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Jeff Squyres
bf6e3d4355 Fixes trac:2061: add MPI_OP_COMMUTATIVE.
This commit was SVN r22128.

The following Trac tickets were found above:
  Ticket 2061 --> https://svn.open-mpi.org/trac/ompi/ticket/2061
2009-10-22 21:46:05 +00:00
Jeff Squyres
4d8a187450 Two major things in this commit:
* New "op" MPI layer framework
 * Addition of the MPI_REDUCE_LOCAL proposed function (for MPI-2.2)

= Op framework =

Add new "op" framework in the ompi layer.  This framework replaces the
hard-coded MPI_Op back-end functions for (MPI_Op, MPI_Datatype) tuples
for pre-defined MPI_Ops, allowing components and modules to provide
the back-end functions.  The intent is that components can be written
to take advantage of hardware acceleration (GPU, FPGA, specialized CPU
instructions, etc.).  Similar to other frameworks, components are
intended to be able to discover at run-time if they can be used, and
if so, elect themselves to be selected (or disqualify themselves from
selection if they cannot run).  If specialized hardware is not
available, there is a default set of functions that will automatically
be used.

This framework is ''not'' used for user-defined MPI_Ops.

The new op framework is similar to the existing coll framework, in
that the final set of function pointers that are used on any given
intrinsic MPI_Op can be a mixed bag of function pointers, potentially
coming from multiple different op modules.  This allows for hardware
that only supports some of the operations, not all of them (e.g., a
GPU that only supports single-precision operations).

All the hard-coded back-end MPI_Op functions for (MPI_Op,
MPI_Datatype) tuples still exist, but unlike coll, they're in the
framework base (vs. being in a separate "basic" component) and are
automatically used if no component is found at runtime that provides a
module with the necessary function pointers.

There is an "example" op component that will hopefully be useful to
those writing meaningful op components.  It is currently
.ompi_ignore'd so that it doesn't impinge on other developers (it's
somewhat chatty in terms of opal_output() so that you can tell when
its functions have been invoked).  See the README file in the example
op component directory.  Developers of new op components are
encouraged to look at the following wiki pages:

  https://svn.open-mpi.org/trac/ompi/wiki/devel/Autogen
  https://svn.open-mpi.org/trac/ompi/wiki/devel/CreateComponent
  https://svn.open-mpi.org/trac/ompi/wiki/devel/CreateFramework

= MPI_REDUCE_LOCAL =

Part of the MPI-2.2 proposal listed here:

    https://svn.mpi-forum.org/trac/mpi-forum-web/ticket/24

is to add a new function named MPI_REDUCE_LOCAL.  It is very easy to
implement, so I added it (also because it makes testing the op
framework pretty easy -- you can do it in serial rather than via
parallel reductions).  There's even a man page!

This commit was SVN r20280.
2009-01-14 23:44:31 +00:00
Jeff Squyres
0a28212392 This is a workaround to bug in the Intel C++ compiler, version 9.1
(all versions up to and including 20060925).  The issue has been
reported to Intel, along with a small [non-MPI] test program that
reproduces the problem (the test program and the OMPI C++ bindings
work fine with Intel C++ 9.0 and many other C++ compilers).

In short, a static initializer for a global variable (i.e., its
constructor is fired before main()) that takes as an argument a
reference to a typedef'd type will simply get the wrong value in the
argument.  Specifically:

{{{
namespace MPI {
    Intracomm COMM_WORLD(MPI_COMM_WORLD);
}
}}}

The constructor for MPI::Intracomm should get the value of
&ompi_mpi_comm_world.  It does not; it seems to get a random value.

As mandated by MPI-2, annex B.13.4, for C/C++ interoperability, the
prototype for this constructor is:

{{{
class Intracomm {
public:
    Intracomm(const MPI_Comm& data);
};
}}}

Experiments with icpc 9.1/20060925 have shown that removing the
reference from the prototype makes it work (!).  After lots of
discussions about this issue with a C++ expert (Doug Gregor from IU),
we decided the following (cut-n-paste from an e-mail):

-----
> So here's my question: given that OMPI's MPI_<CLASS> types are all
> pointers, is there any legal MPI program that adheres to the above
> bindings that would fail to compile or work properly if we simply
> removed the "&" from the second binding, above?

I don't know of any way that a program could detect this change. FWIW,
the C++ committee has agreed that implementation of the C++ standard
library are allowed to decide arbitrarily between const& and by-value.
If they don't care, MPI users won't care.

When you remove the '&', I suggest also removing the "const". It is
redundant, but can trigger some strange name mangling in Sun's C++
compiler.
-----

So with this change:

 * we now work again with the Intel 9.1 compiler
 * our C++ bindings do not exactly conform to the MPI-2 spec, but
   valid/legal MPI C++ apps cannot tell the difference (i.e., the
   functionality is the same)

This commit was SVN r12514.
2006-11-09 17:34:12 +00:00
Jeff Squyres
5f96a74e33 Make user-defined MPI::Op's be thread safe (the previous
implementation was not thread safe).  See lengthy comment in
ompi/mpi/cxx/intercepts.cc::ompi_mpi_cxx_op_intercept() for a full
explanation.

This commit was SVN r8606.
2005-12-23 16:49:09 +00:00
Jeff Squyres
42ec26e640 Update the copyright notices for IU and UTK.
This commit was SVN r7999.
2005-11-05 19:57:48 +00:00
Jeff Squyres
4ab17f019b Rename src -> ompi
This commit was SVN r6269.
2005-07-02 13:43:57 +00:00