From 02c999776b85b22d911cd9cbf252b06280b9f407 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Josh Hursey Date: Fri, 17 Feb 2006 03:47:52 +0000 Subject: [PATCH] Removed all of the LAM stuff. This needs to be gone over a few more times before it is allowed to see daylight, but has come a long way. Some sections may be off more than a little, but the general idea is there. Need to audit to make sure we don't call the ORTE VHNP's daemons :) This commit was SVN r9078. --- orte/tools/orterun/orterun.1 | 714 ++++++++--------------------------- 1 file changed, 163 insertions(+), 551 deletions(-) diff --git a/orte/tools/orterun/orterun.1 b/orte/tools/orterun/orterun.1 index 70dc1804d2..fcb24e933d 100644 --- a/orte/tools/orterun/orterun.1 +++ b/orte/tools/orterun/orterun.1 @@ -218,665 +218,277 @@ line if an application schema is specified. .\" Description Section .\" ************************** .SH DESCRIPTION -One invocation of -.I mpirun -starts an MPI application running under LAM. -If the application is simply SPMD, the application can be specified on the -.I mpirun -command line. +. +One invocation of \fImpirun\fP starts an MPI application running under Open +MPI. If the application is simply SPMD, the application can be specified on the +\fImpirun\fP command line. + If the application is MIMD, comprising multiple programs, an application schema is required in a separate file. -See appschema(5) for a description of the application schema syntax, -but it essentially contains multiple -.I mpirun -command lines, less the command name itself. The ability to specify -different options for different instantiations of a program is another -reason to use an application schema. +See appschema(5) for a description of the application schema syntax. +It essentially contains multiple \fImpirun\fP command lines, less the command +name itself. The ability to specify different options for different +instantiations of a program is another reason to use an application schema. . . . .SS Location Nomenclature -As described above, -.I mpirun -can specify arbitrary locations in the current LAM universe. -Locations can be specified either by CPU or by node (noted by the -"" in the SYNTAX section, above). Note that LAM does not bind -processes to CPUs -- specifying a location "by CPU" is really a -convenience mechanism for SMPs that ultimately maps down to a specific +. +As described above, \fImpirun\fP can specify arbitrary locations in the current +Open MPI universe. +Locations can be specified either by CPU or by node. + +.B Note: +Open MPI does not bind processes to CPUs -- specifying a location "by CPU" is +really a convenience mechanism for SMPs that ultimately maps down to a specific node. .PP -Note that LAM effectively numbers MPI_COMM_WORLD ranks from -left-to-right in the , regardless of which nomenclature is -used. This can be important because typical MPI programs tend to -communicate more with their immediate neighbors (i.e., myrank +/- X) -than distant neighbors. When neighbors end up on the same node, the -shmem RPIs can be used for communication rather than the network RPIs, -which can result in faster MPI performance. -.PP Specifying locations by node will launch one copy of an executable per -specified node. Using a capitol "N" tells LAM to use all available -nodes that were lambooted (see lamboot(1)). Ranges of specific nodes -can also be specified in the form "nR[,R]*", where R specifies either -a single node number or a valid range of node numbers in the range of -[0, num_nodes). For example: +specified node. +Using the \fI--bynode\fP option tells Open MPI to use all available nodes. +Using the \fI--byslot\fP option tells Open MPI to use all slots on an available +node before allocating resources on the next available node. +For example: +. .TP 4 -mpirun N a.out +mpirun --bynode -np 4 a.out Runs one copy of the the executable .I a.out -on all available nodes in the LAM universe. MPI_COMM_WORLD rank 0 -will be on n0, rank 1 will be on n1, etc. +on all available nodes in the Open MPI universe. MPI_COMM_WORLD rank 0 +will be on node0, rank 1 will be on node1, etc. Regardless of how many slots +are available on each of the nodes. +. +. .TP -mpirun n0-3 a.out +mpirun --byslot -np 4 a.out Runs one copy of the the executable .I a.out -on nodes 0 through 3. MPI_COMM_WORLD rank 0 will be on n0, rank 1 -will be on n1, etc. -.TP -mpirun n0-3,8-11,15 a.out -Runs one copy of the the executable -.I a.out -on nodes 0 through 3, 8 through 11, and 15. MPI_COMM_WORLD ranks will -be ordered as follows: (0, n0), (1, n1), (2, n2), (3, n3), (4, n8), -(5, n9), (6, n10), (7, n11), (8, n15). -.PP -Specifying by CPU is the preferred method of launching MPI jobs. The -intent is that the boot schema used with lamboot(1) will indicate how -many CPUs are available on each node, and then a single, simple -.I mpirun -command can be used to launch across all of them. As noted above, -specifying CPUs does not actually bind processes to CPUs -- it is only -a convenience mechanism for launching on SMPs. Otherwise, the by-CPU -notation is the same as the by-node notation, except that "C" and "c" -are used instead of "N" and "n". -.PP -Assume in the following example that the LAM universe consists of four -4-way SMPs. So c0-3 are on n0, c4-7 are on n1, c8-11 are on n2, and -13-15 are on n3. -.TP 4 -mpirun C a.out -Runs one copy of the the executable -.I a.out -on all available CPUs in the LAM universe. This is typically the -simplest (and preferred) method of launching all MPI jobs (even if it -resolves to one process per node). MPI_COMM_WORLD ranks 0-3 will be -on n0, ranks 4-7 will be on n1, ranks 8-11 will be on n2, and ranks -13-15 will be on n3. -.TP -mpirun c0-3 a.out -Runs one copy of the the executable -.I a.out -on CPUs 0 through 3. All four ranks of MPI_COMM_WORLD will be on -MPI_COMM_WORLD. -.TP -mpirun c0-3,8-11,15 a.out -Runs one copy of the the executable -.I a.out -on CPUs 0 through 3, 8 through 11, and 15. MPI_COMM_WORLD ranks 0-3 -will be on n0, 4-7 will be on n2, and 8 will be on n3. -.PP -The reason that the by-CPU nomenclature is preferred over the by-node -nomenclature is best shown through example. Consider trying to run -the first CPU example (with the same MPI_COMM_WORLD mapping) with the -by-node nomenclature -- run one copy of -.I a.out -for every available CPU, and maximize the number of local neighbors to -potentially maximize MPI performance. One solution would be to use -the following command: -.TP 4 -mpirun n0,0,0,0,1,1,1,1,2,2,2,2,3,3,3,3 a.out -.PP -This -.IR works , -but is definitely klunky to type. It is typically easier to use the -by-CPU notation. One might think that the following is equivalent: -.TP 4 -mpirun N -np 16 a.out -.PP -This is -.I not -equivalent because the MPI_COMM_WORLD rank mappings will be assigned -by node rather than by CPU. Hence rank 0 will be on n0, rank 1 will -be on n1, etc. Note that the following, however, -.I is -equivalent, because LAM interprets lack of a as "C": -.TP 4 -mpirun -np 16 a.out -.PP -However, a "C" can tend to be more convenient, especially for -batch-queuing scripts because the exact number of processes may vary -between queue submissions. Since the batch system will determine the -final number of CPUs available, having a generic script that -effectively says "run on everything you gave me" may lead to more -portable / re-usable scripts. -.PP -Finally, it should be noted that specifying multiple clauses -are perfectly acceptable. As such, mixing of the by-node and by-CPU -syntax is also valid, albiet typically not useful. For example: -.TP 4 -mpirun C N a.out -.PP -However, in some cases, specifying multiple clauses can be -useful. Consider a parallel application where MPI_COMM_WORLD rank 0 -will be a "manager" and therefore consume very few CPU cycles because -it is usually waiting for "worker" processes to return results. -Hence, it is probably desirable to run one "worker" process on all -available CPUs, and run one extra process that will be the "manager": -.TP 4 -mpirun c0 C manager-worker-program +on each slot on a given node before running the executable on other available +nodes. . . . .SS Application Schema or Executable Program? -To distinguish the two different forms, -.I mpirun -looks on the command line for or the \fI-c\fR option. If -neither is specified, then the file named on the command line is -assumed to be an application schema. If either one or both are -specified, then the file is assumed to be an executable program. If - and \fI-c\fR both are specified, then copies of the program -are started on the specified nodes/CPUs according to an internal LAM -scheduling policy. Specifying just one node effectively forces LAM to -run all copies of the program in one place. If \fI-c\fR is given, but -not , then all available CPUs on all LAM nodes are used. If - is given, but not \fI-c\fR, then one copy of the program is -run on each node. -.PP . -. -. -.SS Program Transfer -By default, LAM searches for executable programs on the target node -where a particular instantiation will run. If the file system is not -shared, the target nodes are homogeneous, and the program is -frequently recompiled, it can be convenient to have LAM transfer the -program from a source node (usually the local node) to each target -node. The \fI-s\fR option specifies this behavior and identifies the -single source node. +To distinguish the two different forms, \fImpirun\fP +looks on the command line for \fI--app\fP option. If +it is specified, then the file named on the command line is +assumed to be an application schema. If it is not +specified, then the file is assumed to be an executable program. . . . .SS Locating Files -LAM looks for an executable program by searching the directories in +. +Open MPI looks for an executable program by searching the directories in the user's PATH environment variable as defined on the source node(s). This behavior is consistent with logging into the source node and executing the program from the shell. On remote nodes, the "." path is the home directory. .PP -LAM looks for an application schema in three directories: the local -directory, the value of the LAMAPPLDIR environment variable, and -laminstalldir/boot, where "laminstalldir" is the directory where -LAM/MPI was installed. +Open MPI looks for an application schema in three directories the local +directory. . . . .SS Standard I/O -LAM directs UNIX standard input to /dev/null on all remote nodes. On -the local node that invoked -.IR mpirun , -standard input is inherited from -.IR mpirun . -The default is what used to be the -w option to prevent conflicting -access to the terminal. -.PP -LAM directs UNIX standard output and error to the LAM daemon on all -remote nodes. LAM ships all captured output/error to the node that -invoked -.I mpirun -and prints it on the standard output/error of -.IR mpirun . -Local processes inherit the standard output/error of -.I mpirun -and transfer to it directly. -.PP -Thus it is possible to redirect standard I/O for LAM applications by -using the typical shell redirection procedure on -.IR mpirun . -.sp -.RS -% mpirun C my_app < my_input > my_output -.RE -.PP -Note that in this example -.I only -the local node (i.e., the node where mpirun was invoked from) will -receive the stream from my_input on stdin. The stdin on all the other -nodes will be tied to /dev/null. However, the stdout from all nodes -will be collected into the my_output file. -.PP -The -.I \-f -option avoids all the setup required to support standard I/O described -above. Remote processes are completely directed to /dev/null and -local processes inherit file descriptors from lamboot(1). . -. -. -.SS Pseudo-tty support -The -.I \-pty -option enabled pseudo-tty support for process output (it is also -enabled by default). This allows, among other things, for line -buffered output from remote nodes (which is probably what you want). -This option can be disabled with the -.I \-npty -switch. +Open MPI directs UNIX standard input to /dev/null on all remote nodes. On +the local node that invoked \fImpirun\fP, standard input is inherited from +\fImpirun\fP. .PP +Open MPI directs UNIX standard output and error to the Open RTE daemon on all +remote nodes. Open MPI ships all captured output/error to the node that +invoked \fImpirun\fP and prints it on the standard output/error of \fImpirun\fP +Local processes inherit the standard output/error of \fImpirun\fP and transfer +to it directly. +.PP +Thus it is possible to redirect standard I/O for Open MPI applications by +using the typical shell redirection procedure on \fImpirun\fP. + + \fBshell$\fP mpirun -np 2 my_app < my_input > my_output + +Note that in this example \fIonly\fP the local node (i.e., the node where +mpirun was invoked from) will receive the stream from \fImy_input\fP on stdin. The +stdin on all the other nodes will be tied to /dev/null. However, the stdout +from all nodes will be collected into the \fImy_output\fP file. . . . .SS Process Termination / Signal Handling +. During the run of an MPI application, if any rank dies abnormally -(either exiting before invoking -.IR MPI_FINALIZE , -or dying as the result of a signal), -.I mpirun -will print out an error message and kill the rest of the MPI -application. +(either exiting before invoking \fIMPI_FINALIZE\fP, or dying as the result of a +signal), \fImpirun\fP will print out an error message and kill the rest of the +MPI application. .PP -By default, LAM/MPI only installs a signal handler for one signal in -user programs (SIGUSR2 by default, but this can be overridden when LAM -is configured and built). Therefore, it is safe for users to install -their own signal handlers in LAM/MPI programs (LAM notices -death-by-signal cases by examining the process' return status provided -by the operating system). +By default, Open MPI only installs a signal handler for one signal in +user programs (SIGUSR2). Therefore, it is safe for users to install +their own signal handlers in Open MPI programs .PP User signal handlers should probably avoid trying to cleanup MPI state --- LAM is neither thread-safe nor async-signal-safe. For example, if -a seg fault occurs in -.I MPI_SEND -(perhaps because a bad buffer was passed in) and a user signal handler -is invoked, if this user handler attempts to invoke -.IR MPI_FINALIZE , -Bad Things could happen since LAM/MPI was already "in" MPI when the -error occurred. Since -.I mpirun +(Open MPI is, currently, neither thread-safe nor async-signal-safe). +For example, if a seg fault occurs in \fIMPI_SEND\fP (perhaps because a bad +buffer was passed in) and a user signal handler is invoked, if this user +handler attempts to invoke \fIMPI_FINALIZE\fP, Bad Things could happen since +Open MPI was already "in" MPI when the error occurred. Since \fImpirun\fP will notice that the process died due to a signal, it is probably not necessary (and safest) for the user to only clean up non-MPI state. -.PP -If the -.I -sigs -option is used with -.IR mpirun , -LAM/MPI will install several signal handlers to locally on each rank -to catch signals, print out error messages, and kill the rest of the -MPI application. This is somewhat redundant behavior since this is -now all handled by -.IR mpirun , -but it has been left for backwards compatability. -. -. -. -.SS Process Exit Statuses -The -.IR -sa , -\ -.IR -sf , -and -.I -p -parameters can be used to display the exist statuses of the individual -MPI processes as they terminate. -.I -sa -forces the exit statuses to be displayed for all processes; -.I -sf -only displays the exist statuses if at least one process terminates -either by a signal or a non-zero exit status (note that exiting before -invoking -.I MPI_FINALIZE -will cause a non-zero exit status). -.PP -The status of each process is printed out, one per line, in the -following format: -.sp -.RS -prefix_string node pid killed status -.RE -.PP -If -.I killed -is 1, then -.I status -is the signal number. If -.I killed -is 0, then -.I status -is the exit status of the process. -.PP -The default -.I prefix_string -is "mpirun:", but the -.I -p -option can be used override this string. . . . .SS Current Working Directory +. The default behavior of mpirun has changed with respect to the directory that processes will be started in. .PP -The -.I \-wd -option to mpirun allows the user to change to an arbitrary directory -before their program is invoked. It can also be used in application +The \fI\-wd\fP option to mpirun allows the user to change to an arbitrary +directory before their program is invoked. It can also be used in application schema files to specify working directories on specific nodes and/or for specific applications. .PP -If the -.I \-wd -option appears both in a schema file and on the command line, the -schema file directory will override the command line value. +If the \fI\-wd\fP option appears both in a schema file and on the command line, +the schema file directory will override the command line value. .PP -The -.I \-D -option will change the current working directory to the directory -where the executable resides. It cannot be used in application schema -files. -.I \-wd -is mutually exclusive with -.IR \-D . +The \fI\-D\fP option will change the current working directory to the directory +where the executable resides. It cannot be used in application schema files. .PP -If neither -.I \-wd -nor -.I \-D -are specified, the local node will send the directory name where -mpirun was invoked from to each of the remote nodes. The remote nodes +If \fI\-wd\fP is not specified, the local node will send the directory name +where mpirun was invoked from to each of the remote nodes. The remote nodes will then try to change to that directory. If they fail (e.g., if the directory does not exists on that node), they will start with from the user's home directory. .PP All directory changing occurs before the user's program is invoked; it -does not wait until -.I MPI_INIT -is called. +does not wait until \fIMPI_INIT\fP is called. . . . .SS Process Environment +. Processes in the MPI application inherit their environment from the -LAM daemon upon the node on which they are running. The environment -of a LAM daemon is fixed upon booting of the LAM with lamboot(1) and -is typically inherited from the user's shell. On the origin node, -this will be the shell from which lamboot(1) was invoked; on remote -nodes, the exact environment is determined by the boot SSI module used -by lamboot(1). The rsh boot module, for example, uses either rsh/ssh -to launch the LAM daemon on remote nodes, and typically executes one -or more of the user's shell-setup files before launching the LAM -daemon. When running dynamically linked applications which require -the LD_LIBRARY_PATH environment variable to be set, care must be taken -to ensure that it is correctly set when booting the LAM. +Open RTE daemon upon the node on which they are running. The environment +is typically inherited from the user's shell. On remote nodes, the exact +environment is determined by the boot MCA module used. The rsh boot module, +for example, uses either rsh/ssh to launch the LAM daemon on remote nodes, and +typically executes one or more of the user's shell-setup files before launching +the Open RTE daemon. When running dynamically linked applications which +require the LD_LIBRARY_PATH environment variable to be set, care must be taken +to ensure that it is correctly set when booting Open MPI. . . . .SS Exported Environment Variables -All environment variables that are named in the form LAM_MPI_*, -LAM_IMPI_*, or IMPI_* will automatically be exported to new processes -on the local and remote nodes. This exporting may be inhibited with -the -.I \-nx -option. -.PP -Additionally, the -.I \-x -option to -.IR mpirun -can be used to export specific environment variables to the new -processes. While the syntax of the -.I \-x +. +All environment variables that are named in the form OMPI_* will automatically +be exported to new processes on the local and remote nodes. +The \fI\-x\fP option to \fImpirun\fP can be used to export specific environment +variables to the new processes. While the syntax of the \fI\-x\fP option allows the definition of new variables, note that the parser for this option is currently not very sophisticated - it does not even understand quoted values. Users are advised to set variables in the -environment and use -.I \-x -to export them; not to define them. +environment and use \fI\-x\fP to export them; not to define them. . . . -.SS Trace Generation -Two switches control trace generation from processes running under LAM -and both must be in the on position for traces to actually be -generated. The first switch is controlled by -.I mpirun -and the second switch is initially set by -.I mpirun -but can be toggled at runtime with MPIL_Trace_on(2) and -MPIL_Trace_off(2). The \fI-t\fR (\fI-ton\fR is equivalent) and -\fI-toff\fR options all turn on the first switch. Otherwise the first -switch is off and calls to MPIL_Trace_on(2) in the application program -are ineffective. The \fI-t\fR option also turns on the second switch. -The \fI-toff\fR option turns off the second switch. See -MPIL_Trace_on(2) and lamtrace(1) for more details. -. -. -. -.SS MPI Data Conversion -LAM's MPI library converts MPI messages from local representation to -LAM representation upon sending them and then back to local -representation upon receiving them. If the case of a LAM consisting -of a homogeneous network of machines where the local representation -differs from the LAM representation this can result in unnecessary -conversions. -.P -The \fI-O\fR switch used to be necessary to indicate to LAM whether -the mulitcomputer was homogeneous or not. LAM now automatically -determines whether a given MPI job is homogeneous or not. The -.I -O -flag will silently be accepted for backwards compatability, but it is -ignored. -. -. -. -.SS SSI (System Services Interface) +.SS MCA (Modular Component Architecture) The -.I -ssi -switch allows the passing of parameters to various SSI modules. LAM's -SSI modules are described in detail in lamssi(7). SSI modules have -direct impact on MPI programs because they allow tunable parameters to -be set at run time (such as which RPI communication device driver to -use, what parameters to pass to that RPI, etc.). +.I -mca +switch allows the passing of parameters to various MCA modules. +.\" Open MPI's MCA modules are described in detail in ompimca(7). +MCA modules have direct impact on MPI programs because they allow tunable +parameters to be set at run time (such as which BTL communication device driver +to use, what parameters to pass to that BTL, etc.). .PP -The -.I -ssi -switch takes two arguments: -.I -and -.IR . -The -.I -argument generally specifies which SSI module will receive the value. -For example, the -.I -"rpi" is used to select which RPI to be used for transporting MPI -messages. The -.I -argument is the value that is passed. For example: +The \fI-mca\fP switch takes two arguments: \fI\fP. +The \fI\fP argument generally specifies which MCA module will receive the value. +For example, the \fI\fP "btl" is used to select which BTL to be used for +transporting MPI messages. The \fI\fP argument is the value that is +passed. +For example: +. .TP 4 -mpirun -ssi rpi lamd N foo -Tells LAM to use the "lamd" RPI and to run a single copy of "foo" on -every node. +mpirun -mca btl tcp,self -np 1 foo +Tells Open MPI to use the "tcp" and "self" BTLs, and to run a single copy of +"foo" an allocated node. +. .TP -mpirun -ssi rpi tcp N foo -Tells LAM to use the "tcp" RPI. -.TP -mpirun -ssi rpi sysv N foo -Tells LAM to use the "sysv" RPI. +mpirun -mca btl self -np 1 foo +Tells Open MPI to use the "self" BTL, and to run a single copy of +"foo" an allocated node. +.\" And so on. Open MPI's BTL MCA modules are described in lamssi_rpi(7). .PP -And so on. LAM's RPI SSI modules are described in lamssi_rpi(7). +The \fI-mca\fP switch can be used multiple times to specify different +\fI\fP and/or \fI\fP arguments. If the same \fI\fP is +specified more than once, the \fI\fPs are concatenated with a comma +(",") separating them. .PP -The -.I -ssi -switch can be used multiple times to specify different -.I -and/or -.I -arguments. If the same -.I -is specified more than once, the -.IR s -are concatenated with a comma (",") separating them. +.B Note: +The \fI-mca\fP switch is simply a shortcut for setting environment variables. +The same effect may be accomplished by setting corresponding environment +variables before running \fImpirun\fP. +The form of the environment variables that Open MPI sets are: + + OMPI_= .PP -Note that the -.I -ssi -switch is simply a shortcut for setting environment variables. The -same effect may be accomplished by setting corresponding environment -variables before running -.IR mpirun . -The form of the environment variables that LAM sets are: -.IR LAM_MPI_SSI_= . -.PP -Note that the -.I -ssi -switch overrides any previously set environment variables. Also note -that unknown -.I -arguments are still set as environment variable -- they are not -checked (by -.IR mpirun ) -for correctness. Illegal or incorrect -.I -arguments may or may not be reported -- it depends on the specific SSI -module. -.PP -The -.I -ssi -switch obsoletes the old -.I -c2c -and -.I -lamd -switches. These switches used to be relevant because LAM could only -have two RPI's available at a time: the lamd RPI and one of the C2C -RPIs. This is no longer true -- all RPI's are now available and -choosable at run-time. Selecting the lamd RPI is shown in the -examples above. -The -.I -c2c -switch has no direct translation since "C2C" used to refer to all -other RPI's that were not the lamd RPI. As such, -.I -ssi rpi -must be used to select the specific desired RPI (whether it is "lamd" -or one of the other RPI's). -. -. -. -.SS Guaranteed Envelope Resources -By default, LAM will guarantee a minimum amount of message envelope -buffering to each MPI process pair and will impede or report an error -to a process that attempts to overflow this system resource. This -robustness and debugging feature is implemented in a machine specific -manner when direct communication is used. For normal LAM -communication via the LAM daemon, a protocol is used. The \fI-nger\fR -option disables GER and the measures taken to support it. The minimum -GER is configured by the system administrator when LAM is installed. -See MPI(7) for more details. +Note that the \fI-mca\fP switch overrides any previously set environment +variables. Also note that unknown \fI\fP arguments are still set as +environment variable -- they are not checked (by \fImpirun\fP) for correctness. +Illegal or incorrect \fI\fP arguments may or may not be reported -- it +depends on the specific MCA module. . .\" ************************** .\" Examples Section .\" ************************** .SH EXAMPLES -Be sure to also see the examples in the "Location Nomenclature" -section, above. +Be sure to also see the examples in the "Location Nomenclature" section, above. +. .TP 4 -mpirun N prog1 -Load and execute prog1 on all nodes. Search the user's $PATH for the +mpirun -np 1 prog1 +Load and execute prog1 on one node. Search the user's $PATH for the executable file on each node. +. +. .TP -mpirun -c 8 prog1 -Run 8 copies of prog1 wherever LAM wants to run them. +mpirun -np 8 --byslot prog1 +Run 8 copies of prog1 wherever Open MPI wants to run them. +. +. .TP -mpirun n8-10 -v -nw -s n3 prog1 -q -Load and execute prog1 on nodes 8, 9, and 10. Search for prog1 on -node 3 and transfer it to the three target nodes. Report as each -process is created. Give "-q" as a command line to each new process. -Do not wait for the processes to complete before exiting -.IR mpirun . -.TP -mpirun -v myapp -Parse the application schema, myapp, and start all processes specified -in it. Report as each process is created. -.TP -mpirun -npty -wd /work/output -x DISPLAY C my_application - -Start one copy of "my_application" on each available CPU. The number -of available CPUs on each node was previously specified when LAM was -booted with lamboot(1). As noted above, -.I mpirun -will schedule adjoining rank in -.I MPI_COMM_WORLD -on the same node where possible. For example, if n0 has a CPU count -of 8, and n1 has a CPU count of 4, -.I mpirun -will place -.I MPI_COMM_WORLD -ranks 0 through 7 on n0, and 8 through 11 on n1. This tends to -maximize on-node communication for many parallel applications; when -used in conjunction with the multi-protocol network/shared memory RPIs -in LAM (see the RELEASE_NOTES and INSTALL files with the LAM -distribution), overall communication performance can be quite good. -Also disable pseudo-tty support, change directory to /work/output, and -export the DISPLAY variable to the new processes (perhaps -my_application will invoke an X application such as xv to display -output). +mpirun -np 4 -mca btl ib,tcp,self prog1 +Run 4 copies of prog1 using the "ib", "tcp", and "self" BTL's for the transport +of MPI messages. . .\" ************************** .\" Diagnostics Section .\" ************************** . -.SH DIAGNOSTICS -.TP 4 -mpirun: Exec format error -This usually means that either a number of processes or an appropriate - clause was not specified, indicating that LAM does not know -how many processes to run. See the EXAMPLES and "Location -Nomenclature" sections, above, for examples on how to specify how many -processes to run, and/or where to run them. However, it can also mean -that a non-ASCII character was detected in the application schema. -This is usually a command line usage error where -.I mpirun -is expecting an application schema and an executable file was given. -.TP -mpirun: syntax error in application schema, line XXX -The application schema cannot be parsed because of a usage or syntax error -on the given line in the file. -.TP -: No such file or directory -This error can occur in two cases. Either the named file cannot be -located or it has been found but the user does not have sufficient -permissions to execute the program or read the application schema. +.\" .SH DIAGNOSTICS +.\".TP 4 +.\"Error Msg: +.\"Description . .\" ************************** .\" Return Value Section .\" ************************** . .SH RETURN VALUE -.I mpirun -returns 0 if all ranks started by -.I mpirun -exit after calling MPI_FINALIZE. A non-zero value is returned if an -internal error occurred in mpirun, or one or more ranks exited before -calling MPI_FINALIZE. If an internal error occurred in mpirun, the -corresponding error code is returned. In the event that one or more ranks -exit before calling MPI_FINALIZE, the return value of the rank of the -process that -.I mpirun -first notices died before calling MPI_FINALIZE will be returned. Note -that, in general, this will be the first rank that died but is not -guaranteed to be so. +. +\fImpirun\fP returns 0 if all ranks started by \fImpirun\fP exit after calling +MPI_FINALIZE. A non-zero value is returned if an internal error occurred in +mpirun, or one or more ranks exited before calling MPI_FINALIZE. If an +internal error occurred in mpirun, the corresponding error code is returned. +In the event that one or more ranks exit before calling MPI_FINALIZE, the +return value of the rank of the process that \fImpirun\fP first notices died +before calling MPI_FINALIZE will be returned. Note that, in general, this will +be the first rank that died but is not guaranteed to be so. .PP -However, note that if the -.I \-nw -switch is used, the return value from mpirun does not indicate the exit status -of the ranks. +However, note that if the \fI-nw\fP switch is used, the return value from +mpirun does not indicate the exit status of the ranks. . .\" ************************** .\" See Also Section .\" ************************** . .SH SEE ALSO -bhost(5), -lamexec (1), -lamssi(7), -lamssi_rpi(7), -lamtrace(1), -loadgo(1), -MPIL_Trace_on(2), -mpimsg(1), -mpitask(1) +orted(1)