On Dec 10, 2010, at 11:00 AM, Prentice Bisbal wrote:
>> Would it make sense to implement this as an MPI extension, and then
>> perhaps propose something to the Forum for this purpose?
>
> I think that makes sense. As core and socket counts go up, I imagine the need
> for this information will be
On 12/10/2010 03:24 PM, David Mathog wrote:
Ashley Pittman wrote:
For a much simpler approach you could also use these two environment
variables, this is on my current system which is 1.5 based, YMMV of course.
OMPI_COMM_WORLD_LOCAL_RANK
OMPI_COMM_WORLD_LOCAL_SIZE
However that doesn't really
Sorry - guess I had misunderstood. Yes, if all you want is the local rank of
your own process, then this will work.
My suggestion was if you wanted the list of local procs, or to know the local
rank of your peers.
On Dec 10, 2010, at 1:24 PM, David Mathog wrote:
> Ashley Pittman wrote:
>
>>
Ashley Pittman wrote:
> For a much simpler approach you could also use these two environment
variables, this is on my current system which is 1.5 based, YMMV of course.
>
> OMPI_COMM_WORLD_LOCAL_RANK
> OMPI_COMM_WORLD_LOCAL_SIZE
That is simpler. It works on OMPI 1.4.3 too:
cat >/usr/common/bin
For a much simpler approach you could also use these two environment variables,
this is on my current system which is 1.5 based, YMMV of course.
OMPI_COMM_WORLD_LOCAL_RANK
OMPI_COMM_WORLD_LOCAL_SIZE
Actually orte seems to set both OMPI_COMM_WORLD_LOCAL_RANK and
OMPI_COMM_WORLD_NODE_RANK, I can
Hi David
For what it is worth, the method suggested by
Terry Dontje and Richard Troutmann is what is used in several
generations of climate coupled models that we've been using for the
past 8+ years.
The goals are slightly different from yours:
they cut across logical boundaries
(i.e. who's at
There are no race conditions in this data. It is determined by mpirun prior to
launch, so all procs receive the data during MPI_Init and it remains static
throughout the life of the job. It isn't dynamically updated at this time (will
change in later versions), so it won't tell you if a process
> The answer is yes - sort of...
>
> In OpenMPI, every process has information about not only its own local
rank, but the local rank of all its peers regardless of what node they
are on. We use that info internally for a variety of things.
>
> Now the "sort of". That info isn't exposed via an MPI
On 12/10/2010 07:55 AM, Ralph Castain wrote:
Ick - I agree that's portable, but truly ugly.
Would it make sense to implement this as an MPI extension, and then
perhaps propose something to the Forum for this purpose?
I think that makes sense. As core and socket counts go up, I imagine the
n
Terry Dontje wrote:
On 12/10/2010 09:19 AM, Richard Treumann wrote:
It seems to me the MPI_Get_processor_name
description is too ambiguous to make this 100% portable. I assume most
MPI implementations simply use the hostname so all processes on the
same host will return the same string.
ghkeepsie, NY 12601
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From: Ralph Castain
To: Open MPI Users
Date: 12/10/2010 08:00 AM
Subject: Re: [OMPI users] Method for worker to determine its "rank"
on asingle machine?
Sent by:
/10/2010 08:00 AM
Subject:
Re: [OMPI users] Method for worker to determine its "rank" on a single
machine?
Sent by:
users-boun...@open-mpi.org
Ick - I agree that's portable, but truly ugly.
Would it make sense to implement this as an MPI extension, and then
perhaps propose so
Ick - I agree that's portable, but truly ugly.
Would it make sense to implement this as an MPI extension, and then perhaps
propose something to the Forum for this purpose?
Just hate to see such a complex, time-consuming method when the info is already
available on every process.
On Dec 10, 201
A more portable way of doing what you want below is to gather each
processes processor_name given by MPI_Get_processor_name, have the root
who gets this data assign unique numbers to each name and then scatter
that info to the processes and have them use that as the color to a
MPI_Comm_split ca
The answer is yes - sort of...
In OpenMPI, every process has information about not only its own local rank,
but the local rank of all its peers regardless of what node they are on. We use
that info internally for a variety of things.
Now the "sort of". That info isn't exposed via an MPI API at
Is it possible through MPI for a worker to determine:
1. how many MPI processes are running on the local machine
2. within that set its own "local rank"
?
For instance, a quad core with 4 processes might be hosting ranks 10,
14, 15, 20, in which case the "local ranks" would be 1,2,3,4. Th
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