6ab3289582
/usr cannot be included on RHEL7 like distros |
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.. | ||
buildrpm.sh | ||
buildswitcherrpm.sh | ||
ompi-spec-generator.py | ||
openmpi-switcher-modulefile.spec | ||
openmpi-switcher-modulefile.tcl | ||
openmpi.spec | ||
README | ||
README.ompi-spec-generator |
Copyright (c) 2004-2006 The Trustees of Indiana University and Indiana University Research and Technology Corporation. All rights reserved. Copyright (c) 2004-2006 The University of Tennessee and The University of Tennessee Research Foundation. All rights reserved. Copyright (c) 2004-2006 High Performance Computing Center Stuttgart, University of Stuttgart. All rights reserved. Copyright (c) 2004-2006 The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved. Copyright (c) 2006-2009 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. $COPYRIGHT$ Additional copyrights may follow $HEADER$ =========================================================================== Note that you probably want to download the latest release of the SRPM for any given Open MPI version. The SRPM release number is the version after the dash in the SRPM filename. For example, "openmpi-1.6.3-2.src.rpm" is the 2nd release of the SRPM for Open MPI v1.6.3. Subsequent releases of SRPMs typically contain bug fixes for the RPM packaging, but not Open MPI itself. The buildrpm.sh script takes a single argument -- a filename pointing to an Open MPI tarball (may be either .gz or .bz2). It will create one or more RPMs from this tarball: 1. Source RPM 2. "All in one" RPM, where all of Open MPI is put into a single RPM. 3. "Multiple" RPM, where Open MPI is split into several sub-package RPMs: - openmpi-runtime - openmpi-devel - openmpi-docs The prefix, target architecture, and choice of RPM(s) to build are all currently hard-coded in the beginning of the buildrpm.sh script. Alternatively, you can build directly from the openmpi.spec spec file or SRPM directly. Many options can be passed to the building process via rpmbuild's --define option (there are older versions of rpmbuild that do not seem to handle --define'd values properly in all cases, but we generally don't care about those old versions of rpmbuild...). The available options are described in the comments in the beginning of the spec file in this directory.