This commit fixes a segfault in btl-portals4 add_procs(). The segfault
occurs if add_procs() is called after a del_procs() call that reduces
the proc count to zero which would cause PT and NI resources to be
freed. This commit resolves the segfault by using a common
initiailization boolean and only freeing module resources in
finalize().
Signed-off-by: Todd Kordenbrock (thkgcode@gmail.com)
Some of the show_help() messages that were added in 40afd525f8 were
really normal / expected behavior (e.g., if 2 peers connect in the TCP
BTL more-or-less simultaneously, one of them will drop the connection
-- no need to show_help() about this; it's expected behavior). Roll
back these messages to be opal_output_verbose() kinds of messages.
Signed-off-by: Jeff Squyres <jsquyres@cisco.com>
sizeof(addrs[0].addr_inet)==16 (so that it can handle IPv6 addresses),
but the memory that we are copying from (my_ss->sin_addr) is only 4
bytes long. Don't copy beyond the end of that source buffer.
Signed-off-by: Jeff Squyres <jsquyres@cisco.com>
Important note :
According to the man page
"On success, process_vm_readv() returns the number of bytes read and
process_vm_writev() returns the number of bytes written. This return
value may be less than the total number of requested bytes, if a
partial read/write occurred. (Partial transfers apply at the
granularity of iovec elements. These system calls won't perform a
partial transfer that splits a single iovec element.)"
So since we use a single iovec element, the returned size should either
be 0 or size, and the do loop should not be needed here.
We tried on various Linux kernels with size > 2 GB, and surprisingly,
the returned value is always 0x7ffff000 (fwiw, it happens to be the size
of the larger number of pages that fits a signed 32 bits integer).
We do not know whether this is a bug from the kernel, the libc or even
the man page, but for the time being, we do as is process_vm_readv() could
return any value.
Thanks Heiko Bauke for the bug report.
Refs. open-mpi/ompi#4829
Signed-off-by: Gilles Gouaillardet <gilles@rist.or.jp>
Fix case where the btl_tcp_links MCA parameter is used to create multiple TCP connections between peers.
Three issues were resulting in hangs during large message transfer:
* The 2nd..btl_tcp_link connections were dropped during establishment because the per-process
address check was binary, rather than a count
* The accept handler would not skip a btl module that was already in use, resulting in all
connections for a given address being vectored to a single btl
* Multiple addresses in the same subnet caused connections to be
stalled, as the receiver would always use the same (first) address
found. Binding the outgoing connection solves this issue
* Lastly fix race condition created by connections being started at the exact same time
by accpeting connections not in the closed state, allowing endpoint_accept to resolve
dispute
Signed-off-by: Jordan Cherry <cherryj@amazon.com>
This commit replaces the current VMA tree implementation with one that
uses the new opal_interval_tree_t class. Since the VMA tree lock is no
longer used this commit also updates rcache/grdma and btl/vader to
take better care when searching for existing registrations.
Signed-off-by: Nathan Hjelm <hjelmn@lanl.gov>
Follow-on to 8097d09858: now that BTL_VERSION is defined in btl.h, be
a little smarter about whether we define it or not.
Signed-off-by: Jeff Squyres <jsquyres@cisco.com>
This commit adds a new optional function to the BTL module:
btl_flush. This function takes an optional BTL endpoint. When called
this function completes all outstanding RDMA and atomic operations
started prior to the call to btl_flush.
Signed-off-by: Nathan Hjelm <hjelmn@lanl.gov>
Since open-mpi/ompi@47fd2313ab
the backing file is now in /dev/shm by default. As a consequence,
the backing file name has to include the jobid so more than one job
can run at a time.
Signed-off-by: Gilles Gouaillardet <gilles@rist.or.jp>
Resolve a race condition between registering for a file to be removed upon termination and actual creation of that file by providing attributes that identify whether the path is a file or directory. This removes the need for PMIx to detect the difference.
Refs #4686
Signed-off-by: Ralph Castain <rhc@open-mpi.org>
This commit moves the backing files to /dev/shm to avoid limitations
that may be set on /tmp. The files are registered with pmix to ensure
they are cleaned up after an erroneous exit.
Signed-off-by: Nathan Hjelm <hjelmn@lanl.gov>
(cherry picked from commit 48101278160672317ade352365592f56ef3b8977)
If available, have apps use registration capability to cleanup their session directories. Setup capability for vader to register its shared memory file location - let someone familiar with that code do so.
Final cleanup to track uid/gid, update the opal/pmix API to pass flags for ignore and leave top directory alone
Signed-off-by: Ralph Castain <rhc@open-mpi.org>
There were multiple paths that could lead to a fast box
allocation. One of them made little sense (in-place send) so it has
been removed to allow a rework of the fast-box send function. This
should fix a number of issues with hanging/crashing when using the
vader btl.
References #4260
Signed-off-by: Nathan Hjelm <hjelmn@lanl.gov>
This commit adds support for fetch-and-op atomics. This is needed
because and and or are irreversible operations so there needs to be a
way to get the old value atomically. These are also the only semantics
supported by C11 (there is not atomic_op_fetch, just
atomic_fetch_op). The old op-and-fetch atomics have been defined in
terms of fetch-and-op.
Signed-off-by: Nathan Hjelm <hjelmn@lanl.gov>
This commit renames the arithmetic atomic operations in opal to
indicate that they return the new value not the old value. This naming
differentiates these routines from new functions that return the old
value.
Signed-off-by: Nathan Hjelm <hjelmn@lanl.gov>
This commit eliminates the old opal_atomic_bool_cmpset functions. They
have been replaced by the opal_atomic_compare_exchange_strong
functions.
Signed-off-by: Nathan Hjelm <hjelmn@lanl.gov>
This commit renames the atomic compare-and-swap functions to indicate
the return value. This is in preperation for adding support for a
compare-and-swap that returns the old value. At the same time the
return type has been changed to bool.
Signed-off-by: Nathan Hjelm <hjelmn@lanl.gov>
Their is racing condition in TCP connection establishment
during simultaneous handshake. This PR handles the fix for
it.
Signed-off-by: Mohan Gandhi <mohgan@amazon.com>
Cisco wrote a bipartite graph solver to properly solve
interface pair selection for usNIC. Using the reachable
framework, the TCP BTL (and possibly the runtime network
code) can use the graph solver to make more optimal pair
selection. Jeff was happy to have the code more broadly
used, but didn't have time to do the move, hence this
commit.
There are a couple of minor changes to the code compared
to the usNIC version. Obviously, the functions have
been renamed to match naming convention for their new
home. Since it's easier to write unit tests for
util/ code, the unit tests have been made first class
tests run at "make check" time. This last bit required
moving some of the definitions into a new header,
bipartite_graph_internal.h, so that they could be
included in both the library code and the test code.
Signed-off-by: Brian Barrett <bbarrett@amazon.com>
This commit adds the code necessary to support forming connections across
subnets. The primary changes are to 1) add the gid to the modex, and 2)
use the gid to create the address handle.
Signed-off-by: Nathan Hjelm <hjelmn@me.com>
Some OSes have hardcoded limits to prevent overflowing over an int32_t.
We can either detect this at configure (which might be a nicer but
incomplete solution), or always force the pipelined protocol over TCP.
As it only covers data larger than 1GB, no performance penalty is to be
expected.
Signed-off-by: George Bosilca <bosilca@icl.utk.edu>
as the writev and readv support a sum larger than a uint32_t
this version will work. For the other OSes a different patch
is required. This patch is a slight modification of the one
proposed by @ggouaillardet.
Signed-off-by: George Bosilca <bosilca@icl.utk.edu>
* Resolves#3705
* Components should link against the project level library to better
support `dlopen` with `RTLD_LOCAL`.
* Extend the `mca_FRAMEWORK_COMPONENT_la_LIBADD` in the `Makefile.am`
with the appropriate project level library:
```
MCA components in ompi/
$(top_builddir)/ompi/lib@OMPI_LIBMPI_NAME@.la
MCA components in orte/
$(top_builddir)/orte/lib@ORTE_LIB_PREFIX@open-rte.la
MCA components in opal/
$(top_builddir)/opal/lib@OPAL_LIB_PREFIX@open-pal.la
MCA components in oshmem/
$(top_builddir)/oshmem/liboshmem.la"
```
Note: The changes in this commit were automated by the script in
the commit that proceeds it with the `libadd_mca_comp_update.py`
script. Some components were not included in this change because
they are statically built only.
Signed-off-by: Joshua Hursey <jhursey@us.ibm.com>
This commit has two changes
1. Adding magic string during handshake can cause
issue when used with older version of MPI. Hence set
RCVTIMEO paramter to 2 second
2. Using single call during handshake instead of
two calls
Signed-off-by: Mohan Gandhi <mohgan@amazon.com>
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>
Not sure how/when this got deleted, but put back the "Cisco usNIC"
line in the transport summary at the end of configure.
Signed-off-by: Jeff Squyres <jsquyres@cisco.com>
usnic endpoints was always created with default send credit value of 8. This
commit assign the correct number from the hardware instead.
Signed-off-by: Thananon Patinyasakdikul <apatinya@cisco.com>