rounds for this.
If there are solutions to this I'd really like to know about it as
I've been trying this for quite a while now.
Regards,
Jeroen Kleijer
have absolutely _no_ idea
what it'll break but both solutions seem to work for me(tm) )
Regards,
Jeroen Kleijer
On Tue, Sep 30, 2008 at 4:38 PM, Jeff Squyres wrote:
> Sorry for the delay in replying -- I thought I had replied to this already,
> but I guess I hadn't. :-(
>
> We
s to pass the whole string "openmpi-mpirun " to be
passed as a single string / command to LSF.
The second line between the single quotes is then passed as a single
argument to /bin/sh which is run by openmpi-mpirun.
Kind regards,
Jeroen Kleijer
On Thu, Dec 17, 2009 at 4:03 PM, Min Z
kind of curious what the error message is
you're seeing.
Kind regards,
Jeroen Kleijer
On Thu, Dec 17, 2009 at 4:41 PM, Min Zhu wrote:
> Hi, Jeroen,
>
> Thanks for your reply. I tried the command bsub -e ERR -o OUT -n 16
> "openmpi-mpirun /bin/sh -c 'ulimit -s unlimit
ting goes wrong and I'm trying to figure out where
Kind regards,
Jeroen Kleijer
On Thu, Dec 17, 2009 at 5:09 PM, Min Zhu wrote:
> Hi, Jeroen,
>
> Here is the OUT file, ERR file is empty.
>
> --
-s unlimited ; ./wrf.exe \" "
(at least I think you should :) )
The mpirun.lsf is a wrapper provided by LSF and the -a openmpi tells
it to set the necessary openmpi environment varibales etc.
Kind regards,
Jeroen Kleijer
On Thu, Dec 17, 2009 at 5:32 PM, Min Zhu wrote:
RR -o OUT -n 16 './openmpi-mpirun /bin/sh -c "ulimit -s
unlimited ; ./wrf.exe " '
Could you give this a try?
Regards,
Jeroen Kleijer
On Thu, Dec 17, 2009 at 5:56 PM, Min Zhu wrote:
> Hi, Jeroen,
>
> Thanks a lot. Unfortunately I don't think I have got mpirun.lsf.
to fail in Amazon's EC2.
However, if you're able to compile and use a version of the
development branch (1.3) you should be use compile and run the "hello
world" program without problems, regardless of the subnet they're in.
Regards,
Jeroen Kleijer
run
directly but use the mpirun.lsf, a wrapper script provided by LSF. This
wrapper script takes care of setting the necessary environment variables and
eventually calls the correct mpirun. (the option "-a openmpi" tells LSF that
we're using OpenMPI so don't try to autodetect)