The original VADER_MAX_ADDRESS was tunned for x86_64 platforms only.
For non x86_64 platforms we can use XPMEM_MAXADDR_SIZE.
Signed-off-by: Pavel Shamis (Pasha) <pasharesearch@gmail.com>
This commit fixes several bugs in the registration cache code:
- Fix a programming error in the grdma invalidation function that can
cause an infinite loop if more than 100 registrations are
associated with a munmapped region. This happens because the
mca_rcache_base_vma_find_all function returns the same 100
registrations on each call. This has been fixed by adding an
iterate function to the vma tree interface.
- Always obtain the vma lock when needed. This is required because
there may be other threads in the system even if
opal_using_threads() is false. Additionally, since it is safe to do
so (the vma lock is recursive) the vma interface has been made
thread safe.
- Avoid calling free() while holding a lock. This avoids race
conditions with locks held outside the Open MPI code.
Fixesopen-mpi/ompi#1654.
Signed-off-by: Nathan Hjelm <hjelmn@lanl.gov>
This commit fixes a compile/link issue caused by vader. The vader btl
was using OPAL_THREAD_ADD64 to increment a counter which may not be
available on 32-bit systems. Changed to use OPAL_THREAD_ADD_SIZE_T
which will be 64-bit or 32-bit depending on the system.
Signed-off-by: Nathan Hjelm <hjelmn@lanl.gov>
These macros should really be named OPAL_SUMMARY_*; they're used in
all projects, and therefore should be in the lowest later project (OPAL).
Signed-off-by: Jeff Squyres <jsquyres@cisco.com>
This commit rewrites both the mpool and rcache frameworks. Summary of
changes:
- Before this change a significant portion of the rcache
functionality lived in mpool components. This meant that it was
impossible to add a new memory pool to use with rdma networks
(ugni, openib, etc) without duplicating the functionality of an
existing mpool component. All the registration functionality has
been removed from the mpool and placed in the rcache framework.
- All registration cache mpools components (udreg, grdma, gpusm,
rgpusm) have been changed to rcache components. rcaches are
allocated and released in the same way mpool components were.
- It is now valid to pass NULL as the resources argument when
creating an rcache. At this time the gpusm and rgpusm components
support this. All other rcache components require non-NULL
resources.
- A new mpool component has been added: hugepage. This component
supports huge page allocations on linux.
- Memory pools are now allocated using "hints". Each mpool component
is queried with the hints and returns a priority. The current hints
supported are NULL (uses posix_memalign/malloc), page_size=x (huge
page mpool), and mpool=x.
- The sm mpool has been moved to common/sm. This reflects that the sm
mpool is specialized and not meant for any general
allocations. This mpool may be moved back into the mpool framework
if there is any objection.
- The opal_free_list_init arguments have been updated. The unused0
argument is not used to pass in the registration cache module. The
mpool registration flags are now rcache registration flags.
- All components have been updated to make use of the new framework
interfaces.
As this commit makes significant changes to both the mpool and rcache
frameworks both versions have been bumped to 3.0.0.
Signed-off-by: Nathan Hjelm <hjelmn@lanl.gov>
This commit adds two m4 macros: OPAL_SUMMARY_ADD, OPAL_SUMMARY_PRINT.
OPAL_SUMMARY_ADD adds an item to a section in the summary. For example
OPAL_SUMMARY_ADD([[Transports]],[[Foo]],...,[yes]) will add the
following to the summary:
Transports
-----------------------
Foo: yes
With this commit two sections are added: Transports, Resource Managers.
The OPAL_SUMMARY_PRINT macro is called after AC_OUTPUT and prints out
some information about the build (version, projects, etc) and then
the summarys sections. It will additionally print a warning if
internal debugging is enabled.
Example output:
Open MPI configuration:
-----------------------
Version: 3.0.0 a1
Build Open Platform Abstration project: yes
Build Open Runtime project: yes
Build Open MPI project: yes
Build Open SHMEM project: no
MPI C++ bindings (deprecated): no
MPI Fortran bindings: mpif.h, use mpi, use mpi_f08
Debug build: yes
Transports
-----------------------
Cray uGNI (Gemini/Aries): no
Intel Omnipath (PSM2): no
KNEM Shared Memory: no
Linux CMA IPC: no
Mellanox MXM: no
Open UCX: no
OpenFabrics libfabric: no
OpenFabrics Verbs: no
portals4: no
QLogic Infinipath (PSM): no
tcp: yes
XPMEM Shared Memory: no
Resource Managers
-----------------------
Cray Alps: no
Grid Engine: no
LSF: no
Slurm: yes
Torque: yes
INTERNAL DEBUGGING IS ENABLED. DO NOT USE THIS BUILD FOR PERFORMANCE MEASUREMENTS!
Signed-off-by: Nathan Hjelm <hjelmn@me.com>
This commit fixes several threading bugs:
- Add an additional lock to the btl_base_endpoint_t structure to lock
the list of pending frags. This allows the progress function to
attempt to send pending frags without needing to drop/reaquire the
lock. This should provide a small improvement in performance and
fixes a potential race between adding an removing items from the
pending list.
- Ensure fast boxes are only set up once by updating the send count
using atomics when needed and do not set the fast box buffer
pointer until the fast box is set up.
Closesopen-mpi/ompi#1408
Signed-off-by: Nathan Hjelm <hjelmn@lanl.gov>
This commit adds a access_flags argument to the mpool registration
function. This flag indicates what kind of access is being requested:
local write, remote read, remote write, and remote atomic. The values
of the registration access flags in the btl are tied to the new flags
in the mpool. All mpools have been updated to include the new argument
but only the grdma and udreg mpools have been updated to make use of
the access flags. In both mpools existing registrations are checked
for sufficient access before being returned. If a registration does
not contain sufficient access it is marked as invalid and a new
registration is generated.
Signed-off-by: Nathan Hjelm <hjelmn@lanl.gov>
This commit updates each non-compliant btl to send the
MCA_BTL_FLAGS_SEND flag in the btl_flags field if send is
supported. This fixes a problem identified after the latest bml/r2
update which excplicitly checks for the send flag.
Signed-off-by: Nathan Hjelm <hjelmn@lanl.gov>
Bring Slurm PMI-1 component online
Bring the s2 component online
Little cleanup - let the various PMIx modules set the process name during init, and then just raise it up to the ORTE level. Required as the different PMI environments all pass the jobid in different ways.
Bring the OMPI pubsub/pmi component online
Get comm_spawn working again
Ensure we always provide a cpuset, even if it is NULL
pmix/cray: adjust cray pmix component for pmix
Make changes so cray pmix can work within the integrated
ompi/pmix framework.
Bring singletons back online. Implement the comm_spawn operation using pmix - not tested yet
Cleanup comm_spawn - procs now starting, error in connect_accept
Complete integration
This commit does two things. It removes checks for C99 required
headers (stdlib.h, string.h, signal.h, etc). Additionally it removes
definitions for required C99 types (intptr_t, int64_t, int32_t, etc).
Signed-off-by: Nathan Hjelm <hjelmn@me.com>
This commit fixes a typo in mca_btl_vader_progress_endpoints where
OPAL_THREAD_LOCK was used when OPAL_THREAD_UNLOCK was intended.
Signed-off-by: Nathan Hjelm <hjelmn@lanl.gov>
This commit fixes several vagrind errors. Included:
- installdirs did not correctly reinitialize all pointers to NULL
at close. This causes valgrind errors on a subsequent call to
opal_init_tool.
- several opal strings were leaked by opal_deregister_params which
was setting them to NULL instead of letting them be freed by the
MCA variable system.
- move opal_net_init to AFTER the variable system is initialized and
opal's MCA variables have been registered. opal_net_init uses a
variable registered by opal_register_params!
- do not leak ompi_mpi_main_thread when it is allocated by
MPI_T_init_thread.
- do not overwrite ompi_mpi_main_thread if it is already set (by
MPI_T_init_thread).
- mca_base_var: read_files was overwritting mca_base_var_file_list
even if it was non-NULL.
- mca_base_var: set all file global variables to initial states on
finalize.
- btl/vader: decrement enumerator reference count to ensure that it
is freed.
Signed-off-by: Nathan Hjelm <hjelmn@lanl.gov>
On 32-bit architectures loads/stores of fast box headers may take
multiple instructions. This can lead to a data race between the
sender/receiver when reading/writing the sequence number. This can
lead to a situation where the receiver could process incomplete
data. To fix the issue this commit re-orders the fast box header to
put the sequence number and the tag in the same 32-bits to ensure they
are always loaded/stored together.
Fixes#473
Signed-off-by: Nathan Hjelm <hjelmn@lanl.gov>
Use of the old ompi_free_list_t and ompi_free_list_item_t is
deprecated. These classes will be removed in a future commit.
This commit updates the entire code base to use opal_free_list_t and
opal_free_list_item_t.
Notes:
OMPI_FREE_LIST_*_MT -> opal_free_list_* (uses opal_using_threads ())
Signed-off-by: Nathan Hjelm <hjelmn@lanl.gov>
This commit adds an owner file in each of the component directories
for each framework. This allows for a simple script to parse
the contents of the files and generate, among other things, tables
to be used on the project's wiki page. Currently there are two
"fields" in the file, an owner and a status. A tool to parse
the files and generate tables for the wiki page will be added
in a subsequent commit.
The send inline optimization uses the btl_sendi function to achieve lower
latency and higher message rates. Before this commit BTLs were allowed to
assume the descriptor was non-NULL and were expected to return a valid
descriptor if the send could not be completed using btl_sendi. This
behavior was fine until the usage of btl_sendi was changed in ob1. This
commit allows the caller to specify NULL for the descriptor. The affected
btls have been updated to handle this case.
Signed-off-by: Nathan Hjelm <hjelmn@lanl.gov>
Use the pkg-config related m4 functions to find out where
Cray's xpmem.h and libxpmem are located on a system.
With this commit, there is no longer any need to have to
explicitly indicate an xpmem install location on the configure
line, at least for Cray systems running CLE 4.X and 5.X.
value NULL for the descriptor
The send inline optimization uses the btl_sendi function to achieve
lower latency and higher message rates. The problem is the btl_sendi
function was allowed to return a descriptor to the caller. This is fine
for some paths but not ok for the send inline optimization. To fix
this the btl now must be able to handle descriptor = NULL.
structure
This structure member was originally used to specify the remote segment
for an RDMA operation. Since the new btl interface no longer uses
desriptors for RDMA this member no longer has a purpose. In addition
to removing these members the local segment information has been
renamed to des_segments/des_segment_count.
The old BTL interface provided support for RDMA through the use of
the btl_prepare_src and btl_prepare_dst functions. These functions were
expected to prepare as much of the user buffer as possible for the RDMA
operation and return a descriptor. The descriptor contained segment
information on the prepared region. The btl user could then pass the
RDMA segment information to a remote peer. Once the peer received that
information it then packed it into a similar descriptor on the other
side that could then be passed into a single btl_put or btl_get
operation.
Changes:
- Removed the btl_prepare_dst function. This reflects the fact that
RDMA operations no longer depend on "prepared" descriptors.
- Removed the btl_seg_size member. There is no need to btl's to
subclass the mca_btl_base_segment_t class anymore.
...
Add more
using knem
It is valid to modify the remote segment that will be used with the
btl put/get operations as long as the resulting address range falls in
the originally prepared segment. Vader should have been calculating the
offset of the remote address in the registered region. This commit
fixes this issue.
We recognize that this means other users of OPAL will need to "wrap" the opal_process_name_t if they desire to abstract it in some fashion. This is regrettable, and we are looking at possible alternatives that might mitigate that requirement. Meantime, however, we have to put the needs of the OMPI community first, and are taking this step to restore hetero and SPARC support.