via the visibility feature that is provided by some compilers.
Per default this feature is disabled, to enable it you need to
configure with --enable-visibility and obviously you need a compiler
with visibility support. Please refer to the wiki for more information.
https://svn.open-mpi.org/trac/ompi/wiki/Visibility
This commit was SVN r14582.
with RDMAing the rest of it. Also more than one RDMA writes can be performed
simultaneously by different threads. To make this code thread safe this patch
clones original request convertor for each RDMA fragment.
This commit was SVN r14574.
able to compile tm support, but is still "odd" in terms of the way AC
macros are normally structured. Brian says that he will fix it
properly someday.
This commit was SVN r14573.
- Removing "small" message size limit because it really does not relate to the eager size
accross the board.
Now, the leaf nodes in generalized reduce will use blocking send (DEFAULT/ORIGINAL BEHAVIOR)
either when the maximum number of outstanding requests is 0 or
when the total number of segments is less than the maximum number of outstanding requests.
Otherwise, it will send messages using non-blocking synchronized send operation.
This commit was SVN r14572.
because the Sun Studio compiler did not recognize __const.
This commit fixes trac:1011.
This commit was SVN r14558.
The following Trac tickets were found above:
Ticket 1011 --> https://svn.open-mpi.org/trac/ompi/ticket/1011
* Don't need the 2 process case -- we'll send an extra message, but
at very little cost and less code is better.
* Use COMPLETE sends instead of STANDARD sends so that the connection
is fully established before we move on to the next connection. The
previous code was still causing minor connection flooding for huge
numbers of processes.
* mpi_preconnect_all now connects both OOB and MPI layers. There's
also mpi_preconnect_mpi and mpi_preconnect_oob should you want to
be more specific.
* Since we're only using the MCA parameters once at the beginning
of time, no need for global constants. Just do the quick param
lookup right before the parameter is needed. Save some of that
global variable space for the next guy.
Fixes trac:963
This commit was SVN r14553.
The following Trac tickets were found above:
Ticket 963 --> https://svn.open-mpi.org/trac/ompi/ticket/963
* Remove duplicate calls to ompi_check_package by poking at the
internals just a bit. Possibly should make those officially
exposed, but whatever.
* Don't build OpenIB with PTMalloc2 and no thread support, as
this will always lead to badness.
* minor formatting cleanups
This commit was SVN r14552.
during the IPv6 patch. The most important is the multi BTL support. There
was a quite interesting bug. Instead of setting up the multiple connections
over different physical devices, based on the time when these connections
were created most of the time they were all using the same physical network.
Which, of course, was not the intended goal, as we top at the maximum
bandwidth available over one device instead of gathering all available
bandwidth from all devices.
Second, the IPv6 RFC suggest to use sockaddr_storage as a holder for the
IP information, but use a sockaddr* when we pass it to functions. This is
only partially corrected by this patch.
Some other minor cleanups.
This commit was SVN r14544.
This "feature" is disabled by default and it should not affect the current performance.
In case when the message size is large and segment size is smaller than eager size for particular interface,
the leaf nodes in generalized reduce function can overflood parent nodes by sending all segments without
any synchronization. This can cause the parent to have HIGH number of unexpected messages (think 16MB
message with 1KB segments for example). In case of binomial algorithm root node always has at least one
child which is leaf, so this can potentially affect the root's performance significantly [Especially in
large communicators where root may have quite a few children (binomial tree for example)].
When the segment size is bigger than the eager size, rendezvous protocol ensures that this does
not happen so it is not necessary.
Originally, the problem was exposed in "infinite" bucket allocator clean up time for "small" segment sizes
(which may explain some "deadlocks" on Thunderbird tests).
To prevent this, we allow user to specify mca parameter "--mca coll_tuned_reduce_algorithm_max_requests NUM"
this limits number of outstanding messages from a leaf node in generalized reduce to the parent to NUM.
Messages are sent as non-blocking synchrnous messages, so syncronization happens at "wait" time.
The synchronization actually improved performance of pipeline and binomial algorithm for large message sizes
with 1KB segments over MX, but I need to test it some more to make sure it is consistent.
Since there is no easy way to find out what is "the eager" size for particular btl, I set the limit to 4000B.
If message/individual segment size is greater than 4000B - we will not use this feature. This variable may
or may not be exposed as mca parameter later...
I did not have any problems running it and both "default" and "synchronous" tests passed Intel Reduce* tests
up to 80 processes (over MX).
This commit was SVN r14518.
assumptions in the FT restart code for the ORTE layer.
This fixes those problems by having the RML completely shutdown and
restart the OOB framework (instead of just the module as before).
This makes it much easier to manage, and maintainable as the OOB
changes in the future.
The SDS now does communication as part of its startup procedure, so
we need to make sure we restart the RML before the SDS so that it can
communicate properly.
OOB base [close|open] used a static bool to determine if they have
been called previously or not. I needed to expose this boolean so
that I can close() then open() the oob base in the restart procedure.
The functionality has not changed, we just now have the ability to
open/close the framework as many times as we need to as long as we
always call them in that order. (So calling open twice in a row is not allowed
as before, it is only allowed if you open(), close(), then open() again).
Things seem to be working now.
This commit was SVN r14515.
- make opal_sockaddr2str() take a sockaddr_storage instead of a sockaddr_in6
so that it works for IPv4 and IPv6 addresses, and remove a whole bunch
of #ifs in the OOOB code.
- Fix a compiler warning in the TCP BTL due to run-time determined
array size by making it a dynamicly allocated array.
- Fix the unpacking code of IPv4 addresses when using IPv6 support, so
that the address is in the correct location (instead of in an IPv6
structure, use an IPv4 structure). Refs trac:1005.
This commit was SVN r14514.
The following Trac tickets were found above:
Ticket 1005 --> https://svn.open-mpi.org/trac/ompi/ticket/1005