1. Ensure to override CFLAGS properly. Move the setting of CFLAGS outside the AM_CONDITIONAL so that Automake doesn't get confused (because CFLAGS is already set inside an AM_CONDITIONAL -- moving it outside the conditional ensure that this local CFLAGS override trumps all other CFLAGS overrides).
2. Only build libfabric on Linux. Add a little more configury to ensure that we only try to build libfabric on Linux.
3. Remove a dead/unused file
4. Fix typo in condition check
5. Use "false", not "/bin/false"
This commit represents the conversion of the usnic BTL from verbs to
libfabric.
For the moment, libfabric is embedded in Open MPI (currently in the
usnic BTL). This is because the libfabric API is still changing, and
also has not yet been released. Ultimately, this embedded copy of
libfabric will likely disappear and the usnic BTL will rely on an
external installation of libfabric.
New configure options:
* --with-libfabric: will cause configure to fail if libfabric support
cannot be built
* --without-libfabric: will prevent libfabric support from being built
* --with-libfabric=DIR: use an external libfabric installation
* --with-libfabric-libdir=LIBDIR: when paired with --with-libfabric=DIR,
use LIBDIR for the libfabric installation library dir
The --with-libnl3[-libdir] arguments are now gone.
So we need all the routing code for dealing with cross-job communications, lifelines, etc. The HNP will be directly connected to all daemons as they must callback at startup, and so we need to track those children correctly so we know when it is okay to terminate.
We still have to support direct launch, though, as this is the only component we can use in that scenario. So if the app doesn't have daemon URI info, then it must fall back to directly connecting to everything.
Now that "make check" siphons off stdout/stderr to logfiles, it's ok
to have output by default from tests. This test fails often enough
that it's useful to see the diagnostic output.
Some versions of gcc require this flag to be set before the __sync
builtin atomic compare and swap will support 128-bit values. If the
flag is required this check adds the flag to the CFLAGS.
There currently is no standard support for 128-bit integer types. Any use
of the __int128 and int128_t types can lead to warnings from the compiler
when using -Wpedantic. Additionally, some compilers may support __int128
and other may support int128_t. This commit addresses both issues by
defining opal_int128_t if there is a supported 128-bit type. In the
case of GCC a pragma has been added to suppress warnings about __int128
not being a standard C type.
A 128-bit compare-and-swap will enable a better atomic lifo implementation
that uses the pointer + counter method to avoid ABA issues. This commit
adds configury to check for the instruction (cmpxchg16b) and adds an
implementation that uses the __int128 type available in C99.