Hi Ralph,

I would also add that the branch has the advantage that one can actually launch 
jobs on
crays using aprun.  That direct launch capability is busted in trunk at this 
point.

Howard


From: devel [mailto:devel-boun...@open-mpi.org] On Behalf Of Ralph Castain
Sent: Thursday, August 14, 2014 8:45 PM
To: Open MPI Developers
Subject: [OMPI devel] RFC: Merge PMIx branch to trunk


WHAT:    Merge the PMIx branch into the devel repo, creating a new

               OPAL “lmix” framework to abstract PMI support for all RTEs.

               Replace the ORTE daemon-level collectives with a new PMIx

               server and update the ORTE grpcomm framework to support

               server-to-server collectives



WHY:      We’ve had problems dealing with variations in PMI implementations,

               and need to extend the existing PMI definitions to meet exascale

               requirements.



WHEN:   Mon, Aug 25



WHERE:  https://github.com/rhc54/ompi-svn-mirror.git



Several community members have been working on a refactoring of the current PMI 
support within OMPI. Although the APIs are common, Slurm and Cray implement a 
different range of capabilities, and package them differently. For example, 
Cray provides an integrated PMI-1/2 library, while Slurm separates the two and 
requires the user to specify the one to be used at runtime. In addition, 
several bugs in the Slurm implementations have caused problems requiring extra 
coding.



All this has led to a slew of #if’s in the PMI code and bugs when the 
corner-case logic for one implementation accidentally traps the other. 
Extending this support to other implementations would have increased this 
complexity to an unacceptable level.



Accordingly, we have:



* created a new OPAL “pmix” framework to abstract the PMI support, with 
separate components for Cray, Slurm PMI-1, and Slurm PMI-2 implementations.



* Replaced the current ORTE grpcomm daemon-based collective operation with an 
integrated PMIx server, and updated the grpcomm APIs to provide more flexible, 
multi-algorithm support for collective operations. At this time, only the xcast 
and allgather operations are supported.



* Replaced the current global collective id with a signature based on the names 
of the participating procs. The allows an unlimited number of collectives to be 
executed by any group of processes, subject to the requirement that only one 
collective can be active at a time for a unique combination of procs. Note that 
a proc can be involved in any number of simultaneous collectives - it is the 
specific combination of procs that is subject to the constraint



* removed the prior OMPI/OPAL modex code



* added new macros for executing modex send/recv to simplify use of the new 
APIs. The send macros allow the caller to specify whether or not the BTL 
supports async modex operations - if so, then the non-blocking “fence” 
operation is used, if the active PMIx component supports it. Otherwise, the 
default is a full blocking modex exchange as we currently perform.



* retained the current flag that directs us to use a blocking fence operation, 
but only to retrieve data upon demand


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