to *not* use the STL as well as removing the STL use from the error handler
routines. This was removing the STL from the C++ bindings (Solaris has 2
versions of the STL; if OMPI uses one and an MPI application wants to use
another, Bad Things happen).
The main idea is to wrap up the C++ callback function pointers and the user's
extra_state into our own struct that is passed as the extra_state to the C
keyval registration along with the intercept routines in intercepts.cc. When the
C++ intercepts are activated, they unwrap the user's callback and extra state
and call them.
This commit was SVN r17409.
single threaded builds. In its default configuration, all this does
is ensure that there's at least a good chance of threads building
based on non-threaded development (since the variable names will be
checked). There is also code to make sure that a "mutex" is never
"double locked" when using the conditional macro mutex operations.
This is off by default because there are a number of places in both
ORTE and OMPI where this alarm spews mega bytes of errors on a
simple test. So we have some work to do on our path towards
thread support.
Also removed the macro versions of the non-conditional thread locks,
as the only places they were used, the author of the code intended
to use the conditional thread locks. So now you have upper-case
macros for conditional thread locks and lowercase functions for
non-conditional locks. Simple, right? :).
This commit was SVN r15011.
The C++ bindings were not tracking keyvals properly -- they were
freeing some internal meta data when Free_keyval() was called, not
when the keyval was actually destroyed (keyvals are refcounted in the
C layer, just like all other MPI objects, because they can live for
long after their corresponding Free call is invoked). This commit
fixes this problem and several other things:
* Add infrastructure on the ompi_attribute_keyval_t for an "extra"
destructor pointer that will be invoked during the "real"
constructor (i.e., when OBJ_RELEASE puts the refcount to 0). This
allows calling back into the C++ layer to release meta data
associated with the keyval.
* Adjust all cases where keyvals are created to pass in relevant
destructors (NULL or the C++ destructor).
* Do essentially the same for MPI::Comm, MPI::Win, and MPI:Datatype:
* Move several functions out of the .cc file into the _inln.h file
since they no longer require locks
* Make the 4 Create_keyval() functions call a common back-end
keyval creation function that does the Right Thing depending on
whether C or C++ function pointers were used for the keyval
functions. The back-end function does not call the corresponding
C MPI_*_create_keyval function, but rather does the work itself
so that it can associate a "destructor" callback for the C++
bindings for when the keyval is actually destroyed.
* Change a few type names to be more indicative of what they are
(mostly dealing with keyvals [not "keys"]).
* Add the 3 missing bindings for MPI::Comm::Create_keyval().
* Remove MPI::Comm::comm_map (and associated types) because it's no
longer necessary in the intercepts -- it was a by-product of being
a portable C++ bindings layer. Now we can just query the C layer
directly to figure out what type a communicator is. This solves
some logistics / callback issues, too.
* Rename several types, variables, and fix many comments in the
back-end C attribute implementation to make the names really
reflect what they are (keyvals vs. attributes). The previous names
heavily overloaded the name "key" and were ''extremely''
confusing.
This commit was SVN r13565.
The following Trac tickets were found above:
Ticket 817 --> https://svn.open-mpi.org/trac/ompi/ticket/817
* Fix for two problems introduced by r10661:
1. ensure to use the key ''after'' it is initialized (sigh).
1. handle the case where we free the attrkey before it is fully
initialized (i.e., some other error causes us to free it). In
this case, don't try to remove the key from the hash map,
because it won't exist.
* More accurate zeroing in the keyval constructor
(ompi_attrkey_item_constructor)
* Widen the scope of the alock such that the attrkey destructor does
not need to acquire it. Instead, assume that the caller already
has it.
* Add a comment about why the keyval may get destroyed as the result
of deleting an attribute (so that I don't have to figure it out
again the next time I read this code :-) )
This commit was SVN r10664.
The following SVN revision numbers were found above:
r10661 --> open-mpi/ompi@fdba2c9df0
thread safety. This is likely to be only the first of multiple steps
for complete thread safety in the MPI attribute code. All tests
[continue to] pass the intel and ibm attribute tests.
Also renamed a variable from "attr" to "attrkey" to reflect that it's
a keyval, not an attribute.
This commit was SVN r10661.
to use the appropriate macro for all the Fortran .TRUE. handling, or
things get misinterpeted and, with some compilers, it will look like
the attribute wasn't copied properly.
This commit was SVN r9536.
is the last one on the list and as on C the caller "make it right" this addition
will not affect the way we handle the user defined copy functions. Only the C
version of the function has this additional parameter. As it represent the pointer
to the newly created MPI object It hold the key to allow us to modify the new
object (communicator, window or type) depending on some key stored on the initial
communicator.
This commit was SVN r9371.
- 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.
complete, but stable enough that it will have no impact on general development,
so into the trunk it goes. Changes in this commit include:
- Remove the --with option for disabling MPI-2 onesided support. It
complicated code, and has no real reason for existing
- add a framework osc (OneSided Communication) for encapsulating
all the MPI-2 onesided functionality
- Modify the MPI interface functions for the MPI-2 onesided chapter
to properly call the underlying framework and do the required
error checking
- Created an osc component pt2pt, which is layered over the BML/BTL
for communication (although it also uses the PML for long message
transfers). Currently, all support functions, all communication
functions (Put, Get, Accumulate), and the Fence synchronization
function are implemented. The PWSC active synchronization
functions and Lock/Unlock passive synchronization functions are
still not implemented
This commit was SVN r8836.