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openmpi/ompi/op/op.h
George Bosilca 8d92231de3 Deprecated comment.
This commit was SVN r31472.
2014-04-21 23:30:05 +00:00

640 строки
22 KiB
C

/* -*- Mode: C; c-basic-offset:4 ; -*- */
/*
* Copyright (c) 2004-2006 The Trustees of Indiana University and Indiana
* University Research and Technology
* Corporation. All rights reserved.
* Copyright (c) 2004-2007 The University of Tennessee and The University
* of Tennessee Research Foundation. All rights
* reserved.
* Copyright (c) 2004-2007 High Performance Computing Center Stuttgart,
* University of Stuttgart. All rights reserved.
* Copyright (c) 2004-2005 The Regents of the University of California.
* All rights reserved.
* Copyright (c) 2008 UT-Battelle, LLC
* Copyright (c) 2008-2012 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
* Copyright (c) 2009 Sun Microsystems, Inc. All rights reserved.
* $COPYRIGHT$
*
* Additional copyrights may follow
*
* $HEADER$
*/
/**
* @file
*
* Public interface for the MPI_Op handle.
*/
#ifndef OMPI_OP_H
#define OMPI_OP_H
#include "ompi_config.h"
#include <stdio.h>
#include "mpi.h"
#include "opal/class/opal_object.h"
#include "ompi/datatype/ompi_datatype.h"
#include "ompi/mpi/fortran/base/fint_2_int.h"
#include "ompi/mca/op/op.h"
BEGIN_C_DECLS
/**
* Typedef for C op functions for user-defined MPI_Ops.
*
* We don't use MPI_User_function because this would create a
* confusing dependency loop between this file and mpi.h. So this is
* repeated code, but it's better this way (and this typedef will
* never change, so there's not much of a maintenance worry).
*/
typedef void (ompi_op_c_handler_fn_t)(void *, void *, int *,
struct ompi_datatype_t **);
/**
* Typedef for fortran user-defined MPI_Ops.
*/
typedef void (ompi_op_fortran_handler_fn_t)(void *, void *,
MPI_Fint *, MPI_Fint *);
/**
* Typedef for C++ op functions intercept (used for user-defined
* MPI::Ops).
*
* See the lengthy explanation for why this is different than the C
* intercept in ompi/mpi/cxx/intercepts.cc in the
* ompi_mpi_cxx_op_intercept() function.
*/
typedef void (ompi_op_cxx_handler_fn_t)(void *, void *, int *,
struct ompi_datatype_t **,
MPI_User_function * op);
/**
* Typedef for Java op functions intercept (used for user-defined
* MPI.Ops).
*
* See the lengthy explanation for why this is different than the C
* intercept in ompi/mpi/cxx/intercepts.cc in the
* ompi_mpi_cxx_op_intercept() function.
*/
typedef void (ompi_op_java_handler_fn_t)(void *, void *, int *,
struct ompi_datatype_t **,
int baseType,
void *jnienv, void *object);
/*
* Flags for MPI_Op
*/
/** Set if the MPI_Op is a built-in operation */
#define OMPI_OP_FLAGS_INTRINSIC 0x0001
/** Set if the callback function is in Fortran */
#define OMPI_OP_FLAGS_FORTRAN_FUNC 0x0002
/** Set if the callback function is in C++ */
#define OMPI_OP_FLAGS_CXX_FUNC 0x0004
/** Set if the callback function is in Java */
#define OMPI_OP_FLAGS_JAVA_FUNC 0x0008
/** Set if the callback function is associative (MAX and SUM will both
have ASSOC set -- in fact, it will only *not* be set if we
implement some extensions to MPI, because MPI says that all
MPI_Op's should be associative, so this flag is really here for
future expansion) */
#define OMPI_OP_FLAGS_ASSOC 0x0010
/** Set if the callback function is associative for floating point
operands (e.g., MPI_SUM will have ASSOC set, but will *not* have
FLOAT_ASSOC set) */
#define OMPI_OP_FLAGS_FLOAT_ASSOC 0x0020
/** Set if the callback function is communative */
#define OMPI_OP_FLAGS_COMMUTE 0x0040
/*
* Basic operation type for predefined types.
*/
enum ompi_op_type {
OMPI_OP_NULL,
OMPI_OP_MAX,
OMPI_OP_MIN,
OMPI_OP_SUM,
OMPI_OP_PROD,
OMPI_OP_LAND,
OMPI_OP_BAND,
OMPI_OP_LOR,
OMPI_OP_BOR,
OMPI_OP_LXOR,
OMPI_OP_BXOR,
OMPI_OP_MAXLOC,
OMPI_OP_MINLOC,
OMPI_OP_REPLACE,
OMPI_OP_NUM_OF_TYPES
};
/**
* Back-end type of MPI_Op
*/
struct ompi_op_t {
/** Parent class, for reference counting */
opal_object_t super;
/** Name, for debugging purposes */
char o_name[MPI_MAX_OBJECT_NAME];
enum ompi_op_type op_type;
/** Flags about the op */
uint32_t o_flags;
/** Index in Fortran <-> C translation array */
int o_f_to_c_index;
/** Union holding (2-buffer functions):
1. Function pointers for all supported datatypes when this op
is intrinsic
2. Function pointers for when this op is user-defined (only
need one function pointer for this; we call it for *all*
datatypes, even intrinsics)
*/
union {
/** Function/module pointers for intrinsic ops */
ompi_op_base_op_fns_t intrinsic;
/** C handler function pointer */
ompi_op_c_handler_fn_t *c_fn;
/** Fortran handler function pointer */
ompi_op_fortran_handler_fn_t *fort_fn;
/** C++ intercept function data -- see lengthy comment in
ompi/mpi/cxx/intercepts.cc::ompi_mpi_cxx_op_intercept() for
an explanation */
struct {
/* The user's function (it's the wrong type, but that's ok) */
ompi_op_c_handler_fn_t *user_fn;
/* The OMPI C++ callback/intercept function */
ompi_op_cxx_handler_fn_t *intercept_fn;
} cxx_data;
struct {
/* The OMPI C++ callback/intercept function */
ompi_op_java_handler_fn_t *intercept_fn;
/* The Java run time environment */
void *jnienv, *object;
int baseType;
} java_data;
} o_func;
/** 3-buffer functions, which is only for intrinsic ops. No need
for the C/C++/Fortran user-defined functions. */
ompi_op_base_op_3buff_fns_t o_3buff_intrinsic;
};
/**
* Convenience typedef
*/
typedef struct ompi_op_t ompi_op_t;
OMPI_DECLSPEC OBJ_CLASS_DECLARATION(ompi_op_t);
/**
* Padded struct to maintain back compatibiltiy.
* See ompi/communicator/communicator.h comments with struct ompi_communicator_t
* for full explanation why we chose the following padding construct for predefines.
*/
#define PREDEFINED_OP_PAD (sizeof(void*) * 256)
struct ompi_predefined_op_t {
struct ompi_op_t op;
char padding[PREDEFINED_OP_PAD - sizeof(ompi_op_t)];
};
typedef struct ompi_predefined_op_t ompi_predefined_op_t;
/**
* Array to map ddt->id values to the corresponding position in the op
* function array.
*
* NOTE: It is possible to have an implementation without this map.
* There are basically 3 choices for implementing "how to find the
* right position in the op array based on the datatype":
*
* 1. Use the exact same ordering as ddt->id in the op map. This is
* nice in that it's always a direct lookup via one memory
* de-reference. But it makes a sparse op array, and it's at least
* somewhat wasteful. It also chains the ddt and op implementations
* together. If the ddt ever changes its ordering, op is screwed. It
* seemed safer from a maintenance point of view not to do it that
* way.
*
* 2. Re-arrange the ddt ID values so that all the reducable types are
* at the beginning. This means that we can have a dense array here
* in op, but then we have the same problem as number one -- and so
* this didn't seem like a good idea from a maintenance point of view.
*
* 3. Create a mapping between the ddt->id values and the position in
* the op array. This allows a nice dense op array, and if we make
* the map based on symbolic values, then if ddt ever changes its
* ordering, it won't matter to op. This seemed like the safest thing
* to do from a maintenance perspective, and since it only costs one
* extra lookup, and that lookup is way cheaper than the function call
* to invoke the reduction operation, it seemed like the best idea.
*/
OMPI_DECLSPEC extern int ompi_op_ddt_map[OMPI_DATATYPE_MAX_PREDEFINED];
/**
* Global variable for MPI_OP_NULL (_addr flavor is for F03 bindings)
*/
OMPI_DECLSPEC extern ompi_predefined_op_t ompi_mpi_op_null;
OMPI_DECLSPEC extern ompi_predefined_op_t *ompi_mpi_op_null_addr;
/**
* Global variable for MPI_MAX (_addr flavor is for F03 bindings)
*/
OMPI_DECLSPEC extern ompi_predefined_op_t ompi_mpi_op_max;
OMPI_DECLSPEC extern ompi_predefined_op_t *ompi_mpi_op_max_addr;
/**
* Global variable for MPI_MIN (_addr flavor is for F03 bindings)
*/
OMPI_DECLSPEC extern ompi_predefined_op_t ompi_mpi_op_min;
OMPI_DECLSPEC extern ompi_predefined_op_t *ompi_mpi_op_min_addr;
/**
* Global variable for MPI_SUM (_addr flavor is for F03 bindings)
*/
OMPI_DECLSPEC extern ompi_predefined_op_t ompi_mpi_op_sum;
OMPI_DECLSPEC extern ompi_predefined_op_t *ompi_mpi_op_sum_addr;
/**
* Global variable for MPI_PROD (_addr flavor is for F03 bindings)
*/
OMPI_DECLSPEC extern ompi_predefined_op_t ompi_mpi_op_prod;
OMPI_DECLSPEC extern ompi_predefined_op_t *ompi_mpi_op_prod_addr;
/**
* Global variable for MPI_LAND (_addr flavor is for F03 bindings)
*/
OMPI_DECLSPEC extern ompi_predefined_op_t ompi_mpi_op_land;
OMPI_DECLSPEC extern ompi_predefined_op_t *ompi_mpi_op_land_addr;
/**
* Global variable for MPI_BAND (_addr flavor is for F03 bindings)
*/
OMPI_DECLSPEC extern ompi_predefined_op_t ompi_mpi_op_band;
OMPI_DECLSPEC extern ompi_predefined_op_t *ompi_mpi_op_band_addr;
/**
* Global variable for MPI_LOR (_addr flavor is for F03 bindings)
*/
OMPI_DECLSPEC extern ompi_predefined_op_t ompi_mpi_op_lor;
OMPI_DECLSPEC extern ompi_predefined_op_t *ompi_mpi_op_lor_addr;
/**
* Global variable for MPI_BOR (_addr flavor is for F03 bindings)
*/
OMPI_DECLSPEC extern ompi_predefined_op_t ompi_mpi_op_bor;
OMPI_DECLSPEC extern ompi_predefined_op_t *ompi_mpi_op_bor_addr;
/**
* Global variable for MPI_LXOR (_addr flavor is for F03 bindings)
*/
OMPI_DECLSPEC extern ompi_predefined_op_t ompi_mpi_op_lxor;
OMPI_DECLSPEC extern ompi_predefined_op_t *ompi_mpi_op_lxor_addr;
/**
* Global variable for MPI_BXOR (_addr flavor is for F03 bindings)
*/
OMPI_DECLSPEC extern ompi_predefined_op_t ompi_mpi_op_bxor;
OMPI_DECLSPEC extern ompi_predefined_op_t *ompi_mpi_op_bxor_addr;
/**
* Global variable for MPI_MAXLOC (_addr flavor is for F03 bindings)
*/
OMPI_DECLSPEC extern ompi_predefined_op_t ompi_mpi_op_maxloc;
OMPI_DECLSPEC extern ompi_predefined_op_t *ompi_mpi_op_maxloc_addr;
/**
* Global variable for MPI_MINLOC (_addr flavor is for F03 bindings)
*/
OMPI_DECLSPEC extern ompi_predefined_op_t ompi_mpi_op_minloc;
OMPI_DECLSPEC extern ompi_predefined_op_t *ompi_mpi_op_minloc_addr;
/**
* Global variable for MPI_REPLACE (_addr flavor is for F03 bindings)
*/
OMPI_DECLSPEC extern ompi_predefined_op_t ompi_mpi_op_replace;
OMPI_DECLSPEC extern ompi_predefined_op_t *ompi_mpi_op_replace_addr;
/**
* Global variable for MPI_NO_OP
*/
OMPI_DECLSPEC extern ompi_predefined_op_t ompi_mpi_op_no_op;
/**
* Table for Fortran <-> C op handle conversion
*/
extern struct opal_pointer_array_t *ompi_op_f_to_c_table;
/**
* Initialize the op interface.
*
* @returns OMPI_SUCCESS Upon success
* @returns OMPI_ERROR Otherwise
*
* Invoked from ompi_mpi_init(); sets up the op interface, creates
* the predefined MPI operations, and creates the corresopnding F2C
* translation table.
*/
int ompi_op_init(void);
/**
* Finalize the op interface.
*
* @returns OMPI_SUCCESS Always
*
* Invokes from ompi_mpi_finalize(); tears down the op interface, and
* destroys the F2C translation table.
*/
int ompi_op_finalize(void);
/**
* Create a ompi_op_t with a user-defined callback (vs. creating an
* intrinsic ompi_op_t).
*
* @param commute Boolean indicating whether the operation is
* communative or not
* @param func Function pointer of the error handler
*
* @returns op Pointer to the ompi_op_t that will be
* created and returned
*
* This function is called as the back-end of all the MPI_OP_CREATE
* function. It creates a new ompi_op_t object, initializes it to the
* correct object type, and sets the callback function on it.
*
* The type of the function pointer is (arbitrarily) the fortran
* function handler type. Since this function has to accept 2
* different function pointer types (lest we have 2 different
* functions to create errhandlers), the fortran one was picked
* arbitrarily. Note that (void*) is not sufficient because at
* least theoretically, a sizeof(void*) may not necessarily be the
* same as sizeof(void(*)).
*
* NOTE: It *always* sets the "fortran" flag to false. The Fortran
* wrapper for MPI_OP_CREATE is expected to reset this flag to true
* manually.
*/
ompi_op_t *ompi_op_create_user(bool commute,
ompi_op_fortran_handler_fn_t func);
/**
* Mark an MPI_Op as holding a C++ callback function, and cache
* that function in the MPI_Op. See a lenghty comment in
* ompi/mpi/cxx/op.c::ompi_mpi_cxx_op_intercept() for a full
* expalantion.
*/
OMPI_DECLSPEC void ompi_op_set_cxx_callback(ompi_op_t * op,
MPI_User_function * fn);
/**
* Similar to ompi_op_set_cxx_callback(), mark an MPI_Op as holding a
* Java calback function, and cache that function in the MPI_Op.
*/
OMPI_DECLSPEC void ompi_op_set_java_callback(ompi_op_t *op, void *jnienv,
void *object, int baseType);
/**
* Check to see if an op is intrinsic.
*
* @param op The op to check
*
* @returns true If the op is intrinsic
* @returns false If the op is not intrinsic
*
* Self-explanitory. This is needed in a few top-level MPI functions;
* this function is provided to hide the internal structure field
* names.
*/
static inline bool ompi_op_is_intrinsic(ompi_op_t * op)
{
return (bool) (0 != (op->o_flags & OMPI_OP_FLAGS_INTRINSIC));
}
/**
* Check to see if an op is communative or not
*
* @param op The op to check
*
* @returns true If the op is communative
* @returns false If the op is not communative
*
* Self-explanitory. This is needed in a few top-level MPI functions;
* this function is provided to hide the internal structure field
* names.
*/
static inline bool ompi_op_is_commute(ompi_op_t * op)
{
return (bool) (0 != (op->o_flags & OMPI_OP_FLAGS_COMMUTE));
}
/**
* Check to see if an op is floating point associative or not
*
* @param op The op to check
*
* @returns true If the op is floating point associative
* @returns false If the op is not floating point associative
*
* Self-explanitory. This is needed in a few top-level MPI functions;
* this function is provided to hide the internal structure field
* names.
*/
static inline bool ompi_op_is_float_assoc(ompi_op_t * op)
{
return (bool) (0 != (op->o_flags & OMPI_OP_FLAGS_FLOAT_ASSOC));
}
/**
* Check to see if an op is valid on a given datatype
*
* @param op The op to check
* @param ddt The datatype to check
*
* @returns true If the op is valid on that datatype
* @returns false If the op is not valid on that datatype
*
* Self-explanitory. This is needed in a few top-level MPI functions;
* this function is provided to hide the internal structure field
* names.
*/
static inline bool ompi_op_is_valid(ompi_op_t * op, ompi_datatype_t * ddt,
char **msg, const char *func)
{
/* Check:
- non-intrinsic ddt's cannot be invoked on intrinsic op's
- if intrinsic ddt invoked on intrinsic op:
- ensure the datatype is defined in the op map
- ensure we have a function pointer for that combination
*/
if (ompi_op_is_intrinsic(op)) {
if (ompi_datatype_is_predefined(ddt)) {
/* Intrinsic ddt on intrinsic op */
if (-1 == ompi_op_ddt_map[ddt->id] ||
NULL == op->o_func.intrinsic.fns[ompi_op_ddt_map[ddt->id]]) {
(void) asprintf(msg,
"%s: the reduction operation %s is not defined on the %s datatype",
func, op->o_name, ddt->name);
return false;
}
} else {
/* Non-intrinsic ddt on intrinsic op */
if ('\0' != ddt->name[0]) {
(void) asprintf(msg,
"%s: the reduction operation %s is not defined for non-intrinsic datatypes (attempted with datatype named \"%s\")",
func, op->o_name, ddt->name);
} else {
(void) asprintf(msg,
"%s: the reduction operation %s is not defined for non-intrinsic datatypes",
func, op->o_name);
}
return false;
}
}
/* All other cases ok */
return true;
}
/**
* Perform a reduction operation.
*
* @param op The operation (IN)
* @param source Source (input) buffer (IN)
* @param target Target (output) buffer (IN/OUT)
* @param count Number of elements (IN)
* @param dtype MPI datatype (IN)
*
* @returns void As with MPI user-defined reduction functions, there
* is no return code from this function.
*
* Perform a reduction operation with count elements of type dtype in
* the buffers source and target. The target buffer obtains the
* result (i.e., the original values in the target buffer are reduced
* with the values in the source buffer and the result is stored in
* the target buffer).
*
* This function figures out which reduction operation function to
* invoke and whether to invoke it with C- or Fortran-style invocation
* methods. If the op is intrinsic and has the operation defined for
* dtype, the appropriate back-end function will be invoked.
* Otherwise, the op is assumed to be a user op and the first function
* pointer in the op array will be used.
*
* NOTE: This function assumes that a correct combination will be
* given to it; it makes no provision for errors (in the name of
* optimization). If you give it an intrinsic op with a datatype that
* is not defined to have that operation, it is likely to seg fault.
*/
static inline void ompi_op_reduce(ompi_op_t * op, void *source,
void *target, int count,
ompi_datatype_t * dtype)
{
MPI_Fint f_dtype, f_count;
/*
* Call the reduction function. Two dimensions: a) if both the op
* and the datatype are intrinsic, we have a series of predefined
* functions for each datatype (that are *only* in C -- not
* Fortran or C++!), or b) the op is user-defined, and therefore
* we have to check whether to invoke the callback with the C,
* C++, or Fortran callback signature (see lengthy description of
* the C++ callback in ompi/mpi/cxx/intercepts.cc).
*
* NOTE: We *assume* the following:
*
* 1. If the op is intrinsic, the op is pre-defined
* 2. That we will get a valid result back from the
* ompi_op_ddt_map[] (and not -1).
*
* Failures in these assumptions should have been caught by the
* upper layer (i.e., they should never have called this
* function). If either of these assumptions are wrong, it's
* likely that the MPI API function parameter checking is turned
* off, then it's an erroneous program and it's the user's fault.
* :-)
*/
/* For intrinsics, we also pass the corresponding op module */
if (0 != (op->o_flags & OMPI_OP_FLAGS_INTRINSIC)) {
op->o_func.intrinsic.fns[ompi_op_ddt_map[dtype->id]](source, target,
&count, &dtype,
op->o_func.intrinsic.modules[ompi_op_ddt_map[dtype->id]]);
return;
}
/* User-defined function */
if (0 != (op->o_flags & OMPI_OP_FLAGS_FORTRAN_FUNC)) {
f_dtype = OMPI_INT_2_FINT(dtype->d_f_to_c_index);
f_count = OMPI_INT_2_FINT(count);
op->o_func.fort_fn(source, target, &f_count, &f_dtype);
return;
} else if (0 != (op->o_flags & OMPI_OP_FLAGS_CXX_FUNC)) {
op->o_func.cxx_data.intercept_fn(source, target, &count, &dtype,
op->o_func.cxx_data.user_fn);
return;
} else if (0 != (op->o_flags & OMPI_OP_FLAGS_JAVA_FUNC)) {
op->o_func.java_data.intercept_fn(source, target, &count, &dtype,
op->o_func.java_data.baseType,
op->o_func.java_data.jnienv,
op->o_func.java_data.object);
return;
}
op->o_func.c_fn(source, target, &count, &dtype);
return;
}
/**
* Perform a reduction operation.
*
* @param op The operation (IN)
* @param source Source1 (input) buffer (IN)
* @param source Source2 (input) buffer (IN)
* @param target Target (output) buffer (IN/OUT)
* @param count Number of elements (IN)
* @param dtype MPI datatype (IN)
*
* @returns void As with MPI user-defined reduction functions, there
* is no return code from this function.
*
* Perform a reduction operation with count elements of type dtype in
* the buffers source and target. The target buffer obtains the
* result (i.e., the original values in the target buffer are reduced
* with the values in the source buffer and the result is stored in
* the target buffer).
*
* This function will *only* be invoked on intrinsic MPI_Ops.
*
* Otherwise, this function is the same as ompi_op_reduce.
*/
static inline void ompi_3buff_op_reduce(ompi_op_t * op, void *source1,
void *source2, void *target,
int count, ompi_datatype_t * dtype)
{
void *restrict src1;
void *restrict src2;
void *restrict tgt;
src1 = source1;
src2 = source2;
tgt = target;
op->o_3buff_intrinsic.fns[ompi_op_ddt_map[dtype->id]](src1, src2,
tgt, &count,
&dtype,
op->o_3buff_intrinsic.modules[ompi_op_ddt_map[dtype->id]]);
}
END_C_DECLS
#endif /* OMPI_OP_H */