory allocator library as well as its tests.
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								    Invoked via 'make tbbmalloc' from <A HREF=../Makefile>top-level Makefile</A>.
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								<DT><A HREF="Makefile.test">Makefile.test</A>
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								<DD>Main Makefile to build and run the tests for the Intel TBB library.
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								    Invoked via 'make test' from <A HREF=../Makefile>top-level Makefile</A>.
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								<DT><A HREF="common.inc">common.inc</A>
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								<DD>Main common included Makefile that includes OS-specific and compiler-specific Makefiles.
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								<DT><os>.inc
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								<DD>OS-specific Makefile for a particular <os>.
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								<DT><os>.<compiler>.inc
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								<DD>Compiler-specific Makefile for a particular <os> / <compiler> combination.
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								<DT>*.sh
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								<DD>Infrastructure utilities for Linux* OS, OS X*, and UNIX*-related operating systems.
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								<DT>*.js, *.bat
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								<DD>Infrastructure utilities for Windows* OS.
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								</DL>
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								<A NAME=build><H2>To Build</H2></A>
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								<P>
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								To port Intel TBB to a new platform, operating system or architecture, see the <A HREF=#port>porting directions</A> below.
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								</P>
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								<H3>Software prerequisites:</H3>
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								<OL>
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								<LI>C++ compiler for the platform, operating system and architecture of interest.
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								    Either the native compiler for your system, or, optionally, the appropriate Intel® C++ compiler, may be used.
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								<LI>GNU make utility. On Windows OS, if a UNIX* emulator is used to run GNU make,
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								    it should be able to run Windows OS utilities and commands. On Linux OS, OS X, etc.,
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								    shell commands issued by GNU make should execute in a Bourne or BASH compatible shell.
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								</OL>
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								<P>
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								Intel TBB libraries can be built by performing the following steps.
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								On systems that support only one ABI (e.g., 32-bit), these steps build the libraries for that ABI.
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								On systems that support both 64-bit and 32-bit libraries, these steps build the 64-bit libraries
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								(Linux OS, OS X, and related systems) or whichever ABI is selected in the development environment (Windows OS).
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								</P>
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								<OL>
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								<LI>Change to the <A HREF=../index.html>top-level directory</A> of the installed software.
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								<LI>If using the Intel® C++ compiler, make sure the appropriate compiler is available in your PATH
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								    (e.g., by sourcing the appropriate iccvars script for the compiler to be used).
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								<LI>Invoke GNU make using no arguments, for example, 'gmake'.
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								</OL>
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								<P>
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								To build Intel TBB libraries for other than the default ABI (e.g., to build 32-bit libraries on Linux OS, OS X,
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								or related systems that support both 64-bit and 32-bit libraries), perform the following steps:
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								</P>
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								<OL>
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								<LI>Change to the <A HREF=../index.html>top-level directory</A> of the installed software.
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								<LI>If using the Intel® C++ compiler, make sure the appropriate compiler is available in your PATH
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								    (e.g., by sourcing the appropriate iccvars script for the compiler to be used).
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								<LI>Invoke GNU make as follows, 'gmake arch=ia32'.
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								</OL>
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								<P>The default make target will build the release and debug versions of the Intel TBB library.</P>
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								<P>Other targets are available in the top-level Makefile. You might find the following targets useful:
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								<UL>
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								<LI>'make test' will build and run Intel TBB <A HREF=../src/test>unit-tests</A>;
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								<LI>'make examples' will build and run Intel TBB <A HREF=../examples/index.html>examples</A>;
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								<LI>'make all' will do all of the above.
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								</UL>
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								See also the list of other targets below.
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								</P>
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								<P>
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								By default, the libraries will be built in sub-directories within the build/ directory.
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								The sub-directories are named according to the operating system, architecture, compiler and software environment used
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								(the sub-directory names also distinguish release vs. debug libraries).  On Linux OS, the software environment comprises
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								the GCC, libc and kernel version used.  On OS X, the software environment comprises the GCC and OS version used.
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								On Windows OS, the software environment comprises the Microsoft* Visual Studio* version used.
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								See below for how to change the default build directory.
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								</P>
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								<P>
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								To perform different build and/or test operations, use the following steps.
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								</P>
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								<OL>
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								<LI>Change to the <A HREF=../index.html>top-level directory</A> of the installed software.
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								<LI>If using the Intel® C++ compiler, make sure the appropriate compiler is available in your PATH
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								    (e.g., by sourcing the appropriate iccvars script for the compiler to be used).
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								<LI>Invoke GNU make by using one or more of the following commands.
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								    <DL>
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								    <DT><TT>make</TT>
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								    <DD>Default build.  Equivalent to 'make tbb tbbmalloc'.
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								    <DT><TT>make all</TT>
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								    <DD>Equivalent to 'make tbb tbbmalloc test examples'.
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								    <DT><TT>cd src;make release</TT>
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								    <DD>Build and test release libraries only.
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								    <DT><TT>cd src;make debug</TT>
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								    <DD>Build and test debug libraries only. 
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								    <DT><TT>make tbb</TT>
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								    <DD>Make Intel TBB release and debug libraries.
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								    <DT><TT>make tbbmalloc</TT>
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								    <DD>Make Intel TBB scalable memory allocator libraries.
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								    <DT><TT>make test</TT>
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								    <DD>Compile and run unit-tests
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								    <DT><TT>make examples</TT>
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								    <DD>Build libraries and run all examples, like doing 'make debug clean release' from
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									<A HREF=../examples/Makefile>the general example Makefile</A>.
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								    <DT><TT>make compiler=<B>{</B>icl, icc, gcc, clang<B>}</B> <B>[</B>(above options or targets)<B>]</B></TT>
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								    <DD>Build and run as above, but use specified compilers instead of default, native compilers
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								    <LI><TT><B> {</B>icl, icc<B>}</B> </TT> - to use Intel® compilers (<TT>icl</TT> on Windows OS,  <TT>icc</TT>  on Linux OS or OS X). </LI>
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								    <LI><TT>gcc</TT>  - to use g++ (e.g. MinGW on Windows OS)</LI>
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								    <LI><TT>clang</TT> - to use Clang compiler</LI>
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								    <DT><TT>make compiler=clang stdlib=libc++ </B> <B>[</B>(above options or targets)<B>]</B></TT>
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								    <DD>Build and run as above, but use <TT>libc++</TT> as a standard c++ library for clang.
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								    <DT><TT>make target_ui=win8ui [target_ui_mode=production]</B> <B>[</B>(above options or targets)<B>]</B></TT>
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								    <DD>Build and run as above, but use API that is compliant with Windows Store* applications. 
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									<TT>target_ui_mode=production</TT> is used to produce binaries that are compliant with Windows Store* application container.
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									In later case they won't with Intel TBB unit tests but work only with Windows Store* applications. 
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								    <DT><TT>ndk-build target=android</B> <B>[</B>(above options or targets)<B>]</B></TT>
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								    <DD>Build and run as above, but build libraries for Android* OS by Android NDK that should be installed. Makefiles were tested with revision 8.
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								    <DT><TT>make arch=<B>{</B>ia32, intel64, ia64<B>}</B> <B>[</B>(above options or targets)<B>]</B></TT>
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								    <DD>Build and run as above, but build libraries for the selected ABI.
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								        Might be useful for cross-compilation; ensure proper environment is set before running this command.
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								    <DT><TT>make tbb_root=<B>{</B>(Intel TBB directory)<B>}</B> <B>[</B>(above options or targets)<B>]</B></TT>
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								    <DD>Build and run as above; for use when invoking 'make' from a directory other than
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									the <A HREF=../index.html>top-level directory</A>.
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								    <DT><TT>make tbb_build_dir=<B>{</B>(build directory)<B>}</B> <B>[</B>(above options or targets)<B>]</B></TT>
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								    <DD>Build and run as above, but place the built libraries in the specified directory, rather than in the default
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									sub-directory within the build/ directory. This command might have troubles with the build in case the sources 
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									installed to the directory with spaces in the path.
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								    <DT><TT>make tbb_build_prefix=<B>{</B>(build sub-directory)<B>}</B> <B>[</B>(above options or targets)<B>]</B></TT>
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								    <DD>Build and run as above, but place the built libraries in the specified sub-directory within the build/ directory,
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									rather than using the default sub-directory name.
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								    <DT><TT>make tbb_cpf=1 <B>[</B>(above options or targets)<B>]</B></TT>
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								    <DD>Build and run as above, but build and use libraries with the Community Preview Features enabled, 
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								    rather than the default libraries.
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								    <DT><TT>make <B>[</B>(above options)<B>]</B> clean</TT>
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								    <DD>Remove any executables or intermediate files produced by the above commands.
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								        Includes build directories, object files, libraries and test executables.
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								    </DL>
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								</OL>
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								<A NAME=port><H2>To Port</H2></A>
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								<P>
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								This section provides information on how to port Intel TBB to a new platform, operating system or architecture.
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								A subset or a superset of these steps may be required for porting to a given platform.
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								</P>
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								<H4>To port the Intel TBB source code:</H4>
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								<OL>
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								<LI>If porting to a new architecture, create a file that describes the architecture-specific details for that architecture.
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								    <UL>
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								    <LI>Create a <os>_<architecture>.h file in the <A HREF=../include/tbb/machine>include/tbb/machine</A> directory
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									that describes these details.
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									<UL>
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									<LI>The <os>_<architecture>.h is named after the operating system and architecture as recognized by
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									    <A HREF=../include/tbb/tbb_machine.h>include/tbb/tbb_machine.h</A> and the Makefile infrastructure.
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									<LI>This file defines the implementations of synchronization operations, and also the
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									    scheduler yield function, for the operating system and architecture.
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									<LI>Several examples of <os>_<architecture>.h files can be found in the
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									    <A HREF=../include/tbb/machine>include/tbb/machine</A> directory.
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									    <UL>
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									    <LI>A minimal implementation defines the 4-byte and 8-byte compare-and-swap operations,
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										and the scheduler yield function.  See <A HREF=../include/tbb/machine/mac_ppc.h>include/tbb/machine/mac_ppc.h</A>
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										for an example of a minimal implementation.
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									    <LI>More complex implementation examples can also be found in the
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										<A HREF=../include/tbb/machine>include/tbb/machine</A> directory
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										that implement all the individual variants of synchronization operations that Intel TBB uses.
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										Such implementations are more verbose but may achieve better performance on a given architecture.
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									    <LI>In a given implementation, any synchronization operation that is not defined is implemented, by default,
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										in terms of 4-byte or 8-byte compare-and-swap.  More operations can thus be added incrementally to increase
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										the performance of an implementation.
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									    <LI>In most cases, synchronization operations are implemented as inline assembly code; examples also exist,
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										(e.g., for Intel® Itanium® processors) that use out-of-line assembly code in *.s or *.asm files
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										(see the assembly code sub-directories in the <A HREF=../src/tbb>src/tbb</A> directory).
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									    </UL>
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									</UL>
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								    <LI>Modify <A HREF=../include/tbb/tbb_machine.h>include/tbb/tbb_machine.h</A>, if needed, to invoke the appropriate
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									<os>_<architecture>.h file in the <A HREF=../include/tbb/machine>include/tbb/machine</A> directory.
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								    </UL>
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								<LI>Add an implementation of DetectNumberOfWorkers() in <A HREF=../src/tbb/tbb_misc.h>src/tbb/tbb_misc.h</A>,
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								    that returns the number of cores found on the system in case it is not supported by the current implementation.  
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								    This is used to determine the default number of threads for the Intel TBB task scheduler.
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								<LI>Either properly define FillDynamicLinks for use in
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								    <A HREF=../src/tbb/cache_aligned_allocator.cpp>src/tbb/cache_aligned_allocator.cpp</A>,
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								    or hardcode the allocator to be used.
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								<LI>Additional types might be required in the union defined in
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								    <A HREF=../include/tbb/aligned_space.h>include/tbb/aligned_space.h</A>
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								    to ensure proper alignment on your platform.
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								<LI>Changes may be required in <A HREF=../include/tbb/tick_count.h>include/tbb/tick_count.h</A>
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								    for systems that do not provide gettimeofday.
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								</OL>
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								<H4>To port the Makefile infrastructure:</H4>
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								Modify the appropriate files in the Makefile infrastructure to add a new platform, operating system or architecture as needed.
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								See the Makefile infrastructure files for examples.
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								<OL>
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								<LI>The <A HREF=../Makefile>top-level Makefile</A> includes <A HREF=common.inc>common.inc</A> to determine the operating system.
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								    <UL>
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								    <LI>To add a new operating system, add the appropriate test to <A HREF=common.inc>common.inc</A>,
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									and create the needed <os>.inc and <os>.<compiler>.inc files (see below).
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								    </UL>
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								<LI>The <os>.inc file makes OS-specific settings for a particular operating systems.
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								    <UL>
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								    <LI>For example, <A HREF=linux.inc>linux.inc</A> makes settings specific to Linux operating systems.
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								    <LI>This file performs OS-dependent tests to determine the specific platform and/or architecture,
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									and sets other platform-dependent values.
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								    <LI>Add a new <os>.inc file for each new operating system added.
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								    </UL>
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								<LI>The <os>.<compiler>.inc file makes compiler-specific settings for a particular
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								    <os> / <compiler> combination.
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								    <UL>
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								    <LI>For example, <A HREF=linux.gcc.inc>linux.gcc.inc</A> makes specific settings for using GCC on Linux OS,
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									and <A HREF=linux.icc.inc>linux.icc.inc</A> makes specific settings for using the Intel® C++ compiler on Linux OS.
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								    <LI>This file sets particular compiler, assembler and linker options required when using a particular
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									<os> / <compiler> combination.
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								    <LI>Add a new <os>.<compiler>.inc file for each new <os> / <compiler> combination added.
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								    </UL>
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								</OL>
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								<HR>
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								<A HREF="../index.html">Up to parent directory</A>
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								<P></P>
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								Copyright © 2005-2013 Intel Corporation.  All Rights Reserved.
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								<P></P>
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								Intel and Itanium are registered trademarks or trademarks of Intel Corporation or its
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								subsidiaries in the United States and other countries.
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								<p></p>
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								* Other names and brands may be claimed as the property of others.
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								</HTML>
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