cpu_time()
takes the time on the CPU, not the walltime. In parallel applications these are not the same. See here for details.
Using system_clock()
solves this problem:
PROGRAM MAIN
use omp_lib
implicit none
REAL*8 Times1,Times2
INTEGER I,J, iTimes1,iTimes2, rate
real, allocatable, dimension(:) :: a
allocate(a(1000))
CALL system_clock(count_rate=rate)
DO J = 1, 1000
a(j)=j
ENDDO
! ***************NO PARALLEL CODE ************************************
call CPU_TIME(Times1)
call SYSTEM_CLOCK(iTimes1)
write(*,*) 'CPU NO PARALLEL STARTED:',Times1
DO I = 1, 1000
DO J = 1, 500000
a(I)=a(I)+0.0001
end do
a(I)=a(I)+a(I)+a(I)
ENDDO
call CPU_TIME(Times2)
call SYSTEM_CLOCK(iTimes2)
write(*,*) 'CPU CPU NO PARALLEL finished:',Times2
write(*,*) 'NO PARALLEL TIMES:',Times2-Times1, real(iTimes2-iTimes1)/real(rate)
write(*,*) '---------------------------------------------------'
! ***************PARALLEL CODE ************************************
call CPU_TIME(Times1)
call SYSTEM_CLOCK(iTimes1)
write(*,*) 'CPU PARALLEL STARTED:',Times1
!$OMP PARALLEL DEFAULT(shared), private(I,J)
!$OMP DO
DO I = 1, 1000
DO J = 1, 500000
a(I)=a(I)+0.0001
end do
a(I)=a(I)+a(I)+a(I)
ENDDO
!$OMP END DO
!$OMP END PARALLEL
call CPU_TIME(Times2)
call SYSTEM_CLOCK(iTimes2)
write(*,*) 'CPU PARALLEL finished:',Times2
write(*,*) 'PARALLEL TIMES:',Times2-Times1, real(iTimes2-iTimes1)/real(rate)
deallocate(a)
STOP
END
Then, you can see that the parallel program is indeed faster.
CPU NO PARALLEL STARTED: 4.0000000000000001E-003
CPU CPU NO PARALLEL finished: 1.4600000000000000
NO PARALLEL TIMES: 1.4560000000000000 1.45400000
---------------------------------------------------
CPU PARALLEL STARTED: 1.4600000000000000
CPU PARALLEL finished: 5.1040000000000001
PARALLEL TIMES: 3.6440000000000001 0.920000017
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