(1) rml_ofi_transports mca parameter. This parameter should have the list of transports (currently ethernet,fabric are valid)
fabric is higher priority if provided.
(2) ORTE_RML_TRANSPORT_TYPE key with values "ethernet" or "fabric". "fabric" is higher priority.
If specific provider is required use ORTE_RML_OFI_PROV_NAME key with values "socket" or "OPA" or any other supported in system.
modified: ../orte/mca/rml/ofi/rml_ofi.h
modified: ../orte/mca/rml/ofi/rml_ofi_component.c
modified: ../orte/mca/rml/ofi/rml_ofi_send.c
On send_msg choose the provider on local and peer to follow below rules -
1. if the user specified the transport for this conduit (even giving us a prioritized list of candidates), then the one we selected is the _only_ one we will use. If the remote peer has a matching endpoint, then we use it - otherwise, we error out
2. if the user didn't specify a transport, then we look for matches against _all_ of our available transports, starting with fabric and then going to Ethernet, taking the first one that matches.
3. if we can't find any match, then we error out
modified: ../orte/mca/rml/ofi/rml_ofi.h
modified: ../orte/mca/rml/ofi/rml_ofi_component.c
modified: ../orte/mca/rml/ofi/rml_ofi_send.c
send_msg() -> Fixed case when the local provider chosen at time of opening conduit
is not present in peer (destination) node
modified: ../orte/mca/rml/ofi/rml_ofi.h
modified: ../orte/mca/rml/ofi/rml_ofi_send.c
When opening conduit, checking for the transport preference in below order -
(1) rml_ofi_transports mca parameter. This parameter should have the list of transports (currently ethernet,fabric are valid)
fabric is higher priority if provided.
(2) ORTE_RML_TRANSPORT_TYPE key with values "ethernet" or "fabric". "fabric" is higher priority.
If specific provider is required use ORTE_RML_OFI_PROV_NAME key with values "socket" or "OPA" or any other supported in system.
modified: ../orte/mca/rml/ofi/rml_ofi.h
modified: ../orte/mca/rml/ofi/rml_ofi_component.c
modified: ../orte/mca/rml/ofi/rml_ofi_send.c
On send_msg choose the provider on local and peer to follow below rules -
1. if the user specified the transport for this conduit (even giving us a prioritized list of candidates), then the one we selected is the _only_ one we will use. If the remote peer has a matching endpoint, then we use it - otherwise, we error out
2. if the user didn't specify a transport, then we look for matches against _all_ of our available transports, starting with fabric and then going to Ethernet, taking the first one that matches.
3. if we can't find any match, then we error out
modified: ../orte/mca/rml/ofi/rml_ofi.h
modified: ../orte/mca/rml/ofi/rml_ofi_component.c
modified: ../orte/mca/rml/ofi/rml_ofi_send.c
send_msg() -> Fixed case when the local provider chosen at time of opening conduit
is not present in peer (destination) node
modified: ../orte/mca/rml/ofi/rml_ofi.h
modified: ../orte/mca/rml/ofi/rml_ofi_send.c
Signed-off-by: Anandhi Jayakumar <anandhi.s.jayakumar@intel.com>
Reference: https://bugzilla.kernel.org/show_bug.cgi?id=15272.
Work with both stdin/stdout fds that are known to be always
ready using libevent timers.
Such fds can not be effectively used with non-blocking I/O
functions like epoll, poll, select:
- for poll/select the event will be triggered immediately;
- for epoll `epoll_ctl` will reject an attempt to add this
fd to the working set.
Reference: http://www.wangafu.net/~nickm/libevent-book/Ref4_event.html
Libevent suggests to use timers over event_active for the
reasons provided by the link above.
Signed-off-by: Artem Polyakov <artpol84@gmail.com>
Regular files are always write-ready, so non-blocking I/O does not
give any benefits for them.
More than that - if libevent is using "epoll" to track fd events,
epoll_ctl will refuse attempt to add an fd pointing to a regular
file descriptor with EPERM.
This fix checks the object referenced by fd and avoids event_add
using event_active instead.
In the original configuration that uncovered this issue "epoll"
was used in libevent, it was triggering the following warning
message:
"[warn] Epoll ADD(1) on fd 0 failed. Old events were 0; read
change was 1 (add); write change was 0 (none): Operation not
permitted"
And the side effect was accumulation of all output in mpirun
memory and actually writing it only at mpirun exit.
Signed-off-by: Artem Polyakov <artpol84@gmail.com>
Remove the opal_ignore from the RML/OFI component, but disable that component unless the user specifically requests it via the "rml_ofi_desired=1" MCA param. This will let us test compile in various environments without interfering with operations while we continue to debug
Fix an error when computing the number of infos during server init
Signed-off-by: Ralph Castain <rhc@open-mpi.org>
This now passes the loop test, and so we believe it resolves the random hangs in finalize.
Changes in PMIx master that are included here:
* Fixed a bug in the PMIx_Get logic
* Fixed self-notification procedure
* Made pmix_output functions thread safe
* Fixed a number of thread safety issues
* Updated configury to use 'uname -n' when hostname is unavailable
Work on cleaning up the event handler thread safety problem
Rarely used functions, but protect them anyway
Fix the last part of the intercomm problem
Ensure we don't cover any PMIx calls with the framework-level lock.
Protect against NULL argv comm_spawn
Signed-off-by: Ralph Castain <rhc@open-mpi.org>
the 'hostname' command might not be available on some platforms
such as Fedora Core 26, so mimick config/libtool.m4 and fallback
to 'uname -n' if needed
Refs. #3680
Signed-off-by: Gilles Gouaillardet <gilles@rist.or.jp>
Cleanup the way we look for matching OFI addresses by using the opal_net_samenetwork helper function. This now works for multi-network environments, but only using the socket provider
Signed-off-by: Ralph Castain <rhc@open-mpi.org>