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>
This commit adds selective use of a compiler-specific pragma to
silence the numerous warnings the Sun/Oracle/Studio compilers emit for
the GNU-style inline asm used in atomic.h.
Thanks Paul Hargrove for the initial patch and the guidance.
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>
This commit prevents the connection code from trying to connect an
endpoint if the directed datagram has been posted but not received.
Signed-off-by: Nathan Hjelm <hjelmn@lanl.gov>
This commit cleans up some code in the passive target path. The code
used the buffered frag control send path but it is more appropriate to
use the unbuffered one. This avoids checking structures that are
should not be in use in this path.
Signed-off-by: Nathan Hjelm <hjelmn@lanl.gov>
previously, the definition was
struct oshmem_proc_data_t {
int num_transports;
char * transport_ids;
};
so in 64 bits arch, the compiler would very likely insert a 4 bytes
padding before the two fields in order to have transport_ids aligned
store oshmem related per proc data in an oshmem_proc_data_t struct,
that is stored in the padding section of an ompi_proc_t
this data can be accessed via the OSHMEM_PROC_DATA(proc) macro
Fixesopen-mpi/ompi#2023
if sendbuf is equal to recvbuf, that should not be interpreted
as equivalent to MPI_IN_PLACE on the non root rank(s)
Thanks Valentin Petrov for the report
predefined datatypes such as MPI_LONG_DOUBLE_INT are not really contiguous,
so use span as returned by opal_datatype_span() instead of type extent,
otherwise data might be written above allocated memory.
Thanks Valentin Petrov for the report
It is possible that one or more procs could get thru PMIx_Init, and thus be marked as in state "registered", before all local procs have been started. If that happens, then we would report some of the procs in state "running", and the others in state "registered" - which means that the HNP would miss the "running" stage of the state machine.
Thanks to Jingchao Zhang for his patience in tracking this down on the 2.0 branch
* Expand the use of the `orte_keep_fqdn_hostnames` MCA parameter when
it is set to false.
* If that parameter is set to false (default) then short hostnames
(e.g., `node01`) will match with the long hostnames (e.g.,
`node01.mycluster.org`). This allows a user (or resource manager)
to mix the use of short and long hostnames.
- Note that this mechanism does _not_ perform a DNS lookup, but
instead strips off the FQDN by truncating the hostname string at
the first `.` character (when not an IP address).
- By default (`false`) the following is true:
`node01 == node01.mycluster.org == node01.bogus.com`
since we use `node01` as the hostname.
The xlc compiler seems to behave in a different way that gcc when it
comes the inline asm. There were two problems with the code with xlc:
- The TOC read in mca_patcher_base_patch_hook used the syntax
register unsigned long toc asm("r2") to read $r2 (the TOC
pointer). With gcc this seems to behave as expected but with xlc
the result in toc is not the same as $r2. I updated the code to use
asm volatile ("std 2, %0" : "=m" (toc)) to load the TOC pointer.
- The OPAL_PATCHER_BEGIN macro is meant to be the first thing in a
hook. On PPC64 it loads the correct TOC pointer (thanks to
mca_patcher_base_patch_hook) and saves the old one. The
OPAL_PATCHER_END macro restores the TOC pointer. Because we *need*
the TOC to be correct before it is accessed in the hook the
OPAL_PATCHER_BEGIN macro MUST come first. We did this and all was
well with gcc. With xlc on the other hand there was a TOC access
before the assembly inserted by OPAL_PATCHER_BEGIN. To fix this
quickly I broke each hook into a pair of function with the
OPAL_PATCHER_* macros on the top level functions. This works around
the issue but is not a clean way to fix this. In the future we
should 1) either update overwrite to not need this, or 2) figure
out why xlc is not inserting the asm before the first TOC read.
This fixesopen-mpi/ompi#1854
Signed-off-by: Nathan Hjelm <hjelmn@lanl.gov>