This PR removes the constant defining the max attachment address and
replaces it with the largest address that shows up in /proc/self/maps.
This should address issues found on AARCH64 where the max address
may differ based on the configuration.
Since the calculated max address may differ between processes the
max address is sent as part of the modex and stored in the endpoint
data.
Signed-off-by: Nathan Hjelm <hjelmn@google.com>
The opal_gethostname() function provides a more robust mechanism
to retrieve the hostname than gethostname(), which can return
results that are not null-terminated, and which can vary in its
behavior from system to system.
opal_gethostname() just returns the value in opal_process_info.nodename;
this is populated in opal_init_gethostname() inside opal_init.c.
-Changed all gethostname calls in opal subtree to opal_gethostname
-Changed all gethostname calls in orte subtree to opal_gethostname
-Changed all gethostname calls in ompi subdir to opal_gethostname
-Changed all gethostname calls in oshmem subdir to opal_gethostname
-Changed opal_if.c in test subdir to use opal_gethostname
-Changed opal_init.c to include opal_init_gethostname. This function
returns an int and directly sets opal_process_info.nodename per
jsquyres' modifications.
Relates to open-mpi#6801
Signed-off-by: Charles Shereda <cpshereda@lanl.gov>
Make sure to get an RDM provider that can provide both local and
remote communication. We need this check because some providers could
be selected via RXD or RXM, but can't provide local communication, for
example.
Add OPAL_CHECK_OFI_VERSION_GE() m4 macro to check that the Libfabric
we're building against is >= a target version. Use this check in two
places:
1. MTL/OFI: Make sure it is >= v1.5, because the FI_LOCAL_COMM /
FI_REMOTE_COMM constants were introduced in Libfabric API v1.5.
2. BTL/usnic: It already had similar configury to check for Libfabric
>= v1.1, but the usnic component was checking for >= v1.3. So
update the btl/usnic configury to use the new macro and check for
>= v1.3.
Signed-off-by: Jeff Squyres <jsquyres@cisco.com>
This commit fixes an issue discovered in the XPMEM registration cache. It
was possible for a registration to be invalidated by multiple threads
leading to a double-free situation or re-use of an invalidated registration.
This commit fixes the issue by setting the INVALID flag on a registation
when it will be deleted. The flag is set while iterating over the tree
to take advantage of the fact that a registration can not be removed
from the VMA tree by a thread while another thread is traversing the VMA
tree.
References #6524
References #7030Closes#6534
Signed-off-by: Nathan Hjelm <hjelmn@google.com>
There are cases where the same interval may be in the tree multiple
times. This generally isn't a problem when searching the tree but
may cause issues when attempting to delete a particular registration
from the tree. The issue is fixed by breaking a low value tie by
checking the high value then the interval data.
If the high, low, and data of a new insertion exactly matches an
existing interval then an assertion is raised.
Signed-off-by: Nathan Hjelm <hjelmn@google.com>
Rename the component to be "hwloc2" (since it can now be any v2.x.y
version of hwloc), and make the embedded copy of hwloc be a git
submodule.
Signed-off-by: Jeff Squyres <jsquyres@cisco.com>
Clarify in README what --with-hwloc does in its different use cases.
Also, ensure that the behavior when specifying `--with-hwloc` is the
same as if that option is not specified at all. This is what we did
in Open MPI <= v3.x; looks like we inadvertantly caused `--with-hwloc`
to be synonymous with `--with-hwloc=external` in v4.0.0.
Signed-off-by: Jeff Squyres <jsquyres@cisco.com>
The clang compiler (or at least the one used by the Cray CCE 9 and newer)
doesn't like what we're doing passing non _Atomic pointers to C11 atomics.
Fix the ones that keep vader from compiling using Cray CCE 9 and 10.
Signed-off-by: Howard Pritchard <howardp@lanl.gov>
This patch fixes#7147 by preventing overflow when multiplying
the count and the blocklen. The count reflects MPI count and is
therefore bound to the size of an int (it is an uint32_t) while the
blocklen can be merged together to represent the largest contiguous
memory layout and it is therefore promoted to a size_t.
Signed-off-by: George Bosilca <bosilca@icl.utk.edu>
related to #7128
The UCX crew is no longer guaranteeing that the UCT API is going to be frozen,
so this is kind of a whack-a-mole problem trying to keep the BTL UCT working
with various changing UCT APIs.
Signed-off-by: Howard Pritchard <howardp@lanl.gov>
This commit fixes a configure bug that caused flow control to be
disabled regardless of the configure options used.
Signed-off-by: Todd Kordenbrock <thkgcode@gmail.com>
Move the prefix area from the head to the body in relevant size
computations. This fixes a problem in high traffic situations where
usNIC may have sent from unregistered memory.
Signed-off-by: Jeff Squyres <jsquyres@cisco.com>
New MCA param: btl_usnic_max_resends_per_iteration. This is the max
number of resends we'll do in a single pass through usNIC component
progress. This prevents progress from getting stuck in an endless
loop of retransmissions (i.e., if more retransmissions are triggered
during the sending of retransmissions). Specifically: we need to
leave the resend loop to allow receives to happen (which may ACK
messages we have sent previously, and therefore cause pending resends
to be moot).
Signed-off-by: Jeff Squyres <jsquyres@cisco.com>
Significantly increase the default retrans timeout. If the
retrans timeout is too soon, we can end up in a retransmission storm
where the logic will continually re-transmit the same frames during a
single run through the usNIC progress function (because the timer for
a single frame expires before we have run through re-transmitting all
the frames pending re-transmission).
Signed-off-by: Jeff Squyres <jsquyres@cisco.com>
New MCA parameter: btl_usnic_ack_iteration_delay. Set this to the
number of times through the usNIC component progress function before
sending a standalone ACK (vs. piggy-backing the ACK on any other send
going to the target peer).
Use "ticks" language to clarify that we're really counting the number
of times through the usNIC component DATA_CHANNEL completion check (to
check for incoming messages) -- it has no relation to wall clock time
whatsoever.
Also slightly change the channel-checking scheme in usNIC component
progress: only check the PRIORITY channel once (vs. checking it once,
not finding anything, and then falling through the progress_2() where we
check PRIORITY again and then check the DATA channel).
As before, if our "progress" libevent fires, increment the tick
counter enough to guarantee that all endpoints that need an ACK will
get triggered to send standalone ACKs the next time through progress,
if necessary.
Signed-off-by: Jeff Squyres <jsquyres@cisco.com>