was brought in. This supercedes the GLOBL patch that we had been using
with Libtool 2.1a versions prior to the lt_dladvise code. Autogen
tries to figure out which version you're on, so either will now work with
the trunk.
This commit was SVN r15903.
- If one wants to use this solution, remember to unload the project 'orte-restart' which is currently not working for Windows.
This commit was SVN r15680.
This is because internally 'self' uses dlopen to look at the application
running to determine if it can/should be used or not.
This commit was SVN r15673.
in a callback from the event library and post an RML receive, we'll
deadlock because the event library wouldn't be entered until the
event library was not already entered. Now just protect data structures
(which we were basically already doing) instead of code, like good
threading people ;).
This commit was SVN r15585.
* 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
asprintf and friends. This is not a failsafe; there are many cases
where this check will not be used. But at least it's something...
This commit was SVN r15500.
opal_net_get_hostname() rather than malloc, because no one was freeing
the buffer and the common use case was for printfs, where calling
free is a pain.
This commit was SVN r15494.
1. Galen's fine-grain control of queue pair resources in the openib
BTL.
1. Pasha's new implementation of asychronous HCA event handling.
Pasha's new implementation doesn't take much explanation, but the new
"multifrag" stuff does.
Note that "svn merge" was not used to bring this new code from the
/tmp/ib_multifrag branch -- something Bad happened in the periodic
trunk pulls on that branch making an actual merge back to the trunk
effectively impossible (i.e., lots and lots of arbitrary conflicts and
artifical changes). :-(
== Fine-grain control of queue pair resources ==
Galen's fine-grain control of queue pair resources to the OpenIB BTL
(thanks to Gleb for fixing broken code and providing additional
functionality, Pasha for finding broken code, and Jeff for doing all
the svn work and regression testing).
Prior to this commit, the OpenIB BTL created two queue pairs: one for
eager size fragments and one for max send size fragments. When the
use of the shared receive queue (SRQ) was specified (via "-mca
btl_openib_use_srq 1"), these QPs would use a shared receive queue for
receive buffers instead of the default per-peer (PP) receive queues
and buffers. One consequence of this design is that receive buffer
utilization (the size of the data received as a percentage of the
receive buffer used for the data) was quite poor for a number of
applications.
The new design allows multiple QPs to be specified at runtime. Each
QP can be setup to use PP or SRQ receive buffers as well as giving
fine-grained control over receive buffer size, number of receive
buffers to post, when to replenish the receive queue (low water mark)
and for SRQ QPs, the number of outstanding sends can also be
specified. The following is an example of the syntax to describe QPs
to the OpenIB BTL using the new MCA parameter btl_openib_receive_queues:
{{{
-mca btl_openib_receive_queues \
"P,128,16,4;S,1024,256,128,32;S,4096,256,128,32;S,65536,256,128,32"
}}}
Each QP description is delimited by ";" (semicolon) with individual
fields of the QP description delimited by "," (comma). The above
example therefore describes 4 QPs.
The first QP is:
P,128,16,4
Meaning: per-peer receive buffer QPs are indicated by a starting field
of "P"; the first QP (shown above) is therefore a per-peer based QP.
The second field indicates the size of the receive buffer in bytes
(128 bytes). The third field indicates the number of receive buffers
to allocate to the QP (16). The fourth field indicates the low
watermark for receive buffers at which time the BTL will repost
receive buffers to the QP (4).
The second QP is:
S,1024,256,128,32
Shared receive queue based QPs are indicated by a starting field of
"S"; the second QP (shown above) is therefore a shared receive queue
based QP. The second, third and fourth fields are the same as in the
per-peer based QP. The fifth field is the number of outstanding sends
that are allowed at a given time on the QP (32). This provides a
"good enough" mechanism of flow control for some regular communication
patterns.
QPs MUST be specified in ascending receive buffer size order. This
requirement may be removed prior to 1.3 release.
This commit was SVN r15474.
Remove the matching logic out of dynamic path into an
extra function. Add the corresponing check to the static
component path.
This commit was SVN r15458.
There are several interesting things:
1. less NFS traffic [as we potentially access less files]
2. faster loading time [in case the user tune it's execution environment]
3. (1) + (2) -> faster startup time [at least everything which do not depend on the network]
4. MX bug will go away if the pml is specified.
5. No useless BTL will be opened, which will solve few others issues.
This commit was SVN r15402.
VxWorks. Still some issues remaining, I'm sure.
Refs trac:1010
This commit was SVN r15320.
The following Trac tickets were found above:
Ticket 1010 --> https://svn.open-mpi.org/trac/ompi/ticket/1010
* Make orted.1 man page be non-descriptive because it's really an
internal command.
* Re-work the opal_wrapper man page logic a bit so that we can have a
real opal_wrapper.1 installed that says "don't look here -- look at
mpicc (etc.)"
This commit was SVN r15264.
* Remove the 'opal_mca_base_param_use_amca_sets' global variable
* Harness the fact that you can (read should) call the cmd_line functions
before initializing opal_init_util(). This pushes the MCA/GMCA/AMCA
command line options into the environment before OPAL inits and starts
to use these values. By putting the cmd_line parse before opal_init_util
in orterun and orted we only parse the *MCA parameter files once, and
correctly (alleviating the need to 'recache' the files on init.)
* Small bits of cleanup.
This commit was SVN r15219.
param says we should Also, check for != 0, rather than == 1, as there
are way too many double locks, but they'll get warned when we do the
double lock. No need to warn again, in a meaningless way.
Originally part of r15167, reverted with r15172.
This commit was SVN r15173.
The following SVN revision numbers were found above:
r15167 --> open-mpi/ompi@faa401dc47
r15172 --> open-mpi/ompi@5f16251808
OBJ_NEW
* Need to single when the passive unlock has left an expose epoch for
the win_free case
* Clean up some debugging output
* fix missing variable initialization
This commit was SVN r15167.
flex (which, incidentally, emit ''more'' warnings than earlier
versions). Grumble.
This commit was SVN r15166.
The following SVN revision numbers were found above:
r15158 --> open-mpi/ompi@57d09c10f7
Ensure that the AM_CONDITIONALs are ''always'' run, even if we
--enable-mca-no-build the paffinity/linux component.
This commit was SVN r15095.
The following Trac tickets were found above:
Ticket 1057 --> https://svn.open-mpi.org/trac/ompi/ticket/1057
single threaded builds. In its default configuration, all this does
is ensure that there's at least a good chance of threads building
based on non-threaded development (since the variable names will be
checked). There is also code to make sure that a "mutex" is never
"double locked" when using the conditional macro mutex operations.
This is off by default because there are a number of places in both
ORTE and OMPI where this alarm spews mega bytes of errors on a
simple test. So we have some work to do on our path towards
thread support.
Also removed the macro versions of the non-conditional thread locks,
as the only places they were used, the author of the code intended
to use the conditional thread locks. So now you have upper-case
macros for conditional thread locks and lowercase functions for
non-conditional locks. Simple, right? :).
This commit was SVN r15011.
re-enabling compilation of this component.
However, it still won't compile because this component provides a
module finalize function which apparently somehow got dropped from the
paffinity base. Support for the paffinity module finalize function
needs to be re-added.
This commit was SVN r14915.
* Enable VPATH builds to work (slight tweak of r14895 -- mainly
because I already had it done when George committed :-) )
* Enable "make dist" to work properly for PLPA included mode
* Update plpa.h.in
* Update svn:ignore
Took relevant changes back to the main PLPA SVN as well.
This commit was SVN r14896.
The following SVN revision numbers were found above:
r14895 --> open-mpi/ompi@bb7b04e875
Changes paffinity interface to use a cpu mask for available/preferred cpus
rather than the current coarse grained paffinity that lets the OS choose
which processor.
Macros for setting and clearing masks are provided.
Solaris and windows changes have not been made. Solaris subdirectory has some
suggested changes - however the relevant man pages for the Solaris 10 APIs
have some ambiguity regarding order in which one create and sets a processor
set. As we did not have access to a solaris 10 machine we could not test to
see the correct way to do the work under solaris.
This commit was SVN r14887.
symbols in them and environ is defined only in the final application
(probably in crt1.o). Apple provides a function for getting at the
environment, so use that instead if it's available.
This commit was SVN r14857.