1
1
Граф коммитов

9 Коммитов

Автор SHA1 Сообщение Дата
Jeff Squyres
28e51ad4d4 opal: convert from strncpy() -> opal_string_copy()
In many cases, this was a simple string replace.  In a few places, it
entailed:

1. Updating some comments and removing now-redundant foo[size-1]='\0'
   statements.
2. Updating passing (size-1) to (size) (because opal_string_copy()
   wants the entire destination buffer length).

This commit actually fixes a bunch of potential (yet quite unlikely)
bugs where we could have ended up with non-null-terminated strings.

Signed-off-by: Jeff Squyres <jsquyres@cisco.com>
2018-09-27 11:56:18 -07:00
Gilles Gouaillardet
7556dd0abb opal/util: plug a memory leak in the opal_infosubscriber_t destructor
Signed-off-by: Gilles Gouaillardet <gilles@rist.or.jp>
2018-08-30 10:07:17 +09:00
Jeff Squyres
2670a7f55c util/info: tighten up error detection on key length
Fix CID 1435996: use the proper % type to render the size.

Also use opal_output(), not fprintf().  For debug builds, abort
without dumping core (dumping core is very unfriendly when running
thousands of automated tests) -- the stderr output is sufficient to
find the coding error.  For non-debug builds, truncate the key and
emit a warning that it almost certainly will not work properly.

Signed-off-by: Jeff Squyres <jsquyres@cisco.com>
2018-06-16 08:45:03 -07:00
Ralph Castain
94794011f1 Silence warnings and ignore test binary
Signed-off-by: Ralph Castain <rhc@open-mpi.org>
2018-06-15 11:32:22 -07:00
Mark Allen
93fefc4d70 fix info-subscribe to use snprintf() and warn on long key
This checkin mainly concerns our internal info keys that are registering
for callbacks via opal_infosubscribe_subscribe(). Those keys need to have
an extra __IN_<key>/val stored to preserve their pre-callback value. So
that means our internal keys are limited to 5 chars shorter than the usual
key length limit.

The code previously would have been silently inactive if a large key happened
to come in, now it warns and also uses snprintf() to avoid compiler warnings.

I'm also making the top-level MPI_Info_set warn if the user uses our reserved
"__IN_" prefix. I had wanted the feature to be more invisible than that, but
it would require a more sophisticated approach to change that.

Signed-off-by: Mark Allen <markalle@us.ibm.com>
2018-06-01 18:31:32 -04:00
Ralph Castain
ecacde0cd5 Purge whitespace errors
Signed-off-by: Ralph Castain <rhc@open-mpi.org>
2017-06-23 11:12:14 -07:00
Nathan Hjelm
9c621ad5a4 opal/info: fix abstraction break
The new info infrastructure introduced an abstration break by
including mpi.h and using MPI_ constants in opal. This commit fixes
the break by changing the constants to their opal equivalents.

Signed-off-by: Nathan Hjelm <hjelmn@lanl.gov>
2017-06-23 08:03:01 -06:00
Mark Allen
482d84b6e5 fixes for Dave's get/set info code
The expected sequence of events for processing info during object creation
is that if there's an incoming info arg, it is opal_info_dup()ed into the obj
at obj->s_info first. Then interested components register callbacks for
keys they want to know about using opal_infosubscribe_infosubscribe().

Inside info_subscribe_subscribe() the specified callback() is called with
whatever matching k/v is in the object's info, or with the default. The
return string from the callback goes into the new k/v stored in info, and
the input k/v is saved as __IN_<key>/<val>. It's saved the same way
whether the input came from info or whether it was a default. A null return
from the callback indicates an ignored key/val, and no k/v is stored for
it, but an __IN_<key>/<val> is still kept so we still have access to the
original.

At MPI_*_set_info() time, opal_infosubscribe_change_info() is used. That
function calls the registered callbacks for each item in the provided info.
If the callback returns non-null, the info is updated with that k/v, or if
the callback returns null, that key is deleted from info. An __IN_<key>/<val>
is saved either way, and overwrites any previously saved value.

When MPI_*_get_info() is called, opal_info_dup_mpistandard() is used, which
allows relatively easy changes in interpretation of the standard, by looking
at both the <key>/<val> and __IN_<key>/<val> in info. Right now it does
  1. includes system extras, eg k/v defaults not expliclty set by the user
  2. omits ignored keys
  3. shows input values, not callback modifications, eg not the internal values

Currently the callbacks are doing things like
    return some_condition ? "true" : "false"
that is, returning static strings that are not to be freed. If the return
strings start becoming more dynamic in the future I don't see how unallocated
strings could support that, so I'd propose a change for the future that
the callback()s registered with info_subscribe_subscribe() do a strdup on
their return, and we change the callers of callback() to free the strings
it returns (there are only two callers).

Rough outline of the smaller changes spread over the less central files:
  comm.c
    initialize comm->super.s_info to NULL
    copy into comm->super.s_info in comm creation calls that provide info
    OBJ_RELEASE comm->super.s_info at free time
  comm_init.c
    initialize comm->super.s_info to NULL
  file.c
    copy into file->super.s_info if file creation provides info
    OBJ_RELEASE file->super.s_info at free time
  win.c
    copy into win->super.s_info if win creation provides info
    OBJ_RELEASE win->super.s_info at free time

  comm_get_info.c
  file_get_info.c
  win_get_info.c
    change_info() if there's no info attached (shouldn't happen if callbacks
      are registered)
    copy the info for the user

The other category of change is generally addressing compiler warnings where
ompi_info_t and opal_info_t were being used a little too interchangably. An
ompi_info_t* contains an opal_info_t*, at &(ompi_info->super)

Also this commit updates the copyrights.

Signed-off-by: Mark Allen <markalle@us.ibm.com>
2017-05-17 01:12:49 -04:00
David Solt
50aa143ab6 Major structural changes to data types: .super infosubscriber
ompi_communicator_t, ompi_win_t, ompi_file_t all have a super class of type opal_infosubscriber_t instead of a base/super type of opal_object_t (in previous code comm used c_base, but file used super).  It may be a bit bold to say that being a subscriber of MPI_Info is the foundational piece that ties these three things together, but if you object, then I would prefer to turn infosubscriber into a more general name that encompasses other common features rather than create a different super class.  The key here is that we want to be able to pass comm, win and file objects as if they were opal_infosubscriber_t, so that one routine can heandle all 3 types of objects being passed to it.

MPI_INFO_NULL is still an ompi_predefined_info_t type since an MPI_Info is part of ompi but the internal details of the underlying information concept is part of opal.

An ompi_info_t type still exists for exposure to the user, but it is simply a wrapper for the opal object.

Routines such as ompi_info_dup, etc have all been moved to opal_info_dup and related to the opal directory.

Fortran to C translation tables are only used for MPI_Info that is exposed to the application and are therefore part of the ompi_info_t and not the opal_info_t

The data structure changes are primarily in the following files:

    communicator/communicator.h
    ompi/info/info.h
    ompi/win/win.h
    ompi/file/file.h

The following new files were created:

    opal/util/info.h
    opal/util/info.c
    opal/util/info_subscriber.h
    opal/util/info_subscriber.c

This infosubscriber concept is that communicators, files and windows can have subscribers that subscribe to any changes in the info associated with the comm/file/window.  When xxx_set_info is called, the new info is presented to each subscriber who can modify the info in any way they want.  The new value is presented to the next subscriber and so on until all subscribers have had a chance to modify the value.  Therefore, the order of subscribers can make a difference but we hope that there is generally only one subscriber that cares or modifies any given key/value pair.  The final info is then stored and returned by a call to xxx_get_info.

The new model can be seen in the following files:

    ompi/mpi/c/comm_get_info.c
    ompi/mpi/c/comm_set_info.c
    ompi/mpi/c/file_get_info.c
    ompi/mpi/c/file_set_info.c
    ompi/mpi/c/win_get_info.c
    ompi/mpi/c/win_set_info.c

The current subscribers where changed as follows:

    mca/io/ompio/io_ompio_file_open.c
    mca/io/ompio/io_ompio_module.c
    mca/osc/rmda/osc_rdma_component.c (This one actually subscribes to "no_locks")
    mca/osc/sm/osc_sm_component.c (This one actually subscribes to "blocking_fence" and "alloc_shared_contig")

Signed-off-by: Mark Allen <markalle@us.ibm.com>

Conflicts:
	AUTHORS
	ompi/communicator/comm.c
	ompi/debuggers/ompi_mpihandles_dll.c
	ompi/file/file.c
	ompi/file/file.h
	ompi/info/info.c
	ompi/mca/io/ompio/io_ompio.h
	ompi/mca/io/ompio/io_ompio_file_open.c
	ompi/mca/io/ompio/io_ompio_file_set_view.c
	ompi/mca/osc/pt2pt/osc_pt2pt.h
	ompi/mca/sharedfp/addproc/sharedfp_addproc.h
	ompi/mca/sharedfp/addproc/sharedfp_addproc_file_open.c
	ompi/mca/topo/treematch/topo_treematch_dist_graph_create.c
	ompi/mpi/c/lookup_name.c
	ompi/mpi/c/publish_name.c
	ompi/mpi/c/unpublish_name.c
	opal/mca/mpool/base/mpool_base_alloc.c
	opal/util/Makefile.am
2017-05-12 14:41:05 -04:00