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openmpi/configure.ac

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2003-11-22 19:36:58 +03:00
# -*- shell-script -*-
#
# Copyright (c) 2004-2009 The Trustees of Indiana University and Indiana
# University Research and Technology
# Corporation. All rights reserved.
# Copyright (c) 2004-2010 The University of Tennessee and The University
# of Tennessee Research Foundation. All rights
# reserved.
# Copyright (c) 2004-2007 High Performance Computing Center Stuttgart,
# University of Stuttgart. All rights reserved.
# Copyright (c) 2004-2005 The Regents of the University of California.
# All rights reserved.
Make the use of statfs()/statvfs() be more robust. As noted by Paul Hargrove, the #if's surrounding the use of statfs() and statvfs() in opal/util/path.c have apparently gotten stale (e.g., modern flavors of *BSD OSs no longer define __BSD). Changes: * Add statfs and statvfs to the AC_CHECK_FUNCS in configure.ac * Add a sanity check to ensure that we have at least one of statfs() or statvfs(). Add a similar sanity check in opal/util/path.c, just as defensive programming. * Use AC_CHECK_MEMBERS in configure.ac to check for specific struct statfs/struct statvfs members that we use in opal/util/path.c * In path.c, add some #includes as listed on the OS man page for statfs(2) (OS X 10.8.5/Mountain Lion) * The previous code used statvfs() on Solaris and statfs() everywhere else. Attempting to replicate this with behavior-based configure testing led to fairly complicted if/else logic, so the new code uses whichever of the two are available (i.e., it might actually use both -- OS X 10.8.5 and RHEL 6.5 have both statfs() and statvfs()). The rationale here is that we don't really care which of the two functions report the answer; we'll take the answer regardless of where it comes from. For example, if one function returns a failure and the other does not, we'll use the results from the successful function and ignore the failed one. This new code seems to work on OS X and Linux. We'll have to see what happens with MTT and future Paul Hargrove testing... cmr=v1.7.4:reviewer=ompi-rm1.7:subject=Make statfs/statvfs more robust This commit was SVN r30198.
2014-01-10 01:28:52 +04:00
# Copyright (c) 2006-2014 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
# Copyright (c) 2006-2008 Sun Microsystems, Inc. All rights reserved.
# Copyright (c) 2006-2011 Los Alamos National Security, LLC. All rights
# reserved.
# Copyright (c) 2009 Oak Ridge National Labs. All rights reserved.
# Copyright (c) 2011-2013 NVIDIA Corporation. All rights reserved.
# Copyright (c) 2012 Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.
# Copyright (c) 2013 Mellanox Technologies, Inc.
# All rights reserved.
# Copyright (c) 2013-2014 Intel, Inc. All rights reserved.
# $COPYRIGHT$
#
# Additional copyrights may follow
#
# $HEADER$
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#
############################################################################
# Initialization, version number, and other random setup/init stuff
############################################################################
# Load in everything found by autogen.pl
m4_include([config/autogen_found_items.m4])
# Load the version code. Because this is also used directly as a
# shell script, no ac_defun
m4_include([config/opal_get_version.m4])
AC_LANG([C])
Make the hwloc paffinity component available for everyone. hwloc supports a wide variety of operating systems and platforms; see the opal/mca/paffinity/hwloc/hwloc/README file for details. This component includes an embedded copy of hwloc, currently based on hwloc-1.0rc6. But note that hwloc is properly SVN imported into the /vendor branch, so it will be easy to update when 1.0 GA is released. Note that the hwloc tree embedded in opal/mca/paffinity/hwloc/hwloc is identical to a hwloc distribution tarball, except that much of the documentation was rm -rf'ed (because we don't need it for the embedded case). Since the paffinity framework currently does not understand hardware threads, the hwloc component compensates for this by identifying cores by the "first" hardware thread on that core. Hopefully we'll update paffinity someday to understand hardware threads. :-) configure grew a --with-hwloc option, analogous to what we do for many other external libraries that OMPI supports. However, there's a new feature: due to the request of several distros, OMPI can be configured to build with its internal copy of hwloc or with an external copy of hwloc (e.g., a system-installed hwloc). 1. If --with-hwloc is not specified, Open MPI will try to use its internal copy (but silently fail/ignore hwloc if that fails). 1. If --with-hwloc=<dir> is supplied, Open MPI looks for hwloc support in <dir> (and --with-hwloc-libdir=<dir>, if specified). 1. If --with-hwloc=external is supplied, Open MPI will look for hwloc in a compiler/linker default external location. 1. If --with-hwloc=internal is supplied, Open MPI will use its internal copy of hwloc. Some of OMPI's main configury had to be slightly re-arranged in the bootstrapping phase to accomodate hwloc's configry needs. This commit was SVN r23125.
2010-05-14 03:56:05 +04:00
2003-11-22 19:36:58 +03:00
# Init autoconf
# We don't have the version number to put in here yet, and we can't
# call OPAL_GET_VERSION (etc.) before AC_INIT. So use the shell
# version. project_name_* comes from config/project_list.m4, which
# was set during autogen.sh.
AC_INIT([project_name_long],
[m4_normalize(esyscmd([config/opal_get_version.sh VERSION --base]))],
[http://www.open-mpi.org/community/help/], [project_name_short])
AC_PREREQ(2.60)
AC_CONFIG_AUX_DIR(config)
AC_CONFIG_MACRO_DIR(config)
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# Get our platform support file. This has to be done very, very early
# because it twiddles random bits of autoconf
OMPI_LOAD_PLATFORM
Make the hwloc paffinity component available for everyone. hwloc supports a wide variety of operating systems and platforms; see the opal/mca/paffinity/hwloc/hwloc/README file for details. This component includes an embedded copy of hwloc, currently based on hwloc-1.0rc6. But note that hwloc is properly SVN imported into the /vendor branch, so it will be easy to update when 1.0 GA is released. Note that the hwloc tree embedded in opal/mca/paffinity/hwloc/hwloc is identical to a hwloc distribution tarball, except that much of the documentation was rm -rf'ed (because we don't need it for the embedded case). Since the paffinity framework currently does not understand hardware threads, the hwloc component compensates for this by identifying cores by the "first" hardware thread on that core. Hopefully we'll update paffinity someday to understand hardware threads. :-) configure grew a --with-hwloc option, analogous to what we do for many other external libraries that OMPI supports. However, there's a new feature: due to the request of several distros, OMPI can be configured to build with its internal copy of hwloc or with an external copy of hwloc (e.g., a system-installed hwloc). 1. If --with-hwloc is not specified, Open MPI will try to use its internal copy (but silently fail/ignore hwloc if that fails). 1. If --with-hwloc=<dir> is supplied, Open MPI looks for hwloc support in <dir> (and --with-hwloc-libdir=<dir>, if specified). 1. If --with-hwloc=external is supplied, Open MPI will look for hwloc in a compiler/linker default external location. 1. If --with-hwloc=internal is supplied, Open MPI will use its internal copy of hwloc. Some of OMPI's main configury had to be slightly re-arranged in the bootstrapping phase to accomodate hwloc's configry needs. This commit was SVN r23125.
2010-05-14 03:56:05 +04:00
#
# Start it up
#
OPAL_CONFIGURE_SETUP
opal_show_title "Configuring project_name_long"
Make the hwloc paffinity component available for everyone. hwloc supports a wide variety of operating systems and platforms; see the opal/mca/paffinity/hwloc/hwloc/README file for details. This component includes an embedded copy of hwloc, currently based on hwloc-1.0rc6. But note that hwloc is properly SVN imported into the /vendor branch, so it will be easy to update when 1.0 GA is released. Note that the hwloc tree embedded in opal/mca/paffinity/hwloc/hwloc is identical to a hwloc distribution tarball, except that much of the documentation was rm -rf'ed (because we don't need it for the embedded case). Since the paffinity framework currently does not understand hardware threads, the hwloc component compensates for this by identifying cores by the "first" hardware thread on that core. Hopefully we'll update paffinity someday to understand hardware threads. :-) configure grew a --with-hwloc option, analogous to what we do for many other external libraries that OMPI supports. However, there's a new feature: due to the request of several distros, OMPI can be configured to build with its internal copy of hwloc or with an external copy of hwloc (e.g., a system-installed hwloc). 1. If --with-hwloc is not specified, Open MPI will try to use its internal copy (but silently fail/ignore hwloc if that fails). 1. If --with-hwloc=<dir> is supplied, Open MPI looks for hwloc support in <dir> (and --with-hwloc-libdir=<dir>, if specified). 1. If --with-hwloc=external is supplied, Open MPI will look for hwloc in a compiler/linker default external location. 1. If --with-hwloc=internal is supplied, Open MPI will use its internal copy of hwloc. Some of OMPI's main configury had to be slightly re-arranged in the bootstrapping phase to accomodate hwloc's configry needs. This commit was SVN r23125.
2010-05-14 03:56:05 +04:00
#
# Setup some things that must be done before AM-INIT-AUTOMAKE
#
opal_show_subtitle "Startup tests"
Make the hwloc paffinity component available for everyone. hwloc supports a wide variety of operating systems and platforms; see the opal/mca/paffinity/hwloc/hwloc/README file for details. This component includes an embedded copy of hwloc, currently based on hwloc-1.0rc6. But note that hwloc is properly SVN imported into the /vendor branch, so it will be easy to update when 1.0 GA is released. Note that the hwloc tree embedded in opal/mca/paffinity/hwloc/hwloc is identical to a hwloc distribution tarball, except that much of the documentation was rm -rf'ed (because we don't need it for the embedded case). Since the paffinity framework currently does not understand hardware threads, the hwloc component compensates for this by identifying cores by the "first" hardware thread on that core. Hopefully we'll update paffinity someday to understand hardware threads. :-) configure grew a --with-hwloc option, analogous to what we do for many other external libraries that OMPI supports. However, there's a new feature: due to the request of several distros, OMPI can be configured to build with its internal copy of hwloc or with an external copy of hwloc (e.g., a system-installed hwloc). 1. If --with-hwloc is not specified, Open MPI will try to use its internal copy (but silently fail/ignore hwloc if that fails). 1. If --with-hwloc=<dir> is supplied, Open MPI looks for hwloc support in <dir> (and --with-hwloc-libdir=<dir>, if specified). 1. If --with-hwloc=external is supplied, Open MPI will look for hwloc in a compiler/linker default external location. 1. If --with-hwloc=internal is supplied, Open MPI will use its internal copy of hwloc. Some of OMPI's main configury had to be slightly re-arranged in the bootstrapping phase to accomodate hwloc's configry needs. This commit was SVN r23125.
2010-05-14 03:56:05 +04:00
AC_CANONICAL_HOST
AC_CANONICAL_TARGET
AC_DEFINE_UNQUOTED(OPAL_ARCH, "$target", [OMPI architecture string])
AS_IF([test "$host" != "$target"],
[AC_MSG_WARN([Cross-compile detected])
AC_MSG_WARN([Cross-compiling is only partially supported])
AC_MSG_WARN([Proceed at your own risk!])])
# AC_USE_SYSTEM_EXTENSIONS alters CFLAGS (e.g., adds -g -O2)
OPAL_VAR_SCOPE_PUSH([CFLAGS_save])
CFLAGS_save=$CFLAGS
Make the hwloc paffinity component available for everyone. hwloc supports a wide variety of operating systems and platforms; see the opal/mca/paffinity/hwloc/hwloc/README file for details. This component includes an embedded copy of hwloc, currently based on hwloc-1.0rc6. But note that hwloc is properly SVN imported into the /vendor branch, so it will be easy to update when 1.0 GA is released. Note that the hwloc tree embedded in opal/mca/paffinity/hwloc/hwloc is identical to a hwloc distribution tarball, except that much of the documentation was rm -rf'ed (because we don't need it for the embedded case). Since the paffinity framework currently does not understand hardware threads, the hwloc component compensates for this by identifying cores by the "first" hardware thread on that core. Hopefully we'll update paffinity someday to understand hardware threads. :-) configure grew a --with-hwloc option, analogous to what we do for many other external libraries that OMPI supports. However, there's a new feature: due to the request of several distros, OMPI can be configured to build with its internal copy of hwloc or with an external copy of hwloc (e.g., a system-installed hwloc). 1. If --with-hwloc is not specified, Open MPI will try to use its internal copy (but silently fail/ignore hwloc if that fails). 1. If --with-hwloc=<dir> is supplied, Open MPI looks for hwloc support in <dir> (and --with-hwloc-libdir=<dir>, if specified). 1. If --with-hwloc=external is supplied, Open MPI will look for hwloc in a compiler/linker default external location. 1. If --with-hwloc=internal is supplied, Open MPI will use its internal copy of hwloc. Some of OMPI's main configury had to be slightly re-arranged in the bootstrapping phase to accomodate hwloc's configry needs. This commit was SVN r23125.
2010-05-14 03:56:05 +04:00
AC_USE_SYSTEM_EXTENSIONS
# AC_USE_SYSTEM_EXTENSIONS will modify CFLAGS if nothing was in there
# beforehand. We don't want that. So if there was nothing in
# CFLAGS, put nothing back in there.
AS_IF([test -z "$CFLAGS_save"], [CFLAGS=])
OPAL_VAR_SCOPE_POP
Make the hwloc paffinity component available for everyone. hwloc supports a wide variety of operating systems and platforms; see the opal/mca/paffinity/hwloc/hwloc/README file for details. This component includes an embedded copy of hwloc, currently based on hwloc-1.0rc6. But note that hwloc is properly SVN imported into the /vendor branch, so it will be easy to update when 1.0 GA is released. Note that the hwloc tree embedded in opal/mca/paffinity/hwloc/hwloc is identical to a hwloc distribution tarball, except that much of the documentation was rm -rf'ed (because we don't need it for the embedded case). Since the paffinity framework currently does not understand hardware threads, the hwloc component compensates for this by identifying cores by the "first" hardware thread on that core. Hopefully we'll update paffinity someday to understand hardware threads. :-) configure grew a --with-hwloc option, analogous to what we do for many other external libraries that OMPI supports. However, there's a new feature: due to the request of several distros, OMPI can be configured to build with its internal copy of hwloc or with an external copy of hwloc (e.g., a system-installed hwloc). 1. If --with-hwloc is not specified, Open MPI will try to use its internal copy (but silently fail/ignore hwloc if that fails). 1. If --with-hwloc=<dir> is supplied, Open MPI looks for hwloc support in <dir> (and --with-hwloc-libdir=<dir>, if specified). 1. If --with-hwloc=external is supplied, Open MPI will look for hwloc in a compiler/linker default external location. 1. If --with-hwloc=internal is supplied, Open MPI will use its internal copy of hwloc. Some of OMPI's main configury had to be slightly re-arranged in the bootstrapping phase to accomodate hwloc's configry needs. This commit was SVN r23125.
2010-05-14 03:56:05 +04:00
#
# Init automake
#
AM_INIT_AUTOMAKE([foreign dist-bzip2 subdir-objects no-define 1.12.2 tar-ustar])
# SILENT_RULES is new in AM 1.11, but we require 1.11 or higher via
# autogen. Limited testing shows that calling SILENT_RULES directly
# works in more cases than adding "silent-rules" to INIT_AUTOMAKE
# (even though they're supposed to be identical). Shrug.
AM_SILENT_RULES([yes])
# Make configure depend on the VERSION file, since it's used in AC_INIT
AC_SUBST([CONFIGURE_DEPENDENCIES], ['$(top_srcdir)/VERSION'])
opal_show_subtitle "Checking versions"
# Get the version of OMPI that we are installing
m4_ifdef([project_ompi],
[OPAL_SAVE_VERSION([OMPI], [Open MPI], [$srcdir/VERSION],
[ompi/include/ompi/version.h])])
m4_ifdef([project_orte],
[OPAL_SAVE_VERSION([ORTE], [Open MPI Run-Time Environment],
[$srcdir/VERSION],
[orte/include/orte/version.h])])
m4_ifdef([project_oshmem],
[OPAL_SAVE_VERSION([OSHMEM], [Open SHMEM],
[$srcdir/VERSION],
[oshmem/include/oshmem/version.h])])
OPAL_SAVE_VERSION([OPAL], [Open Portable Access Layer], [$srcdir/VERSION],
[opal/include/opal/version.h])
# Get shared library version numbers
. $srcdir/VERSION
m4_ifdef([project_ompi],
[AC_SUBST(libmpi_so_version)
AC_SUBST(libmpi_cxx_so_version)
== Highlights == 1. New mpifort wrapper compiler: you can utilize mpif.h, use mpi, and use mpi_f08 through this one wrapper compiler 1. mpif77 and mpif90 still exist, but are sym links to mpifort and may be removed in a future release 1. The mpi module has been re-implemented and is significantly "mo' bettah" 1. The mpi_f08 module offers many, many improvements over mpif.h and the mpi module This stuff is coming from a VERY long-lived mercurial branch (3 years!); it'll almost certainly take a few SVN commits and a bunch of testing before I get it correctly committed to the SVN trunk. == More details == Craig Rasmussen and I have been working with the MPI-3 Fortran WG and Fortran J3 committees for a long, long time to make a prototype MPI-3 Fortran bindings implementation. We think we're at a stable enough state to bring this stuff back to the trunk, with the goal of including it in OMPI v1.7. Special thanks go out to everyone who has been incredibly patient and helpful to us in this journey: * Rolf Rabenseifner/HLRS (mastermind/genius behind the entire MPI-3 Fortran effort) * The Fortran J3 committee * Tobias Burnus/gfortran * Tony !Goetz/Absoft * Terry !Donte/Oracle * ...and probably others whom I'm forgetting :-( There's still opportunities for optimization in the mpi_f08 implementation, but by and large, it is as far along as it can be until Fortran compilers start implementing the new F08 dimension(..) syntax. Note that gfortran is currently unsupported for the mpi_f08 module and the new mpi module. gfortran users will a) fall back to the same mpi module implementation that is in OMPI v1.5.x, and b) not get the new mpi_f08 module. The gfortran maintainers are actively working hard to add the necessary features to support both the new mpi_f08 module and the new mpi module implementations. This will take some time. As mentioned above, ompi/mpi/f77 and ompi/mpi/f90 no longer exist. All the fortran bindings implementations have been collated under ompi/mpi/fortran; each implementation has its own subdirectory: {{{ ompi/mpi/fortran/ base/ - glue code mpif-h/ - what used to be ompi/mpi/f77 use-mpi-tkr/ - what used to be ompi/mpi/f90 use-mpi-ignore-tkr/ - new mpi module implementation use-mpi-f08/ - new mpi_f08 module implementation }}} There's also a prototype 6-function-MPI implementation under use-mpi-f08-desc that emulates the new F08 dimension(..) syntax that isn't fully available in Fortran compilers yet. We did that to prove it to ourselves that it could be done once the compilers fully support it. This directory/implementation will likely eventually replace the use-mpi-f08 version. Other things that were done: * ompi_info grew a few new output fields to describe what level of Fortran support is included * Existing Fortran examples in examples/ were renamed; new mpi_f08 examples were added * The old Fortran MPI libraries were renamed: * libmpi_f77 -> libmpi_mpifh * libmpi_f90 -> libmpi_usempi * The configury for Fortran was consolidated and significantly slimmed down. Note that the F77 env variable is now IGNORED for configure; you should only use FC. Example: {{{ shell$ ./configure CC=icc CXX=icpc FC=ifort ... }}} All of this work was done in a Mercurial branch off the SVN trunk, and hosted at Bitbucket. This branch has got to be one of OMPI's longest-running branches. Its first commit was Tue Apr 07 23:01:46 2009 -0400 -- it's over 3 years old! :-) We think we've pulled in all relevant changes from the OMPI trunk (e.g., Fortran implementations of the new MPI-3 MPROBE stuff for mpif.h, use mpi, and use mpi_f08, and the recent Fujitsu Fortran patches). I anticipate some instability when we bring this stuff into the trunk, simply because it touches a LOT of code in the MPI layer in the OMPI code base. We'll try our best to make it as pain-free as possible, but please bear with us when it is committed. This commit was SVN r26283.
2012-04-18 19:57:29 +04:00
AC_SUBST(libmpi_mpifh_so_version)
AC_SUBST(libmpi_usempi_tkr_so_version)
AC_SUBST(libmpi_usempi_ignore_tkr_so_version)
AC_SUBST(libmpi_usempif08_so_version)
AC_SUBST(libmpi_java_so_version)
# It's icky that we have to hard-code the names of the
# common components here. :-( This could probably be done
# transparently by adding some intelligence in autogen.sh
# and/or ompi_mca.m4, but I don't have the cycles to do this
# right now.
AC_SUBST(libmca_common_cuda_so_version)
AC_SUBST(libmca_common_mx_so_version)
AC_SUBST(libmca_common_ofacm_so_version)
AC_SUBST(libmca_common_sm_so_version)
AC_SUBST(libmca_common_ugni_so_version)
AC_SUBST(libmca_common_verbs_so_version)])
m4_ifdef([project_orte],
[AC_SUBST(libopen_rte_so_version)])
m4_ifdef([project_oshmem],
[AC_SUBST(liboshmem_so_version)])
AC_SUBST(libmca_opal_common_hwloc_so_version)
AC_SUBST(libmca_opal_common_pmi_so_version)
AC_SUBST(libopen_pal_so_version)
#
# Get the versions of the autotools that were used to bootstrap us
# (helpful for debugging reports)
#
AC_MSG_CHECKING([for bootstrap Autoconf version])
acversion=`grep "Generated by GNU Autoconf" $0 | head -n 1 | awk '{ print $6 }'`
AC_MSG_RESULT([$acversion])
AC_MSG_CHECKING([for bootstrap Automake version])
AC_MSG_RESULT([$am__api_version])
AC_MSG_CHECKING([for boostrap Libtool version])
ltversion=`grep VERSION= $srcdir/config/ltmain.sh | head -n 1 | cut -d= -f2`
AC_MSG_RESULT([$ltversion])
# List header files to generate
AC_CONFIG_HEADERS([opal/include/opal_config.h])
m4_ifdef([project_ompi],
[AC_CONFIG_HEADERS([ompi/include/mpi.h])])
m4_ifdef([project_oshmem],
[AC_CONFIG_HEADER([oshmem/include/shmem.h])])
# override/fixup the version numbers set by AC_INIT, since on
# developer builds, there's no good way to know what the version is
# before running configure :(. We only use the base version number
# (ie, no svn r numbers) for the version set in AC_INIT. This will
# always match reality because we add the VERSION file (the only way
# to change the major.minor.release{greek}) into the configure
# dependencies. PACKAGE_VERSION the AC_DEFINE doesn't change once set
# the first time -- AC_INIT's input (so it doesn't have an r number in
# it). PACKAGE_VERSION the AC_SUBST can be rewritten along the way,
# and we'd like it to have the r number in it so that it shows up in
# the tarball name, so it is set to the full version here.
PACKAGE_VERSION="$OPAL_VERSION"
PACKAGE_STRING="${PACKAGE_NAME} ${PACKAGE_VERSION}"
VERSION="${PACKAGE_VERSION}"
opal_show_subtitle "Initialization, setup"
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OMPI_TOP_BUILDDIR="`pwd`"
AC_SUBST(OMPI_TOP_BUILDDIR)
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cd "$srcdir"
OMPI_TOP_SRCDIR="`pwd`"
AC_SUBST(OMPI_TOP_SRCDIR)
cd "$OMPI_TOP_BUILDDIR"
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AC_MSG_NOTICE([builddir: $OMPI_TOP_BUILDDIR])
AC_MSG_NOTICE([srcdir: $OMPI_TOP_SRCDIR])
if test "$OMPI_TOP_BUILDDIR" != "$OMPI_TOP_SRCDIR"; then
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AC_MSG_NOTICE([Detected VPATH build])
fi
# Setup the top of the opal/include/opal_config.h file
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AH_TOP([/* -*- c -*-
*
* Copyright (c) 2004-2005 The Trustees of Indiana University.
* All rights reserved.
* Copyright (c) 2004-2005 The Trustees of the University of Tennessee.
* All rights reserved.
* Copyright (c) 2004-2005 High Performance Computing Center Stuttgart,
* University of Stuttgart. All rights reserved.
* Copyright (c) 2004-2005 The Regents of the University of California.
* All rights reserved.
* $COPYRIGHT$
*
* Additional copyrights may follow
*
* $HEADER$
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*
* Function: - OS, CPU and compiler dependent configuration
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*/
#ifndef OPAL_CONFIG_H
#define OPAL_CONFIG_H
#include "opal_config_top.h"
])
AH_BOTTOM([
#include "opal_config_bottom.h"
#endif /* OPAL_CONFIG_H */
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])
- massive change for module<-->component name fixes throughout the code base. - many (most) mca type names have "component" or "module" in them, as relevant, just to further distinguish the difference between component data/actions and module data/actions. All developers are encouraged to perpetuate this convention when you create types that are specific to a framework, component, or module - did very little to entire framework (just the basics to make it compile) because it's just about to be almost entirely replaced - ditto for io / romio - did not work on elan or ib components; have to commit and then convert those on a different machine with the right libraries and headers - renamed a bunch of *_module.c files to *_component.c and *module*c to *component*c (a few still remain, e.g., ptl/ib, ptl/elan, etc.) - modified autogen/configure/build process to match new filenames (e.g., output static-components.h instead of static-modules.h) - removed DOS-style cr/lf stuff in ns/ns.h - added newline to end of file src/util/numtostr.h - removed some redundant error checking in the top-level topo functions - added a few {} here and there where people "forgot" to put them in for 1 line blocks ;-) - removed a bunch of MPI_* types from mca header files (replaced with corresponding ompi_* types) - all the ptl components had version numbers in their structs; removed - converted a few more elements in the MCA base to use the OBJ interface -- removed some old manual reference counting kruft This commit was SVN r1830.
2004-08-02 04:24:22 +04:00
# Other basic setup stuff (shared with components)
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OPAL_BASIC_SETUP
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top_ompi_srcdir="$OMPI_TOP_SRCDIR"
AC_SUBST(top_ompi_srcdir)
top_ompi_builddir="$OMPI_TOP_BUILDDIR"
AC_SUBST(top_ompi_builddir)
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############################################################################
# Configuration options
############################################################################
OPAL_CONFIGURE_OPTIONS
OPAL_CHECK_OS_FLAVORS
OPAL_CHECK_CUDA
m4_ifdef([project_orte], [ORTE_CONFIGURE_OPTIONS])
m4_ifdef([project_ompi], [OMPI_CONFIGURE_OPTIONS])
m4_ifdef([project_oshmem], [OSHMEM_CONFIGURE_OPTIONS])
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# Set up project specific AM_CONDITIONALs
AS_IF([test "$enable_ompi" != "no"], [project_ompi_amc=true], [project_ompi_amc=false])
m4_ifndef([project_ompi], [project_ompi_amc=no])
AM_CONDITIONAL([PROJECT_OMPI], [$project_ompi_amc])
AS_IF([test "$enable_orte" != "no"], [project_orte_amc=true], [project_orte_amc=false])
m4_ifndef([project_orte], [project_orte_amc=false])
AM_CONDITIONAL([PROJECT_ORTE], [$project_orte_amc])
AS_IF([test "$enable_oshmem" != "no"], [project_oshmem_amc=true], [project_oshmem_amc=false])
m4_ifndef([project_oshmem], [project_oshmem_amc=false])
AM_CONDITIONAL([PROJECT_OSHMEM], [$project_oshmem_amc])
if test "$enable_binaries" = "no" -a "$enable_dist" = "yes"; then
AC_MSG_WARN([--disable-binaries is incompatible with --enable dist])
AC_MSG_ERROR([Cannot continue])
fi
2003-11-22 19:36:58 +03:00
############################################################################
# Libtool: part one
# (before C compiler setup)
############################################################################
#
# Part one of libtool magic. Enable static so that we have the --with
# tests done up here and can check for OS. Save the values of
# $enable_static and $enable_shared before setting the defaults,
# because if the user specified --[en|dis]able-[static|shared] on the
# command line, they'll already be set. In this way, we can tell if
# the user requested something or if the default was set here.
#
ompi_enable_shared="$enable_shared"
ompi_enable_static="$enable_static"
AM_ENABLE_SHARED
AM_DISABLE_STATIC
2003-11-22 19:36:58 +03:00
OPAL_SETUP_WRAPPER_INIT
##################################
# Check for known incompatibility
##################################
# Do *not* print a message that we're checking the OS because this
# test is *not* meant to be an all-inclusive "if it passes this test,
# then configure must succeed" test. This test is *only* mean to
# screen out the versions of OS X where we know OMPI will cause kernel
# panics because of bad implementations of pty's. See
# https://svn.open-mpi.org/trac/ompi/ticket/1637 for details.
# OS X name OS X Version $host_os value
# OS X Tiger 10.4.x darwin8.x
# OS X Leopard 10.5.x darwin9.x
# OS X Snow Leopard 10.6.x darwin10.x
# OS X Lion 10.7.x darwin11.x
# We do not support OS X before version 10.5 (Leopard)
case $host_os in
# Corresponds to OS X 10.0 - 10.4 (additional [] quoting for m4)
darwin[[45678]]*)
AC_MSG_WARN([Open MPI does not support OS X prior to version 10.5 (Leopard)])
AC_MSG_ERROR([Cannot continue])
esac
2003-11-22 19:36:58 +03:00
############################################################################
# Check for compilers and preprocessors
############################################################################
opal_show_title "Compiler and preprocessor tests"
2003-11-22 19:36:58 +03:00
##################################
# C compiler characteristics
##################################
OPAL_SETUP_CC
2003-11-22 19:36:58 +03:00
# If we build on a windows environment with the windows compiler and linker
# then we need some translation functions from the opal/win32 directory.
AM_CONDITIONAL(OMPI_NEED_WINDOWS_REPLACEMENTS,
test "$ompi_cv_c_compiler_vendor" = "microsoft" )
# Do all Interix detections if necessary
OMPI_INTERIX
# Does the compiler support "ident"-like constructs?
OMPI_CHECK_IDENT([CC], [CFLAGS], [c], [C])
#
# Check for some types
#
AC_CHECK_TYPES(int8_t)
AC_CHECK_TYPES(uint8_t)
AC_CHECK_TYPES(int16_t)
AC_CHECK_TYPES(uint16_t)
AC_CHECK_TYPES(int32_t)
AC_CHECK_TYPES(uint32_t)
AC_CHECK_TYPES(int64_t)
AC_CHECK_TYPES(uint64_t)
- Split the datatype engine into two parts: an MPI specific part in OMPI and a language agnostic part in OPAL. The convertor is completely moved into OPAL. This offers several benefits as described in RFC http://www.open-mpi.org/community/lists/devel/2009/07/6387.php namely: - Fewer basic types (int* and float* types, boolean and wchar - Fixing naming scheme to ompi-nomenclature. - Usability outside of the ompi-layer. - Due to the fixed nature of simple opal types, their information is completely known at compile time and therefore constified - With fewer datatypes (22), the actual sizes of bit-field types may be reduced from 64 to 32 bits, allowing reorganizing the opal_datatype structure, eliminating holes and keeping data required in convertor (upon send/recv) in one cacheline... This has implications to the convertor-datastructure and other parts of the code. - Several performance tests have been run, the netpipe latency does not change with this patch on Linux/x86-64 on the smoky cluster. - Extensive tests have been done to verify correctness (no new regressions) using: 1. mpi_test_suite on linux/x86-64 using clean ompi-trunk and ompi-ddt: a. running both trunk and ompi-ddt resulted in no differences (except for MPI_SHORT_INT and MPI_TYPE_MIX_LB_UB do now run correctly). b. with --enable-memchecker and running under valgrind (one buglet when run with static found in test-suite, commited) 2. ibm testsuite on linux/x86-64 using clean ompi-trunk and ompi-ddt: all passed (except for the dynamic/ tests failed!! as trunk/MTT) 3. compilation and usage of HDF5 tests on Jaguar using PGI and PathScale compilers. 4. compilation and usage on Scicortex. - Please note, that for the heterogeneous case, (-m32 compiled binaries/ompi), neither ompi-trunk, nor ompi-ddt branch would successfully launch. This commit was SVN r21641.
2009-07-13 08:56:31 +04:00
AC_CHECK_TYPES(int128_t)
AC_CHECK_TYPES(uint128_t)
AC_CHECK_TYPES(long long)
AC_CHECK_TYPES(__float128)
- Split the datatype engine into two parts: an MPI specific part in OMPI and a language agnostic part in OPAL. The convertor is completely moved into OPAL. This offers several benefits as described in RFC http://www.open-mpi.org/community/lists/devel/2009/07/6387.php namely: - Fewer basic types (int* and float* types, boolean and wchar - Fixing naming scheme to ompi-nomenclature. - Usability outside of the ompi-layer. - Due to the fixed nature of simple opal types, their information is completely known at compile time and therefore constified - With fewer datatypes (22), the actual sizes of bit-field types may be reduced from 64 to 32 bits, allowing reorganizing the opal_datatype structure, eliminating holes and keeping data required in convertor (upon send/recv) in one cacheline... This has implications to the convertor-datastructure and other parts of the code. - Several performance tests have been run, the netpipe latency does not change with this patch on Linux/x86-64 on the smoky cluster. - Extensive tests have been done to verify correctness (no new regressions) using: 1. mpi_test_suite on linux/x86-64 using clean ompi-trunk and ompi-ddt: a. running both trunk and ompi-ddt resulted in no differences (except for MPI_SHORT_INT and MPI_TYPE_MIX_LB_UB do now run correctly). b. with --enable-memchecker and running under valgrind (one buglet when run with static found in test-suite, commited) 2. ibm testsuite on linux/x86-64 using clean ompi-trunk and ompi-ddt: all passed (except for the dynamic/ tests failed!! as trunk/MTT) 3. compilation and usage of HDF5 tests on Jaguar using PGI and PathScale compilers. 4. compilation and usage on Scicortex. - Please note, that for the heterogeneous case, (-m32 compiled binaries/ompi), neither ompi-trunk, nor ompi-ddt branch would successfully launch. This commit was SVN r21641.
2009-07-13 08:56:31 +04:00
AC_CHECK_TYPES(long double)
# We only need these types if we're building the OMPI project, but
# OPAL currently doesn't protect for their lack of presence well.
== Highlights == 1. New mpifort wrapper compiler: you can utilize mpif.h, use mpi, and use mpi_f08 through this one wrapper compiler 1. mpif77 and mpif90 still exist, but are sym links to mpifort and may be removed in a future release 1. The mpi module has been re-implemented and is significantly "mo' bettah" 1. The mpi_f08 module offers many, many improvements over mpif.h and the mpi module This stuff is coming from a VERY long-lived mercurial branch (3 years!); it'll almost certainly take a few SVN commits and a bunch of testing before I get it correctly committed to the SVN trunk. == More details == Craig Rasmussen and I have been working with the MPI-3 Fortran WG and Fortran J3 committees for a long, long time to make a prototype MPI-3 Fortran bindings implementation. We think we're at a stable enough state to bring this stuff back to the trunk, with the goal of including it in OMPI v1.7. Special thanks go out to everyone who has been incredibly patient and helpful to us in this journey: * Rolf Rabenseifner/HLRS (mastermind/genius behind the entire MPI-3 Fortran effort) * The Fortran J3 committee * Tobias Burnus/gfortran * Tony !Goetz/Absoft * Terry !Donte/Oracle * ...and probably others whom I'm forgetting :-( There's still opportunities for optimization in the mpi_f08 implementation, but by and large, it is as far along as it can be until Fortran compilers start implementing the new F08 dimension(..) syntax. Note that gfortran is currently unsupported for the mpi_f08 module and the new mpi module. gfortran users will a) fall back to the same mpi module implementation that is in OMPI v1.5.x, and b) not get the new mpi_f08 module. The gfortran maintainers are actively working hard to add the necessary features to support both the new mpi_f08 module and the new mpi module implementations. This will take some time. As mentioned above, ompi/mpi/f77 and ompi/mpi/f90 no longer exist. All the fortran bindings implementations have been collated under ompi/mpi/fortran; each implementation has its own subdirectory: {{{ ompi/mpi/fortran/ base/ - glue code mpif-h/ - what used to be ompi/mpi/f77 use-mpi-tkr/ - what used to be ompi/mpi/f90 use-mpi-ignore-tkr/ - new mpi module implementation use-mpi-f08/ - new mpi_f08 module implementation }}} There's also a prototype 6-function-MPI implementation under use-mpi-f08-desc that emulates the new F08 dimension(..) syntax that isn't fully available in Fortran compilers yet. We did that to prove it to ourselves that it could be done once the compilers fully support it. This directory/implementation will likely eventually replace the use-mpi-f08 version. Other things that were done: * ompi_info grew a few new output fields to describe what level of Fortran support is included * Existing Fortran examples in examples/ were renamed; new mpi_f08 examples were added * The old Fortran MPI libraries were renamed: * libmpi_f77 -> libmpi_mpifh * libmpi_f90 -> libmpi_usempi * The configury for Fortran was consolidated and significantly slimmed down. Note that the F77 env variable is now IGNORED for configure; you should only use FC. Example: {{{ shell$ ./configure CC=icc CXX=icpc FC=ifort ... }}} All of this work was done in a Mercurial branch off the SVN trunk, and hosted at Bitbucket. This branch has got to be one of OMPI's longest-running branches. Its first commit was Tue Apr 07 23:01:46 2009 -0400 -- it's over 3 years old! :-) We think we've pulled in all relevant changes from the OMPI trunk (e.g., Fortran implementations of the new MPI-3 MPROBE stuff for mpif.h, use mpi, and use mpi_f08, and the recent Fujitsu Fortran patches). I anticipate some instability when we bring this stuff into the trunk, simply because it touches a LOT of code in the MPI layer in the OMPI code base. We'll try our best to make it as pain-free as possible, but please bear with us when it is committed. This commit was SVN r26283.
2012-04-18 19:57:29 +04:00
AC_CHECK_HEADERS(complex.h)
- Split the datatype engine into two parts: an MPI specific part in OMPI and a language agnostic part in OPAL. The convertor is completely moved into OPAL. This offers several benefits as described in RFC http://www.open-mpi.org/community/lists/devel/2009/07/6387.php namely: - Fewer basic types (int* and float* types, boolean and wchar - Fixing naming scheme to ompi-nomenclature. - Usability outside of the ompi-layer. - Due to the fixed nature of simple opal types, their information is completely known at compile time and therefore constified - With fewer datatypes (22), the actual sizes of bit-field types may be reduced from 64 to 32 bits, allowing reorganizing the opal_datatype structure, eliminating holes and keeping data required in convertor (upon send/recv) in one cacheline... This has implications to the convertor-datastructure and other parts of the code. - Several performance tests have been run, the netpipe latency does not change with this patch on Linux/x86-64 on the smoky cluster. - Extensive tests have been done to verify correctness (no new regressions) using: 1. mpi_test_suite on linux/x86-64 using clean ompi-trunk and ompi-ddt: a. running both trunk and ompi-ddt resulted in no differences (except for MPI_SHORT_INT and MPI_TYPE_MIX_LB_UB do now run correctly). b. with --enable-memchecker and running under valgrind (one buglet when run with static found in test-suite, commited) 2. ibm testsuite on linux/x86-64 using clean ompi-trunk and ompi-ddt: all passed (except for the dynamic/ tests failed!! as trunk/MTT) 3. compilation and usage of HDF5 tests on Jaguar using PGI and PathScale compilers. 4. compilation and usage on Scicortex. - Please note, that for the heterogeneous case, (-m32 compiled binaries/ompi), neither ompi-trunk, nor ompi-ddt branch would successfully launch. This commit was SVN r21641.
2009-07-13 08:56:31 +04:00
AC_CHECK_TYPES(float _Complex)
AC_CHECK_TYPES(double _Complex)
AC_CHECK_TYPES(long double _Complex)
AC_CHECK_TYPES(intptr_t)
AC_CHECK_TYPES(uintptr_t)
AC_CHECK_TYPES(mode_t)
AC_CHECK_TYPES(ssize_t)
AC_CHECK_TYPES(ptrdiff_t)
#
# Check for type sizes
#
AC_CHECK_SIZEOF(char)
AC_CHECK_SIZEOF(short)
AC_CHECK_SIZEOF(int)
AC_CHECK_SIZEOF(long)
if test "$ac_cv_type_long_long" = yes; then
AC_CHECK_SIZEOF(long long)
fi
- Split the datatype engine into two parts: an MPI specific part in OMPI and a language agnostic part in OPAL. The convertor is completely moved into OPAL. This offers several benefits as described in RFC http://www.open-mpi.org/community/lists/devel/2009/07/6387.php namely: - Fewer basic types (int* and float* types, boolean and wchar - Fixing naming scheme to ompi-nomenclature. - Usability outside of the ompi-layer. - Due to the fixed nature of simple opal types, their information is completely known at compile time and therefore constified - With fewer datatypes (22), the actual sizes of bit-field types may be reduced from 64 to 32 bits, allowing reorganizing the opal_datatype structure, eliminating holes and keeping data required in convertor (upon send/recv) in one cacheline... This has implications to the convertor-datastructure and other parts of the code. - Several performance tests have been run, the netpipe latency does not change with this patch on Linux/x86-64 on the smoky cluster. - Extensive tests have been done to verify correctness (no new regressions) using: 1. mpi_test_suite on linux/x86-64 using clean ompi-trunk and ompi-ddt: a. running both trunk and ompi-ddt resulted in no differences (except for MPI_SHORT_INT and MPI_TYPE_MIX_LB_UB do now run correctly). b. with --enable-memchecker and running under valgrind (one buglet when run with static found in test-suite, commited) 2. ibm testsuite on linux/x86-64 using clean ompi-trunk and ompi-ddt: all passed (except for the dynamic/ tests failed!! as trunk/MTT) 3. compilation and usage of HDF5 tests on Jaguar using PGI and PathScale compilers. 4. compilation and usage on Scicortex. - Please note, that for the heterogeneous case, (-m32 compiled binaries/ompi), neither ompi-trunk, nor ompi-ddt branch would successfully launch. This commit was SVN r21641.
2009-07-13 08:56:31 +04:00
AC_CHECK_SIZEOF(float)
AC_CHECK_SIZEOF(double)
if test "$ac_cv_type_long_double" = yes; then
AC_CHECK_SIZEOF(long double)
fi
if test "$ac_cv_type___float128" = yes; then
AC_CHECK_SIZEOF(__float128)
fi
# We only need these types if we're building the OMPI project, but
# OPAL currently doesn't protect for their lack of presence well.
- Split the datatype engine into two parts: an MPI specific part in OMPI and a language agnostic part in OPAL. The convertor is completely moved into OPAL. This offers several benefits as described in RFC http://www.open-mpi.org/community/lists/devel/2009/07/6387.php namely: - Fewer basic types (int* and float* types, boolean and wchar - Fixing naming scheme to ompi-nomenclature. - Usability outside of the ompi-layer. - Due to the fixed nature of simple opal types, their information is completely known at compile time and therefore constified - With fewer datatypes (22), the actual sizes of bit-field types may be reduced from 64 to 32 bits, allowing reorganizing the opal_datatype structure, eliminating holes and keeping data required in convertor (upon send/recv) in one cacheline... This has implications to the convertor-datastructure and other parts of the code. - Several performance tests have been run, the netpipe latency does not change with this patch on Linux/x86-64 on the smoky cluster. - Extensive tests have been done to verify correctness (no new regressions) using: 1. mpi_test_suite on linux/x86-64 using clean ompi-trunk and ompi-ddt: a. running both trunk and ompi-ddt resulted in no differences (except for MPI_SHORT_INT and MPI_TYPE_MIX_LB_UB do now run correctly). b. with --enable-memchecker and running under valgrind (one buglet when run with static found in test-suite, commited) 2. ibm testsuite on linux/x86-64 using clean ompi-trunk and ompi-ddt: all passed (except for the dynamic/ tests failed!! as trunk/MTT) 3. compilation and usage of HDF5 tests on Jaguar using PGI and PathScale compilers. 4. compilation and usage on Scicortex. - Please note, that for the heterogeneous case, (-m32 compiled binaries/ompi), neither ompi-trunk, nor ompi-ddt branch would successfully launch. This commit was SVN r21641.
2009-07-13 08:56:31 +04:00
if test "$ac_cv_type_float__Complex" = yes; then
AC_CHECK_SIZEOF(float _Complex)
fi
if test "$ac_cv_type_double__Complex" = yes; then
AC_CHECK_SIZEOF(double _Complex)
fi
if test "$ac_cv_type_long_double__Complex" = yes; then
AC_CHECK_SIZEOF(long double _Complex)
fi
AC_CHECK_SIZEOF(void *)
AC_CHECK_SIZEOF(size_t)
if test "$ac_cv_type_ssize_t" = yes ; then
AC_CHECK_SIZEOF(ssize_t)
fi
if test "$ac_cv_type_ptrdiff_t" = yes; then
AC_CHECK_SIZEOF(ptrdiff_t)
fi
- Split the datatype engine into two parts: an MPI specific part in OMPI and a language agnostic part in OPAL. The convertor is completely moved into OPAL. This offers several benefits as described in RFC http://www.open-mpi.org/community/lists/devel/2009/07/6387.php namely: - Fewer basic types (int* and float* types, boolean and wchar - Fixing naming scheme to ompi-nomenclature. - Usability outside of the ompi-layer. - Due to the fixed nature of simple opal types, their information is completely known at compile time and therefore constified - With fewer datatypes (22), the actual sizes of bit-field types may be reduced from 64 to 32 bits, allowing reorganizing the opal_datatype structure, eliminating holes and keeping data required in convertor (upon send/recv) in one cacheline... This has implications to the convertor-datastructure and other parts of the code. - Several performance tests have been run, the netpipe latency does not change with this patch on Linux/x86-64 on the smoky cluster. - Extensive tests have been done to verify correctness (no new regressions) using: 1. mpi_test_suite on linux/x86-64 using clean ompi-trunk and ompi-ddt: a. running both trunk and ompi-ddt resulted in no differences (except for MPI_SHORT_INT and MPI_TYPE_MIX_LB_UB do now run correctly). b. with --enable-memchecker and running under valgrind (one buglet when run with static found in test-suite, commited) 2. ibm testsuite on linux/x86-64 using clean ompi-trunk and ompi-ddt: all passed (except for the dynamic/ tests failed!! as trunk/MTT) 3. compilation and usage of HDF5 tests on Jaguar using PGI and PathScale compilers. 4. compilation and usage on Scicortex. - Please note, that for the heterogeneous case, (-m32 compiled binaries/ompi), neither ompi-trunk, nor ompi-ddt branch would successfully launch. This commit was SVN r21641.
2009-07-13 08:56:31 +04:00
AC_CHECK_SIZEOF(wchar_t)
AC_CHECK_SIZEOF(pid_t)
#
# Check for type alignments
#
- Split the datatype engine into two parts: an MPI specific part in OMPI and a language agnostic part in OPAL. The convertor is completely moved into OPAL. This offers several benefits as described in RFC http://www.open-mpi.org/community/lists/devel/2009/07/6387.php namely: - Fewer basic types (int* and float* types, boolean and wchar - Fixing naming scheme to ompi-nomenclature. - Usability outside of the ompi-layer. - Due to the fixed nature of simple opal types, their information is completely known at compile time and therefore constified - With fewer datatypes (22), the actual sizes of bit-field types may be reduced from 64 to 32 bits, allowing reorganizing the opal_datatype structure, eliminating holes and keeping data required in convertor (upon send/recv) in one cacheline... This has implications to the convertor-datastructure and other parts of the code. - Several performance tests have been run, the netpipe latency does not change with this patch on Linux/x86-64 on the smoky cluster. - Extensive tests have been done to verify correctness (no new regressions) using: 1. mpi_test_suite on linux/x86-64 using clean ompi-trunk and ompi-ddt: a. running both trunk and ompi-ddt resulted in no differences (except for MPI_SHORT_INT and MPI_TYPE_MIX_LB_UB do now run correctly). b. with --enable-memchecker and running under valgrind (one buglet when run with static found in test-suite, commited) 2. ibm testsuite on linux/x86-64 using clean ompi-trunk and ompi-ddt: all passed (except for the dynamic/ tests failed!! as trunk/MTT) 3. compilation and usage of HDF5 tests on Jaguar using PGI and PathScale compilers. 4. compilation and usage on Scicortex. - Please note, that for the heterogeneous case, (-m32 compiled binaries/ompi), neither ompi-trunk, nor ompi-ddt branch would successfully launch. This commit was SVN r21641.
2009-07-13 08:56:31 +04:00
OMPI_C_GET_ALIGNMENT(_Bool, OPAL_ALIGNMENT_BOOL)
OMPI_C_GET_ALIGNMENT(int8_t, OPAL_ALIGNMENT_INT8)
OMPI_C_GET_ALIGNMENT(int16_t, OPAL_ALIGNMENT_INT16)
OMPI_C_GET_ALIGNMENT(int32_t, OPAL_ALIGNMENT_INT32)
OMPI_C_GET_ALIGNMENT(int64_t, OPAL_ALIGNMENT_INT64)
if test "$ac_cv_type_int128_t" = yes ; then
OMPI_C_GET_ALIGNMENT(int128_t, OPAL_ALIGNMENT_INT128)
fi
OMPI_C_GET_ALIGNMENT(char, OPAL_ALIGNMENT_CHAR)
OMPI_C_GET_ALIGNMENT(short, OPAL_ALIGNMENT_SHORT)
- Split the datatype engine into two parts: an MPI specific part in OMPI and a language agnostic part in OPAL. The convertor is completely moved into OPAL. This offers several benefits as described in RFC http://www.open-mpi.org/community/lists/devel/2009/07/6387.php namely: - Fewer basic types (int* and float* types, boolean and wchar - Fixing naming scheme to ompi-nomenclature. - Usability outside of the ompi-layer. - Due to the fixed nature of simple opal types, their information is completely known at compile time and therefore constified - With fewer datatypes (22), the actual sizes of bit-field types may be reduced from 64 to 32 bits, allowing reorganizing the opal_datatype structure, eliminating holes and keeping data required in convertor (upon send/recv) in one cacheline... This has implications to the convertor-datastructure and other parts of the code. - Several performance tests have been run, the netpipe latency does not change with this patch on Linux/x86-64 on the smoky cluster. - Extensive tests have been done to verify correctness (no new regressions) using: 1. mpi_test_suite on linux/x86-64 using clean ompi-trunk and ompi-ddt: a. running both trunk and ompi-ddt resulted in no differences (except for MPI_SHORT_INT and MPI_TYPE_MIX_LB_UB do now run correctly). b. with --enable-memchecker and running under valgrind (one buglet when run with static found in test-suite, commited) 2. ibm testsuite on linux/x86-64 using clean ompi-trunk and ompi-ddt: all passed (except for the dynamic/ tests failed!! as trunk/MTT) 3. compilation and usage of HDF5 tests on Jaguar using PGI and PathScale compilers. 4. compilation and usage on Scicortex. - Please note, that for the heterogeneous case, (-m32 compiled binaries/ompi), neither ompi-trunk, nor ompi-ddt branch would successfully launch. This commit was SVN r21641.
2009-07-13 08:56:31 +04:00
OMPI_C_GET_ALIGNMENT(wchar_t, OPAL_ALIGNMENT_WCHAR)
OMPI_C_GET_ALIGNMENT(int, OPAL_ALIGNMENT_INT)
OMPI_C_GET_ALIGNMENT(long, OPAL_ALIGNMENT_LONG)
- Split the datatype engine into two parts: an MPI specific part in OMPI and a language agnostic part in OPAL. The convertor is completely moved into OPAL. This offers several benefits as described in RFC http://www.open-mpi.org/community/lists/devel/2009/07/6387.php namely: - Fewer basic types (int* and float* types, boolean and wchar - Fixing naming scheme to ompi-nomenclature. - Usability outside of the ompi-layer. - Due to the fixed nature of simple opal types, their information is completely known at compile time and therefore constified - With fewer datatypes (22), the actual sizes of bit-field types may be reduced from 64 to 32 bits, allowing reorganizing the opal_datatype structure, eliminating holes and keeping data required in convertor (upon send/recv) in one cacheline... This has implications to the convertor-datastructure and other parts of the code. - Several performance tests have been run, the netpipe latency does not change with this patch on Linux/x86-64 on the smoky cluster. - Extensive tests have been done to verify correctness (no new regressions) using: 1. mpi_test_suite on linux/x86-64 using clean ompi-trunk and ompi-ddt: a. running both trunk and ompi-ddt resulted in no differences (except for MPI_SHORT_INT and MPI_TYPE_MIX_LB_UB do now run correctly). b. with --enable-memchecker and running under valgrind (one buglet when run with static found in test-suite, commited) 2. ibm testsuite on linux/x86-64 using clean ompi-trunk and ompi-ddt: all passed (except for the dynamic/ tests failed!! as trunk/MTT) 3. compilation and usage of HDF5 tests on Jaguar using PGI and PathScale compilers. 4. compilation and usage on Scicortex. - Please note, that for the heterogeneous case, (-m32 compiled binaries/ompi), neither ompi-trunk, nor ompi-ddt branch would successfully launch. This commit was SVN r21641.
2009-07-13 08:56:31 +04:00
if test "$ac_cv_type_long_long" = yes; then
OMPI_C_GET_ALIGNMENT(long long, OPAL_ALIGNMENT_LONG_LONG)
fi
- Split the datatype engine into two parts: an MPI specific part in OMPI and a language agnostic part in OPAL. The convertor is completely moved into OPAL. This offers several benefits as described in RFC http://www.open-mpi.org/community/lists/devel/2009/07/6387.php namely: - Fewer basic types (int* and float* types, boolean and wchar - Fixing naming scheme to ompi-nomenclature. - Usability outside of the ompi-layer. - Due to the fixed nature of simple opal types, their information is completely known at compile time and therefore constified - With fewer datatypes (22), the actual sizes of bit-field types may be reduced from 64 to 32 bits, allowing reorganizing the opal_datatype structure, eliminating holes and keeping data required in convertor (upon send/recv) in one cacheline... This has implications to the convertor-datastructure and other parts of the code. - Several performance tests have been run, the netpipe latency does not change with this patch on Linux/x86-64 on the smoky cluster. - Extensive tests have been done to verify correctness (no new regressions) using: 1. mpi_test_suite on linux/x86-64 using clean ompi-trunk and ompi-ddt: a. running both trunk and ompi-ddt resulted in no differences (except for MPI_SHORT_INT and MPI_TYPE_MIX_LB_UB do now run correctly). b. with --enable-memchecker and running under valgrind (one buglet when run with static found in test-suite, commited) 2. ibm testsuite on linux/x86-64 using clean ompi-trunk and ompi-ddt: all passed (except for the dynamic/ tests failed!! as trunk/MTT) 3. compilation and usage of HDF5 tests on Jaguar using PGI and PathScale compilers. 4. compilation and usage on Scicortex. - Please note, that for the heterogeneous case, (-m32 compiled binaries/ompi), neither ompi-trunk, nor ompi-ddt branch would successfully launch. This commit was SVN r21641.
2009-07-13 08:56:31 +04:00
OMPI_C_GET_ALIGNMENT(float, OPAL_ALIGNMENT_FLOAT)
OMPI_C_GET_ALIGNMENT(double, OPAL_ALIGNMENT_DOUBLE)
if test "$ac_cv_type_long_double" = yes; then
OMPI_C_GET_ALIGNMENT(long double, OPAL_ALIGNMENT_LONG_DOUBLE)
fi
if test "$ac_cv_type___float128" = yes; then
OMPI_C_GET_ALIGNMENT(__float128, OPAL_ALIGNMENT___FLOAT128)
fi
- Split the datatype engine into two parts: an MPI specific part in OMPI and a language agnostic part in OPAL. The convertor is completely moved into OPAL. This offers several benefits as described in RFC http://www.open-mpi.org/community/lists/devel/2009/07/6387.php namely: - Fewer basic types (int* and float* types, boolean and wchar - Fixing naming scheme to ompi-nomenclature. - Usability outside of the ompi-layer. - Due to the fixed nature of simple opal types, their information is completely known at compile time and therefore constified - With fewer datatypes (22), the actual sizes of bit-field types may be reduced from 64 to 32 bits, allowing reorganizing the opal_datatype structure, eliminating holes and keeping data required in convertor (upon send/recv) in one cacheline... This has implications to the convertor-datastructure and other parts of the code. - Several performance tests have been run, the netpipe latency does not change with this patch on Linux/x86-64 on the smoky cluster. - Extensive tests have been done to verify correctness (no new regressions) using: 1. mpi_test_suite on linux/x86-64 using clean ompi-trunk and ompi-ddt: a. running both trunk and ompi-ddt resulted in no differences (except for MPI_SHORT_INT and MPI_TYPE_MIX_LB_UB do now run correctly). b. with --enable-memchecker and running under valgrind (one buglet when run with static found in test-suite, commited) 2. ibm testsuite on linux/x86-64 using clean ompi-trunk and ompi-ddt: all passed (except for the dynamic/ tests failed!! as trunk/MTT) 3. compilation and usage of HDF5 tests on Jaguar using PGI and PathScale compilers. 4. compilation and usage on Scicortex. - Please note, that for the heterogeneous case, (-m32 compiled binaries/ompi), neither ompi-trunk, nor ompi-ddt branch would successfully launch. This commit was SVN r21641.
2009-07-13 08:56:31 +04:00
# We only need these types if we're building the OMPI project, but
# OPAL currently doesn't protect for their lack of presence well.
- Split the datatype engine into two parts: an MPI specific part in OMPI and a language agnostic part in OPAL. The convertor is completely moved into OPAL. This offers several benefits as described in RFC http://www.open-mpi.org/community/lists/devel/2009/07/6387.php namely: - Fewer basic types (int* and float* types, boolean and wchar - Fixing naming scheme to ompi-nomenclature. - Usability outside of the ompi-layer. - Due to the fixed nature of simple opal types, their information is completely known at compile time and therefore constified - With fewer datatypes (22), the actual sizes of bit-field types may be reduced from 64 to 32 bits, allowing reorganizing the opal_datatype structure, eliminating holes and keeping data required in convertor (upon send/recv) in one cacheline... This has implications to the convertor-datastructure and other parts of the code. - Several performance tests have been run, the netpipe latency does not change with this patch on Linux/x86-64 on the smoky cluster. - Extensive tests have been done to verify correctness (no new regressions) using: 1. mpi_test_suite on linux/x86-64 using clean ompi-trunk and ompi-ddt: a. running both trunk and ompi-ddt resulted in no differences (except for MPI_SHORT_INT and MPI_TYPE_MIX_LB_UB do now run correctly). b. with --enable-memchecker and running under valgrind (one buglet when run with static found in test-suite, commited) 2. ibm testsuite on linux/x86-64 using clean ompi-trunk and ompi-ddt: all passed (except for the dynamic/ tests failed!! as trunk/MTT) 3. compilation and usage of HDF5 tests on Jaguar using PGI and PathScale compilers. 4. compilation and usage on Scicortex. - Please note, that for the heterogeneous case, (-m32 compiled binaries/ompi), neither ompi-trunk, nor ompi-ddt branch would successfully launch. This commit was SVN r21641.
2009-07-13 08:56:31 +04:00
if test "$ac_cv_type_float__Complex" = yes; then
OMPI_C_GET_ALIGNMENT(float _Complex, OPAL_ALIGNMENT_FLOAT_COMPLEX)
fi
if test "$ac_cv_type_double__Complex" = yes; then
OMPI_C_GET_ALIGNMENT(double _Complex, OPAL_ALIGNMENT_DOUBLE_COMPLEX)
fi
if test "$ac_cv_type_long_double__Complex" = yes; then
OMPI_C_GET_ALIGNMENT(long double _Complex, OPAL_ALIGNMENT_LONG_DOUBLE_COMPLEX)
fi
OMPI_C_GET_ALIGNMENT(void *, OPAL_ALIGNMENT_VOID_P)
OMPI_C_GET_ALIGNMENT(size_t, OPAL_ALIGNMENT_SIZE_T)
#
# Does the C compiler native support "bool"? (i.e., without
# <stdbool.h> or any other help)
#
OPAL_VAR_SCOPE_PUSH([MSG])
AC_MSG_CHECKING(for C bool type)
AC_COMPILE_IFELSE([AC_LANG_PROGRAM([
AC_INCLUDES_DEFAULT],
[[bool bar, foo = true; bar = foo;]])],
[OPAL_NEED_C_BOOL=0 MSG=yes],[OPAL_NEED_C_BOOL=1 MSG=no])
AC_DEFINE_UNQUOTED(OPAL_NEED_C_BOOL, $OPAL_NEED_C_BOOL,
[Whether the C compiler supports "bool" without any other help (such as <stdbool.h>)])
AC_MSG_RESULT([$MSG])
AC_CHECK_SIZEOF(_Bool)
OPAL_VAR_SCOPE_POP
#
# Check for other compiler characteristics
#
OPAL_VAR_SCOPE_PUSH([CFLAGS_save])
if test "$GCC" = "yes"; then
# gcc 2.96 will emit oodles of warnings if you use "inline" with
# -pedantic (which we do in developer builds). However,
# "__inline__" is ok. So we have to force gcc to select the
# right one. If you use -pedantic, the AC_C_INLINE test will fail
# (because it names a function foo() -- without the (void)). So
# we turn off all the picky flags, turn on -ansi mode (which is
# implied by -pedantic), and set warnings to be errors. Hence,
# this does the following (for 2.96):
#
# - causes the check for "inline" to emit a warning, which then
# fails
# - checks for __inline__, which then emits no error, and works
#
# This also works nicely for gcc 3.x because "inline" will work on
# the first check, and all is fine. :-)
CFLAGS_save=$CFLAGS
CFLAGS="$OPAL_CFLAGS_BEFORE_PICKY -Werror -ansi"
fi
AC_C_INLINE
# Microsoft compilers support 2 versions of restrict. One for functions, and
# one for variables. The problem is that they don't have an equivalent
# syntax, and the autoconf restrict detection is unable to detect them
# correctly. It detect the restrict keyword as __restrict which break the
# rules for function syntax which is declspec(restrict).
if test "x$ompi_cv_c_compiler_vendor" != "xmicrosoft"; then
AC_C_RESTRICT
fi
OMPI_C_WEAK_SYMBOLS
if test "$GCC" = "yes"; then
CFLAGS=$CFLAGS_save
fi
OPAL_VAR_SCOPE_POP
2003-11-22 19:36:58 +03:00
if test "x$CC" = "xicc"; then
OMPI_CHECK_ICC_VARARGS
fi
# If we want the profiling layer:
# - If the C compiler has weak symbols, use those.
# - If not, then set to compile the code again with #define's in a
# separate directory.
if test "$WANT_WEAK_SYMBOLS" = "0"; then
OPAL_C_HAVE_WEAK_SYMBOLS=0
fi
if test "$WANT_MPI_PROFILING" = "1"; then
if test "$OPAL_C_HAVE_WEAK_SYMBOLS" = "1"; then
OMPI_PROFILING_COMPILE_SEPARATELY=0
else
OMPI_PROFILING_COMPILE_SEPARATELY=1
fi
else
OMPI_PROFILING_COMPILE_SEPARATELY=0
fi
# Check if we support the offsetof compiler directive
OPAL_CHECK_OFFSETOF
2003-11-22 19:36:58 +03:00
##################################
# C++ compiler characteristics
##################################
# We don't need C++ unless we're building Open MPI; ORTE and OPAL do
# not use C++ at all. The OPAL macro name appears to be a bit of a
# misnomer; I'm not sure why it was split into a second macro and put
# into OPAL...? All it does is setup the C++ compiler (the OMPI macro
# sets up the C++ MPI bindings, etc.). Perhaps it was moved to OPAL
# just on the rationale that all compiler setup should be done in
# OPAL...? Shrug.
m4_ifdef([project_ompi], [OPAL_SETUP_CXX
OMPI_SETUP_CXX])
##################################
# Only after setting up both
# C and C++ check compiler attributes.
##################################
opal_show_subtitle "Compiler characteristics"
OPAL_CHECK_ATTRIBUTES
- As proposed in RFC and telcon, warn the user about deprecated functionality (per MPI-2.1). This warning can be toggled using --enable-mpi-interface-warning (default OFF), but can be selectively turned on passing mpicc -DOMPI_WANT_MPI_INTERFACE_WARNING Using icc, gcc < 4.5, warnings (such as in mpi2basic_tests) show: type_vector.c:83: warning: ‘MPI_Type_hvector’ is deprecated (declared at /home/../usr/include/mpi.h:1379) Using gcc-4.5 (gcc-svn) these show up as: type_vector.c:83: warning: ‘MPI_Type_hvector’ is deprecated (declared at /home/../usr/include/mpi.h:1379): MPI_Type_hvector is superseded by MPI_Type_create_hvector in MPI-2.0 Jeff and I propose to turn such warnings on with Open MPI-1.7 by default. - Detection of user-level compiler is handled using the preprocessor checks of GASnet's other/portable_platform.h (thanks to Paul Hargrove and Dan Bonachea) adapted into ompi/include/mpi_portable_platform.h (see comments). The OMPI-build time detection is output (Familyname and Version) with ompi_info. This functionality (actually any upcoming __attribute__) are turned off, if a different compiler (and version) is being detected. - Note, that any warnings regarding (user-compiler!=build-compiler) as discussed in the RFC are _not_ included for now. - Tested on Linux with --enable-mpi-interface-warning on Linux, gcc-4.5 (deprecated w/ specific msg) Linux, gcc-4.3 (deprecated w/o specific msg) Linux, pathscale 3.1 (deprecated w/o specific msg) Linux, icc-11.0 (deprecated w/o specific msg) Linux, PGI-8.0.6 accepts __deprecated__ but does not issue a warning, further investigation needed... This commit was SVN r21262.
2009-05-22 08:39:43 +04:00
OPAL_CHECK_COMPILER_VERSION_ID
##################################
# Java MPI Binding request
##################################
# Only needed for OMPI
m4_ifdef([project_ompi], [OMPI_SETUP_JAVA_BINDINGS])
##################################
# MPI API profiling layer
##################################
# Setup OMPI bindings (if we're building the OMPI project). Note that
# opal_wrapper.c has a hard-coded use of the OMPI_ENABLE_MPI_PROFILING
# macro, so we need to define it (to 0) even if we're not building the
# OMPI project.
m4_ifdef([project_ompi], [OMPI_SETUP_MPI_PROFILING],
[AC_DEFINE([OMPI_ENABLE_MPI_PROFILING], [0],
[We are not building OMPI, so no profiling])])
##################################
# Assembler Configuration
##################################
opal_show_subtitle "Assembler"
AM_PROG_AS
OPAL_CONFIG_ASM
2003-11-22 19:36:58 +03:00
##################################
# Fortran
##################################
m4_ifdef([project_ompi], [OMPI_SETUP_MPI_FORTRAN], [ompi_fortran_happy=0])
AM_CONDITIONAL(OSHMEM_BUILD_FORTRAN_BINDINGS,
[test "$enable_oshmem" == "yes" -a "$ompi_fortran_happy" == "1" -a \
"$OMPI_WANT_FORTRAN_BINDINGS" == "1" -a \
"$enable_oshmem_fortran" != "no"])
* Rewrite ompi_mca.m4 to use m4_defined lists of projects (ompi, orte, etc.), frameworks, and components without configure scripts instead of hard-coded shell variables (for projects and frameworks) and shell variable building (for components). * Add 3rd category of component configuration (in addition to configure scripts and no-configured components): configure.m4 components. These components can only be built as part of OMPI (like no-configure), but can provide an m4 file that is run as part of the main configure script. These macros can set whether the component should be built, along with just about any other configuration wanted. More care must be taken compared to configure components, as doing things like setting variables or calling AC_MSG_ERROR now affects the top-level configure script (so calling AC_MSG_ERROR if your component can't configure probably isn't what you want) * Added support to autogen.sh for the configure.m4-style components, as well as building up the m4_define lists ompi_mca.m4 now expects * Updated a number of macros to be more config.cache friendly (both so that config.cache can be used and so the test can be quickly run multiple times in the same configrue script): - ompi_config_asm - c_weak_symbols - c_get_alignment * Added new macros to be shared when configuring components: - ompi_objc.m4 (this actually provides AC_PROG_OBJC - don't ask...) - ompi_check_xgrid - ompi_check_tm - ompi_check_bproc * Updated a number of components to use configure.m4 instead of configure.stub - btl portals - io romio - tm ras and pls - bjs, lsf_bproc ras and bproc_seed pls - xgrid ras and pls - null iof (used by tm) This commit was SVN r6412.
2005-07-09 22:52:53 +04:00
# checkpoint results
AC_CACHE_SAVE
2003-11-22 19:36:58 +03:00
##################################
# Header files
##################################
opal_show_title "Header file tests"
AC_CHECK_HEADERS([alloca.h aio.h arpa/inet.h dirent.h \
dlfcn.h execinfo.h err.h fcntl.h grp.h inttypes.h libgen.h \
libutil.h memory.h netdb.h netinet/in.h netinet/tcp.h \
poll.h pthread.h pty.h pwd.h sched.h stdint.h stddef.h \
stdlib.h string.h strings.h stropts.h sys/fcntl.h sys/ipc.h sys/shm.h \
sys/ioctl.h sys/mman.h sys/param.h sys/queue.h \
sys/resource.h sys/select.h sys/socket.h sys/sockio.h \
stdarg.h sys/stat.h sys/statfs.h sys/statvfs.h sys/time.h sys/tree.h \
sys/types.h sys/uio.h sys/un.h net/uio.h sys/utsname.h sys/vfs.h sys/wait.h syslog.h \
time.h termios.h ulimit.h unistd.h util.h utmp.h malloc.h \
ifaddrs.h crt_externs.h regex.h signal.h \
ioLib.h sockLib.h hostLib.h shlwapi.h sys/synch.h limits.h db.h ndbm.h])
AC_CHECK_HEADERS([sys/mount.h], [], [],
[AC_INCLUDES_DEFAULT
#if HAVE_SYS_PARAM_H
#include <sys/param.h>
#endif
])
AC_CHECK_HEADERS([sys/sysctl.h], [], [],
[AC_INCLUDES_DEFAULT
#if HAVE_SYS_PARAM_H
#include <sys/param.h>
#endif
])
# Needed to work around Darwin requiring sys/socket.h for
# net/if.h
AC_CHECK_HEADERS([net/if.h], [], [],
[#include <stdio.h>
#if STDC_HEADERS
# include <stdlib.h>
# include <stddef.h>
#else
# if HAVE_STDLIB_H
# include <stdlib.h>
# endif
#endif
#if HAVE_SYS_SOCKET_H
# include <sys/socket.h>
#endif
])
# Note that sometimes we have <stdbool.h>, but it doesn't work (e.g.,
# have both Portland and GNU installed; using pgcc will find GNU's
# <stdbool.h>, which all it does -- by standard -- is define "bool" to
# "_Bool" [see
# http://www.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/009695399/basedefs/stdbool.h.html],
# and Portland has no idea what to do with _Bool).
# So first figure out if we have <stdbool.h> (i.e., check the value of
# the macro HAVE_STDBOOL_H from the result of AC_CHECK_HEADERS,
# above). If we do have it, then check to see if it actually works.
# Define OPAL_USE_STDBOOL_H as approrpaite.
AC_CHECK_HEADERS([stdbool.h], [have_stdbool_h=1], [have_stdbool_h=0])
OPAL_VAR_SCOPE_PUSH([MSG])
AC_MSG_CHECKING([if <stdbool.h> works])
if test "$have_stdbool_h" = "1"; then
AC_COMPILE_IFELSE([AC_LANG_PROGRAM([
AC_INCLUDES_DEFAULT[
#if HAVE_STDBOOL_H
#include <stdbool.h>
#endif]],
[[bool bar, foo = true; bar = foo;]])],
[OPAL_USE_STDBOOL_H=1 MSG=yes],[OPAL_USE_STDBOOL_H=0 MSG=no])
else
OPAL_USE_STDBOOL_H=0
MSG="no (don't have <stdbool.h>)"
fi
AC_DEFINE_UNQUOTED(OPAL_USE_STDBOOL_H, $OPAL_USE_STDBOOL_H,
[Whether to use <stdbool.h> or not])
AC_MSG_RESULT([$MSG])
OPAL_VAR_SCOPE_POP
2003-11-22 19:36:58 +03:00
* Rewrite ompi_mca.m4 to use m4_defined lists of projects (ompi, orte, etc.), frameworks, and components without configure scripts instead of hard-coded shell variables (for projects and frameworks) and shell variable building (for components). * Add 3rd category of component configuration (in addition to configure scripts and no-configured components): configure.m4 components. These components can only be built as part of OMPI (like no-configure), but can provide an m4 file that is run as part of the main configure script. These macros can set whether the component should be built, along with just about any other configuration wanted. More care must be taken compared to configure components, as doing things like setting variables or calling AC_MSG_ERROR now affects the top-level configure script (so calling AC_MSG_ERROR if your component can't configure probably isn't what you want) * Added support to autogen.sh for the configure.m4-style components, as well as building up the m4_define lists ompi_mca.m4 now expects * Updated a number of macros to be more config.cache friendly (both so that config.cache can be used and so the test can be quickly run multiple times in the same configrue script): - ompi_config_asm - c_weak_symbols - c_get_alignment * Added new macros to be shared when configuring components: - ompi_objc.m4 (this actually provides AC_PROG_OBJC - don't ask...) - ompi_check_xgrid - ompi_check_tm - ompi_check_bproc * Updated a number of components to use configure.m4 instead of configure.stub - btl portals - io romio - tm ras and pls - bjs, lsf_bproc ras and bproc_seed pls - xgrid ras and pls - null iof (used by tm) This commit was SVN r6412.
2005-07-09 22:52:53 +04:00
# checkpoint results
AC_CACHE_SAVE
2003-11-22 19:36:58 +03:00
##################################
# Types
##################################
opal_show_title "Type tests"
AC_CHECK_TYPES([socklen_t, struct sockaddr_in, struct sockaddr_in6,
struct sockaddr_storage],
[], [], [AC_INCLUDES_DEFAULT
#if HAVE_SYS_SOCKET_H
#include <sys/socket.h>
#endif
#ifdef HAVE_NETINET_IN_H
#include <netinet/in.h>
#endif])
AC_CHECK_DECLS([AF_UNSPEC, PF_UNSPEC, AF_INET6, PF_INET6],
[], [], [AC_INCLUDES_DEFAULT
#if HAVE_SYS_SOCKET_H
#include <sys/socket.h>
#endif
#ifdef HAVE_NETINET_IN_H
#include <netinet/in.h>
#endif])
# SA_RESTART in signal.h
OPAL_VAR_SCOPE_PUSH([MSG])
AC_MSG_CHECKING([if SA_RESTART defined in signal.h])
AC_EGREP_CPP(yes, [
#include <signal.h>
#ifdef SA_RESTART
yes
#endif ], [MSG=yes VALUE=1], [MSG=no VALUE=0])
AC_DEFINE_UNQUOTED(OPAL_HAVE_SA_RESTART, $VALUE,
[Whether we have SA_RESTART in <signal.h> or not])
AC_MSG_RESULT([$MSG])
OPAL_VAR_SCOPE_POP
AC_CHECK_MEMBERS([struct sockaddr.sa_len], [], [], [
#include <sys/types.h>
#if HAVE_SYS_SOCKET_H
#include <sys/socket.h>
#endif])
AC_CHECK_MEMBERS([struct dirent.d_type], [], [], [
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <dirent.h>])
AC_CHECK_MEMBERS([siginfo_t.si_fd],,,[#include <signal.h>])
AC_CHECK_MEMBERS([siginfo_t.si_band],,,[#include <signal.h>])
Make the use of statfs()/statvfs() be more robust. As noted by Paul Hargrove, the #if's surrounding the use of statfs() and statvfs() in opal/util/path.c have apparently gotten stale (e.g., modern flavors of *BSD OSs no longer define __BSD). Changes: * Add statfs and statvfs to the AC_CHECK_FUNCS in configure.ac * Add a sanity check to ensure that we have at least one of statfs() or statvfs(). Add a similar sanity check in opal/util/path.c, just as defensive programming. * Use AC_CHECK_MEMBERS in configure.ac to check for specific struct statfs/struct statvfs members that we use in opal/util/path.c * In path.c, add some #includes as listed on the OS man page for statfs(2) (OS X 10.8.5/Mountain Lion) * The previous code used statvfs() on Solaris and statfs() everywhere else. Attempting to replicate this with behavior-based configure testing led to fairly complicted if/else logic, so the new code uses whichever of the two are available (i.e., it might actually use both -- OS X 10.8.5 and RHEL 6.5 have both statfs() and statvfs()). The rationale here is that we don't really care which of the two functions report the answer; we'll take the answer regardless of where it comes from. For example, if one function returns a failure and the other does not, we'll use the results from the successful function and ignore the failed one. This new code seems to work on OS X and Linux. We'll have to see what happens with MTT and future Paul Hargrove testing... cmr=v1.7.4:reviewer=ompi-rm1.7:subject=Make statfs/statvfs more robust This commit was SVN r30198.
2014-01-10 01:28:52 +04:00
#
# Checks for struct member names in struct statfs
#
AC_CHECK_MEMBERS([struct statfs.f_type], [], [], [
AC_INCLUDES_DEFAULT
#ifdef HAVE_SYS_VFS_H
#include <sys/vfs.h>
#endif
#ifdef HAVE_SYS_STATFS_H
Make the use of statfs()/statvfs() be more robust. As noted by Paul Hargrove, the #if's surrounding the use of statfs() and statvfs() in opal/util/path.c have apparently gotten stale (e.g., modern flavors of *BSD OSs no longer define __BSD). Changes: * Add statfs and statvfs to the AC_CHECK_FUNCS in configure.ac * Add a sanity check to ensure that we have at least one of statfs() or statvfs(). Add a similar sanity check in opal/util/path.c, just as defensive programming. * Use AC_CHECK_MEMBERS in configure.ac to check for specific struct statfs/struct statvfs members that we use in opal/util/path.c * In path.c, add some #includes as listed on the OS man page for statfs(2) (OS X 10.8.5/Mountain Lion) * The previous code used statvfs() on Solaris and statfs() everywhere else. Attempting to replicate this with behavior-based configure testing led to fairly complicted if/else logic, so the new code uses whichever of the two are available (i.e., it might actually use both -- OS X 10.8.5 and RHEL 6.5 have both statfs() and statvfs()). The rationale here is that we don't really care which of the two functions report the answer; we'll take the answer regardless of where it comes from. For example, if one function returns a failure and the other does not, we'll use the results from the successful function and ignore the failed one. This new code seems to work on OS X and Linux. We'll have to see what happens with MTT and future Paul Hargrove testing... cmr=v1.7.4:reviewer=ompi-rm1.7:subject=Make statfs/statvfs more robust This commit was SVN r30198.
2014-01-10 01:28:52 +04:00
#include <sys/statfs.h>
#endif
])
AC_CHECK_MEMBERS([struct statfs.f_fstypename], [], [], [
AC_INCLUDES_DEFAULT
#ifdef HAVE_SYS_PARAM_H
#include <sys/param.h>
#endif
#ifdef HAVE_SYS_MOUNT_H
#include <sys/mount.h>
#endif
#ifdef HAVE_SYS_VFS_H
#include <sys/vfs.h>
#endif
#ifdef HAVE_SYS_STATFS_H
Make the use of statfs()/statvfs() be more robust. As noted by Paul Hargrove, the #if's surrounding the use of statfs() and statvfs() in opal/util/path.c have apparently gotten stale (e.g., modern flavors of *BSD OSs no longer define __BSD). Changes: * Add statfs and statvfs to the AC_CHECK_FUNCS in configure.ac * Add a sanity check to ensure that we have at least one of statfs() or statvfs(). Add a similar sanity check in opal/util/path.c, just as defensive programming. * Use AC_CHECK_MEMBERS in configure.ac to check for specific struct statfs/struct statvfs members that we use in opal/util/path.c * In path.c, add some #includes as listed on the OS man page for statfs(2) (OS X 10.8.5/Mountain Lion) * The previous code used statvfs() on Solaris and statfs() everywhere else. Attempting to replicate this with behavior-based configure testing led to fairly complicted if/else logic, so the new code uses whichever of the two are available (i.e., it might actually use both -- OS X 10.8.5 and RHEL 6.5 have both statfs() and statvfs()). The rationale here is that we don't really care which of the two functions report the answer; we'll take the answer regardless of where it comes from. For example, if one function returns a failure and the other does not, we'll use the results from the successful function and ignore the failed one. This new code seems to work on OS X and Linux. We'll have to see what happens with MTT and future Paul Hargrove testing... cmr=v1.7.4:reviewer=ompi-rm1.7:subject=Make statfs/statvfs more robust This commit was SVN r30198.
2014-01-10 01:28:52 +04:00
#include <sys/statfs.h>
#endif
])
#
# Checks for struct member names in struct statvfs
#
AC_CHECK_MEMBERS([struct statvfs.f_basetype], [], [], [
AC_INCLUDES_DEFAULT
#ifdef HAVE_SYS_STATVFS_H
#include <sys/statvfs.h>
#endif
])
AC_CHECK_MEMBERS([struct statvfs.f_fstypename], [], [], [
AC_INCLUDES_DEFAULT
#ifdef HAVE_SYS_STATVFS_H
Make the use of statfs()/statvfs() be more robust. As noted by Paul Hargrove, the #if's surrounding the use of statfs() and statvfs() in opal/util/path.c have apparently gotten stale (e.g., modern flavors of *BSD OSs no longer define __BSD). Changes: * Add statfs and statvfs to the AC_CHECK_FUNCS in configure.ac * Add a sanity check to ensure that we have at least one of statfs() or statvfs(). Add a similar sanity check in opal/util/path.c, just as defensive programming. * Use AC_CHECK_MEMBERS in configure.ac to check for specific struct statfs/struct statvfs members that we use in opal/util/path.c * In path.c, add some #includes as listed on the OS man page for statfs(2) (OS X 10.8.5/Mountain Lion) * The previous code used statvfs() on Solaris and statfs() everywhere else. Attempting to replicate this with behavior-based configure testing led to fairly complicted if/else logic, so the new code uses whichever of the two are available (i.e., it might actually use both -- OS X 10.8.5 and RHEL 6.5 have both statfs() and statvfs()). The rationale here is that we don't really care which of the two functions report the answer; we'll take the answer regardless of where it comes from. For example, if one function returns a failure and the other does not, we'll use the results from the successful function and ignore the failed one. This new code seems to work on OS X and Linux. We'll have to see what happens with MTT and future Paul Hargrove testing... cmr=v1.7.4:reviewer=ompi-rm1.7:subject=Make statfs/statvfs more robust This commit was SVN r30198.
2014-01-10 01:28:52 +04:00
#include <sys/statvfs.h>
#endif
])
#
# Check for ptrdiff type. Yes, there are platforms where
# sizeof(void*) != sizeof(long) (64 bit Windows, apparently).
#
AC_MSG_CHECKING([for pointer diff type])
if test $ac_cv_type_ptrdiff_t = yes ; then
opal_ptrdiff_t="ptrdiff_t"
opal_ptrdiff_size=$ac_cv_sizeof_ptrdiff_t
elif test $ac_cv_sizeof_void_p -eq $ac_cv_sizeof_long ; then
opal_ptrdiff_t="long"
opal_ptrdiff_size=$ac_cv_sizeof_long
elif test $ac_cv_type_long_long = yes -a $ac_cv_sizeof_void_p -eq $ac_cv_sizeof_long_long ; then
opal_ptrdiff_t="long long"
opal_ptrdiff_size=$ac_cv_sizeof_long_long
else
AC_MSG_ERROR([Could not find datatype to emulate ptrdiff_t. Cannot continue])
fi
AC_DEFINE_UNQUOTED([OPAL_PTRDIFF_TYPE], [$opal_ptrdiff_t],
[type to use for ptrdiff_t])
AC_MSG_RESULT([$opal_ptrdiff_t (size: $opal_ptrdiff_size)])
#
# Find corresponding types for MPI_Aint, MPI_Count, and MPI_Offset.
# And if relevant, find the corresponding MPI_ADDRESS_KIND,
# MPI_COUNT_KIND, and MPI_OFFSET_KIND.
#
m4_ifdef([project_ompi], [OMPI_FIND_MPI_AINT_COUNT_OFFSET])
# checkpoint results
AC_CACHE_SAVE
2003-11-22 19:36:58 +03:00
##################################
# Libraries
##################################
opal_show_title "Library and Function tests"
# Darwin doesn't need -lutil, as it's something other than this -lutil.
OPAL_CHECK_FUNC_LIB([openpty], [util])
AC_CHECK_LIB([nsl], [gethostbyname])
AC_CHECK_LIB([socket], [socket])
# Solaris has sched_yield in -lrt, usually in libc
OPAL_CHECK_FUNC_LIB([sched_yield], [rt])
# IRIX has dirname in -lgen, usually in libc
OPAL_CHECK_FUNC_LIB([dirname], [gen])
# Darwin doesn't need -lm, as it's a symlink to libSystem.dylib
OPAL_CHECK_FUNC_LIB([ceil], [m])
AC_CHECK_FUNCS([asprintf snprintf vasprintf vsnprintf openpty isatty getpwuid fork waitpid execve pipe ptsname setsid mmap tcgetpgrp posix_memalign strsignal sysconf syslog vsyslog regcmp regexec regfree _NSGetEnviron socketpair strncpy_s _strdup usleep mkfifo dbopen dbm_open statfs statvfs setpgid])
Make the use of statfs()/statvfs() be more robust. As noted by Paul Hargrove, the #if's surrounding the use of statfs() and statvfs() in opal/util/path.c have apparently gotten stale (e.g., modern flavors of *BSD OSs no longer define __BSD). Changes: * Add statfs and statvfs to the AC_CHECK_FUNCS in configure.ac * Add a sanity check to ensure that we have at least one of statfs() or statvfs(). Add a similar sanity check in opal/util/path.c, just as defensive programming. * Use AC_CHECK_MEMBERS in configure.ac to check for specific struct statfs/struct statvfs members that we use in opal/util/path.c * In path.c, add some #includes as listed on the OS man page for statfs(2) (OS X 10.8.5/Mountain Lion) * The previous code used statvfs() on Solaris and statfs() everywhere else. Attempting to replicate this with behavior-based configure testing led to fairly complicted if/else logic, so the new code uses whichever of the two are available (i.e., it might actually use both -- OS X 10.8.5 and RHEL 6.5 have both statfs() and statvfs()). The rationale here is that we don't really care which of the two functions report the answer; we'll take the answer regardless of where it comes from. For example, if one function returns a failure and the other does not, we'll use the results from the successful function and ignore the failed one. This new code seems to work on OS X and Linux. We'll have to see what happens with MTT and future Paul Hargrove testing... cmr=v1.7.4:reviewer=ompi-rm1.7:subject=Make statfs/statvfs more robust This commit was SVN r30198.
2014-01-10 01:28:52 +04:00
# Sanity check: ensure that we got at least one of statfs or statvfs.
if test $ac_cv_func_statfs = no -a $ac_cv_func_statvfs = no; then
AC_MSG_WARN([neither statfs() and statvfs() were found])
AC_MSG_ERROR([Cannot continue])
fi
# On some hosts, htonl is a define, so the AC_CHECK_FUNC will get
# confused. On others, it's in the standard library, but stubbed with
# the magic glibc foo as not implemented. and on other systems, it's
# just not there. This covers all cases.
AC_CACHE_CHECK([for htonl define],
[ompi_cv_htonl_define],
[AC_PREPROC_IFELSE([AC_LANG_PROGRAM([
#ifdef HAVE_SYS_TYPES_H
#include <sys/types.h>
#endif
#ifdef HAVE_NETINET_IN_H
#include <netinet/in.h>
#endif
#ifdef HAVE_ARPA_INET_H
#include <arpa/inet.h>
#endif],[
#ifndef ntohl
#error "ntohl not defined"
#endif
])], [ompi_cv_htonl_define=yes], [ompi_cv_htonl_define=no])])
AC_CHECK_FUNC([htonl], [ompi_have_htonl=yes], [ompi_have_htonl=no])
AS_IF([test "$ompi_cv_htonl_define" = "yes" -o "$ompi_have_htonl" = "yes"],
[AC_DEFINE_UNQUOTED([HAVE_UNIX_BYTESWAP], [1],
[whether unix byteswap routines -- htonl, htons, nothl, ntohs -- are available])])
#
# Make sure we can copy va_lists (need check declared, not linkable)
#
AC_CHECK_DECL(va_copy, OPAL_HAVE_VA_COPY=1, OPAL_HAVE_VA_COPY=0,
[#include <stdarg.h>])
AC_DEFINE_UNQUOTED(OPAL_HAVE_VA_COPY, $OPAL_HAVE_VA_COPY,
[Whether we have va_copy or not])
AC_CHECK_DECL(__va_copy, OPAL_HAVE_UNDERSCORE_VA_COPY=1,
OPAL_HAVE_UNDERSCORE_VA_COPY=0, [#include <stdarg.h>])
AC_DEFINE_UNQUOTED(OPAL_HAVE_UNDERSCORE_VA_COPY, $OPAL_HAVE_UNDERSCORE_VA_COPY,
[Whether we have __va_copy or not])
AC_CHECK_DECLS(__func__)
* Rewrite ompi_mca.m4 to use m4_defined lists of projects (ompi, orte, etc.), frameworks, and components without configure scripts instead of hard-coded shell variables (for projects and frameworks) and shell variable building (for components). * Add 3rd category of component configuration (in addition to configure scripts and no-configured components): configure.m4 components. These components can only be built as part of OMPI (like no-configure), but can provide an m4 file that is run as part of the main configure script. These macros can set whether the component should be built, along with just about any other configuration wanted. More care must be taken compared to configure components, as doing things like setting variables or calling AC_MSG_ERROR now affects the top-level configure script (so calling AC_MSG_ERROR if your component can't configure probably isn't what you want) * Added support to autogen.sh for the configure.m4-style components, as well as building up the m4_define lists ompi_mca.m4 now expects * Updated a number of macros to be more config.cache friendly (both so that config.cache can be used and so the test can be quickly run multiple times in the same configrue script): - ompi_config_asm - c_weak_symbols - c_get_alignment * Added new macros to be shared when configuring components: - ompi_objc.m4 (this actually provides AC_PROG_OBJC - don't ask...) - ompi_check_xgrid - ompi_check_tm - ompi_check_bproc * Updated a number of components to use configure.m4 instead of configure.stub - btl portals - io romio - tm ras and pls - bjs, lsf_bproc ras and bproc_seed pls - xgrid ras and pls - null iof (used by tm) This commit was SVN r6412.
2005-07-09 22:52:53 +04:00
# checkpoint results
AC_CACHE_SAVE
2003-11-22 19:36:58 +03:00
##################################
# System-specific tests
##################################
opal_show_title "System-specific tests"
# Do we have _SC_NPROCESSORS_ONLN? (only going to pass if we also have
# <unistd.h> and sysconf(), which is ok) OS X 10.4 has <unistd.h> and
# sysconf(), but does not have _SC_NPROCESSORS_ONLN. Doh!
AC_CACHE_CHECK([for _SC_NPROCESSORS_ONLN],
[ompi_cv_have__SC_NPROCESSORS_ONLN],
[AC_COMPILE_IFELSE([AC_LANG_PROGRAM([
AC_INCLUDES_DEFAULT
#include <unistd.h>
],
[int i = _SC_NPROCESSORS_ONLN;])],
[ompi_cv_have__SC_NPROCESSORS_ONLN="yes"],
[ompi_cv_have__SC_NPROCESSORS_ONLN="no"])])
AS_IF([test "$ompi_cv_have__SC_NPROCESSORS_ONLN" = "yes"],
[result=1], [result=0])
AC_DEFINE_UNQUOTED([OPAL_HAVE__SC_NPROCESSORS_ONLN], [$result],
[Define to 1 ifyou have the declaration of _SC_NPROCESSORS_ONLN, and to 0 otherwise])
2003-11-22 19:36:58 +03:00
# all: endian
AC_C_BIGENDIAN
OMPI_CHECK_BROKEN_QSORT
AC_CACHE_CHECK([if word-sized integers must be word-size aligned],
[ompi_cv_c_word_size_align],
[AC_LANG_PUSH(C)
AC_RUN_IFELSE([AC_LANG_PROGRAM([dnl
#include <stdlib.h>], [[ long data[2] = {0, 0};
long *lp;
int *ip;
ip = (int*) data;
ip++;
lp = (long*) ip;
return lp[0]; ]])],
[ompi_cv_c_word_size_align=no],
[ompi_cv_c_word_size_align=yes],
[ompi_cv_c_word_size_align=yes])])
AS_IF([test $ompi_cv_c_word_size_align = yes], [results=1], [results=0])
AC_DEFINE_UNQUOTED([OPAL_ALIGN_WORD_SIZE_INTEGERS], [$results],
[set to 1 if word-size integers must be aligned to word-size padding to prevent bus errors])
2003-11-22 19:36:58 +03:00
# all: SYSV semaphores
# all: SYSV shared memory
# all: size of FD_SET
# all: sizeof struct stat members
# all: type of getsockopt optlen
# all: type of recvfrom optlen
#
# Check out what thread support we have
#
OPAL_CONFIG_THREADS
OMPI_CONFIG_THREADS
CFLAGS="$CFLAGS $THREAD_CFLAGS"
CPPFLAGS="$CPPFLAGS $THREAD_CPPFLAGS"
CXXFLAGS="$CXXFLAGS $THREAD_CXXFLAGS"
CXXCPPFLAGS="$CXXCPPFLAGS $THREAD_CXXCPPFLAGS"
LDFLAGS="$LDFLAGS $THREAD_LDFLAGS"
LIBS="$LIBS $THREAD_LIBS"
OPAL_WRAPPER_FLAGS_ADD([CFLAGS], [$THREAD_CFLAGS])
OPAL_WRAPPER_FLAGS_ADD([CXXFLAGS], [$THREAD_CXXFLAGS])
OPAL_WRAPPER_FLAGS_ADD([FCFLAGS], [$THREAD_FCFLAGS])
OPAL_WRAPPER_FLAGS_ADD([LDFLAGS], [$THREAD_LDFLAGS])
# no need to update WRAPPER_EXTRA_LIBS - we'll get it from LT later
#
# What is the local equivalent of "ln -s"
#
AC_PROG_LN_S
AC_PROG_GREP
AC_PROG_EGREP
#
# We need as and lex
#
AM_PROG_AS
AM_PROG_LEX
# If we don't have GNU Flex and we don't have a generated .c file
# (distribution tarballs will have the .c file included, but SVN
# checkouts will not), then error. Must have GNU Flex -- other
# versions of Lex are not workable (all things being equal, since this
# is *only* required for developers, we decided that it really was not
# worth it to be portable between different versions of lex ;-).
if test -z "$LEX" -o -n "`echo $LEX | $GREP missing`" -o \
"`basename $LEX`" != "flex"; then
if test ! -f "$srcdir/opal/util/show_help_lex.c"; then
AC_MSG_WARN([*** Could not find GNU Flex on your system.])
AC_MSG_WARN([*** GNU Flex required for developer builds of Open MPI.])
AC_MSG_WARN([*** Other versions of Lex are not supported.])
AC_MSG_WARN([*** YOU DO NOT NEED FLEX FOR DISTRIBUTION TARBALLS!])
AC_MSG_WARN([*** If you absolutely cannot install GNU Flex on this system])
AC_MSG_WARN([*** consider using a distribution tarball, or generate the])
AC_MSG_WARN([*** following files on another system (using Flex) and])
AC_MSG_WARN([*** copy them here:])
for lfile in `find . -name \*.l -print`; do
cfile="`echo $lfile | cut -d. -f-2`"
AC_MSG_WARN([*** $cfile.c])
done
AC_MSG_ERROR([Cannot continue])
fi
fi
#
# Look for ps command and arguments for orte-clean
#
m4_ifdef([project_orte], [OMPI_PS_FLAVOR_CHECK])
#
# File system case sensitivity
#
OPAL_CASE_SENSITIVE_FS_SETUP
2003-11-22 19:36:58 +03:00
# AIX: FIONBIO in sys/ioctl.h
# glibc: memcpy
#
# Do we have RLIMIT_NPROC in <sys/resources.h>? (e.g., Solaris does not)
#
AC_CHECK_DECLS([RLIMIT_NPROC], [], [], [
AC_INCLUDES_DEFAULT
#if HAVE_SYS_RESOURCE_H
#include <sys/resource.h>
#endif])
#
# Do we have RLIMIT_MEMLOCK in <sys/resources.h>? (e.g., Solaris does not)
#
AC_CHECK_DECLS([RLIMIT_MEMLOCK], [], [], [
AC_INCLUDES_DEFAULT
#if HAVE_SYS_RESOURCE_H
#include <sys/resource.h>
#endif])
#
# Do we have RLIMIT_NOFILE in <sys/resources.h>? (e.g., Solaris does not)
#
AC_CHECK_DECLS([RLIMIT_NOFILE], [], [], [
AC_INCLUDES_DEFAULT
#if HAVE_SYS_RESOURCE_H
#include <sys/resource.h>
#endif])
#
# Do we have RLIMIT_MEMLOCK in <sys/resources.h>? (e.g., Solaris does not)
#
AC_CHECK_DECLS([RLIMIT_FSIZE], [], [], [
AC_INCLUDES_DEFAULT
#if HAVE_SYS_RESOURCE_H
#include <sys/resource.h>
#endif])
#
# Do we have RLIMIT_CORE in <sys/resources.h>? (e.g., Solaris does not)
#
AC_CHECK_DECLS([RLIMIT_CORE], [], [], [
AC_INCLUDES_DEFAULT
#if HAVE_SYS_RESOURCE_H
#include <sys/resource.h>
#endif])
#
# Do we have RLIMIT_STACK in <sys/resources.h>? (e.g., Solaris does not)
#
AC_CHECK_DECLS([RLIMIT_STACK], [], [], [
AC_INCLUDES_DEFAULT
#if HAVE_SYS_RESOURCE_H
#include <sys/resource.h>
#endif])
#
# Do we have RLIMIT_AS in <sys/resources.h>? (e.g., Solaris does not)
#
AC_CHECK_DECLS([RLIMIT_AS], [], [], [
AC_INCLUDES_DEFAULT
#if HAVE_SYS_RESOURCE_H
#include <sys/resource.h>
#endif])
* Rewrite ompi_mca.m4 to use m4_defined lists of projects (ompi, orte, etc.), frameworks, and components without configure scripts instead of hard-coded shell variables (for projects and frameworks) and shell variable building (for components). * Add 3rd category of component configuration (in addition to configure scripts and no-configured components): configure.m4 components. These components can only be built as part of OMPI (like no-configure), but can provide an m4 file that is run as part of the main configure script. These macros can set whether the component should be built, along with just about any other configuration wanted. More care must be taken compared to configure components, as doing things like setting variables or calling AC_MSG_ERROR now affects the top-level configure script (so calling AC_MSG_ERROR if your component can't configure probably isn't what you want) * Added support to autogen.sh for the configure.m4-style components, as well as building up the m4_define lists ompi_mca.m4 now expects * Updated a number of macros to be more config.cache friendly (both so that config.cache can be used and so the test can be quickly run multiple times in the same configrue script): - ompi_config_asm - c_weak_symbols - c_get_alignment * Added new macros to be shared when configuring components: - ompi_objc.m4 (this actually provides AC_PROG_OBJC - don't ask...) - ompi_check_xgrid - ompi_check_tm - ompi_check_bproc * Updated a number of components to use configure.m4 instead of configure.stub - btl portals - io romio - tm ras and pls - bjs, lsf_bproc ras and bproc_seed pls - xgrid ras and pls - null iof (used by tm) This commit was SVN r6412.
2005-07-09 22:52:53 +04:00
# checkpoint results
AC_CACHE_SAVE
###########################################################
# Fault Tolerance
#
# The FT code in the OMPI trunk is currently broken. We don't
# have an active maintainer for it at this time, and it isn't
# clear if/when we will return to it. We have therefore removed
# the configure options supporting it until such time as it
# can be fixed.
#
# However, we recognize that there are researchers who use this
# option on their independent branches. In such cases, simply
# uncomment the line below to render the FT configure options
# visible again
#
###########################################################
#OPAL_SETUP_FT_OPTIONS
###########################################################
# The following line is always required as it contains the
# AC_DEFINE and AM_CONDITIONAL calls that set variables used
# throughout the build system. If the above line is commented
# out, then those variables will be set to "off". Otherwise,
# they are controlled by the options
OPAL_SETUP_FT
2003-11-22 19:36:58 +03:00
##################################
# MCA
##################################
opal_show_title "Modular Component Architecture (MCA) setup"
AC_MSG_CHECKING([for subdir args])
OMPI_CONFIG_SUBDIR_ARGS([ompi_subdir_args])
AC_MSG_RESULT([$ompi_subdir_args])
OMPI_MCA
m4_ifdef([project_ompi], [OMPI_REQUIRE_ENDPOINT_TAG_FINI])
* Rewrite ompi_mca.m4 to use m4_defined lists of projects (ompi, orte, etc.), frameworks, and components without configure scripts instead of hard-coded shell variables (for projects and frameworks) and shell variable building (for components). * Add 3rd category of component configuration (in addition to configure scripts and no-configured components): configure.m4 components. These components can only be built as part of OMPI (like no-configure), but can provide an m4 file that is run as part of the main configure script. These macros can set whether the component should be built, along with just about any other configuration wanted. More care must be taken compared to configure components, as doing things like setting variables or calling AC_MSG_ERROR now affects the top-level configure script (so calling AC_MSG_ERROR if your component can't configure probably isn't what you want) * Added support to autogen.sh for the configure.m4-style components, as well as building up the m4_define lists ompi_mca.m4 now expects * Updated a number of macros to be more config.cache friendly (both so that config.cache can be used and so the test can be quickly run multiple times in the same configrue script): - ompi_config_asm - c_weak_symbols - c_get_alignment * Added new macros to be shared when configuring components: - ompi_objc.m4 (this actually provides AC_PROG_OBJC - don't ask...) - ompi_check_xgrid - ompi_check_tm - ompi_check_bproc * Updated a number of components to use configure.m4 instead of configure.stub - btl portals - io romio - tm ras and pls - bjs, lsf_bproc ras and bproc_seed pls - xgrid ras and pls - null iof (used by tm) This commit was SVN r6412.
2005-07-09 22:52:53 +04:00
# checkpoint results
AC_CACHE_SAVE
##################################
# MPI Extended Interfaces
##################################
m4_ifdef([project_ompi], [OMPI_SETUP_MPI_EXT])
# checkpoint results
AC_CACHE_SAVE
##################################
# Contributed software
##################################
m4_ifdef([project_ompi], [OMPI_SETUP_CONTRIB])
# checkpoint results
AC_CACHE_SAVE
##################################
# Visibility
##################################
# Check the visibility declspec at the end to avoid problem with
# the previous tests that are not necessarily prepared for
# the visibility feature.
opal_show_title "Symbol visibility feature"
OPAL_CHECK_VISIBILITY
############################################################################
# Final top-level OMPI configuration
############################################################################
opal_show_title "Final top-level OMPI configuration"
2003-11-22 19:36:58 +03:00
############################################################################
# Libtool: part two
# (after C compiler setup = no compiler/linker tests after this)
2003-11-22 19:36:58 +03:00
############################################################################
opal_show_subtitle "Libtool configuration"
2003-11-22 19:36:58 +03:00
# Use the undocumented solaris_use_stlport4 libtool variable to turn off any
# Cstd/stlport4 linkage. This allows Open MPI to be C++ STL agnostic.
if test "x$ompi_cv_c_compiler_vendor" = "xsun"; then
solaris_use_stlport4="yes"
fi
# Due to this thread:
# http://www.open-mpi.org/community/lists/users/2013/02/21356.php and
# a helpful tip from Dave Goodell, set the precious variables for
# compilers to "no" that we don't want. Libtool's m4 configry will
# interpret this as "I won't be using this language; don't bother
# setting it up." Note that we do this only for Fortran; we *don't*
# do this for C++, because even if we're not building the MPI C++
# bindings, we *do* still want to setup the mpicxx wrapper if we have
# a C++ compiler.
AS_IF([test "$OMPI_WANT_FORTRAN_BINDINGS" != "1"],[F77=no FC=no])
LT_CONFIG_LTDL_DIR([opal/libltdl], [subproject])
LTDL_CONVENIENCE
LT_INIT([dlopen win32-dll])
Put back the static-library-detection stuff from r27668, with some additional functionality. Rationale (refs trac:3422): * Normal MPI applications only ever use the MPI API. Hence, -lmpi is sufficient (they'll never directly call ORTE or OPAL functions). This is arguably the most common case. * That being said, we do have some test programs (e.g., those in orte/test/mpi) that call MPI functions but also call ORTE/OPAL functions. I've also written the occasional MPI test program that calls opal_output, for example (there even might be a few tests in the IBM test suite that directly call ORTE/OPAL functions). * Even though this is not a common case, these applications should also compile/link with mpicc. * So we should add a --openmpi:linkall option that will also link in whatever is necessary to call ORTE/OPAL functions * Yes, we could hard-code "-lopen-rte -lopen-pal" in Makefiles, but we do reserve the right to change those library names and/or add others someday, so it's better to abstract out the names and let the wrapper supply whatever is necessary. * ORTE programs, however, are different. They almost always call OPAL functions (e.g., if they want to send a message, they must use the OPAL DSS). As such, it seems like the ORTE programs should always link in OPAL. Therefore: * Add undocumented --openmpi:linkall flag to the wrapper compilers. See the comment in opal_wrapper.c for an explanation of what it does. This flag is only intended for Open MPI developers -- not end users. That's why it's undocumented. * Update orte/test/mpi/Makefile.am to add --openmpi:linkall * Make ortecc/ortec++'s wrapper data text files always explicitly link in libopen-pal This commit was SVN r27670. The following SVN revision numbers were found above: r27668 --> open-mpi/ompi@cf845897aa89407195aa13f56ddf4ec0d3c21a68 The following Trac tickets were found above: Ticket 3422 --> https://svn.open-mpi.org/trac/ompi/ticket/3422
2012-12-14 02:31:37 +04:00
# What's the suffix of shared libraries? Inspired by generated
# Libtool code (even though we don't support several of these
# platforms, there didn't seem to be any harm in leaving in some of
# them, alhtough I did remove some that we have never/will never
# support, like OS/2).
OPAL_DYN_LIB_PREFIX=lib
Put back the static-library-detection stuff from r27668, with some additional functionality. Rationale (refs trac:3422): * Normal MPI applications only ever use the MPI API. Hence, -lmpi is sufficient (they'll never directly call ORTE or OPAL functions). This is arguably the most common case. * That being said, we do have some test programs (e.g., those in orte/test/mpi) that call MPI functions but also call ORTE/OPAL functions. I've also written the occasional MPI test program that calls opal_output, for example (there even might be a few tests in the IBM test suite that directly call ORTE/OPAL functions). * Even though this is not a common case, these applications should also compile/link with mpicc. * So we should add a --openmpi:linkall option that will also link in whatever is necessary to call ORTE/OPAL functions * Yes, we could hard-code "-lopen-rte -lopen-pal" in Makefiles, but we do reserve the right to change those library names and/or add others someday, so it's better to abstract out the names and let the wrapper supply whatever is necessary. * ORTE programs, however, are different. They almost always call OPAL functions (e.g., if they want to send a message, they must use the OPAL DSS). As such, it seems like the ORTE programs should always link in OPAL. Therefore: * Add undocumented --openmpi:linkall flag to the wrapper compilers. See the comment in opal_wrapper.c for an explanation of what it does. This flag is only intended for Open MPI developers -- not end users. That's why it's undocumented. * Update orte/test/mpi/Makefile.am to add --openmpi:linkall * Make ortecc/ortec++'s wrapper data text files always explicitly link in libopen-pal This commit was SVN r27670. The following SVN revision numbers were found above: r27668 --> open-mpi/ompi@cf845897aa89407195aa13f56ddf4ec0d3c21a68 The following Trac tickets were found above: Ticket 3422 --> https://svn.open-mpi.org/trac/ompi/ticket/3422
2012-12-14 02:31:37 +04:00
case $host_os in
cygwin*)
OPAL_DYN_LIB_PREFIX=cyg
OPAL_DYN_LIB_SUFFIX=dll
;;
mingw* | pw32* | cegcc*)
Put back the static-library-detection stuff from r27668, with some additional functionality. Rationale (refs trac:3422): * Normal MPI applications only ever use the MPI API. Hence, -lmpi is sufficient (they'll never directly call ORTE or OPAL functions). This is arguably the most common case. * That being said, we do have some test programs (e.g., those in orte/test/mpi) that call MPI functions but also call ORTE/OPAL functions. I've also written the occasional MPI test program that calls opal_output, for example (there even might be a few tests in the IBM test suite that directly call ORTE/OPAL functions). * Even though this is not a common case, these applications should also compile/link with mpicc. * So we should add a --openmpi:linkall option that will also link in whatever is necessary to call ORTE/OPAL functions * Yes, we could hard-code "-lopen-rte -lopen-pal" in Makefiles, but we do reserve the right to change those library names and/or add others someday, so it's better to abstract out the names and let the wrapper supply whatever is necessary. * ORTE programs, however, are different. They almost always call OPAL functions (e.g., if they want to send a message, they must use the OPAL DSS). As such, it seems like the ORTE programs should always link in OPAL. Therefore: * Add undocumented --openmpi:linkall flag to the wrapper compilers. See the comment in opal_wrapper.c for an explanation of what it does. This flag is only intended for Open MPI developers -- not end users. That's why it's undocumented. * Update orte/test/mpi/Makefile.am to add --openmpi:linkall * Make ortecc/ortec++'s wrapper data text files always explicitly link in libopen-pal This commit was SVN r27670. The following SVN revision numbers were found above: r27668 --> open-mpi/ompi@cf845897aa89407195aa13f56ddf4ec0d3c21a68 The following Trac tickets were found above: Ticket 3422 --> https://svn.open-mpi.org/trac/ompi/ticket/3422
2012-12-14 02:31:37 +04:00
OPAL_DYN_LIB_SUFFIX=dll
;;
darwin* | rhapsody*)
OPAL_DYN_LIB_SUFFIX=dylib
;;
hpux9* | hpux10* | hpux11*)
case $host_cpu in
ia64*)
OPAL_DYN_LIB_SUFFIX=so
;;
*)
OPAL_DYN_LIB_SUFFIX=sl
;;
esac
;;
*)
OPAL_DYN_LIB_SUFFIX=so
;;
esac
AC_SUBST(OPAL_DYN_LIB_PREFIX)
Put back the static-library-detection stuff from r27668, with some additional functionality. Rationale (refs trac:3422): * Normal MPI applications only ever use the MPI API. Hence, -lmpi is sufficient (they'll never directly call ORTE or OPAL functions). This is arguably the most common case. * That being said, we do have some test programs (e.g., those in orte/test/mpi) that call MPI functions but also call ORTE/OPAL functions. I've also written the occasional MPI test program that calls opal_output, for example (there even might be a few tests in the IBM test suite that directly call ORTE/OPAL functions). * Even though this is not a common case, these applications should also compile/link with mpicc. * So we should add a --openmpi:linkall option that will also link in whatever is necessary to call ORTE/OPAL functions * Yes, we could hard-code "-lopen-rte -lopen-pal" in Makefiles, but we do reserve the right to change those library names and/or add others someday, so it's better to abstract out the names and let the wrapper supply whatever is necessary. * ORTE programs, however, are different. They almost always call OPAL functions (e.g., if they want to send a message, they must use the OPAL DSS). As such, it seems like the ORTE programs should always link in OPAL. Therefore: * Add undocumented --openmpi:linkall flag to the wrapper compilers. See the comment in opal_wrapper.c for an explanation of what it does. This flag is only intended for Open MPI developers -- not end users. That's why it's undocumented. * Update orte/test/mpi/Makefile.am to add --openmpi:linkall * Make ortecc/ortec++'s wrapper data text files always explicitly link in libopen-pal This commit was SVN r27670. The following SVN revision numbers were found above: r27668 --> open-mpi/ompi@cf845897aa89407195aa13f56ddf4ec0d3c21a68 The following Trac tickets were found above: Ticket 3422 --> https://svn.open-mpi.org/trac/ompi/ticket/3422
2012-12-14 02:31:37 +04:00
AC_SUBST(OPAL_DYN_LIB_SUFFIX)
OPAL_SETUP_LIBLTDL
# Need the libtool binary before the rpathify stuff
LT_OUTPUT
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############################################################################
# final compiler config
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############################################################################
m4_ifdef([project_ompi], [opal_show_subtitle "Compiler flags"],
[m4_ifdef([project_orte], [opal_show_subtitle "Compiler flags"])])
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#
# This is needed for VPATH builds, so that it will -I the appropriate
# include directory. We delayed doing it until now just so that
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# '-I$(top_srcdir)' doesn't show up in any of the configure output --
# purely aesthetic.
#
# Because opal_config.h and mpi.h are created by AC_CONFIG_HEADERS, we
# don't need to -I the builddir for <opal,ompi>/include. However, we do
# need to add it for orte as it doesn't have an AC_CONFIG_HEADERS that
# will install it for us. If we VPATH building, we do need to include the
# source directories, however.
#
if test "$OMPI_TOP_BUILDDIR" != "$OMPI_TOP_SRCDIR"; then
# Note the embedded m4 directives here -- we must embed them
# rather than have successive assignments to these shell
# variables, lest the $(foo) names try to get evaluated here.
# Yuck!
CPPFLAGS='-I$(top_srcdir) -I$(top_builddir) -I$(top_srcdir)/opal/include m4_ifdef([project_orte], [-I$(top_srcdir)/orte/include -I$(top_builddir)/orte/include]) m4_ifdef([project_ompi], [-I$(top_srcdir)/ompi/include]) m4_ifdef([project_oshmem], [-I$(top_srcdir)/oshmem/include])'" $CPPFLAGS"
# C++ is only relevant if we're building OMPI
m4_ifdef([project_ompi], [CXXCPPFLAGS='-I$(top_srcdir) -I$(top_builddir) -I$(top_srcdir)/opal/include -I$(top_srcdir)/orte/include -I$(top_srcdir)/ompi/include'" $CXXCPPFLAGS"])
else
CPPFLAGS='-I$(top_srcdir) m4_ifdef([project_orte], [-I$(top_srcdir)/orte/include])'" $CPPFLAGS"
# C++ is only relevant if we're building OMPI
m4_ifdef([project_ompi], [CXXCPPFLAGS='-I$(top_srcdir)'" $CXXCPPFLAGS"])
fi
# OMPI/ORTE wants some additional processing of the flags (e.g., get
# versions without optimization for debugger modules).
m4_ifdef([project_orte], [ORTE_SETUP_DEBUGGER_FLAGS],
[m4_ifdef([project_ompi], [ORTE_SETUP_DEBUGGER_FLAGS])])
#
# Delayed the substitution of CFLAGS and CXXFLAGS until now because
# they may have been modified throughout the course of this script.
#
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AC_SUBST(CFLAGS)
AC_SUBST(CPPFLAGS)
AC_SUBST(CXXFLAGS)
AC_SUBST(CXXCPPFLAGS)
m4_ifdef([project_ompi], [AC_SUBST(FFLAGS)
AC_SUBST(FCFLAGS)
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AC_SUBST(OMPI_LIBMPI_EXTRA_LIBS)
AC_SUBST(OMPI_LIBMPI_EXTRA_LDFLAGS)])
#
# Aggregate MCA parameters directory
#
AC_SUBST([AMCA_PARAM_SETS_DIR], ['$(ompidatadir)/amca-param-sets'])
############################################################################
# final wrapper compiler config
############################################################################
opal_show_subtitle "Wrapper compiler final setup"
# The ORTE and OMPI wrapper scripts (i.e., not the C-compiled
# executables) need perl.
AC_PATH_PROG(PERL, perl, perl)
OPAL_SETUP_WRAPPER_FINAL
2003-11-22 19:36:58 +03:00
# Recreate some defines prefixed with OMPI_ so that there are no bare
# autoconf macro defines in mpi.h. Since AC sometimes changes whether
# things are defined as null tokens or an integer result, two projects
# with different versions of AC can cause problems.
if test $ac_cv_header_stdc = yes; then
AC_DEFINE(OPAL_STDC_HEADERS, 1,
[Do not use outside of mpi.h. Define to 1 if you have the ANSI C header files.])
fi
if test $ac_cv_header_sys_time_h = yes ; then
AC_DEFINE(OPAL_HAVE_SYS_TIME_H, 1,
[Do not use outside of mpi.h. Define to 1 if you have the <sys/time.h> header file.])
fi
if test $ac_cv_type_long_long = yes ; then
AC_DEFINE(OPAL_HAVE_LONG_LONG, 1,
[Do not use outside of mpi.h. Define to 1 if the system has the type `long long'.]) dnl `
fi
if test $ac_cv_header_sys_synch_h = yes ; then
AC_DEFINE(OPAL_HAVE_SYS_SYNCH_H, 1,
[Do not use outside of mpi.h. Define to 1 if you have the <sys/synch.h> header file.])
fi
# If there is a local hook for each project, call it. This allows 3rd
# parties to add configuration steps to OPAL, ORTE, and/or OMPI simply
# by placing a file in [opal|orte|ompi]/config/whatever.m4 that
# AC_DEFUN's the appropriate macro name -- no patching is necessary.
# If that macro is defined, we'll run it here.
#
# Unfortunately, aclocal is not smart enough to parse something like
# the following in ompi_mca.m4 (when we're already m4 looping over the
# project list):
#
# m4_foreach(mca_project, [mca_project_list],
# [m4_ifdef(mca_project[_CONFIG_LOCAL], mca_project[_CONFIG_LOCAL])])
#
# Meaning that aclocal doesn't see that, for example,
# "ompi_CONFIG_LOCAL" is actually invoked at the bottom and therefore
# go look for an .m4 file that contains it. Instead, we have to
# manually list the macros here. *Then* aclocal is smart enough to go
# look for an .m4 file containing each macro, and if found,
# automatically m4_include the corresponding in aclocal.m4. Bummer.
# :-\
m4_ifdef([opal_CONFIG_LOCAL], [opal_CONFIG_LOCAL])
m4_ifdef([project_orte],
[m4_ifdef([orte_CONFIG_LOCAL], [orte_CONFIG_LOCAL])])
m4_ifdef([project_ompi],
[m4_ifdef([ompi_CONFIG_LOCAL], [ompi_CONFIG_LOCAL])])
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############################################################################
# Party on
############################################################################
AC_MSG_CHECKING([if libtool needs -no-undefined flag to build shared libraries])
case "`uname`" in
CYGWIN*|MINGW*|AIX*)
## Add in the -no-undefined flag to LDFLAGS for libtool.
AC_MSG_RESULT([yes])
LDFLAGS="$LDFLAGS -no-undefined"
;;
*)
## Don't add in anything.
AC_MSG_RESULT([no])
;;
esac
# ompidatadir, ompilibdir, and ompiinclude are essentially the same as
# pkg*dir, but will always be */openmpi. This is to make it a bit
# easier to deal with the problem of opal, orte, and ompi built from
# their own tarballs, with their own PACKAGE variables.
ompidatadir='${datadir}/openmpi'
ompilibdir='${libdir}/openmpi'
ompiincludedir='${includedir}/openmpi'
AC_SUBST(ompidatadir)
AC_SUBST(ompilibdir)
AC_SUBST(ompiincludedir)
opal_show_subtitle "Final output"
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AC_CONFIG_FILES([
Makefile
config/Makefile
contrib/Makefile
contrib/dist/mofed/debian/changelog
contrib/dist/mofed/debian/control
contrib/dist/mofed/debian/copyright:LICENSE
test/Makefile
test/event/Makefile
test/asm/Makefile
test/datatype/Makefile
test/class/Makefile
test/support/Makefile
test/threads/Makefile
test/util/Makefile
])
AC_CONFIG_FILES([contrib/dist/mofed/debian/rules],
[chmod +x contrib/dist/mofed/debian/rules])
AC_CONFIG_FILES([contrib/dist/mofed/compile_debian_mlnx_example],
[chmod +x contrib/dist/mofed/compile_debian_mlnx_example])
OPAL_CONFIG_FILES
m4_ifdef([project_orte], [ORTE_CONFIG_FILES])
m4_ifdef([project_ompi], [OMPI_CONFIG_FILES])
m4_ifdef([project_oshmem], [OSHMEM_CONFIG_FILES])
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AC_OUTPUT