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Jeff Squyres
0af7ac53f2 Fixes trac:1392, #1400
* add "register" function to mca_base_component_t
   * converted coll:basic and paffinity:linux and paffinity:solaris to
     use this function
   * we'll convert the rest over time (I'll file a ticket once all
     this is committed)
 * add 32 bytes of "reserved" space to the end of mca_base_component_t
   and mca_base_component_data_2_0_0_t to make future upgrades
   [slightly] easier
   * new mca_base_component_t size: 196 bytes
   * new mca_base_component_data_2_0_0_t size: 36 bytes
 * MCA base version bumped to v2.0
   * '''We now refuse to load components that are not MCA v2.0.x'''
 * all MCA frameworks versions bumped to v2.0
 * be a little more explicit about version numbers in the MCA base
   * add big comment in mca.h about versioning philosophy

This commit was SVN r19073.

The following Trac tickets were found above:
  Ticket 1392 --> https://svn.open-mpi.org/trac/ompi/ticket/1392
2008-07-28 22:40:57 +00:00
Jeff Squyres
54dbd95243 Fix some component version numbers to be the same as the OMPI release
This commit was SVN r18965.
2008-07-21 20:05:29 +00:00
Ralph Castain
0532d799d6 Complete implementation of the --without-rte-support configure option. Working with Brian, this has been tested on RedStorm.
Some minor changes to help facilitate debugger support so that both mpirun and yod can operate with it. Still to be completed.

This commit was SVN r18664.
2008-06-18 03:15:56 +00:00
Ralph Castain
9613b3176c Effectively revert the orte_output system and return to direct use of opal_output at all levels. Retain the orte_show_help subsystem to allow aggregation of show_help messages at the HNP.
After much work by Jeff and myself, and quite a lot of discussion, it has become clear that we simply cannot resolve the infinite loops caused by RML-involved subsystems calling orte_output. The original rationale for the change to orte_output has also been reduced by shifting the output of XML-formatted vs human readable messages to an alternative approach.

I have globally replaced the orte_output/ORTE_OUTPUT calls in the code base, as well as the corresponding .h file name. I have test compiled and run this on the various environments within my reach, so hopefully this will prove minimally disruptive.

This commit was SVN r18619.
2008-06-09 14:53:58 +00:00
Jeff Squyres
d3795d7a34 Fix CID 987: remove unused variable.
This commit was SVN r18598.
2008-06-05 20:17:02 +00:00
George Bosilca
25ae9c12e6 Silence few warnings.
This commit was SVN r18568.
2008-06-03 19:58:40 +00:00
Ralph Castain
c992e99035 Remove the tags from orte_output_open and the filtering operation from orte_output - this will be handled differently to improve the XML output interface
This commit was SVN r18557.
2008-06-03 14:24:01 +00:00
Ralph Castain
e5e542ddcf Clarify an error message
This commit was SVN r18533.
2008-05-29 12:20:24 +00:00
Jeff Squyres
e7ecd56bd2 This commit represents a bunch of work on a Mercurial side branch. As
such, the commit message back to the master SVN repository is fairly
long.

= ORTE Job-Level Output Messages =

Add two new interfaces that should be used for all new code throughout
the ORTE and OMPI layers (we already make the search-and-replace on
the existing ORTE / OMPI layers):

 * orte_output(): (and corresponding friends ORTE_OUTPUT,
   orte_output_verbose, etc.)  This function sends the output directly
   to the HNP for processing as part of a job-specific output
   channel.  It supports all the same outputs as opal_output()
   (syslog, file, stdout, stderr), but for stdout/stderr, the output
   is sent to the HNP for processing and output.  More on this below.
 * orte_show_help(): This function is a drop-in-replacement for
   opal_show_help(), with two differences in functionality:
   1. the rendered text help message output is sent to the HNP for
      display (rather than outputting directly into the process' stderr
      stream)
   1. the HNP detects duplicate help messages and does not display them
      (so that you don't see the same error message N times, once from
      each of your N MPI processes); instead, it counts "new" instances
      of the help message and displays a message every ~5 seconds when
      there are new ones ("I got X new copies of the help message...")

opal_show_help and opal_output still exist, but they only output in
the current process.  The intent for the new orte_* functions is that
they can apply job-level intelligence to the output.  As such, we
recommend that all new ORTE and OMPI code use the new orte_*
functions, not thei opal_* functions.

=== New code ===

For ORTE and OMPI programmers, here's what you need to do differently
in new code:

 * Do not include opal/util/show_help.h or opal/util/output.h.
   Instead, include orte/util/output.h (this one header file has
   declarations for both the orte_output() series of functions and
   orte_show_help()).
 * Effectively s/opal_output/orte_output/gi throughout your code.
   Note that orte_output_open() takes a slightly different argument
   list (as a way to pass data to the filtering stream -- see below),
   so you if explicitly call opal_output_open(), you'll need to
   slightly adapt to the new signature of orte_output_open().
 * Literally s/opal_show_help/orte_show_help/.  The function signature
   is identical.

=== Notes ===

 * orte_output'ing to stream 0 will do similar to what
   opal_output'ing did, so leaving a hard-coded "0" as the first
   argument is safe.
 * For systems that do not use ORTE's RML or the HNP, the effect of
   orte_output_* and orte_show_help will be identical to their opal
   counterparts (the additional information passed to
   orte_output_open() will be lost!).  Indeed, the orte_* functions
   simply become trivial wrappers to their opal_* counterparts.  Note
   that we have not tested this; the code is simple but it is quite
   possible that we mucked something up.

= Filter Framework =

Messages sent view the new orte_* functions described above and
messages output via the IOF on the HNP will now optionally be passed
through a new "filter" framework before being output to
stdout/stderr.  The "filter" OPAL MCA framework is intended to allow
preprocessing to messages before they are sent to their final
destinations.  The first component that was written in the filter
framework was to create an XML stream, segregating all the messages
into different XML tags, etc.  This will allow 3rd party tools to read
the stdout/stderr from the HNP and be able to know exactly what each
text message is (e.g., a help message, another OMPI infrastructure
message, stdout from the user process, stderr from the user process,
etc.).

Filtering is not active by default.  Filter components must be
specifically requested, such as:

{{{
$ mpirun --mca filter xml ...
}}}

There can only be one filter component active.

= New MCA Parameters =

The new functionality described above introduces two new MCA
parameters:

 * '''orte_base_help_aggregate''': Defaults to 1 (true), meaning that
   help messages will be aggregated, as described above.  If set to 0,
   all help messages will be displayed, even if they are duplicates
   (i.e., the original behavior).
 * '''orte_base_show_output_recursions''': An MCA parameter to help
   debug one of the known issues, described below.  It is likely that
   this MCA parameter will disappear before v1.3 final.

= Known Issues =

 * The XML filter component is not complete.  The current output from
   this component is preliminary and not real XML.  A bit more work
   needs to be done to configure.m4 search for an appropriate XML
   library/link it in/use it at run time.
 * There are possible recursion loops in the orte_output() and
   orte_show_help() functions -- e.g., if RML send calls orte_output()
   or orte_show_help().  We have some ideas how to fix these, but
   figured that it was ok to commit before feature freeze with known
   issues.  The code currently contains sub-optimal workarounds so
   that this will not be a problem, but it would be good to actually
   solve the problem rather than have hackish workarounds before v1.3 final.

This commit was SVN r18434.
2008-05-13 20:00:55 +00:00
Ralph Castain
3e55fe6f6d Fold in the revised modex scheme. Move the ompi_proc_t modex portions to the RTE level since the daemons already have that info. Provide each process with the equivalent of a "nidmap" - both a map of what nodes are in the job, and a map of which node each process is on. This enables the use of static ports, though that hasn't been turned "on" in this commit.
Update the rsh tree spawn capability so we spawn the next wave of daemons before launching our own local procs.

Add an ability to encode nodenames for large clusters with contiguous node name numbering schemes - this allows communication of all node names in a few bytes instead of tens-of-bytes/node.

This commit was SVN r18338.
2008-04-30 19:49:53 +00:00
Josh Hursey
2c736873bb Fix a checkpoint/restart bug that causes a restarted application to occasionally throw a SIGSEGV or SIGPIPE due to invalid socket descriptors.
The problem was caused by a bad ordering between the restart of the ORTE level tcp connections (in the OOB - out-of-band communication) and the Open MPI level tcp connections (BTLs). Before this commit ORTE would shutdown and restart the OOB completely before the OMPI level restarted its tcp connections. What would happen is that a socket descriptor used by the OMPI level on checkpoint was assigned to the ORTE level on restart. But the OMPI level had no knowledge that the socket descriptor it was previously using has been recycled so it closed it on restart. This caused the ORTE level to break as the newly created socket descriptor was closed without its knowledge.

The fix is to have the OMPI level shutdown tcp connections, allow the ORTE level to restart, and then allow the OMPi level to restart its connections. This seems obvious, and I'm surprised that this bug has not cropped up sooner. I'm confident that this specific problem has been fixed with this commit.

Thanks to Eric Roman and Tamer El Sayed for their help in identifying this problem, and patience while I was fixing it.

 * Add a new state {{{OPAL_CRS_RESTART_PRE}}}. This state identifies when we are on the down slope of the INC (finalize-like) which is useful when you want to close, but not reopen a component set for fear of interfering with a lower level.
 * Use this new state in OMPI level coordination. Here we want to make sure to play well with both the OMPI/BTL/TCP and ORTE/OOB/TCP components.
 * Update ft_event functions in PML and BML to handle the new restart state.
 * Add an additional flag to the error output in OOB/TCP so we can see what the socket descriptor was on failure as this can be helpful in debugging.

This commit was SVN r18276.
2008-04-24 17:54:22 +00:00
Josh Hursey
cc83d41ad9 Merge in tmp/jjh-scratch
{{{
 svn merge -r 18218:18240 https://svn.open-mpi.org/svn/ompi/tmp/jjh-scratch .
}}}

Contains:
 * Primarily a fix for a user reported problem where a cached file descriptor is causing a SIGPIPE on restart.
 * Cleanup some small memory leaks from using mca_base_param_env_var() - Thanks Jeff
 * Cleanup ORTE FT tool compilation in non-FT builds - Thanks Tim P.
 * Cleanup mpi interface with missplaced {{{OPAL_CR_ENTER_LIBRARY}}} - Thanks Terry
 * Some other sundry cleanup items all dealing with C/R functionality in the trunk.

This commit was SVN r18241.
2008-04-23 00:17:12 +00:00
Adrian Knoth
84e4013530 Always declare oob_tcp_disable_family, no matter if --disable-ipv6 is set.
This commit was SVN r18164.
2008-04-16 09:31:15 +00:00
Adrian Knoth
0ddfff4ffe Added new oob-tcp parameter oob_tcp_disable_family.
Like btl_tcp_disable_family, this parameter more or less disables
a whole address family. Though the sockets are still created, the
corresponding information isn't added to the connection strings.

Likewise, we don't try to connect to addresses matching the disabled
address family.

This is particularly important for multidomain clusters, where IPv4 is
oftenly filtered (firewalled), sometimes by simply dropping the packets
instead of rejecting them (thus causing a connection timeout instead of
a quick "no route to host").

This commit was SVN r18163.
2008-04-16 09:22:00 +00:00
Ralph Castain
11c6773c83 Commit a patch from Brian that fixes potential segfaults in systems where IPv6 include files are found, but the kernel doesn't actually support IPv6.
This commit was SVN r18106.
2008-04-09 12:53:24 +00:00
Adrian Knoth
a56b9b1df1 Fix broken build with --disable-ipv6.
This commit was SVN r18071.
2008-04-02 10:53:48 +00:00
Ralph Castain
39c2680e9a Silence warning
This commit was SVN r18057.
2008-04-01 13:42:16 +00:00
Ralph Castain
3e8846d685 Some code cleanups from Brian to clarify port selection and opening logic
This commit was SVN r18055.
2008-04-01 12:39:02 +00:00
Ralph Castain
60d931217f Modify the routed framework to allow greater control/flexibility over response to lost routes and initial wireup of jobs as required by several soon-to-come new modules.
Specifically, add two new APIs:

1. lost_route: allows the OOB to report that a connection has failed, thereby giving the routed module an opportunity to respond appropriately to its topology. Creating the API also allows each routed component to hold its own definition of "lifeline" - in some cases, this may be a single connection, but in others it may be multiple connections. Some modules may choose to re-route messaging if the lifeline or any other connection is lost, while others may choose to abort the job.

Both the tree and unity modules retain the current behavior and abort the job if the lifeline connection is lost, while ignoring other lost connections.

2. get_wireup_info: returns (in a provided buffer) info required to wireup connections for the specified job. Some routed modules do not need to return any info as they can wireup via alternative means, while some need to xchg data with their peers. If info is inserted into the buffer, the plm_base_launch_apps function will xcast the contents to the specified job.

The commit also removes the "lifeline" entry from the orte_process_info struct (and the associated ORTE_PROC_MY_LIFELINE definition) as the lifeline info is now contained within the respective routed module.

This commit was SVN r17969.
2008-03-26 01:00:24 +00:00
Ralph Castain
f8642e9390 Add debug to tell us when we opened a socket and to whom
This commit was SVN r17911.
2008-03-21 15:47:47 +00:00
Ralph Castain
19ffdfef42 Add some debugging output to tell us what interfaces were considered and used by OOB
This commit was SVN r17909.
2008-03-21 15:35:40 +00:00
Ralph Castain
27a73ad9ee Fix a race condition between the orteds and HNP that can cause the orteds to output the "lost lifeline" message.
This has been a long-time problem. I tried to reduce the problem by having the orteds tell the HNP they were finalizing, and having the HNP wait until all orteds had reported or we timed out.

What was observed was that all the orteds were correctly reporting that they are leaving, but the HNP is able to exit before the orteds, thus closing the orteds lifeline socket and generating the error output. This is caused by the fact that the orteds have to whack all remaining session directories, which includes that blasted monster shared memory file! Cleaning up the SM file can take quite a while.

The HNP doesn't have that problem as there is no SM file there! So it gets out first.

What we had done in the past to resolve that problem was put a little test in the OOB that checks to see if we are finalizing. If we are, then we ignore the lifeline connection being lost. That check was still in the code - however, we had lost the line in orte_finalize that set the flag!!

This commit was SVN r17893.
2008-03-20 13:30:51 +00:00
Ralph Castain
ec64bf3da8 Clarify the error output so we can understand if it was a daemon or process that lost its lifeline
This commit was SVN r17880.
2008-03-19 19:06:52 +00:00
Ralph Castain
ff99aa054f In order to prevent orphaned processes when using non-unity routing methods, the procs need to realize that their local daemon is a critical connection - if that connection unexpectedly closes, they need to terminate.
This commit adds definition for a "lifeline" connection. For an HNP, there is no lifeline, so the lifeline proc is NULL. For a daemon, the lifeline is the HNP - the daemon should abort if it loses that connection.

For a proc using unity routed, the lifeline is the HNP since it connects directly to the HNP.

For a proc using tree routed, the lifeline is the local daemon.

Adjusted OOB to call abort if the lifeline (as opposed to HNP) connection is lost.

This commit was SVN r17761.
2008-03-06 15:30:44 +00:00
Tim Prins
5de3e1965e Remove the orte_proc_table. Migrate all users of it to the opal_hash_table and a new name hash function in orte.
Everything should work, however I am unable to compile and test the sctp BTL.

This commit was SVN r17751.
2008-03-05 22:44:35 +00:00
Ralph Castain
6450962d59 Add some debugging to the message event object.
Cleanup some no-longer-used values

This commit was SVN r17671.
2008-02-29 20:10:31 +00:00
Ralph Castain
d70e2e8c2b Merge the ORTE devel branch into the main trunk. Details of what this means will be circulated separately.
Remains to be tested to ensure everything came over cleanly, so please continue to withhold commits a little longer

This commit was SVN r17632.
2008-02-28 01:57:57 +00:00
George Bosilca
eb71a634c6 Don't forget to initialize the msg_origin field.
This commit was SVN r17055.
2008-01-04 23:24:49 +00:00
George Bosilca
48f5a26e8c Cast to keep VC happy (quiet).
This commit was SVN r17054.
2008-01-04 23:13:32 +00:00
Adrian Knoth
42d5fe62f9 Fixed misplaced #endif
This commit was SVN r17028.
2008-01-01 11:02:38 +00:00
Jeff Squyres
213b5d5c6e Per long threads on the mailing list and much confusion discussion
about linkers, have all OPAL, ORTE, and OMPI components '''not'' link
against the OPAL, ORTE, or OMPI libraries.

See ttp://www.open-mpi.org/community/lists/users/2007/10/4220.php for
details (or https://svn.open-mpi.org/trac/ompi/wiki/Linkers for a
better-formatted version of the same info).

This commit was SVN r16968.
2007-12-15 13:32:02 +00:00
Jeff Squyres
c20350b943 Patch submitted by Brian Barrett, inspired by this thread:
http://www.open-mpi.org/community/lists/users/2007/11/4547.php.

- Better handling of ECONNABORTED from connect on Linux.
- Reduce extraneous output from OOB when TCP connections must
  be retried.

This commit was SVN r16808.
2007-11-30 21:42:15 +00:00
George Bosilca
d67c0eefb4 Remove a compilation warning about using uninitialized variables.
This commit was SVN r16589.
2007-10-26 20:15:28 +00:00
George Bosilca
b1b5cb6453 Looks like SO_REUSEPORT it's not defined on some platforms. Switch
to the conventional SO_REUSEADDR instead.

This commit was SVN r16588.
2007-10-26 19:56:21 +00:00
George Bosilca
337f78a4a8 Restrict the port range for the OOB and the BTL. Each protocols (v4 and v6)
has his own range which is defined by a min value and a range. By default
there is no limitation on the port range, which is exactly the same
behavior as before.

This commit was SVN r16584.
2007-10-26 16:36:51 +00:00
Jeff Squyres
5637c7a5a0 In addition to r16513, this commit fixes trac:1170.
If we cannot resolve the route to the peer that we're trying to send
to, don't queue up the message in the TCP OOB -- instead, return it to
the upper layer (e.g., the RML) and let it decide what to do.

In the case of the routed RML, the tree component will queue it up for
later transmission.  Hence, we don't want the message queued up both
here in the TCP OOB and the tree routed.  Also see some more
discussion / explanation in #1171.

This commit was SVN r16540.

The following SVN revision numbers were found above:
  r16513 --> open-mpi/ompi@7ae9589d70

The following Trac tickets were found above:
  Ticket 1170 --> https://svn.open-mpi.org/trac/ompi/ticket/1170
2007-10-22 13:46:57 +00:00
Jeff Squyres
abf1b728b9 Minor code maintenance fix -- put the THREAD_UNLOCK outside the if
statement so that you only have to have it once.

This commit was SVN r16512.
2007-10-19 12:36:26 +00:00
Ralph Castain
54b2cf747e These changes were mostly captured in a prior RFC (except for #2 below) and are aimed specifically at improving startup performance and setting up the remaining modifications described in that RFC.
The commit has been tested for C/R and Cray operations, and on Odin (SLURM, rsh) and RoadRunner (TM). I tried to update all environments, but obviously could not test them. I know that Windows needs some work, and have highlighted what is know to be needed in the odls process component.

This represents a lot of work by Brian, Tim P, Josh, and myself, with much advice from Jeff and others. For posterity, I have appended a copy of the email describing the work that was done:

As we have repeatedly noted, the modex operation in MPI_Init is the single greatest consumer of time during startup. To-date, we have executed that operation as an ORTE stage gate that held the process until a startup message containing all required modex (and OOB contact info - see #3 below) info could be sent to it. Each process would send its data to the HNP's registry, which assembled and sent the message when all processes had reported in.

In addition, ORTE had taken responsibility for monitoring process status as it progressed through a series of "stage gates". The process reported its status at each gate, and ORTE would then send a "release" message once all procs had reported in.

The incoming changes revamp these procedures in three ways:

1. eliminating the ORTE stage gate system and cleanly delineating responsibility between the OMPI and ORTE layers for MPI init/finalize. The modex stage gate (STG1) has been replaced by a collective operation in the modex itself that performs an allgather on the required modex info. The allgather is implemented using the orte_grpcomm framework since the BTL's are not active at that point. At the moment, the grpcomm framework only has a "basic" component analogous to OMPI's "basic" coll framework - I would recommend that the MPI team create additional, more advanced components to improve performance of this step.

The other stage gates have been replaced by orte_grpcomm barrier functions. We tried to use MPI barriers instead (since the BTL's are active at that point), but - as we discussed on the telecon - these are not currently true barriers so the job would hang when we fell through while messages were still in process. Note that the grpcomm barrier doesn't actually resolve that problem, but Brian has pointed out that we are unlikely to ever see it violated. Again, you might want to spend a little time on an advanced barrier algorithm as the one in "basic" is very simplistic.

Summarizing this change: ORTE no longer tracks process state nor has direct responsibility for synchronizing jobs. This is now done via collective operations within the MPI layer, albeit using ORTE collective communication services. I -strongly- urge the MPI team to implement advanced collective algorithms to improve the performance of this critical procedure.


2. reducing the volume of data exchanged during modex. Data in the modex consisted of the process name, the name of the node where that process is located (expressed as a string), plus a string representation of all contact info. The nodename was required in order for the modex to determine if the process was local or not - in addition, some people like to have it to print pretty error messages when a connection failed.

The size of this data has been reduced in three ways:

(a) reducing the size of the process name itself. The process name consisted of two 32-bit fields for the jobid and vpid. This is far larger than any current system, or system likely to exist in the near future, can support. Accordingly, the default size of these fields has been reduced to 16-bits, which means you can have 32k procs in each of 32k jobs. Since the daemons must have a vpid, and we require one daemon/node, this also restricts the default configuration to 32k nodes.

To support any future "mega-clusters", a configuration option --enable-jumbo-apps has been added. This option increases the jobid and vpid field sizes to 32-bits. Someday, if necessary, someone can add yet another option to increase them to 64-bits, I suppose.

(b) replacing the string nodename with an integer nodeid. Since we have one daemon/node, the nodeid corresponds to the local daemon's vpid. This replaces an often lengthy string with only 2 (or at most 4) bytes, a substantial reduction.

(c) when the mca param requesting that nodenames be sent to support pretty error messages, a second mca param is now used to request FQDN - otherwise, the domain name is stripped (by default) from the message to save space. If someone wants to combine those into a single param somehow (perhaps with an argument?), they are welcome to do so - I didn't want to alter what people are already using.

While these may seem like small savings, they actually amount to a significant impact when aggregated across the entire modex operation. Since every proc must receive the modex data regardless of the collective used to send it, just reducing the size of the process name removes nearly 400MBytes of communication from a 32k proc job (admittedly, much of this comm may occur in parallel). So it does add up pretty quickly.


3. routing RML messages to reduce connections. The default messaging system remains point-to-point - i.e., each proc opens a socket to every proc it communicates with and sends its messages directly. A new option uses the orteds as routers - i.e., each proc only opens a single socket to its local orted. All messages are sent from the proc to the orted, which forwards the message to the orted on the node where the intended recipient proc is located - that orted then forwards the message to its local proc (the recipient). This greatly reduces the connection storm we have encountered during startup.

It also has the benefit of removing the sharing of every proc's OOB contact with every other proc. The orted routing tables are populated during launch since every orted gets a map of where every proc is being placed. Each proc, therefore, only needs to know the contact info for its local daemon, which is passed in via the environment when the proc is fork/exec'd by the daemon. This alone removes ~50 bytes/process of communication that was in the current STG1 startup message - so for our 32k proc job, this saves us roughly 32k*50 = 1.6MBytes sent to 32k procs = 51GBytes of messaging.

Note that you can use the new routing method by specifying -mca routed tree - if you so desire. This mode will become the default at some point in the future.


There are a few minor additional changes in the commit that I'll just note in passing:

* propagation of command line mca params to the orteds - fixes ticket #1073. See note there for details.

* requiring of "finalize" prior to "exit" for MPI procs - fixes ticket #1144. See note there for details.

* cleanup of some stale header files

This commit was SVN r16364.
2007-10-05 19:48:23 +00:00
George Bosilca
e5d316dba6 Coverty: fix issues with using a string once it get freed. The problem, is that the
mca_base_register_string don't set the result to NULL is an error occurs.

This commit was SVN r16108.
2007-09-12 18:16:53 +00:00
Shiqing Fan
548a4fe943 - Use IOVBASE_TYPE instead of char to avoid warnings on some systems.
This commit was SVN r16092.
2007-09-11 16:24:23 +00:00
Shiqing Fan
c1065d8262 - Some more type casts.
This commit was SVN r16087.
2007-09-11 11:28:43 +00:00
Brian Barrett
59524a9009 Fix issue where we set state to SHUTDOWN rather than CONNECTING when we
had to switch socket types.

This commit was SVN r15784.
2007-08-06 22:55:41 +00:00
Rainer Keller
2c5d07217d - Coverity: use snprintf, instead of sprintf....
This commit was SVN r15669.
2007-07-29 11:23:23 +00:00
Brian Barrett
f06b61cff9 Don't use the OOB TCP key for contact information, remove the need to
include a not so public header file.  FIxes a compile error on the Cray.

This commit was SVN r15613.
2007-07-25 15:12:07 +00:00
George Bosilca
00796cfdab Make sure the oob_tcp_windows_progress_callback is registered
in all cases. This is now done in the oob tcp open function.
As a result, the unregistering have to be done in the close
function.

This commit was SVN r15603.
2007-07-25 05:55:14 +00:00
George Bosilca
c961cb5749 The Windows support is now back in bussiness.
This commit was SVN r15599.
2007-07-25 03:55:34 +00:00
Brian Barrett
4e23c7c5a2 Fixes for case where IPv6 support is disabled. Fixes trac:1102.
This commit was SVN r15584.

The following Trac tickets were found above:
  Ticket 1102 --> https://svn.open-mpi.org/trac/ompi/ticket/1102
2007-07-24 17:01:39 +00:00
Brian Barrett
5b9fa7e998 reapply r15517 and r15520, which were removed in r15527 so that I could get
the RML/OOB merge in slightly easier

This commit was SVN r15530.

The following SVN revision numbers were found above:
  r15517 --> open-mpi/ompi@41977fcc95
  r15520 --> open-mpi/ompi@9cbc9df1b8
  r15527 --> open-mpi/ompi@2d17dd9516
2007-07-20 02:34:29 +00:00
Brian Barrett
39a6057fc6 A number of improvements / changes to the RML/OOB layers:
* General TCP cleanup for OPAL / ORTE
  * Simplifying the OOB by moving much of the logic into the RML
  * Allowing the OOB RML component to do routing of messages
  * Adding a component framework for handling routing tables
  * Moving the xcast functionality from the OOB base to its own framework

Includes merge from tmp/bwb-oob-rml-merge revisions:

    r15506, r15507, r15508, r15510, r15511, r15512, r15513

This commit was SVN r15528.

The following SVN revisions from the original message are invalid or
inconsistent and therefore were not cross-referenced:
  r15506
  r15507
  r15508
  r15510
  r15511
  r15512
  r15513
2007-07-20 01:34:02 +00:00
Brian Barrett
2d17dd9516 temporarily back our r15517 and 15520 so that I can get the RML / OOB changes
to cleanly apply

This commit was SVN r15527.

The following SVN revision numbers were found above:
  r15517 --> open-mpi/ompi@41977fcc95
2007-07-20 01:10:34 +00:00