This commit modifies the ompi_group_t union/difference code to compare/copy the
raw group values. This will either be a ompi_proc_t or a sentinel value. This
commit also adds helper functions to convert between opal process names and
sentinel values.
Signed-off-by: Nathan Hjelm <hjelmn@me.com>
This commit adds an opal hash table to keep track of mapping between
process identifiers and ompi_proc_t's. This hash table is used by the
ompi_proc_by_name() function to lookup (in O(1) time) a given
process. This can be used by a BTL or other component to get a
ompi_proc_t when handling an incoming message from an as yet unknown
peer.
Additionally, this commit adds a new MCA variable to control the new
add_procs behavior: mpi_add_procs_cutoff. If the number of ranks in
the process falls below the threshold a ompi_proc_t is created for
every process. If the number of ranks is above the threshold then a
ompi_proc_t is only created for the local rank. The code needed to
generate additional ompi_proc_t's for a communicator is not yet
complete.
Signed-off-by: Nathan Hjelm <hjelmn@lanl.gov>
Bring Slurm PMI-1 component online
Bring the s2 component online
Little cleanup - let the various PMIx modules set the process name during init, and then just raise it up to the ORTE level. Required as the different PMI environments all pass the jobid in different ways.
Bring the OMPI pubsub/pmi component online
Get comm_spawn working again
Ensure we always provide a cpuset, even if it is NULL
pmix/cray: adjust cray pmix component for pmix
Make changes so cray pmix can work within the integrated
ompi/pmix framework.
Bring singletons back online. Implement the comm_spawn operation using pmix - not tested yet
Cleanup comm_spawn - procs now starting, error in connect_accept
Complete integration
In an abort situation, just bail out immediately -- don't try to
invoke any atexit()/on_exit()-registered functions.
This is similar rationale to
open-mpi/ompi@17846411c3.
only define the unique fortran symbol depending on
- CAPS
- PLAIN
- SINGLE_UNDERSCORE
- DOUBLE_UNDERSCORE
and bind the f08 symbol to the uniquely defined C symbol.
Use real data structures to make the code simpler.
(perl script written by Jeff)
This commit does two things. It removes checks for C99 required
headers (stdlib.h, string.h, signal.h, etc). Additionally it removes
definitions for required C99 types (intptr_t, int64_t, int32_t, etc).
Signed-off-by: Nathan Hjelm <hjelmn@me.com>
This commit fixes some issues with the cuda support parameters. There
were a couple of duplicate registrations and an incorrect synonym (one
variable was made a synonym of mpi_preconnect_mpi).
Signed-off-by: Nathan Hjelm <hjelmn@lanl.gov>
This commit fixes several vagrind errors. Included:
- installdirs did not correctly reinitialize all pointers to NULL
at close. This causes valgrind errors on a subsequent call to
opal_init_tool.
- several opal strings were leaked by opal_deregister_params which
was setting them to NULL instead of letting them be freed by the
MCA variable system.
- move opal_net_init to AFTER the variable system is initialized and
opal's MCA variables have been registered. opal_net_init uses a
variable registered by opal_register_params!
- do not leak ompi_mpi_main_thread when it is allocated by
MPI_T_init_thread.
- do not overwrite ompi_mpi_main_thread if it is already set (by
MPI_T_init_thread).
- mca_base_var: read_files was overwritting mca_base_var_file_list
even if it was non-NULL.
- mca_base_var: set all file global variables to initial states on
finalize.
- btl/vader: decrement enumerator reference count to ensure that it
is freed.
Signed-off-by: Nathan Hjelm <hjelmn@lanl.gov>
This commit fixes the following bugs:
- opal_output_finalize did not properly set internal state. This
caused problems when calling the sequence opal_output_init (),
opal_output_finalize (), opal_output_init ().
- opal_info support called mca_base_open () but never called the
matching mca_base_close (). mca_base_open () and mca_base_close ()
have been updated to use a open count instead of an open flag to
allow mca_base_open to be called through multiple paths (as may be
the case when MPI_T is in use).
- orte_info support did not register opal variables. This can cause
orte-info to not return opal variables.
- opal_info, orte_info, and ompi_info support have been updated to
use a register count.
- When opening the dl framework the reference count was added to
ensure the framework stuck around. The framework being closed
prematurely was a bug in the MCA base that has since been
corrected. The increment (and associated decrement) have been
removed.
- dl/dlopen did not set the value of
mca_dl_dlopen_component.filename_suffixes_mca_storage on each call
to register. Instead the value was set in the component
structure. This caused the value to be lost when re-loading the
component. Fixed by setting the default value in register.
- Reset shmem framework state on close to avoid returning a stale
component after reloading opal/shmem.
- MCA base parameters were not properly deregistered when the MCA
base was closed.
This commit may fix#374.
Signed-off-by: Nathan Hjelm <hjelmn@lanl.gov>
Enabling the FT code breaks compilation (again). This series
tries to fix the compiler errors. This is again only fixing
the compiler errors without any warranty that the result
might actually support FT again.
This first patch moves orte_cr_continue_like_restart from ORTE
to opal_cr_continue_like_restart in OPAL. This only leaves three
calls from OPAL to ORTE in the FT code. As it is not yet 100%
clear how to handle these calls the code orte_sstore.set_attr()
has been #ifdef'd out for now.
inserted in the ompi_proc_list as soon as it is created and it
is removed only upon the call to the destructor. In ompi_proc_finalize
we loop over all procs in ompi_proc_finalize and release them once.
However, as a proc is not removed from this list right away, we
decrease the ref count for each proc until it reach zero and the
proc is finally removed. Thus, we cannot clean the BML/BTL after
the call the ompi_proc_finalize.
A quick fix is to delay the call to ompi_proc_finalize until all
other frameworks have been finalized, and then the behavior
depicted above will give the expected outcome.
We recognize that this means other users of OPAL will need to "wrap" the opal_process_name_t if they desire to abstract it in some fashion. This is regrettable, and we are looking at possible alternatives that might mitigate that requirement. Meantime, however, we have to put the needs of the OMPI community first, and are taking this step to restore hetero and SPARC support.
Properly setup the opal_process_info structure early in the initialization procedure. Define the local hostname right at the beginning of opal_init so all parts of opal can use it. Overlay that during orte_init as the user may choose to remove fqdn and strip prefixes during that time. Setup the job_session_dir and other such info immediately when it becomes available during orte_init.
Update the VERSION file scheme:
* Remove "want_repo_rev".
* Add "tarball_version".
All values are now always included (major, minor, release, greek,
repo_rev). However, configure.ac now runs "opal_get_version.sh
... --tarball", which will return the value of tarball_version (if it
is non-empty) or the "full" version string (i.e.,
"major.minor.releasegreek").
Replace our old, clunky timing setup with a much nicer one that is only available if configured with --enable-timing. Add a tool for profiling clock differences between the nodes so you can get more precise timing measurements. I'll ask Artem to update the Github wiki with full instructions on how to use this setup.
This commit was SVN r32738.
WHAT: Merge the PMIx branch into the devel repo, creating a new
OPAL “lmix” framework to abstract PMI support for all RTEs.
Replace the ORTE daemon-level collectives with a new PMIx
server and update the ORTE grpcomm framework to support
server-to-server collectives
WHY: We’ve had problems dealing with variations in PMI implementations,
and need to extend the existing PMI definitions to meet exascale
requirements.
WHEN: Mon, Aug 25
WHERE: https://github.com/rhc54/ompi-svn-mirror.git
Several community members have been working on a refactoring of the current PMI support within OMPI. Although the APIs are common, Slurm and Cray implement a different range of capabilities, and package them differently. For example, Cray provides an integrated PMI-1/2 library, while Slurm separates the two and requires the user to specify the one to be used at runtime. In addition, several bugs in the Slurm implementations have caused problems requiring extra coding.
All this has led to a slew of #if’s in the PMI code and bugs when the corner-case logic for one implementation accidentally traps the other. Extending this support to other implementations would have increased this complexity to an unacceptable level.
Accordingly, we have:
* created a new OPAL “pmix” framework to abstract the PMI support, with separate components for Cray, Slurm PMI-1, and Slurm PMI-2 implementations.
* Replaced the current ORTE grpcomm daemon-based collective operation with an integrated PMIx server, and updated the grpcomm APIs to provide more flexible, multi-algorithm support for collective operations. At this time, only the xcast and allgather operations are supported.
* Replaced the current global collective id with a signature based on the names of the participating procs. The allows an unlimited number of collectives to be executed by any group of processes, subject to the requirement that only one collective can be active at a time for a unique combination of procs. Note that a proc can be involved in any number of simultaneous collectives - it is the specific combination of procs that is subject to the constraint
* removed the prior OMPI/OPAL modex code
* added new macros for executing modex send/recv to simplify use of the new APIs. The send macros allow the caller to specify whether or not the BTL supports async modex operations - if so, then the non-blocking “fence” operation is used, if the active PMIx component supports it. Otherwise, the default is a full blocking modex exchange as we currently perform.
* retained the current flag that directs us to use a blocking fence operation, but only to retrieve data upon demand
This commit was SVN r32570.
also replase the OMPI_CAST_RTE_NAME macro with
an inline function if OPAL_ENABLE_DEBUG, so we can
get warnings from the compiler if ampersand is missing.
Thanks to Paul Hargrove for reporting the bugs
This commit was SVN r32408.
communication library should use to initialize itself.
Ralph will champion this change back with an RFC if there is a realistic
need/use case from the community.
This commit was SVN r32361.
The following SVN revision numbers were found above:
r32355 --> open-mpi/ompi@c903917f47
WHAT: Open our low-level communication infrastructure by moving all necessary components (btl/rcache/allocator/mpool) down in OPAL
All the components required for inter-process communications are currently deeply integrated in the OMPI layer. Several groups/institutions have express interest in having a more generic communication infrastructure, without all the OMPI layer dependencies. This communication layer should be made available at a different software level, available to all layers in the Open MPI software stack. As an example, our ORTE layer could replace the current OOB and instead use the BTL directly, gaining access to more reactive network interfaces than TCP. Similarly, external software libraries could take advantage of our highly optimized AM (active message) communication layer for their own purpose. UTK with support from Sandia, developped a version of Open MPI where the entire communication infrastucture has been moved down to OPAL (btl/rcache/allocator/mpool). Most of the moved components have been updated to match the new schema, with few exceptions (mainly BTLs where I have no way of compiling/testing them). Thus, the completion of this RFC is tied to being able to completing this move for all BTLs. For this we need help from the rest of the Open MPI community, especially those supporting some of the BTLs. A non-exhaustive list of BTLs that qualify here is: mx, portals4, scif, udapl, ugni, usnic.
This commit was SVN r32317.
We have been getting several requests for new collectives that need to be inserted in various places of the MPI layer, all in support of either checkpoint/restart or various research efforts. Until now, this would require that the collective id's be generated at launch. which required modification
s to ORTE and other places. We chose not to make collectives reusable as the race conditions associated with resetting collective counters are daunti
ng.
This commit extends the collective system to allow self-generation of collective id's that the daemons need to support, thereby allowing developers to request any number of collectives for their work. There is one restriction: RTE collectives must occur at the process level - i.e., we don't curren
tly have a way of tagging the collective to a specific thread. From the comment in the code:
* In order to allow scalable
* generation of collective id's, they are formed as:
*
* top 32-bits are the jobid of the procs involved in
* the collective. For collectives across multiple jobs
* (e.g., in a connect_accept), the daemon jobid will
* be used as the id will be issued by mpirun. This
* won't cause problems because daemons don't use the
* collective_id
*
* bottom 32-bits are a rolling counter that recycles
* when the max is hit. The daemon will cleanup each
* collective upon completion, so this means a job can
* never have more than 2**32 collectives going on at
* a time. If someone needs more than that - they've got
* a problem.
*
* Note that this means (for now) that RTE-level collectives
* cannot be done by individual threads - they must be
* done at the overall process level. This is required as
* there is no guaranteed ordering for the collective id's,
* and all the participants must agree on the id of the
* collective they are executing. So if thread A on one
* process asks for a collective id before thread B does,
* but B asks before A on another process, the collectives will
* be mixed and not result in the expected behavior. We may
* find a way to relax this requirement in the future by
* adding a thread context id to the jobid field (maybe taking the
* lower 16-bits of that field).
This commit includes a test program (orte/test/mpi/coll_test.c) that cycles 100 times across barrier and modex collectives.
This commit was SVN r32203.
I recently found a case where ompi_mpi_abort() segv's:
{{{
$ mpirun --mca btl non_existent_btl_name ...
}}}
In this case, the BML init fails because we have no paths to any
peers. It calls ompi_mpi_abort(), but this is before ompi_comm_self
has been setup. ompi_mpi_abort() assumes that if the comm parameter
is != NULL, it can be used. But since we aborted so early in
MPI_INIT, that's a false assumption.
(note that this isn't happening on v1.8 because the check for
INIT/FINALIZE in ompi_mpi_abort() is a little different. Hence: this
is a trunk issue -- at least for now)
When fixing this problem, I noticed a few other problems in ompi_mpi_abort():
* the group access was incorrect (it didn't use accessor functions)
* it wasn't clear that ORTE's ompi_rte_abort_peers() returns
NOT_IMPLEMENTED and falls through down to ompi_rte_abort()
* the check for my proc in the communicator was a little more
complicated than necessary
* the logic for checking for aborts early in MPI_INIT wasn't right
* some comments were stale
* the hostname output in error messages would be NULL if MPI_FINALIZE
had been invoked
* it was possible to abort, but still exit with a 0 status
This commit fixes all of the above problems, and makes the logic a
little more straightforward. Thanks to Ralph Castain and George
Bosilca for the assists with this patch.
This commit was SVN r32125.
Based on extensive discussions before/at the June 2014 developer's
meeting, put a lengthy comment explaining a second reason why we
''must'' use an RTE barrier during MPI_FINALIZE and
MPI_COMM_DISCONNECT (i.e., unreliable transports). Slightly explain
more the original reason why we do this, too (BTLs can lie/buffer a
message without actually injecting it on the network).
This commit was SVN r32095.
This commit fixes leaks of bml endpoints in finalize. A summary of the
bugs/fixes is below.
1) ompi_mpi_finalize used ompi_proc_all to get the list of procs but
never released the reference to them (ompi_proc_all called
OBJ_RETAIN on all the procs returned). When calling del_procs at
finalize it should suffice to call ompi_proc_world which does not
increment the reference count.
2) del_procs is called BEFORE ompi_comm_finalize. This leaves the
references to the procs from calling the pml_add_comm
function. The fix is to reorder the calls to do omp_comm_finalize,
del_procs, pml_finalize instead of del_procs, pml_finalize,
ompi_comm_finalize.
3) The check in del_procs in r2 checked for a reference count of
1. This is incorrect. At this point there should be 2 references:
1 from ompi_proc, and another from the add_procs. The fix is to
change this check to look for a reference count of 22. This check
makes me extremely uncomforable as nothing will call del_procs if
the reference count of a procs is not 2 when del_procs is
called. Maybe there should be an assert since this is a developer
error IMHO.
cmr=v1.8.2:reviewer=bosilca
This commit was SVN r31782.
The following SVN revision numbers were found above:
r2 --> open-mpi/ompi@58fdc18855
This commit fixes three leaks:
- bml/r2: fix leak of del_procs in mca_bml_r2_del_procs
- Release the modex data in btl/scif, btl/ugni, and btl/vader
- ompi_mpi_finalize: close the allocator framework
cmr=v1.8.2:reviewer=jsquyres
This commit was SVN r31778.
The following SVN revision numbers were found above:
r2 --> open-mpi/ompi@58fdc18855
So track that the rte has reached that point, and only emit the new message if it is accurate.
Note that we still generate a TON of output for a minor error:
Ralphs-iMac:examples rhc$ mpirun -n 3 -mca btl sm ./hello_c
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
At least one pair of MPI processes are unable to reach each other for
MPI communications. This means that no Open MPI device has indicated
that it can be used to communicate between these processes. This is
an error; Open MPI requires that all MPI processes be able to reach
each other. This error can sometimes be the result of forgetting to
specify the "self" BTL.
Process 1 ([[50239,1],2]) is on host: Ralphs-iMac
Process 2 ([[50239,1],2]) is on host: Ralphs-iMac
BTLs attempted: sm
Your MPI job is now going to abort; sorry.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
*** An error occurred in MPI_Init
*** on a NULL communicator
*** MPI_ERRORS_ARE_FATAL (processes in this communicator will now abort,
*** and potentially your MPI job)
*** An error occurred in MPI_Init
*** on a NULL communicator
*** MPI_ERRORS_ARE_FATAL (processes in this communicator will now abort,
*** and potentially your MPI job)
*** An error occurred in MPI_Init
*** on a NULL communicator
*** MPI_ERRORS_ARE_FATAL (processes in this communicator will now abort,
*** and potentially your MPI job)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
MPI_INIT has failed because at least one MPI process is unreachable
from another. This *usually* means that an underlying communication
plugin -- such as a BTL or an MTL -- has either not loaded or not
allowed itself to be used. Your MPI job will now abort.
You may wish to try to narrow down the problem;
* Check the output of ompi_info to see which BTL/MTL plugins are
available.
* Run your application with MPI_THREAD_SINGLE.
* Set the MCA parameter btl_base_verbose to 100 (or mtl_base_verbose,
if using MTL-based communications) to see exactly which
communication plugins were considered and/or discarded.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
-------------------------------------------------------
Primary job terminated normally, but 1 process returned
a non-zero exit code.. Per user-direction, the job has been aborted.
-------------------------------------------------------
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
mpirun detected that one or more processes exited with non-zero status, thus causing
the job to be terminated. The first process to do so was:
Process name: [[50239,1],2]
Exit code: 1
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
[Ralphs-iMac.local:23227] 2 more processes have sent help message help-mca-bml-r2.txt / unreachable proc
[Ralphs-iMac.local:23227] Set MCA parameter "orte_base_help_aggregate" to 0 to see all help / error messages
[Ralphs-iMac.local:23227] 2 more processes have sent help message help-mpi-runtime / mpi_init:startup:pml-add-procs-fail
Ralphs-iMac:examples rhc$
Hopefully, we can agree on a way to reduce this verbage!
This commit was SVN r31686.
The following SVN revision numbers were found above:
r2 --> open-mpi/ompi@58fdc18855