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106 Коммитов

Автор SHA1 Сообщение Дата
Ralph Castain
48f702827e First part of memory leak cleanups from Gilles 2014-11-24 16:53:33 -08:00
Ralph Castain
780c93ee57 Per the PR and discussion on today's telecon, extend the process name definition as a two-field struct of uint32_t's down to the OPAL layer. This resolves issues created by prior commits that impacted both heterogeneous and SPARC support. This also simplifies the OMPI code base by removing the need for frequent memcpy's when transitioning between the OMPI/ORTE layers and OPAL.
We recognize that this means other users of OPAL will need to "wrap" the opal_process_name_t if they desire to abstract it in some fashion. This is regrettable, and we are looking at possible alternatives that might mitigate that requirement. Meantime, however, we have to put the needs of the OMPI community first, and are taking this step to restore hetero and SPARC support.
2014-11-11 17:00:42 -08:00
Ralph Castain
aec5cd08bd Per the PMIx RFC:
WHAT:    Merge the PMIx branch into the devel repo, creating a new
               OPAL “lmix” framework to abstract PMI support for all RTEs.
               Replace the ORTE daemon-level collectives with a new PMIx
               server and update the ORTE grpcomm framework to support
               server-to-server collectives

WHY:      We’ve had problems dealing with variations in PMI implementations,
               and need to extend the existing PMI definitions to meet exascale
               requirements.

WHEN:   Mon, Aug 25

WHERE:  https://github.com/rhc54/ompi-svn-mirror.git

Several community members have been working on a refactoring of the current PMI support within OMPI. Although the APIs are common, Slurm and Cray implement a different range of capabilities, and package them differently. For example, Cray provides an integrated PMI-1/2 library, while Slurm separates the two and requires the user to specify the one to be used at runtime. In addition, several bugs in the Slurm implementations have caused problems requiring extra coding.

All this has led to a slew of #if’s in the PMI code and bugs when the corner-case logic for one implementation accidentally traps the other. Extending this support to other implementations would have increased this complexity to an unacceptable level.

Accordingly, we have:

* created a new OPAL “pmix” framework to abstract the PMI support, with separate components for Cray, Slurm PMI-1, and Slurm PMI-2 implementations.

* Replaced the current ORTE grpcomm daemon-based collective operation with an integrated PMIx server, and updated the grpcomm APIs to provide more flexible, multi-algorithm support for collective operations. At this time, only the xcast and allgather operations are supported.

* Replaced the current global collective id with a signature based on the names of the participating procs. The allows an unlimited number of collectives to be executed by any group of processes, subject to the requirement that only one collective can be active at a time for a unique combination of procs. Note that a proc can be involved in any number of simultaneous collectives - it is the specific combination of procs that is subject to the constraint

* removed the prior OMPI/OPAL modex code

* added new macros for executing modex send/recv to simplify use of the new APIs. The send macros allow the caller to specify whether or not the BTL supports async modex operations - if so, then the non-blocking “fence” operation is used, if the active PMIx component supports it. Otherwise, the default is a full blocking modex exchange as we currently perform.

* retained the current flag that directs us to use a blocking fence operation, but only to retrieve data upon demand

This commit was SVN r32570.
2014-08-21 18:56:47 +00:00
Ralph Castain
1e93e85403 Cleanup some autoconf messages - thanks to Paul Hargrove for noting them
cmr=v1.8.3:reviewer=jsquyres

This commit was SVN r32429.
2014-08-05 14:48:42 +00:00
Ralph Castain
daeb9b6c4f Some more cleanups. Remove direct references to ORTE by changing OMPI_CAST_ORTE_NAME -> OMPI_CAST_RTE_NAME. Ensure that ORTE tools (mpirun, orted, tools) set the OPAL proc structure fields so OPAL knows what is going on and uses the correct print functions (still need to fix the problem for non-MPI apps). Properly return uint32_t from the opal utilities instead of int32_t as that is what the ORTE process name fields contain.
Thanks to Gilles for pointing out some of the discrepancies.

This commit was SVN r32398.
2014-08-01 14:44:11 +00:00
Ralph Castain
552c9ca5a0 George did the work and deserves all the credit for it. Ralph did the merge, and deserves whatever blame results from errors in it :-)
WHAT:    Open our low-level communication infrastructure by moving all necessary components (btl/rcache/allocator/mpool) down in OPAL

All the components required for inter-process communications are currently deeply integrated in the OMPI layer. Several groups/institutions have express interest in having a more generic communication infrastructure, without all the OMPI layer dependencies.  This communication layer should be made available at a different software level, available to all layers in the Open MPI software stack. As an example, our ORTE layer could replace the current OOB and instead use the BTL directly, gaining access to more reactive network interfaces than TCP.  Similarly, external software libraries could take advantage of our highly optimized AM (active message) communication layer for their own purpose.  UTK with support from Sandia, developped a version of Open MPI where the entire communication infrastucture has been moved down to OPAL (btl/rcache/allocator/mpool). Most of the moved components have been updated to match the new schema, with few exceptions (mainly BTLs where I have no way of compiling/testing them). Thus, the completion of this RFC is tied to being able to completing this move for all BTLs. For this we need help from the rest of the Open MPI community, especially those supporting some of the BTLs.  A non-exhaustive list of BTLs that qualify here is: mx, portals4, scif, udapl, ugni, usnic.

This commit was SVN r32317.
2014-07-26 00:47:28 +00:00
Ralph Castain
6c5e592785 Revert r32222, r32210, and r32203 as they created a problem when daemon collectives did not involve app procs on every node. Instead, modify the ompi/mca/rte/orte/rte_orte.h to add a new function that allows apps to request new daemon collective ids for use in barrier and modex operations. This will only appear in ORTE-based installations, but it is only being used by a couple of researchers at the moment.
Update the orte/test/mpi/coll_test.c test to show the revised example.

This commit was SVN r32234.

The following SVN revision numbers were found above:
  r32203 --> open-mpi/ompi@a523dba41d
  r32210 --> open-mpi/ompi@2ce11ed5c4
  r32222 --> open-mpi/ompi@d55f16db50
2014-07-15 03:48:00 +00:00
Ralph Castain
a523dba41d NOTE: this modifies the MPI-RTE interface
We have been getting several requests for new collectives that need to be inserted in various places of the MPI layer, all in support of either checkpoint/restart or various research efforts. Until now, this would require that the collective id's be generated at launch. which required modification
s to ORTE and other places. We chose not to make collectives reusable as the race conditions associated with resetting collective counters are daunti
ng.

This commit extends the collective system to allow self-generation of collective id's that the daemons need to support, thereby allowing developers to request any number of collectives for their work. There is one restriction: RTE collectives must occur at the process level - i.e., we don't curren
tly have a way of tagging the collective to a specific thread. From the comment in the code:

 * In order to allow scalable
 * generation of collective id's, they are formed as:
 *
 * top 32-bits are the jobid of the procs involved in
 * the collective. For collectives across multiple jobs
 * (e.g., in a connect_accept), the daemon jobid will
 * be used as the id will be issued by mpirun. This
 * won't cause problems because daemons don't use the
 * collective_id
 *
 * bottom 32-bits are a rolling counter that recycles
 * when the max is hit. The daemon will cleanup each
 * collective upon completion, so this means a job can
 * never have more than 2**32 collectives going on at
 * a time. If someone needs more than that - they've got
 * a problem.
 *
 * Note that this means (for now) that RTE-level collectives
 * cannot be done by individual threads - they must be
 * done at the overall process level. This is required as
 * there is no guaranteed ordering for the collective id's,
 * and all the participants must agree on the id of the
 * collective they are executing. So if thread A on one
 * process asks for a collective id before thread B does,
 * but B asks before A on another process, the collectives will
 * be mixed and not result in the expected behavior. We may
 * find a way to relax this requirement in the future by
 * adding a thread context id to the jobid field (maybe taking the
 * lower 16-bits of that field).

This commit includes a test program (orte/test/mpi/coll_test.c) that cycles 100 times across barrier and modex collectives.

This commit was SVN r32203.
2014-07-10 18:53:12 +00:00
Jeff Squyres
8e52ba423f finalize/disconnect: add explicit comment about why we use an RTE barrier
Based on extensive discussions before/at the June 2014 developer's
meeting, put a lengthy comment explaining a second reason why we
''must'' use an RTE barrier during MPI_FINALIZE and
MPI_COMM_DISCONNECT (i.e., unreliable transports).  Slightly explain
more the original reason why we do this, too (BTLs can lie/buffer a
message without actually injecting it on the network). 

This commit was SVN r32095.
2014-06-26 14:31:40 +00:00
Ralph Castain
8736a1c138 Per RFC:
http://www.open-mpi.org/community/lists/devel/2014/05/14822.php

Revamp the ORTE global data structures to reduce memory footprint and add new features. Add ability to control/set cpu frequency, though this can only be done if the sys admin has setup the system to support it (or you run as root).

This commit was SVN r31916.
2014-06-01 16:14:10 +00:00
Ralph Castain
cf2c7381d0 Replace the PML barrier with an RTE barrier for now until we can come up with a better solution for connectionless BTLs.
Refs trac:4643

This commit was SVN r31915.

The following Trac tickets were found above:
  Ticket 4643 --> https://svn.open-mpi.org/trac/ompi/ticket/4643
2014-06-01 16:08:56 +00:00
Jeff Squyres
af5399ab5b Gah; we need to have a unique barrier ID for the ompi_rte_barrier()
operation.  Ralph will fix shortly.

For the time being, put back the original code...

Refs trac:4669

This commit was SVN r31872.

The following Trac tickets were found above:
  Ticket 4669 --> https://svn.open-mpi.org/trac/ompi/ticket/4669
2014-05-22 00:31:39 +00:00
Jeff Squyres
5aa05f2f1d Potentially temporarily change the barrier in the ORTE DPM component
to be based on grpcomm (i.e., an out-of-band based barrier) rather
than the simplistic PML-based barrier that it currently uses.

This is pending a larger discussion with Nathan and George, but it
will allow the usnic BTL to stop assert()-failing in light of the
recent del_procs() change.

This commit was SVN r31870.
2014-05-21 23:09:01 +00:00
Ralph Castain
c4c9bc1573 As per the RFC:
http://www.open-mpi.org/community/lists/devel/2014/04/14496.php

Revamp the opal database framework, including renaming it to "dstore" to reflect that it isn't a "database". Move the "db" framework to ORTE for now, soon to move to ORCM

This commit was SVN r31557.
2014-04-29 21:49:23 +00:00
Ralph Castain
543271b9de Set the locality prior to calling add_procs so bozos like Jeff get it at the right time
Refs trac:4411

This commit was SVN r31119.

The following Trac tickets were found above:
  Ticket 4411 --> https://svn.open-mpi.org/trac/ompi/ticket/4411
2014-03-18 17:57:27 +00:00
Ralph Castain
554da83865 Set the locality for remote procs even after a comm_spawn. Ensure we store our own local cpuset upon launch so it will be shared during comm_join.
This provides full locality - i.e., not just node-level, but all the way down to whatever common binding level exists between the procs.

cmr=v1.7.5:reviewer=jsquyres

This commit was SVN r31106.
2014-03-18 14:51:07 +00:00
Brian Barrett
8b778903d8 Fix longstanding issue with our multi-project support. Rather than using
pkg{data,lib,includedir}, use our own ompi{data,lib,includedir}, which is
always set to {datadir,libdir,includedir}/openmpi.  This will keep us from
having help files in prefix/share/open-rte when building without Open MPI,
but in prefix/share/openmpi when building with Open MPI.

This commit was SVN r30140.
2014-01-07 22:11:15 +00:00
Ralph Castain
31248c0985 Correctly add support for the "env" MPI_Info key during comm_spawn, update the "map-by", "rank-by", and "bind-to" Info key behaviors to match the new mapping/ranking/binding system, and update all docs and comments to match.
Fix comm_spawn on a single host - with the new default mapping scheme, we were incorrectly computing the number of procs to put on the node.

Refs trac:4003

This commit was SVN r30033.

The following Trac tickets were found above:
  Ticket 4003 --> https://svn.open-mpi.org/trac/ompi/ticket/4003
2013-12-20 20:42:39 +00:00
Ralph Castain
b745078535 Support user-provided envars for comm_spawn using info key "env"
Thanks to Tom Fogal for the request

cmr=v1.7.4:reviewer=jsquyres

This commit was SVN r29990.
2013-12-19 20:59:50 +00:00
Ralph Castain
762400d559 Silence warning
Refs trac:3898

This commit was SVN r29659.

The following Trac tickets were found above:
  Ticket 3898 --> https://svn.open-mpi.org/trac/ompi/ticket/3898
2013-11-11 22:53:09 +00:00
Nathan Hjelm
6a331275d8 Set transfers as active before starting them.
cmr=v1.7.4:ticket=trac:3898

This commit was SVN r29654.

The following Trac tickets were found above:
  Ticket 3898 --> https://svn.open-mpi.org/trac/ompi/ticket/3898
2013-11-11 21:50:54 +00:00
Nathan Hjelm
b5ce72cc15 Set the modex as active before starting it. This resolves a hang in
MPI_Init() on comm-spawned processes.

cmr=v1.7.4:reviewer=rhc

This commit was SVN r29652.
2013-11-11 19:33:32 +00:00
Ralph Castain
f4f2287958 Singletons currently start out by spawning an HNP - this is required solely in the cases where the singleton subsequently calls MPI_Comm_spawn or publishes port info without support from an external orte-server. In all other cases, the HNP is of no value and can actually be a detriment by creating additional overhead on the node. This is particularly concerning for async operations where processes may begin as singletons and then dynamically wireup to perform pt2pt communications.
So we now allow singletons to start on their own, only spawning an HNP when initiating an operation that actually requires it.

cmr:v1.7.4:reviewer=jsquyres

This commit was SVN r29354.
2013-10-04 02:58:26 +00:00
Ralph Castain
d565a76814 Do some cleanup of the way we handle modex data. Identify data that needs to be shared with peers in my job vs data that needs to be shared with non-peers - no point in sharing extra data. When we share data with some process(es) from another job, we cannot know in advance what info they have or lack, so we have to share everything just in case. This limits the optimization we can do for things like comm_spawn.
Create a new required key in the OMPI layer for retrieving a "node id" from the database. ALL RTE'S MUST DEFINE THIS KEY. This allows us to compute locality in the MPI layer, which is necessary when we do things like intercomm_create.

cmr:v1.7.4:reviewer=rhc:subject=Cleanup handling of modex data

This commit was SVN r29274.
2013-09-27 00:37:49 +00:00
Nathan Hjelm
0b8fc13299 MPI-3.0: update C bindings with const and consistent use of [] for
arrays.

The MPI 3.0 standard added const to all in buffers in the C bindings. This
commit adds the const keyword and in most cases casts const away. We will
eventually should go through and update the various interfaces (coll, pml,
io, etc) to take the const keyword. The group, comm, win, and datatype
interfaces have been updated with const.

cmr=v1.7.4:ticket=trac:3785:reviewer=jsquyres

This commit was SVN r29266.

The following Trac tickets were found above:
  Ticket 3785 --> https://svn.open-mpi.org/trac/ompi/ticket/3785
2013-09-26 21:56:20 +00:00
Ralph Castain
865a7028f8 Per patch from George, with a few minor cleanups. Correctly address the complete exchange of required wireup information in Intercomm_create so all procs in the resulting communicator know how to talk to each other.
Refs trac:29166

This commit was SVN r29200.

The following Trac tickets were found above:
  Ticket 29166 --> https://svn.open-mpi.org/trac/ompi/ticket/29166
2013-09-18 02:01:30 +00:00
Ralph Castain
99611ac1d2 Revert r29166 in favor of a better solution from George
This commit was SVN r29199.

The following SVN revision numbers were found above:
  r29166 --> open-mpi/ompi@497c7e6abb
2013-09-18 01:41:26 +00:00
Ralph Castain
497c7e6abb Fixes trac:2904
The intercomm "merge" function can create a linkage between procs that was not reflected anywhere in a modex, and so at least some of the procs in the resulting communicator don't know how to talk to some of the new communicator's peers.

For example, consider the case where:

1. parent job A comm_spawns a process (job B) - these processes exchange modex and can communicate

2. parent job A now comm_spawns another process (job C) - again, these can communicate, but the proc in C knows nothing of B

3. do an intercomm merge across the communicators created by the two comm_spawns. This puts B and C into the same communicator, but they know nothing about how to talk to each other as they were not involved in any exchange of contact info. Hence, collectives on that communicator now fail. 

This fix adds an API to the ompi/dpm framework that (a) exchanges the modex info across the procs in the merge to ensure all procs know how to communicate, and (b) calls add_procs to give the btl's a chance to select transports to any new procs.

cmr:v1.7.3:reviewer=jsquyres

This commit was SVN r29166.

The following Trac tickets were found above:
  Ticket 2904 --> https://svn.open-mpi.org/trac/ompi/ticket/2904
2013-09-15 15:00:40 +00:00
Ralph Castain
6d24b34940 Extend the dpm framework API to support persistent accept/connect operations:
* paccept - establish a persistent listening port for async connect requests

* pconnect - async connect to remote process that has posted a paccept port. Provides a timeout mechanism, and allows the underlying implementation to retry until timeout 

* pclose - shuts down a prior paccept posting

Includes example programs paccept.c and pconnect.c in orte/test/mpi. New MPI extension interfaces coming...

This commit was SVN r29063.
2013-08-23 18:02:50 +00:00
Ralph Castain
a200e4f865 As per the RFC, bring in the ORTE async progress code and the rewrite of OOB:
*** THIS RFC INCLUDES A MINOR CHANGE TO THE MPI-RTE INTERFACE ***

Note: during the course of this work, it was necessary to completely separate the MPI and RTE progress engines. There were multiple places in the MPI layer where ORTE_WAIT_FOR_COMPLETION was being used. A new OMPI_WAIT_FOR_COMPLETION macro was created (defined in ompi/mca/rte/rte.h) that simply cycles across opal_progress until the provided flag becomes false. Places where the MPI layer blocked waiting for RTE to complete an event have been modified to use this macro.

***************************************************************************************

I am reissuing this RFC because of the time that has passed since its original release. Since its initial release and review, I have debugged it further to ensure it fully supports tests like loop_spawn. It therefore seems ready for merge back to the trunk. Given its prior review, I have set the timeout for one week.

The code is in  https://bitbucket.org/rhc/ompi-oob2


WHAT:    Rewrite of ORTE OOB

WHY:       Support asynchronous progress and a host of other features

WHEN:    Wed, August 21

SYNOPSIS:
The current OOB has served us well, but a number of limitations have been identified over the years. Specifically:

* it is only progressed when called via opal_progress, which can lead to hangs or recursive calls into libevent (which is not supported by that code)

* we've had issues when multiple NICs are available as the code doesn't "shift" messages between transports - thus, all nodes had to be available via the same TCP interface.

* the OOB "unloads" incoming opal_buffer_t objects during the transmission, thus preventing use of OBJ_RETAIN in the code when repeatedly sending the same message to multiple recipients

* there is no failover mechanism across NICs - if the selected NIC (or its attached switch) fails, we are forced to abort

* only one transport (i.e., component) can be "active"


The revised OOB resolves these problems:

* async progress is used for all application processes, with the progress thread blocking in the event library

* each available TCP NIC is supported by its own TCP module. The ability to asynchronously progress each module independently is provided, but not enabled by default (a runtime MCA parameter turns it "on")

* multi-address TCP NICs (e.g., a NIC with both an IPv4 and IPv6 address, or with virtual interfaces) are supported - reachability is determined by comparing the contact info for a peer against all addresses within the range covered by the address/mask pairs for the NIC.

* a message that arrives on one TCP NIC is automatically shifted to whatever NIC that is connected to the next "hop" if that peer cannot be reached by the incoming NIC. If no TCP module will reach the peer, then the OOB attempts to send the message via all other available components - if none can reach the peer, then an "error" is reported back to the RML, which then calls the errmgr for instructions.

* opal_buffer_t now conforms to standard object rules re OBJ_RETAIN as we no longer "unload" the incoming object

* NIC failure is reported to the TCP component, which then tries to resend the message across any other available TCP NIC. If that doesn't work, then the message is given back to the OOB base to try using other components. If all that fails, then the error is reported to the RML, which reports to the errmgr for instructions

* obviously from the above, multiple OOB components (e.g., TCP and UD) can be active in parallel

* the matching code has been moved to the RML (and out of the OOB/TCP component) so it is independent of transport

* routing is done by the individual OOB modules (as opposed to the RML). Thus, both routed and non-routed transports can simultaneously be active

* all blocking send/recv APIs have been removed. Everything operates asynchronously.


KNOWN LIMITATIONS:

* although provision is made for component failover as described above, the code for doing so has not been fully implemented yet. At the moment, if all connections for a given peer fail, the errmgr is notified of a "lost connection", which by default results in termination of the job if it was a lifeline

* the IPv6 code is present and compiles, but is not complete. Since the current IPv6 support in the OOB doesn't work anyway, I don't consider this a blocker

* routing is performed at the individual module level, yet the active routed component is selected on a global basis. We probably should update that to reflect that different transports may need/choose to route in different ways

* obviously, not every error path has been tested nor necessarily covered

* determining abnormal termination is more challenging than in the old code as we now potentially have multiple ways of connecting to a process. Ideally, we would declare "connection failed" when *all* transports can no longer reach the process, but that requires some additional (possibly complex) code. For now, the code replicates the old behavior only somewhat modified - i.e., if a module sees its connection fail, it checks to see if it is a lifeline. If so, it notifies the errmgr that the lifeline is lost - otherwise, it notifies the errmgr that a non-lifeline connection was lost.

* reachability is determined solely on the basis of a shared subnet address/mask - more sophisticated algorithms (e.g., the one used in the tcp btl) are required to handle routing via gateways

* the RML needs to assign sequence numbers to each message on a per-peer basis. The receiving RML will then deliver messages in order, thus preventing out-of-order messaging in the case where messages travel across different transports or a message needs to be redirected/resent due to failure of a NIC

This commit was SVN r29058.
2013-08-22 16:37:40 +00:00
Ralph Castain
3e6e1046a3 fix a correctness issue by returning an error if waitall fails and invoking the mpi error handler
cmr:v1.7.2:reviewer=jsquyres

This commit was SVN r28533.
2013-05-16 15:04:37 +00:00
Nathan Hjelm
9d4a26f47d Update OMPI frameworks to use the MCA framework system.
Notes:
  - This commit also eliminates the need for an available components list in use
    in several frameworks. None of the code in question was making use of the
    priority field of the priority component list item so these extra lists were
    removed.
  - Cleaned up selection code in several frameworks to sort lists using opal_list_sort.
  - Cleans up the ompi/orte-info functions. Expose the functions that construct the
    list of params so they can be used elsewhere.

patches for mtl/portals4 from brian

missed a few output variables in openib

This commit was SVN r28241.
2013-03-27 21:17:31 +00:00
Ralph Castain
8d2fa3693b First cut at removing the native Windows support. Remove all the Windows-specific components, and the .windows files sprinkled around. Remove the Windows platform files and MTT scripts. Update the NEWS to point Windows users to the cygwin package.
This commit was SVN r28116.
2013-02-26 20:44:56 +00:00
Brian Barrett
f42783ae1a Move the RTE framework change into the trunk. With this change, all non-CR
runtime code goes through one of the rte, dpm, or pubsub frameworks.

This commit was SVN r27934.
2013-01-27 23:25:10 +00:00
Ralph Castain
6319014ab0 Sigh - get the end of the loop at the right place
This commit was SVN r27197.
2012-08-31 15:54:11 +00:00
Ralph Castain
7ac257e169 At least prevent the segfault if a proc isn't found in a sparse group
This commit was SVN r27196.
2012-08-31 15:13:52 +00:00
Ralph Castain
e0c39c94e8 Complete the cleanup of the preload files system. Remove the dest_dir option as moving things to arbitrary locations - especially absolute paths - can prove disastrous. Remove the preload_libs option as these can be treated as just files. Cleanup some of the pack/unpack code as the dss handles NULL strings just fine. Deal a little better with absolute paths, noting that tar now strips the leading '/' for us (showing my age as it didn't used to do so).
Remove the odls_base_state.c file as that code is now covered by the new broadcast form of preload_files.

This commit was SVN r27127.
2012-08-24 02:28:29 +00:00
Josh Hursey
28681deffa Backout the ORCA commit. :(
There is a linking issue on Mac OSX that needs to be addressed before this is able to come back into the trunk.

This commit was SVN r26676.
2012-06-27 01:28:28 +00:00
Josh Hursey
542330e3a7 Commit of ORCA: Open MPI Runtime Collaborative Abstraction
This is a runtime interposition project that sits between the OMPI and ORTE layers in Open MPI.

The project is described on the wiki:
  https://svn.open-mpi.org/trac/ompi/wiki/Runtime_Interposition

And on this email thread:
  http://www.open-mpi.org/community/lists/devel/2012/06/11109.php

This commit was SVN r26670.
2012-06-26 21:42:16 +00:00
Ralph Castain
269cb2b8d9 Some cleanup to remove calls to opal_progress when running with orte progress threads, and to ensure that all orte-related events are in the orte event base.
This commit was SVN r26591.
2012-06-11 19:59:53 +00:00
Ralph Castain
bd8b4f7f1e Sorry for mid-day commit, but I had promised on the call to do this upon my return.
Roll in the ORTE state machine. Remove last traces of opal_sos. Remove UTK epoch code.

Please see the various emails about the state machine change for details. I'll send something out later with more info on the new arch.

This commit was SVN r26242.
2012-04-06 14:23:13 +00:00
Ralph Castain
f03b82ab0a Don't fiddle with the port_name memory as, per standard, this is an input-only parameter
This commit was SVN r25756.
2012-01-20 13:15:41 +00:00
Ralph Castain
c56acf60ca Although we never really thought about it, we made an unconscious assumption in the mapper system - we assumed that the daemons would be placed on nodes in the order that the nodes appear in the allocation. In other words, we assumed that the launch environment would map processes in node order.
Turns out, this isn't necessarily true. The Cray, for example, launches processes in a toroidal pattern, thus causing the daemons to wind up somewhere other than what we thought. Other environments (e.g., slurm) are also capable of such behavior, depending upon the default mapping algorithm they are told to use.

Resolve this problem by making the daemon-to-node assignment in the affected environments when the daemon calls back and tells us what node it is on. Order the nodes in the mapping list so they are in daemon-vpid order as opposed to the order in which they show in the allocation. For environments that don't exhibit this mapping behavior (e.g., rsh), this won't have any impact.

Also, clean up the vm launch procedure a little bit so it more closely aligns with the state machine implementation that is coming, and remove some lingering "slave" code.

This commit was SVN r25551.
2011-11-30 19:58:24 +00:00
Ralph Castain
9b59d8de6f This is actually a much smaller commit than it appears at first glance - it just touches a lot of files. The --without-rte-support configuration option has never really been implemented completely. The option caused various objects not to be defined and conditionally compiled some base functions, but did nothing to prevent build of the component libraries. Unfortunately, since many of those components use objects covered by the option, it caused builds to break if those components were allowed to build.
Brian dealt with this in the past by creating platform files and using "no-build" to block the components. This was clunky, but acceptable when only one organization was using that option. However, that number has now expanded to at least two more locations.

Accordingly, make --without-rte-support actually work by adding appropriate configury to prevent components from building when they shouldn't. While doing so, remove two frameworks (db and rmcast) that are no longer used as ORCM comes to a close (besides, they belonged in ORCM now anyway). Do some minor cleanups along the way.

This commit was SVN r25497.
2011-11-22 21:24:35 +00:00
Ralph Castain
6310361532 At long last, the fabled revision to the affinity system has arrived. A more detailed explanation of how this all works will be presented here:
https://svn.open-mpi.org/trac/ompi/wiki/ProcessPlacement

The wiki page is incomplete at the moment, but I hope to complete it over the next few days. I will provide updates on the devel list. As the wiki page states, the default and most commonly used options remain unchanged (except as noted below). New, esoteric and complex options have been added, but unless you are a true masochist, you are unlikely to use many of them beyond perhaps an initial curiosity-motivated experimentation.

In a nutshell, this commit revamps the map/rank/bind procedure to take into account topology info on the compute nodes. I have, for the most part, preserved the default behaviors, with three notable exceptions:

1. I have at long last bowed my head in submission to the system admin's of managed clusters. For years, they have complained about our default of allowing users to oversubscribe nodes - i.e., to run more processes on a node than allocated slots. Accordingly, I have modified the default behavior: if you are running off of hostfile/dash-host allocated nodes, then the default is to allow oversubscription. If you are running off of RM-allocated nodes, then the default is to NOT allow oversubscription. Flags to override these behaviors are provided, so this only affects the default behavior.

2. both cpus/rank and stride have been removed. The latter was demanded by those who didn't understand the purpose behind it - and I agreed as the users who requested it are no longer using it. The former was removed temporarily pending implementation.

3. vm launch is now the sole method for starting OMPI. It was just too darned hard to maintain multiple launch procedures - maybe someday, provided someone can demonstrate a reason to do so.

As Jeff stated, it is impossible to fully test a change of this size. I have tested it on Linux and Mac, covering all the default and simple options, singletons, and comm_spawn. That said, I'm sure others will find problems, so I'll be watching MTT results until this stabilizes.

This commit was SVN r25476.
2011-11-15 03:40:11 +00:00
George Bosilca
80c02647c8 Each level (OPAL/ORTE/OMPI) should only return it's own constants,
instead of the current mismatch.

This commit was SVN r25230.
2011-10-04 14:50:31 +00:00
Ralph Castain
b11f93a039 Check add_procs return value
This commit was SVN r25122.
2011-09-11 14:53:26 +00:00
Wesley Bland
4e7ff0bd5e By popular demand the epoch code is now disabled by default.
To enable the epochs and the resilient orte code, use the configure flag:

--enable-resilient-orte

This will define both:

ORTE_ENABLE_EPOCH
ORTE_RESIL_ORTE

This commit was SVN r25093.
2011-08-26 22:16:14 +00:00
Wesley Bland
e1ba09ad51 Add a resilience to ORTE. Allows the runtime to continue after a process (or
ORTED) failure. Note that more work will be necessary to allow the MPI layer to
take advantage of this.

Per RFC:
http://www.open-mpi.org/community/lists/devel/2011/06/9299.php

This commit was SVN r24815.
2011-06-23 20:38:02 +00:00
Ralph Castain
502cc0747f My my...cleanup a disconnect between the man pages and how we implemented comm_spawn_multiple. We allow an info key per executable. Also fix the -host and -add-host info keys - they are supposed to accept comma-separated lists.
This commit was SVN r24706.
2011-05-17 20:12:31 +00:00