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Автор SHA1 Сообщение Дата
Ralph Castain
368684bd63 Revert e9bc293 and try a different approach for scalably dealing with hetero clusters. Have each orted send back its topo "signature". If mpirun detects that this signature has not been seen before, then ask for that daemon to send back its full topology description. This allows the system to only get the topology once for each unique topo in the cluster.
Cleanup a typo, and remove no longer needed MCA params for hetero nodes and hetero apps. Hetero nodes will always be automatically detected. We don't support a mix of 32 and 64 bit apps

Modify the orte_node_t to use orte_topology_t instead of hwloc_topology_t, updating all the places that use it. Ensure that we properly update topology when we see a different one on a compute node.

Signed-off-by: Ralph Castain <rhc@open-mpi.org>
2017-01-18 10:22:15 -08:00
Ralph Castain
e9bc2934be Add an MCA param "hnp_on_smgmt_node" that mpirun can use to tell the orteds to ignore its topology signature as mpirun is executing on a system mgmt node, and hence a different topology than the compute nodes
Signed-off-by: Ralph Castain <rhc@open-mpi.org>
2017-01-16 19:32:01 -08:00
Ralph Castain
9eab9a1ed3 Remove stale global variables
Revamp the event notification integration to rely on the PMIx event chaining and remove the duplicate chaining in OPAL. This ensures we get system-level events that target non-default handlers.

Restore the hostname entries for MPI-level error messages, but provide an MCA param (orte_hostname_cutoff) to remove them for large clusters where the memory footprint is problematic. Set the default at 1000 nodes in the job (not the allocation).

Begin first cut at memory profiler

Some minor cleanups of memprobe

Signed-off-by: Ralph Castain <rhc@open-mpi.org>
2017-01-02 14:04:24 -08:00
Ralph Castain
649301a3a2 Revise the routed framework to be multi-select so it can support the new conduit system. Update all calls to rml.send* to the new syntax. Define an orte_mgmt_conduit for admin and IOF messages, and an orte_coll_conduit for all collective operations (e.g., xcast, modex, and barrier).
Still not completely done as we need a better way of tracking the routed module being used down in the OOB - e.g., when a peer drops connection, we want to remove that route from all conduits that (a) use the OOB and (b) are routed, but we don't want to remove it from an OFI conduit.
2016-10-23 21:52:39 -07:00
Ralph Castain
de7b1494d9 Clean out old cruft from the ORCM project 2016-09-21 00:13:30 -07:00
Ralph Castain
d72c1c72ff Do not push child processes into separate process groups so that any host RM can still "see" them, and ensure that any signal sent to the orted's themselves will be provided to all child processes. Forward all signals from mpirun to the child processes, removing the old MCA parameter required to turn that behavior "on". 2016-03-06 17:55:09 -08:00
Ralph Castain
d653cf2847 Convert the orte_job_data pointer array to a hash table so it doesn't grow forever as we run lots and lots of jobs in the persistent DVM. 2016-02-21 11:55:49 -08:00
Ralph Castain
8f9508cace Further enhance the support for Singularity containers. Extend the "personality" command-line option to allow specifying both model (e.g., "ompi") and container (e.g., "singularity"), and add the necessary logic to support multiple options. Add a new pmix "isolated" component to handle singletons where no HNP is available since containers cannot launch the HNP. 2016-02-17 13:33:06 -08:00
Ralph Castain
50431001a3 Modify the IOF subsystem to handle per-job directives for redirecting IO to files, tagging IO, and timestamping IO.
Fix stdin reader
2016-02-16 18:54:38 -08:00
Ralph Castain
06c3dfc052 Refactor the ORTE DVM code so that external codes can submit multiple jobs using only a single connection to the HNP.
* Clean up the DVM so it continues to run even when applications error out and we would ordinarily abort the daemons.
* Create a new errmgr component for the DVM to handle the differences.
* Cleanup the DVM state component.
* Add ORTE bindings directory and brief README
* Pass a local tool index around to match jobs.
* Pass the jobid on job completion.
* Fix initialization logic.
* Add framework for python wrapper.
* Fix terminate-with-non-zero-exit behavior so it properly terminates only the indicated procs, notifies orte-submit, and orte-dvm continues executing.
* Add some missing options to orte-dvm
* Fix a bug in -host processing that caused us to ignore the #slots designator. Add a new attribute to indicate "do not expand the DVM" when submitting job spawn requests.
* It actually makes no sense that we treat the termination of all children differently than terminating the children of a specific job - it only creates confusion over the difference in behavior. So terminate children the same way regardless.

Extend the cmd_line utility to easily allow layering of command line definitions

Catch up with ORTE interface change and make build more generic.

Disable "fixed dvm" logic for now.

Add another cmd_line function to merge a table of cmd line options with another one, reporting as errors any duplicate entries. Use this to allow orterun to reuse the orted_submit code

Fix the "fixed_dvm" logic by ensuring we reset num_new_daemons to zero. Also ensure that the nidmap is sent with the first job so the downstream daemons get the node info. Remove a duplicate cmd line entry in orterun.

Revise the DVM startup procedure to pass the nidmap only once, at the startup of the DVM. This reduces the overhead on each job launch and ensures that the nidmap doesn't get overwritten.

Add new commands to get_orted_comm_cmd_str().

Move ORTE command line options to orte_globals.[ch].

Catch up with extra orte_submit_init parameter.

Add example code.

Add documentation.

Bump version.

The nidmap and routing data must be updated prior to propagating the xcast or else the xcast will fail.

Fix the return code so it is something more expected when an error occurs. Ensure we get an error returned to us when we fail to launch for some reason. In this case, we will always get a launch_cb as we did indeed attempt to spawn it. The error code will be returned in the complete_cb.

Fix the return code from orte_submit_job - it was returning the tracker index instead of "success". Take advantage of ORTE's pretty-print capabilities to provide a nice error output explaining why we failed to launch. Ensure we always get a launch_cb when we fail to launch, but no complete_cb as the job never launched.

Extend the error reporting capability to job completion as well.

Add index parameter to orte_submit_job().

Add orte_job_cancel and implement ORTE_DAEMON_TERMINATE_JOB_CMD.

Factor out dvm termination.

Parse the terminate option at tool level.

Add error string for ORTE_ERR_JOB_CANCELLED.

Add some safeguards.

Cleanup and/of comments.

Enable the return.

Properly ORTE_DECLSPEC orte_submit_halt.

Add orte_submit_halt and orte_submit_cancel to interface.

Use the plm interface to terminate the job
2016-02-13 08:10:44 -08:00
Ralph Castain
8bfbe7f16c Add a new MCA parameter for default_dash_host to offer a mirror of the default_hostfile 2015-10-31 19:09:54 -07:00
Ralph Castain
d97bc29102 Remove OPAL_HAVE_HWLOC qualifier and error out if --without-hwloc is given 2015-09-04 16:54:40 -07:00
Ralph Castain
869041f770 Purge whitespace from the repo 2015-06-23 20:59:57 -07:00
Ralph Castain
869b2891c4 When doing comm-spawn, track the last object we bound to and ensure that we start the next job on the next object so we avoid overload situations when they aren't necessary 2015-06-17 09:20:08 -07:00
Ralph Castain
028b00154d Complete implementation of the schizo framework to support OMPI component 2015-01-27 09:29:42 -06:00
Ralph Castain
9ac39b63cc Use the opal_progress_threads support for the ORTE progress thread in applications 2015-01-15 07:55:19 -08:00
Ralph Castain
bb529ebd8e Revise the way we handle hetero nodes as users are finding this (a) a significant surprise, and (b) confusing as to when it is required. So try to automate it a bit by creating a topology "signature" that mpirun can share on the cmd line with the remote daemons, thus allowing them to check to see if they match. This isn't comprehensive of course - for now, it only checks the number of each type of hwloc object on the node. This is good enough to pickup major differences (e.g., where we have different numbers of sockets or assigned core bindings).
Retain the hetero-nodes flag for those cases where the user *knows* that there are differences and our automated system isn't good enough to see it.

Will obviously require further refinement as we find out which variances it can detect, and which it cannot.
2014-12-08 15:38:14 -08:00
Ralph Castain
b6aa691e0a Fix incorrect implementation of new MCA param mca_base_env_list - it was not picking up envars and forwarding them, but only worked if you explicitly set a value for the envar. Ensure it works for both direct and indirect launch modes. Remove stale code as this replaced orte_forward_envars. Ensure it doesn't get passed to the ORTE daemons. 2014-10-16 12:58:56 -07:00
Elena
c905fe9b78 pmix: removed pmix_base_direct modex mca parameter, renamed orte_full_modex_cutoff and ompi_hostname_cutoff to direct_modex_cutoff 2014-10-09 06:15:31 +02:00
Ralph Castain
dfb952fa78 [Contribution from Artem - moved it to svn from git for him]
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.
2014-09-15 18:00:46 +00:00
Ralph Castain
aec5cd08bd Per the PMIx RFC:
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.
2014-08-21 18:56:47 +00:00
Ralph Castain
6c5e592785 Revert r32222, r32210, and r32203 as they created a problem when daemon collectives did not involve app procs on every node. Instead, modify the ompi/mca/rte/orte/rte_orte.h to add a new function that allows apps to request new daemon collective ids for use in barrier and modex operations. This will only appear in ORTE-based installations, but it is only being used by a couple of researchers at the moment.
Update the orte/test/mpi/coll_test.c test to show the revised example.

This commit was SVN r32234.

The following SVN revision numbers were found above:
  r32203 --> open-mpi/ompi@a523dba41d
  r32210 --> open-mpi/ompi@2ce11ed5c4
  r32222 --> open-mpi/ompi@d55f16db50
2014-07-15 03:48:00 +00:00
Ralph Castain
a523dba41d NOTE: this modifies the MPI-RTE interface
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.
2014-07-10 18:53:12 +00:00
Ralph Castain
356e7ea904 Move all collective id's into the attributes and let the job pack/unpack take care of them instead of singling them out. Add the envars just prior to forking the children instead of into the launch message itself. Remove a few #if CR as the attributes functionality can handle this condition now.
This commit was SVN r32133.
2014-07-03 15:58:13 +00:00
Ralph Castain
42bf7466fc This isn't as big a change as it appears - a change in one place caused a whole bunch of files to require updated #include's due to some arcane linkage. Rework the orte_wait code to reflect the introduction of the state machine. If we are in cleanup mode and just want to kill all our local children, then there is no reason to be polite about it as that introduces *very* long delays at scale. Just kill the procs and move on.
Refs trac:4717

This commit was SVN r32019.

The following Trac tickets were found above:
  Ticket 4717 --> https://svn.open-mpi.org/trac/ompi/ticket/4717
2014-06-17 17:57:51 +00:00
Ralph Castain
8736a1c138 Per RFC:
http://www.open-mpi.org/community/lists/devel/2014/05/14822.php

Revamp the ORTE global data structures to reduce memory footprint and add new features. Add ability to control/set cpu frequency, though this can only be done if the sys admin has setup the system to support it (or you run as root).

This commit was SVN r31916.
2014-06-01 16:14:10 +00:00
Ralph Castain
1107f9099e Per the RFC issued here:
http://www.open-mpi.org/community/lists/devel/2014/05/14827.php

Refactor PMI support

This commit was SVN r31907.
2014-06-01 04:28:17 +00:00
Ralph Castain
c3df744a3b Shift the orte_db_localrank key to the opal level. Add the job and proc-level session directory names to the database using opal_db keys.
This commit was SVN r30746.
2014-02-17 01:40:56 +00:00
Ralph Castain
449cd8f3d7 Update a couple of fields, add a scheduler field to proc_info
This commit was SVN r30718.
2014-02-13 23:30:04 +00:00
Adrian Reber
fde1040d2f Use unique collective ids for the checkpoint/restart code
This commit was SVN r30552.
2014-02-04 14:03:05 +00:00
Ralph Castain
193cceb483 Okay, since a certain other RM out there made a fuss about being able to lock their daemons to specified cores, offer the same option here. The MCA param orte_daemon_cores can be used to specify which core(s) you want the orte daemons to use. This will have no bearing on the application procs - unbound will remain unbound, and binding directives will be applied to the apps.
Yippee skippee...

This commit was SVN r30513.
2014-01-30 23:50:14 +00:00
Ralph Castain
80497d73cf Need to mark the daemon as alive so that exit commands are properly routed during abnormal terminations. Also, remove stale references to the "selected oob component" as we no longer require only one component be selected
cmr=v1.7.4:reviewer=jsquyres

This commit was SVN r30162.
2014-01-08 22:35:48 +00:00
Ralph Castain
71b52fe861 Ensure that comm_spawn'd procs get user-specified forwarded envars
Thanks to Tim Miller for reporting the regression from the 1.6 series

cmr=v1.7.4:reviewer=jsquyres:subject=Ensure that comm_spawn'd procs get user-specified forwarded envars

This commit was SVN r30012.
2013-12-20 14:47:35 +00:00
Ralph Castain
d44e4a311f Per request from Dave Goodell, add support for MPIEXEC_TIMEOUT - if set in the environment, terminate the job after the specified number of seconds has passed. Equivalent to MPICH functionality.
cmr=v1.7.4:reviewer=dgoodell:subject=add support for MPIEXEC_TIMEOUT

This commit was SVN r29831.
2013-12-07 01:58:32 +00:00
Ralph Castain
7480beb7f0 Per request from Nathan, add an offset value to the job struct so we can construct a "global rank" that spans multiple jobs during dynamic launch operations. Store a new ORTE_DB_GLOBAL_RANK value for each process in the database, and ensure that we share our own value during connect_accept so both sides can see it.
This isn't being used yet - just enabling Nathan to do what he needs.

***** NOTE: any use of the OMPI_DB_GLOBAL_RANK database key must be protected by #ifdef OMPI_DB_GLOBAL_RANK as not all RTE's will define this key. *****

This commit was SVN r29708.
2013-11-14 17:01:43 +00:00
Ralph Castain
f1e510154c Revise the launch timeout detection so we don't mistakenly declare "failed to start". Recognize that timeout is at the per-job level, and define the timeout param as a total value instead of seconds/daemon as it otherwise can get to be an enormous (and useless) number.
Resolves problems in loop_spawn where the timer was incorrectly firing and killing the overall job.

cmr=v1.7.4:reviewer=hjelmn

This commit was SVN r29661.
2013-11-11 23:50:40 +00:00
Ralph Castain
e35ad23176 Correctly compute usage for dynamic spawns when binding is invoked. Ensure we correctly account for existing process usage on each node when computing bindings during dynamic spawns.
cmr=v1.7.4:reviewer=hjelmn:subject=Correctly compute usage for dynamic spawns when binding is invoked

This commit was SVN r29649.
2013-11-10 00:38:01 +00:00
Ralph Castain
b12167abef Per a good suggestion from Jeff, make the coprocessor mapping more scalable by using a hash table to cache the coprocessor list, and then do a single pass thru the nodes at the end to assign hostid's.
Refs trac:3847

This commit was SVN r29439.

The following Trac tickets were found above:
  Ticket 3847 --> https://svn.open-mpi.org/trac/ompi/ticket/3847
2013-10-14 22:01:48 +00:00
Ralph Castain
24c811805f ****************************************************************
This change contains a non-mandatory modification
       of the MPI-RTE interface. Anyone wishing to support
       coprocessors such as the Xeon Phi may wish to add
       the required definition and underlying support
****************************************************************

Add locality support for coprocessors such as the Intel Xeon Phi.

Detecting that we are on a coprocessor inside of a host node isn't straightforward. There are no good "hooks" provided for programmatically detecting that "we are on a coprocessor running its own OS", and the ORTE daemon just thinks it is on another node. However, in order to properly use the Phi's public interface for MPI transport, it is necessary that the daemon detect that it is colocated with procs on the host.

So we have to split the locality to separately record "on the same host" vs "on the same board". We already have the board-level locality flag, but not quite enough flexibility to handle this use-case. Thus, do the following:

1. add OPAL_PROC_ON_HOST flag to indicate we share a host, but not necessarily the same board

2. modify OPAL_PROC_ON_NODE to indicate we share both a host AND the same board. Note that we have to modify the OPAL_PROC_ON_LOCAL_NODE macro to explicitly check both conditions

3. add support in opal/mca/hwloc/base/hwloc_base_util.c for the host to check for coprocessors, and for daemons to check to see if they are on a coprocessor. The former is done via hwloc, but support for the latter is not yet provided by hwloc. So the code for detecting we are on a coprocessor currently is Xeon Phi specific - hopefully, we will find more generic methods in the future.

4. modify the orted and the hnp startup so they check for coprocessors and to see if they are on a coprocessor, and have the orteds pass that info back in their callback message. Automatically detect that coprocessors have been found and identify which coprocessors are on which hosts. Note that this algo isn't scalable at the moment - this will hopefully be improved over time.

5. modify the ompi proc locality detection function to look for coprocessor host info IF the OMPI_RTE_HOST_ID database key has been defined. RTE's that choose not to provide this support do not have to do anything - the associated code will simply be ignored.

6. include some cleanup of the hwloc open/close code so it conforms to how we did things in other frameworks (e.g., having a single "frame" file instead of open/close). Also, fix the locality flags - e.g., being on the same node means you must also be on the same cluster/cu, so ensure those flags are also set.

cmr:v1.7.4:reviewer=hjelmn

This commit was SVN r29435.
2013-10-14 16:52:58 +00:00
Ralph Castain
f4f2287958 Singletons currently start out by spawning an HNP - this is required solely in the cases where the singleton subsequently calls MPI_Comm_spawn or publishes port info without support from an external orte-server. In all other cases, the HNP is of no value and can actually be a detriment by creating additional overhead on the node. This is particularly concerning for async operations where processes may begin as singletons and then dynamically wireup to perform pt2pt communications.
So we now allow singletons to start on their own, only spawning an HNP when initiating an operation that actually requires it.

cmr:v1.7.4:reviewer=jsquyres

This commit was SVN r29354.
2013-10-04 02:58:26 +00:00
Ralph Castain
d565a76814 Do some cleanup of the way we handle modex data. Identify data that needs to be shared with peers in my job vs data that needs to be shared with non-peers - no point in sharing extra data. When we share data with some process(es) from another job, we cannot know in advance what info they have or lack, so we have to share everything just in case. This limits the optimization we can do for things like comm_spawn.
Create a new required key in the OMPI layer for retrieving a "node id" from the database. ALL RTE'S MUST DEFINE THIS KEY. This allows us to compute locality in the MPI layer, which is necessary when we do things like intercomm_create.

cmr:v1.7.4:reviewer=rhc:subject=Cleanup handling of modex data

This commit was SVN r29274.
2013-09-27 00:37:49 +00:00
Ralph Castain
a200e4f865 As per the RFC, bring in the ORTE async progress code and the rewrite of OOB:
*** THIS RFC INCLUDES A MINOR CHANGE TO THE MPI-RTE INTERFACE ***

Note: during the course of this work, it was necessary to completely separate the MPI and RTE progress engines. There were multiple places in the MPI layer where ORTE_WAIT_FOR_COMPLETION was being used. A new OMPI_WAIT_FOR_COMPLETION macro was created (defined in ompi/mca/rte/rte.h) that simply cycles across opal_progress until the provided flag becomes false. Places where the MPI layer blocked waiting for RTE to complete an event have been modified to use this macro.

***************************************************************************************

I am reissuing this RFC because of the time that has passed since its original release. Since its initial release and review, I have debugged it further to ensure it fully supports tests like loop_spawn. It therefore seems ready for merge back to the trunk. Given its prior review, I have set the timeout for one week.

The code is in  https://bitbucket.org/rhc/ompi-oob2


WHAT:    Rewrite of ORTE OOB

WHY:       Support asynchronous progress and a host of other features

WHEN:    Wed, August 21

SYNOPSIS:
The current OOB has served us well, but a number of limitations have been identified over the years. Specifically:

* it is only progressed when called via opal_progress, which can lead to hangs or recursive calls into libevent (which is not supported by that code)

* we've had issues when multiple NICs are available as the code doesn't "shift" messages between transports - thus, all nodes had to be available via the same TCP interface.

* the OOB "unloads" incoming opal_buffer_t objects during the transmission, thus preventing use of OBJ_RETAIN in the code when repeatedly sending the same message to multiple recipients

* there is no failover mechanism across NICs - if the selected NIC (or its attached switch) fails, we are forced to abort

* only one transport (i.e., component) can be "active"


The revised OOB resolves these problems:

* async progress is used for all application processes, with the progress thread blocking in the event library

* each available TCP NIC is supported by its own TCP module. The ability to asynchronously progress each module independently is provided, but not enabled by default (a runtime MCA parameter turns it "on")

* multi-address TCP NICs (e.g., a NIC with both an IPv4 and IPv6 address, or with virtual interfaces) are supported - reachability is determined by comparing the contact info for a peer against all addresses within the range covered by the address/mask pairs for the NIC.

* a message that arrives on one TCP NIC is automatically shifted to whatever NIC that is connected to the next "hop" if that peer cannot be reached by the incoming NIC. If no TCP module will reach the peer, then the OOB attempts to send the message via all other available components - if none can reach the peer, then an "error" is reported back to the RML, which then calls the errmgr for instructions.

* opal_buffer_t now conforms to standard object rules re OBJ_RETAIN as we no longer "unload" the incoming object

* NIC failure is reported to the TCP component, which then tries to resend the message across any other available TCP NIC. If that doesn't work, then the message is given back to the OOB base to try using other components. If all that fails, then the error is reported to the RML, which reports to the errmgr for instructions

* obviously from the above, multiple OOB components (e.g., TCP and UD) can be active in parallel

* the matching code has been moved to the RML (and out of the OOB/TCP component) so it is independent of transport

* routing is done by the individual OOB modules (as opposed to the RML). Thus, both routed and non-routed transports can simultaneously be active

* all blocking send/recv APIs have been removed. Everything operates asynchronously.


KNOWN LIMITATIONS:

* although provision is made for component failover as described above, the code for doing so has not been fully implemented yet. At the moment, if all connections for a given peer fail, the errmgr is notified of a "lost connection", which by default results in termination of the job if it was a lifeline

* the IPv6 code is present and compiles, but is not complete. Since the current IPv6 support in the OOB doesn't work anyway, I don't consider this a blocker

* routing is performed at the individual module level, yet the active routed component is selected on a global basis. We probably should update that to reflect that different transports may need/choose to route in different ways

* obviously, not every error path has been tested nor necessarily covered

* determining abnormal termination is more challenging than in the old code as we now potentially have multiple ways of connecting to a process. Ideally, we would declare "connection failed" when *all* transports can no longer reach the process, but that requires some additional (possibly complex) code. For now, the code replicates the old behavior only somewhat modified - i.e., if a module sees its connection fail, it checks to see if it is a lifeline. If so, it notifies the errmgr that the lifeline is lost - otherwise, it notifies the errmgr that a non-lifeline connection was lost.

* reachability is determined solely on the basis of a shared subnet address/mask - more sophisticated algorithms (e.g., the one used in the tcp btl) are required to handle routing via gateways

* the RML needs to assign sequence numbers to each message on a per-peer basis. The receiving RML will then deliver messages in order, thus preventing out-of-order messaging in the case where messages travel across different transports or a message needs to be redirected/resent due to failure of a NIC

This commit was SVN r29058.
2013-08-22 16:37:40 +00:00
Ralph Castain
16c5b30a1f Since the calls to "PMI get" scale by number of procs (not nodes), it makes more sense to have the MCA param be the cutoff based on number of procs. Also, it occurred to me that this shouldn't impact the nidmap process as that is built and circulated when we launch via mpirun, not during direct launch.
So shift the cutoff param to the MPI layer, and have it solely determine whether or not we call modex_recv on the hostname. If comm_world is of size greater than the cutoff, then we don't automatically retrieve the hostname when we build the ompi_proc_t for a process - instead, we fill the hostname entry on first call to modex_recv for that process.

The param is now "ompi_hostname_cutoff=N", where N=number of procs for cutoff.

Refs trac:3729

This commit was SVN r29056.

The following Trac tickets were found above:
  Ticket 3729 --> https://svn.open-mpi.org/trac/ompi/ticket/3729
2013-08-22 03:40:26 +00:00
Ralph Castain
45e695928f As per the email discussion, revise the sparse handling of hostnames so that we avoid potential infinite loops while allowing large-scale users to improve their startup time:
* add a new MCA param orte_hostname_cutoff to specify the number of nodes at which we stop including hostnames. This defaults to INT_MAX => always include hostnames. If a value is given, then we will include hostnames for any allocation smaller than the given limit.

* remove ompi_proc_get_hostname. Replace all occurrences with a direct link to ompi_proc_t's proc_hostname, protected by appropriate "if NULL"

* modify the OMPI-ORTE integration component so that any call to modex_recv automatically loads the ompi_proc_t->proc_hostname field as well as returning the requested info. Thus, any process whose modex info you retrieve will automatically receive the hostname. Note that on-demand retrieval is still enabled - i.e., if we are running under direct launch with PMI, the hostname will be fetched upon first call to modex_recv, and then the ompi_proc_t->proc_hostname field will be loaded

* removed a stale MCA param "mpi_keep_peer_hostnames" that was no longer used anywhere in the code base

* added an envar lookup in ess/pmi for the number of nodes in the allocation. Sadly, PMI itself doesn't provide that info, so we have to get it a different way. Currently, we support PBS-based systems and SLURM - for any other, rank0 will emit a warning and we assume max number of daemons so we will always retain hostnames

This commit was SVN r29052.
2013-08-20 18:59:36 +00:00
Nathan Hjelm
cf377db823 MCA/base: Add new MCA variable system
Features:
 - Support for an override parameter file (openmpi-mca-param-override.conf).
   Variable values in this file can not be overridden by any file or environment
   value.
 - Support for boolean, unsigned, and unsigned long long variables.
 - Support for true/false values.
 - Support for enumerations on integer variables.
 - Support for MPIT scope, verbosity, and binding.
 - Support for command line source.
 - Support for setting variable source via the environment using
   OMPI_MCA_SOURCE_<var name>=source (either command or file:filename)
 - Cleaner API.
 - Support for variable groups (equivalent to MPIT categories).

Notes:
 - Variables must be created with a backing store (char **, int *, or bool *)
   that must live at least as long as the variable.
 - Creating a variable with the MCA_BASE_VAR_FLAG_SETTABLE enables the use of
   mca_base_var_set_value() to change the value.
 - String values are duplicated when the variable is registered. It is up to
   the caller to free the original value if necessary. The new value will be
   freed by the mca_base_var system and must not be freed by the user.
 - Variables with constant scope may not be settable.
 - Variable groups (and all associated variables) are deregistered when the
   component is closed or the component repository item is freed. This
   prevents a segmentation fault from accessing a variable after its component
   is unloaded.
 - After some discussion we decided we should remove the automatic registration
   of component priority variables. Few component actually made use of this
   feature.
 - The enumerator interface was updated to be general enough to handle
   future uses of the interface.
 - The code to generate ompi_info output has been moved into the MCA variable
   system. See mca_base_var_dump().

opal: update core and components to mca_base_var system
orte: update core and components to mca_base_var system
ompi: update core and components to mca_base_var system

This commit also modifies the rmaps framework. The following variables were
moved from ppr and lama: rmaps_base_pernode, rmaps_base_n_pernode,
rmaps_base_n_persocket. Both lama and ppr create synonyms for these variables.

This commit was SVN r28236.
2013-03-27 21:09:41 +00:00
Ralph Castain
6ee32767d4 Restore the cpus-per-proc option for byslot and bynode mapping. Remove the bind_idx (which recorded the index of the hwloc object where the proc was bound) as this would no longer be unique, and just use the bitmap as the standard reference for location. Update the relative locality computation to take bitmaps as its argument.
This commit was SVN r28219.
2013-03-26 18:27:50 +00:00
Ralph Castain
147c6ff9e7 Clean out the cruft leftover from the use_common_ports experiment
cmr:v1.7

This commit was SVN r28184.
2013-03-20 15:07:43 +00:00
Ralph Castain
a4b6fb241f Remove all remaining vestiges of the Windows integration
This commit was SVN r28137.
2013-02-28 17:31:47 +00:00
Ralph Castain
cf9796accd Remove the old configure option for disabling full rte support - we now use the OMPI rte framework for such purposes
This commit was SVN r28134.
2013-02-28 01:35:55 +00:00
Ralph Castain
bd9265c560 Per the meeting on moving the BTLs to OPAL, move the ORTE database "db" framework to OPAL so the relocated BTLs can access it. Because the data is indexed by process, this requires that we define a new "opal_identifier_t" that corresponds to the orte_process_name_t struct. In order to support multiple run-times, this is defined in opal/mca/db/db_types.h as a uint64_t without identifying the meaning of any part of that data.
A few changes were required to support this move:

1. the PMI component used to identify rte-related data (e.g., host name, bind level) and package them as a unit to reduce the number of PMI keys. This code was moved up to the ORTE layer as the OPAL layer has no understanding of these concepts. In addition, the component locally stored data based on process jobid/vpid - this could no longer be supported (see below for the solution).

2. the hash component was updated to use the new opal_identifier_t instead of orte_process_name_t as its index for storing data in the hash tables. Previously, we did a hash on the vpid and stored the data in a 32-bit hash table. In the revised system, we don't see a separate "vpid" field - we only have a 64-bit opaque value. The orte_process_name_t hash turned out to do nothing useful, so we now store the data in a 64-bit hash table. Preliminary tests didn't show any identifiable change in behavior or performance, but we'll have to see if a move back to the 32-bit table is required at some later time.

3. the db framework was a "select one" system. However, since the PMI component could no longer use its internal storage system, the framework has now been changed to a "select many" mode of operation. This allows the hash component to handle all internal storage, while the PMI component only handles pushing/pulling things from the PMI system. This was something we had planned for some time - when fetching data, we first check internal storage to see if we already have it, and then automatically go to the global system to look for it if we don't. Accordingly, the framework was provided with a custom query function used during "select" that lets you seperately specify the "store" and "fetch" ordering.

4. the ORTE grpcomm and ess/pmi components, and the nidmap code,  were updated to work with the new db framework and to specify internal/global storage options.

No changes were made to the MPI layer, except for modifying the ORTE component of the OMPI/rte framework to support the new db framework.

This commit was SVN r28112.
2013-02-26 17:50:04 +00:00