As part of improvement towards tcp debugging
we are moving few BTL_ERROR to show_help and also
update the function behaviour of
mca_btl_tcp_endpoint_complete_connect to return
SUCCESS and ERROR cases.
Signed-off-by: Mohan Gandhi <mohgan@amazon.com>
As part of improvement towards handling failure case
in btl tcp we are using magic string to verify mpi
connection. In case if there is mismatch or missing
magic string we can identify that we are trying to
connect with someother process.
Signed-off-by: Mohan Gandhi <mohgan@amazon.com>
Moving non-blocking send/receive function to btl_tcp
will help reusing these function where ever needed.
In this case we plan to reuse receive function to
retrive magic string to validate established connection
is from mpi process.
Signed-off-by: Mohan Gandhi <mohgan@amazon.com>
Set the default send and receive socket buffer size to 0,
which means Open MPI will not try to set a buffer size during
startup.
The default behavior since near day one of the TCP BTL has been
to set the send and receive socket buffer sizes to 128 KiB. A
number that works great on 1 GbE, but not so great on 10 GbE
fabrics of any real size. Modern TCP stacks, particularly on
Linux, have gotten much smarter about buffer sizes and are much
less efficient if a buffer size is set (even if set to something
large).
Signed-off-by: Brian Barrett <bbarrett@amazon.com>
This is mostly for error cases, where we need to release the
newly created proc. Currently the code deadlocks because the endpoint
lock is help at the release and the lock is not recursive.
Aslo added some code to print the IP addresses that don't match during
the TCP connection step.
Signed-off-by: George Bosilca <bosilca@icl.utk.edu>
Add a verbose to show all the failed attempts to match the
remote interfaces based on the modex info.
Signed-off-by: George Bosilca <bosilca@icl.utk.edu>
Due to the conversion from ssize_t to int we were losing bytes, and
ended up writing outside the receiver buffer. Similarly on the send,
due to the conversion to a lesser type, we could missinterpret the
end of the fragment.
since pthreads are now mandatory, the MCA_BTL_TCP_SUPPORT_PROGRESS_THREAD
is always true and hence can be safely removed
Signed-off-by: Gilles Gouaillardet <gilles@rist.or.jp>
This patch is based on the "RFC: Reenabling the TCP BTL over local
interfaces (when specifically requested)". It removes the hardcoded
exception for the local devices that has been enforced by the
TCP BTL. Instead, we exclude the local interface only via the
exclude MCA (both IPv4 and IPv6 local addresses are already in the
default if_exclude), which is also the behavior currently described in
our README file.
This commit fixes an abort during finalize because pending events were
removed from the list twice.
References #2030
Signed-off-by: Nathan Hjelm <hjelmn@lanl.gov>
We commonly see messages on the users list where a peer has hung up
because it has crashed. Instead of having just a BTL_ERROR message,
make this a real opal_show_help() message that tells the user that the
peer unexpectedly hung up, and they should look into *why* that peer
hung up.
Signed-off-by: Jeff Squyres <jsquyres@cisco.com>
It looks like one help message was accidentally pasted in the middle
of another. Disentangle the two messages from each other, and
slightly tweak the one message to say that the job may also crash (in
addition to hanging).
Signed-off-by: Jeff Squyres <jsquyres@cisco.com>
In some rare cases when a process receives the connect ack while
locally updating the peer endpoint structure, we could drop the
incomming connect ack due to the fact that the send handler is
protected with a try lock (on the endpoint) and our initial send
event was not persistent. Making the send event persistent solves
all issues.
This commit fixes a race between a thread calling the tcp btl's
add_procs and a thread processing an incomming connection. The race
occured because the add_procs thread adds a newly created proc object
to the hash table *before* the object is fully initialized. The
connection thread then attempts to use the object before the endpoints
array on the object has beeen allocation. The fix is to only add the
proc to the hash table after it has been completely initialized.
Signed-off-by: Nathan Hjelm <hjelmn@lanl.gov>
These macros should really be named OPAL_SUMMARY_*; they're used in
all projects, and therefore should be in the lowest later project (OPAL).
Signed-off-by: Jeff Squyres <jsquyres@cisco.com>
Added mca parameter to turn progress thread on/off
Add a flag to check if we have btl progress thread.
Added macro for ob1 matching lock.
Update the AUTHORS file.
All BTL-only operations (basically all data movements
with the exception of the matching operation) can now
be handled for the TCP BTL by a progress thread.
This commit adds two m4 macros: OPAL_SUMMARY_ADD, OPAL_SUMMARY_PRINT.
OPAL_SUMMARY_ADD adds an item to a section in the summary. For example
OPAL_SUMMARY_ADD([[Transports]],[[Foo]],...,[yes]) will add the
following to the summary:
Transports
-----------------------
Foo: yes
With this commit two sections are added: Transports, Resource Managers.
The OPAL_SUMMARY_PRINT macro is called after AC_OUTPUT and prints out
some information about the build (version, projects, etc) and then
the summarys sections. It will additionally print a warning if
internal debugging is enabled.
Example output:
Open MPI configuration:
-----------------------
Version: 3.0.0 a1
Build Open Platform Abstration project: yes
Build Open Runtime project: yes
Build Open MPI project: yes
Build Open SHMEM project: no
MPI C++ bindings (deprecated): no
MPI Fortran bindings: mpif.h, use mpi, use mpi_f08
Debug build: yes
Transports
-----------------------
Cray uGNI (Gemini/Aries): no
Intel Omnipath (PSM2): no
KNEM Shared Memory: no
Linux CMA IPC: no
Mellanox MXM: no
Open UCX: no
OpenFabrics libfabric: no
OpenFabrics Verbs: no
portals4: no
QLogic Infinipath (PSM): no
tcp: yes
XPMEM Shared Memory: no
Resource Managers
-----------------------
Cray Alps: no
Grid Engine: no
LSF: no
Slurm: yes
Torque: yes
INTERNAL DEBUGGING IS ENABLED. DO NOT USE THIS BUILD FOR PERFORMANCE MEASUREMENTS!
Signed-off-by: Nathan Hjelm <hjelmn@me.com>
This commit makes two changes to the tcp btl:
- If a tcp proc does not exist when handling a new connection create
a new proc and use it. The current implementation uses the
opal_proc_by_name() function to get the opal_proc_t then calls
add_procs on all btl modules. It may be sufficient to just call
add_procs until an endpoint is created so this may change somewhat.
- In add_procs add a check for an existing endpoint before creating
one.
Signed-off-by: Nathan Hjelm <hjelmn@lanl.gov>