This code really had no purpose; just assign FI_VERSION(1, 1). This
fixes CID 1315274.
Also clarify the commet about why we still retain libfabric v1.0.0
compatibility code, even though configure.m4 requires libfabric >= v1.1.0.
In short applications, it's possible that the agent (i.e., local rank
0) will finalize after non-local rank 0 procs detect the connectivity
checker named socket, but before they complete a connect() on it. As
such, their connect() gets ECONNREFUSED.
This commit adds a simple counter in the agent that won't let it quit
before it accept()'s from all local procs, or 10 seconds goes by
(whichever occurs first). This is similar to the timeout for the
clients: they'll exit if they don't see the expected named socket
within 10 seconds.
There's no longer any need for the usnic BTL to have its own progress
thread: it can use the opal_progress_thread() infrastructure. This
commit removes the code to startup/shutdown the usnic-BTL-specific
progress thread and instead, just adds its events to the OPAL-wide
progress thread.
This necessitated a small change in the finalization step.
Previously, we would stop the progress thread and then tear down the
events. We can no longer stop the progress thread, and if we start
tearing down events, this will cause shutdown/hangups to be sent
across sockets, potentially firing some of the still-remaining events
while some (but not all) of the data structures have been torn down.
Chaos ensues.
Instead, queue up an event to tear down all the pending events. Since
the progress thread will only fire one event at a time, having a
teardown event means that it can tear down all the pending events
"atomically" and not have to worry that one of those events will get
fired in the middle of the teardown process.
There are now four functions and one global constant:
* opal_progress_thread_name: the name of the OPAL-wide async progress
thread. If you have general purpose events that you need to run in
*a* progress thread, but not a *dedicated* progress thread, use this
name in the functions below to glom your events on to the general
OPAL-wide async progress thread.
* opal_progress_thread_init(): return an event base corresponding to a
progress thread of the specified name (a progress thread will be
created for that name if it does not already exist).
* opal_progress_thread_finalize(): decrement the refcount on the
passed progress thread name. If the refcount is 0, stop the thread
and destroy the event base.
* opal_progress_thread_pause(): stop processing events on the event
base corresponding to the progress thread name, but do not destroy
the event base.
* opal_progess_thread_resume(): resume processing events on the event
base corresponding to a previously-paused progress thread name.
Ensure that we have non-NULL on all levels of pointers, which will
save us if there are exitable errors very early during component /
module initialization.
since ibv_create_xrc_rcv_qp is now deprecated, and in order to
be "future-proof", we have to consider the case in which only XRC Domains are supported.
also, correctly handle distro that ship broken ibverbs devel headers
Thanks Paul Hargrove for the detailled report.
In libfabric v1.0.0 (i.e., API v1.0), the usnic provider handled
FI_MSG_PREFIX inconsistently between sends and receives. This has
been fixed in libfabric v1.1.0 (i.e., API v1.1): FI_MSG_PREFIX is
handled consistently for both sends and receives.
Run-time detect which libfabric we are running with and adapt behavior
appropriately.
Handle the differences between libfabric v1.0.0 and v1.1.0 in the
return value of fi_cq_readerr().
Also consolidate CRC and truncation errors into the same handling
block, since truncation errors are typically another symptom of CRC
errors. This ensures that buffers get reposted properly.
Instead of silently determining that the usnic BTL can't be built,
announce that usnic is checking for libfabric support, and then
AC_MSG_RESULT the result of that check.
@ggouaillardet is likely offline for the weekend, but master is broken
on RHEL 6.5 systems that do not have MOFED installed. So I'm taking
the liberty of revering this commit; I'm guessing Gilles will fixup
and re-commit next week.
This reverts commit 77f8282d51.
since ibv_create_xrc_rcv_qp is now deprecated, and in order to
be "future-proof", we have to consider the case in which only XRC Domains are supported.
Thanks Paul Hargrove for the detailled report.