and George on these refinements):
* Rename the static OBJ initializer macro to be
OPAL_OBJ_STATIC_INIT(class)
* Ensure that all static OBJ initializations get a refcount of 1
(doesn't ''really'' matter, since they're static, it should never
get to the point where the OBJ is DESTRUCTed, but more correct
nonetheless)
* Add a "magic number" to the OBJ when compiling with debug support.
The magic number does some rudimentary support to ensure that
you're operating on a valid OBJ (and fails an assertion if you're
not). Check to ensure that the memory contains the magic number
when performing actions of OBJ's. Also remove the magic number
when DESTRUCTing OBJs, so that if, for example, an OBJ is
DESTRUCTed more than once, we'll fail the magic number assert.
This commit was SVN r13338.
The following SVN revision numbers were found above:
r13227 --> open-mpi/ompi@96030de97b
r13228 --> open-mpi/ompi@c2e9075d29
for the C++ bindings in MPI-2 p276-278 to see that MPI_BOOL should
work with MPI_LAND, MPI_LOR, and MPI_LXOR. Thanks to Andy Selle for
pointing this out.
This commit was SVN r9200.
- move files out of toplevel include/ and etc/, moving it into the
sub-projects
- rather than including config headers with <project>/include,
have them as <project>
- require all headers to be included with a project prefix, with
the exception of the config headers ({opal,orte,ompi}_config.h
mpi.h, and mpif.h)
This commit was SVN r8985.
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.
"MPI_OP_foo")
- Remove all the handlers for MPI_REPLACE for general reductions
(it's only defined for MPI_ACCUMULATE, and ACCUMULATE is handled
differently than the other reductions, so it's safe to make all the
maps for REPLACE be empty)
This commit was SVN r8008.
MPI_UNSIGNED_LONG_LONG, MPI_LONG_LONG, and MPI_LONG_LONG_INT --
although I already had implementations of all the relevant functions
for these types. Doh!
This commit was SVN r7944.