Developer Guide for Intel® oneAPI Math Kernel Library for Linux*
ID
766690
Date
4/28/2026
Public
Getting Help and Support
What’s New
Notational Conventions
Related Information
Getting Started
Structure of the Intel® oneAPI Math Kernel Library
Linking Your Application with the Intel® oneAPI Math Kernel Library
Managing Performance and Memory
Language-Specific Usage Options
Coding Tips
Managing Output
Working with the Intel® Math Kernel Library Cluster Edition Software
Managing Behavior of the Intel® oneAPI Math Kernel Library with Environment Variables
Programming with Intel® Math Kernel Library in an Integrated Development Environment (IDE)
Intel® Math Kernel Library Benchmarks
Appendix A: Intel® oneAPI Math Kernel Library Language Interfaces Support
Appendix B: Support for Third-Party Interfaces
Appendix C: Directory Structure in Detail
Notices and Disclaimers
OpenMP* Threaded Functions and Problems
Functions Threaded with Intel® Threading Building Blocks
Avoiding Conflicts in the Execution Environment
Techniques to Set the Number of Threads
Setting the Number of Threads Using an OpenMP* Environment Variable
Changing the Number of OpenMP* Threads at Run Time
Using Additional Threading Control
Calling Intel® oneMKL Functions from Multi-threaded Applications
Using Intel® Hyper-Threading Technology
Managing Multi-core Performance
Managing Performance with Heterogeneous Cores
Overview of the Intel® Distribution for LINPACK* Benchmark
Overview of the Intel® Optimized HPL-AI* Benchmark
Contents of the Intel® Distribution for LINPACK* Benchmark and Intel® Optimized HPL-AI* Benchmark
Building the Intel® Distribution for LINPACK* Benchmark and Intel® Optimized HPL-AI* Benchmark for a Customized MPI Implementation
Building the Netlib HPL from Source Code
Configuring Parameters
Ease-of-use Command-Line Parameters
Running the Intel® Distribution for LINPACK* Benchmark and Intel® Optimized HPL-AI* Benchmark
Heterogeneous Support in the Intel® Distribution for LINPACK* Benchmark
Environment Variables
Improving Performance of Your Cluster
Using the Single Dynamic Library
You can simplify your link line through the use of the Intel® oneAPI Math Kernel Library (oneMKL) Single Dynamic Library (SDL).
To use SDL, place libmkl_rt.so on your link line. For example:
icx application.c -lmkl_rt
SDL enables you to select the interface and threading library for Intel® oneMKL at run time. By default, linking with SDL provides:
Intel LP64 interface on systems based on the Intel® 64 architecture
Intel threading
To use other interfaces or change threading preferences, including use of the sequential version of Intel® oneMKL , you need to specify your choices using functions or environment variables as explained in section Dynamically Selecting the Interface and Threading Layer .
NOTE:
Intel® oneMKL SDL (mkl_rt) does not support SYCL APIs. If your application requires support of Intel® oneMKL DPC++ APIs, refer to Intel® oneAPI Math Kernel Library (oneMKL) Link-line Advisor to configure your link command.