Re: [OMPI devel] Multiworld MCA parameter values broken
On 11/19/07 8:19 AM, "Jeff Squyres" wrote: > On Nov 19, 2007, at 10:15 AM, Ralph H Castain wrote: > >> Hmmm...okay, I get the message: if it is going to be fixed, then I >> have to >> fix it on my end. ;-) Which means it ain't happening anytime soon, >> so Tim P >> is the one left in the lurch. >> >> Sorry Tim! Perhaps you can come up with a compromise that re-enables >> what >> you want to do. > > Yep -- sorry Tim. :-( > > Is this only a problem for the rsh/ssh launcher? I *think* that > should be the only launcher affected -- all others use raw argv string > arrays, right? If so, we already have a local/non-local flag in the > rsh launcher, right? I agree it kinda sucks, but it may be necessary > to construct argv differently between local/non-local (which we > already do, right?). > Nope, not any more - you can't do a local rsh since mpirun is acting as the local daemon. And we only have one way of constructing argv arrays for orteds as they are always non-local. I believe the problem is occurring for all environments due to the reconstruction of the argv array to include the cmd line mca params. Tim will have to clarify for his application - I know I encountered the problem on SLURM, TM, and rsh for my application, but I fixed that special case once I discovered what was going on. > > >> On 11/19/07 8:11 AM, "Jeff Squyres" wrote: >> >>> On Nov 19, 2007, at 10:01 AM, Ralph H Castain wrote: >>> Unfortunately, it -is- a significant problem when passing the params on to the orteds, as Tim has eloquently pointed out in his original posting. I guess I don't see why it would be a significant problem to just have opal_cmd_line_parse do the "right thing" - if a string param is quoted, then just remove the quotes. >>> >>> How would opal_cmd_line_parse know when to remove quotes and when not >>> remove quotes? I.e., what if an MCA param (or some other value, such >>> as a user application argv) required quotes? This is not uncommon >>> for >>> the wrapper compilers, for example (passing -D's to the C >>> preprocessor >>> that take string arguments). >>> >>> AFAIK, opal_cmd_line_parse() does exactly what I intended it to. :-) >>> It performs no shell-like quoting because it expects to be given a >>> list of "final" string tokens. >>> Problem solved, and I wouldn't have to add a bunch of code to figure out when to assemble argv arrays in different ways. >>> >>> Er... I don't understand: I joined this thread because I thought >>> there >>> was still something to fix...? >>> >>> I would be against changing opal_cmd_line_parse() in the manner that >>> you have described because it will break other things (e.g., the >>> wrapper compilers). >>> >>> >>> On 11/19/07 7:52 AM, "Jeff Squyres" wrote: > I guess I don't see why this is an opal_cmd_line_parse() problem. > > If you invoke executables through system(), then a shell is used > and > quoting is necessary to preserve the individual string tokens > (i.e., > "my beloved string" would be passed to the application as one argv > token, without the quotes). > > But if you're building up an array of argv and calling some form of > exec(), then no shell is involved and quoting should not be > necessary. Specifically: > >opal_append_argv(&argc, &argv, "my beloved string"); > > will be passed as one string token to the application. > > opal_cmd_line_parse() is passed an array of argv, meaning that the > command line have already been split into individual string > tokens. I > guess the question is whether these come in directly from the > arguments to main() or whether we are getting a single string and > breaking it up into tokens. If the latter is true, then we need to > re- > evaluate our break-into-tokens algorithm. I have a dim > recollection > that these come in from the arguments to main(), though. > > I guess I can see where this would get complicated for rsh/ssh > invocations, because *both* models are used. (i.e., you exec > locally > but it turns into a system-like invocation on the remote side). In > this case, I think you'll need to quote extended strings (e.g., > those > containing spaces) for the non-local invocations not not quote it > for > local invocations. > > > > > On Nov 19, 2007, at 9:19 AM, Ralph H Castain wrote: > >> My, you are joining late! ;-) >> >> The problem is with MCA params that take string arguments. If we >> pass the following: >> >> -mca foo "my beloved string" >> >> on the command line of an orted, we get a value for foo that >> includes the quote marks. I verified this rather painfully when >> attempting to pass a command line mca param for a uri. I >> eventually >> had to add specific code
Re: [OMPI devel] Multiworld MCA parameter values broken
On Nov 19, 2007, at 10:15 AM, Ralph H Castain wrote: Hmmm...okay, I get the message: if it is going to be fixed, then I have to fix it on my end. ;-) Which means it ain't happening anytime soon, so Tim P is the one left in the lurch. Sorry Tim! Perhaps you can come up with a compromise that re-enables what you want to do. Yep -- sorry Tim. :-( Is this only a problem for the rsh/ssh launcher? I *think* that should be the only launcher affected -- all others use raw argv string arrays, right? If so, we already have a local/non-local flag in the rsh launcher, right? I agree it kinda sucks, but it may be necessary to construct argv differently between local/non-local (which we already do, right?). On 11/19/07 8:11 AM, "Jeff Squyres" wrote: On Nov 19, 2007, at 10:01 AM, Ralph H Castain wrote: Unfortunately, it -is- a significant problem when passing the params on to the orteds, as Tim has eloquently pointed out in his original posting. I guess I don't see why it would be a significant problem to just have opal_cmd_line_parse do the "right thing" - if a string param is quoted, then just remove the quotes. How would opal_cmd_line_parse know when to remove quotes and when not remove quotes? I.e., what if an MCA param (or some other value, such as a user application argv) required quotes? This is not uncommon for the wrapper compilers, for example (passing -D's to the C preprocessor that take string arguments). AFAIK, opal_cmd_line_parse() does exactly what I intended it to. :-) It performs no shell-like quoting because it expects to be given a list of "final" string tokens. Problem solved, and I wouldn't have to add a bunch of code to figure out when to assemble argv arrays in different ways. Er... I don't understand: I joined this thread because I thought there was still something to fix...? I would be against changing opal_cmd_line_parse() in the manner that you have described because it will break other things (e.g., the wrapper compilers). On 11/19/07 7:52 AM, "Jeff Squyres" wrote: I guess I don't see why this is an opal_cmd_line_parse() problem. If you invoke executables through system(), then a shell is used and quoting is necessary to preserve the individual string tokens (i.e., "my beloved string" would be passed to the application as one argv token, without the quotes). But if you're building up an array of argv and calling some form of exec(), then no shell is involved and quoting should not be necessary. Specifically: opal_append_argv(&argc, &argv, "my beloved string"); will be passed as one string token to the application. opal_cmd_line_parse() is passed an array of argv, meaning that the command line have already been split into individual string tokens. I guess the question is whether these come in directly from the arguments to main() or whether we are getting a single string and breaking it up into tokens. If the latter is true, then we need to re- evaluate our break-into-tokens algorithm. I have a dim recollection that these come in from the arguments to main(), though. I guess I can see where this would get complicated for rsh/ssh invocations, because *both* models are used. (i.e., you exec locally but it turns into a system-like invocation on the remote side). In this case, I think you'll need to quote extended strings (e.g., those containing spaces) for the non-local invocations not not quote it for local invocations. On Nov 19, 2007, at 9:19 AM, Ralph H Castain wrote: My, you are joining late! ;-) The problem is with MCA params that take string arguments. If we pass the following: -mca foo "my beloved string" on the command line of an orted, we get a value for foo that includes the quote marks. I verified this rather painfully when attempting to pass a command line mca param for a uri. I eventually had to add specific code to clean the paramater up. This appears to be somehow related to the precise method used to register the param. For example, the following deprecated method works fine: On the setup end: opal_argv_append(argc, argv, "--gprreplica"); if (NULL != orte_process_info.gpr_replica_uri) { contact_info = strdup(orte_process_info.gpr_replica_uri); } else { contact_info = orte_rml.get_contact_info(); } asprintf(¶m, "\"%s\"", contact_info); opal_argv_append(argc, argv, param); And on the receiving end: id = mca_base_param_register_string("gpr", "replica", "uri", NULL, orte_process_info.gpr_replica_uri); mca_base_param_lookup_string(id, &(orte_process_info.gpr_replica_uri)); mca_base_param_set_internal(id, true); However, the following does NOT work cleanly: On the setup end: rml_uri = orte_rml.get_contact_info(); asprintf(¶m, "\"%s\"", rml_uri); opal_argv_append(argc, argv, "--hnp-uri"); opal_argv_append(argc, argv, param); On the receiving end: mca_base_param_reg_string_name("orte", "hnp_uri", "HNP co
Re: [OMPI devel] Multiworld MCA parameter values broken
Hmmm...okay, I get the message: if it is going to be fixed, then I have to fix it on my end. ;-) Which means it ain't happening anytime soon, so Tim P is the one left in the lurch. Sorry Tim! Perhaps you can come up with a compromise that re-enables what you want to do. Ralph On 11/19/07 8:11 AM, "Jeff Squyres" wrote: > On Nov 19, 2007, at 10:01 AM, Ralph H Castain wrote: > >> Unfortunately, it -is- a significant problem when passing the params >> on to >> the orteds, as Tim has eloquently pointed out in his original >> posting. I >> guess I don't see why it would be a significant problem to just have >> opal_cmd_line_parse do the "right thing" - if a string param is >> quoted, then >> just remove the quotes. > > How would opal_cmd_line_parse know when to remove quotes and when not > remove quotes? I.e., what if an MCA param (or some other value, such > as a user application argv) required quotes? This is not uncommon for > the wrapper compilers, for example (passing -D's to the C preprocessor > that take string arguments). > > AFAIK, opal_cmd_line_parse() does exactly what I intended it to. :-) > It performs no shell-like quoting because it expects to be given a > list of "final" string tokens. > >> Problem solved, and I wouldn't have to add a bunch of code to figure >> out >> when to assemble argv arrays in different ways. > > Er... I don't understand: I joined this thread because I thought there > was still something to fix...? > > I would be against changing opal_cmd_line_parse() in the manner that > you have described because it will break other things (e.g., the > wrapper compilers). > > > >> >> >> On 11/19/07 7:52 AM, "Jeff Squyres" wrote: >> >>> I guess I don't see why this is an opal_cmd_line_parse() problem. >>> >>> If you invoke executables through system(), then a shell is used and >>> quoting is necessary to preserve the individual string tokens (i.e., >>> "my beloved string" would be passed to the application as one argv >>> token, without the quotes). >>> >>> But if you're building up an array of argv and calling some form of >>> exec(), then no shell is involved and quoting should not be >>> necessary. Specifically: >>> >>> opal_append_argv(&argc, &argv, "my beloved string"); >>> >>> will be passed as one string token to the application. >>> >>> opal_cmd_line_parse() is passed an array of argv, meaning that the >>> command line have already been split into individual string >>> tokens. I >>> guess the question is whether these come in directly from the >>> arguments to main() or whether we are getting a single string and >>> breaking it up into tokens. If the latter is true, then we need to >>> re- >>> evaluate our break-into-tokens algorithm. I have a dim recollection >>> that these come in from the arguments to main(), though. >>> >>> I guess I can see where this would get complicated for rsh/ssh >>> invocations, because *both* models are used. (i.e., you exec locally >>> but it turns into a system-like invocation on the remote side). In >>> this case, I think you'll need to quote extended strings (e.g., those >>> containing spaces) for the non-local invocations not not quote it for >>> local invocations. >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> On Nov 19, 2007, at 9:19 AM, Ralph H Castain wrote: >>> My, you are joining late! ;-) The problem is with MCA params that take string arguments. If we pass the following: -mca foo "my beloved string" on the command line of an orted, we get a value for foo that includes the quote marks. I verified this rather painfully when attempting to pass a command line mca param for a uri. I eventually had to add specific code to clean the paramater up. This appears to be somehow related to the precise method used to register the param. For example, the following deprecated method works fine: On the setup end: opal_argv_append(argc, argv, "--gprreplica"); if (NULL != orte_process_info.gpr_replica_uri) { contact_info = strdup(orte_process_info.gpr_replica_uri); } else { contact_info = orte_rml.get_contact_info(); } asprintf(¶m, "\"%s\"", contact_info); opal_argv_append(argc, argv, param); And on the receiving end: id = mca_base_param_register_string("gpr", "replica", "uri", NULL, orte_process_info.gpr_replica_uri); mca_base_param_lookup_string(id, &(orte_process_info.gpr_replica_uri)); mca_base_param_set_internal(id, true); However, the following does NOT work cleanly: On the setup end: rml_uri = orte_rml.get_contact_info(); asprintf(¶m, "\"%s\"", rml_uri); opal_argv_append(argc, argv, "--hnp-uri"); opal_argv_append(argc, argv, param); On the receiving end: mca_base_param_reg_string_name("orte", "hnp_uri", "HNP cont
Re: [OMPI devel] Multiworld MCA parameter values broken
On Nov 19, 2007, at 10:01 AM, Ralph H Castain wrote: Unfortunately, it -is- a significant problem when passing the params on to the orteds, as Tim has eloquently pointed out in his original posting. I guess I don't see why it would be a significant problem to just have opal_cmd_line_parse do the "right thing" - if a string param is quoted, then just remove the quotes. How would opal_cmd_line_parse know when to remove quotes and when not remove quotes? I.e., what if an MCA param (or some other value, such as a user application argv) required quotes? This is not uncommon for the wrapper compilers, for example (passing -D's to the C preprocessor that take string arguments). AFAIK, opal_cmd_line_parse() does exactly what I intended it to. :-) It performs no shell-like quoting because it expects to be given a list of "final" string tokens. Problem solved, and I wouldn't have to add a bunch of code to figure out when to assemble argv arrays in different ways. Er... I don't understand: I joined this thread because I thought there was still something to fix...? I would be against changing opal_cmd_line_parse() in the manner that you have described because it will break other things (e.g., the wrapper compilers). On 11/19/07 7:52 AM, "Jeff Squyres" wrote: I guess I don't see why this is an opal_cmd_line_parse() problem. If you invoke executables through system(), then a shell is used and quoting is necessary to preserve the individual string tokens (i.e., "my beloved string" would be passed to the application as one argv token, without the quotes). But if you're building up an array of argv and calling some form of exec(), then no shell is involved and quoting should not be necessary. Specifically: opal_append_argv(&argc, &argv, "my beloved string"); will be passed as one string token to the application. opal_cmd_line_parse() is passed an array of argv, meaning that the command line have already been split into individual string tokens. I guess the question is whether these come in directly from the arguments to main() or whether we are getting a single string and breaking it up into tokens. If the latter is true, then we need to re- evaluate our break-into-tokens algorithm. I have a dim recollection that these come in from the arguments to main(), though. I guess I can see where this would get complicated for rsh/ssh invocations, because *both* models are used. (i.e., you exec locally but it turns into a system-like invocation on the remote side). In this case, I think you'll need to quote extended strings (e.g., those containing spaces) for the non-local invocations not not quote it for local invocations. On Nov 19, 2007, at 9:19 AM, Ralph H Castain wrote: My, you are joining late! ;-) The problem is with MCA params that take string arguments. If we pass the following: -mca foo "my beloved string" on the command line of an orted, we get a value for foo that includes the quote marks. I verified this rather painfully when attempting to pass a command line mca param for a uri. I eventually had to add specific code to clean the paramater up. This appears to be somehow related to the precise method used to register the param. For example, the following deprecated method works fine: On the setup end: opal_argv_append(argc, argv, "--gprreplica"); if (NULL != orte_process_info.gpr_replica_uri) { contact_info = strdup(orte_process_info.gpr_replica_uri); } else { contact_info = orte_rml.get_contact_info(); } asprintf(¶m, "\"%s\"", contact_info); opal_argv_append(argc, argv, param); And on the receiving end: id = mca_base_param_register_string("gpr", "replica", "uri", NULL, orte_process_info.gpr_replica_uri); mca_base_param_lookup_string(id, &(orte_process_info.gpr_replica_uri)); mca_base_param_set_internal(id, true); However, the following does NOT work cleanly: On the setup end: rml_uri = orte_rml.get_contact_info(); asprintf(¶m, "\"%s\"", rml_uri); opal_argv_append(argc, argv, "--hnp-uri"); opal_argv_append(argc, argv, param); On the receiving end: mca_base_param_reg_string_name("orte", "hnp_uri", "HNP contact info", true, false, NULL, &uri); Thereby necessitating the addition of the following code to clean it up: if (NULL != uri) { /* the uri value passed to us will have quote marks around it to protect * the value if passed on the command line. We must remove those * to have a correct uri string */ if ('"' == uri[0]) { /* if the first char is a quote, then so will the last one be */ ptr = &uri[1]; len = strlen(ptr) - 1; } else { ptr = &uri[0]; len = strlen(uri); } /* we have to copy the string by hand as strndup is a GNU extension * and may not be generally available */ or
Re: [OMPI devel] Multiworld MCA parameter values broken
Unfortunately, it -is- a significant problem when passing the params on to the orteds, as Tim has eloquently pointed out in his original posting. I guess I don't see why it would be a significant problem to just have opal_cmd_line_parse do the "right thing" - if a string param is quoted, then just remove the quotes. Problem solved, and I wouldn't have to add a bunch of code to figure out when to assemble argv arrays in different ways. On 11/19/07 7:52 AM, "Jeff Squyres" wrote: > I guess I don't see why this is an opal_cmd_line_parse() problem. > > If you invoke executables through system(), then a shell is used and > quoting is necessary to preserve the individual string tokens (i.e., > "my beloved string" would be passed to the application as one argv > token, without the quotes). > > But if you're building up an array of argv and calling some form of > exec(), then no shell is involved and quoting should not be > necessary. Specifically: > > opal_append_argv(&argc, &argv, "my beloved string"); > > will be passed as one string token to the application. > > opal_cmd_line_parse() is passed an array of argv, meaning that the > command line have already been split into individual string tokens. I > guess the question is whether these come in directly from the > arguments to main() or whether we are getting a single string and > breaking it up into tokens. If the latter is true, then we need to re- > evaluate our break-into-tokens algorithm. I have a dim recollection > that these come in from the arguments to main(), though. > > I guess I can see where this would get complicated for rsh/ssh > invocations, because *both* models are used. (i.e., you exec locally > but it turns into a system-like invocation on the remote side). In > this case, I think you'll need to quote extended strings (e.g., those > containing spaces) for the non-local invocations not not quote it for > local invocations. > > > > > On Nov 19, 2007, at 9:19 AM, Ralph H Castain wrote: > >> My, you are joining late! ;-) >> >> The problem is with MCA params that take string arguments. If we >> pass the following: >> >> -mca foo "my beloved string" >> >> on the command line of an orted, we get a value for foo that >> includes the quote marks. I verified this rather painfully when >> attempting to pass a command line mca param for a uri. I eventually >> had to add specific code to clean the paramater up. >> >> This appears to be somehow related to the precise method used to >> register the param. For example, the following deprecated method >> works fine: >> >> On the setup end: >> >> opal_argv_append(argc, argv, "--gprreplica"); >> if (NULL != orte_process_info.gpr_replica_uri) { >> contact_info = strdup(orte_process_info.gpr_replica_uri); >> } else { >> contact_info = orte_rml.get_contact_info(); >> } >> asprintf(¶m, "\"%s\"", contact_info); >> opal_argv_append(argc, argv, param); >> >> And on the receiving end: >> id = mca_base_param_register_string("gpr", "replica", "uri", >> NULL, orte_process_info.gpr_replica_uri); >> mca_base_param_lookup_string(id, >> &(orte_process_info.gpr_replica_uri)); >> mca_base_param_set_internal(id, true); >> >> >> However, the following does NOT work cleanly: >> >> On the setup end: >>rml_uri = orte_rml.get_contact_info(); >> asprintf(¶m, "\"%s\"", rml_uri); >> opal_argv_append(argc, argv, "--hnp-uri"); >> opal_argv_append(argc, argv, param); >> >> On the receiving end: >> mca_base_param_reg_string_name("orte", "hnp_uri", >>"HNP contact info", >>true, false, NULL, &uri); >> >> Thereby necessitating the addition of the following code to clean it >> up: >> if (NULL != uri) { >> /* the uri value passed to us will have quote marks around >> it to protect >> * the value if passed on the command line. We must remove >> those >> * to have a correct uri string >> */ >>if ('"' == uri[0]) { >> /* if the first char is a quote, then so will the last >> one be */ >>ptr = &uri[1]; >> len = strlen(ptr) - 1; >> } else { >> ptr = &uri[0]; >> len = strlen(uri); >> } >> >> /* we have to copy the string by hand as strndup is a GNU >> extension >> * and may not be generally available >> */ >>orte_process_info.my_hnp_uri = (char*)malloc(len+1); >> for (i=0; i < len; i++) { >> orte_process_info.my_hnp_uri[i] = ptr[i]; >> } >> orte_process_info.my_hnp_uri[len] = '\0'; /* NULL terminate >> */ >>free(uri); >> >> } >> >> It was my understanding that you wanted us to move away from the >> deprecated interface hence my comment that we cannot just quote >> all the strings as we would have to add this code all over the >> place, or (better) fix opal_cmd_line_par
Re: [OMPI devel] Multiworld MCA parameter values broken
I guess I don't see why this is an opal_cmd_line_parse() problem. If you invoke executables through system(), then a shell is used and quoting is necessary to preserve the individual string tokens (i.e., "my beloved string" would be passed to the application as one argv token, without the quotes). But if you're building up an array of argv and calling some form of exec(), then no shell is involved and quoting should not be necessary. Specifically: opal_append_argv(&argc, &argv, "my beloved string"); will be passed as one string token to the application. opal_cmd_line_parse() is passed an array of argv, meaning that the command line have already been split into individual string tokens. I guess the question is whether these come in directly from the arguments to main() or whether we are getting a single string and breaking it up into tokens. If the latter is true, then we need to re- evaluate our break-into-tokens algorithm. I have a dim recollection that these come in from the arguments to main(), though. I guess I can see where this would get complicated for rsh/ssh invocations, because *both* models are used. (i.e., you exec locally but it turns into a system-like invocation on the remote side). In this case, I think you'll need to quote extended strings (e.g., those containing spaces) for the non-local invocations not not quote it for local invocations. On Nov 19, 2007, at 9:19 AM, Ralph H Castain wrote: My, you are joining late! ;-) The problem is with MCA params that take string arguments. If we pass the following: -mca foo "my beloved string" on the command line of an orted, we get a value for foo that includes the quote marks. I verified this rather painfully when attempting to pass a command line mca param for a uri. I eventually had to add specific code to clean the paramater up. This appears to be somehow related to the precise method used to register the param. For example, the following deprecated method works fine: On the setup end: opal_argv_append(argc, argv, "--gprreplica"); if (NULL != orte_process_info.gpr_replica_uri) { contact_info = strdup(orte_process_info.gpr_replica_uri); } else { contact_info = orte_rml.get_contact_info(); } asprintf(¶m, "\"%s\"", contact_info); opal_argv_append(argc, argv, param); And on the receiving end: id = mca_base_param_register_string("gpr", "replica", "uri", NULL, orte_process_info.gpr_replica_uri); mca_base_param_lookup_string(id, &(orte_process_info.gpr_replica_uri)); mca_base_param_set_internal(id, true); However, the following does NOT work cleanly: On the setup end: rml_uri = orte_rml.get_contact_info(); asprintf(¶m, "\"%s\"", rml_uri); opal_argv_append(argc, argv, "--hnp-uri"); opal_argv_append(argc, argv, param); On the receiving end: mca_base_param_reg_string_name("orte", "hnp_uri", "HNP contact info", true, false, NULL, &uri); Thereby necessitating the addition of the following code to clean it up: if (NULL != uri) { /* the uri value passed to us will have quote marks around it to protect * the value if passed on the command line. We must remove those * to have a correct uri string */ if ('"' == uri[0]) { /* if the first char is a quote, then so will the last one be */ ptr = &uri[1]; len = strlen(ptr) - 1; } else { ptr = &uri[0]; len = strlen(uri); } /* we have to copy the string by hand as strndup is a GNU extension * and may not be generally available */ orte_process_info.my_hnp_uri = (char*)malloc(len+1); for (i=0; i < len; i++) { orte_process_info.my_hnp_uri[i] = ptr[i]; } orte_process_info.my_hnp_uri[len] = '\0'; /* NULL terminate */ free(uri); } It was my understanding that you wanted us to move away from the deprecated interface – hence my comment that we cannot just quote all the strings as we would have to add this code all over the place, or (better) fix opal_cmd_line_parse. Hope that helps Ralph On 11/19/07 7:01 AM, "Jeff Squyres" wrote: > Sorry -- I'm just joining this conversation late: what's the problem > with opal_cmd_line_parse? > > It should obey all quoting from shells, etc. I.e., it shouldn't care > about tokens with special characters (to include spaces) because the > shell divides all of that stuff up -- it just gets a char*[] that it > treats as discrete tokens. > > Is it doing something wrong? > > > > On Nov 19, 2007, at 8:39 AM, Ralph H Castain wrote: > >> I'm not sure it is really necessary - the problem is solely within >> opal_cmd_line_parse and (if someone can parse that code ;-)) is >> truly simple >> to fix. The overly long cmd line issue is due to a bug that
Re: [OMPI devel] Multiworld MCA parameter values broken
My, you are joining late! ;-) The problem is with MCA params that take string arguments. If we pass the following: -mca foo "my beloved string" on the command line of an orted, we get a value for foo that includes the quote marks. I verified this rather painfully when attempting to pass a command line mca param for a uri. I eventually had to add specific code to clean the paramater up. This appears to be somehow related to the precise method used to register the param. For example, the following deprecated method works fine: On the setup end: opal_argv_append(argc, argv, "--gprreplica"); if (NULL != orte_process_info.gpr_replica_uri) { contact_info = strdup(orte_process_info.gpr_replica_uri); } else { contact_info = orte_rml.get_contact_info(); } asprintf(¶m, "\"%s\"", contact_info); opal_argv_append(argc, argv, param); And on the receiving end: id = mca_base_param_register_string("gpr", "replica", "uri", NULL, orte_process_info.gpr_replica_uri); mca_base_param_lookup_string(id, &(orte_process_info.gpr_replica_uri)); mca_base_param_set_internal(id, true); However, the following does NOT work cleanly: On the setup end: rml_uri = orte_rml.get_contact_info(); asprintf(¶m, "\"%s\"", rml_uri); opal_argv_append(argc, argv, "--hnp-uri"); opal_argv_append(argc, argv, param); On the receiving end: mca_base_param_reg_string_name("orte", "hnp_uri", "HNP contact info", true, false, NULL, &uri); Thereby necessitating the addition of the following code to clean it up: if (NULL != uri) { /* the uri value passed to us will have quote marks around it to protect * the value if passed on the command line. We must remove those * to have a correct uri string */ if ('"' == uri[0]) { /* if the first char is a quote, then so will the last one be */ ptr = &uri[1]; len = strlen(ptr) - 1; } else { ptr = &uri[0]; len = strlen(uri); } /* we have to copy the string by hand as strndup is a GNU extension * and may not be generally available */ orte_process_info.my_hnp_uri = (char*)malloc(len+1); for (i=0; i < len; i++) { orte_process_info.my_hnp_uri[i] = ptr[i]; } orte_process_info.my_hnp_uri[len] = '\0'; /* NULL terminate */ free(uri); } It was my understanding that you wanted us to move away from the deprecated interface hence my comment that we cannot just quote all the strings as we would have to add this code all over the place, or (better) fix opal_cmd_line_parse. Hope that helps Ralph On 11/19/07 7:01 AM, "Jeff Squyres" wrote: > Sorry -- I'm just joining this conversation late: what's the problem > with opal_cmd_line_parse? > > It should obey all quoting from shells, etc. I.e., it shouldn't care > about tokens with special characters (to include spaces) because the > shell divides all of that stuff up -- it just gets a char*[] that it > treats as discrete tokens. > > Is it doing something wrong? > > > > On Nov 19, 2007, at 8:39 AM, Ralph H Castain wrote: > >> I'm not sure it is really necessary - the problem is solely within >> opal_cmd_line_parse and (if someone can parse that code ;-)) is >> truly simple >> to fix. The overly long cmd line issue is due to a bug that Josh was >> going >> to look at (may already have done so while I was out of touch). >> >> Ralph >> >> >> >> On 11/9/07 5:10 AM, "Jeff Squyres" wrote: >> >>> Should there be another option for passing MCA parameters between >>> processes, such as via stdin (or any file descriptor)? I.e., during >>> the command line parsing to check for command line MCA params, >>> perhaps >>> a new argument could be introduced: -mcauri , where could >>> be a few different forms: >>> >>> - file://stdin: (note the 2 //, not 3, so "stdin" would never >>> conflict >>> with a real file named /stdin) Read the parameters in off stdin. >>> >>> - rml://...rml contact info...: read in the MCA params via the RML >>> (although I assume that reading via the RML would be *wy* to late >>> during the MCA setup process -- I mentioned this option for >>> completeness, even though I don't think it'll work) >>> >>> - ip://ipaddress:port: open a socket back and read the MCA params in >>> over a socket. This could have some scalability issues...? But who >>> knows; it could be tied into the hierarchical startup such that we >>> wouldn't have to have an all-to-one connection scheme. Certainly it >>> would cause scalability problems when paired with today's all-to-one >>> RML connection scheme for the OOB. >>> >>> I'm not sure that the rml: and ip: schemes are worthwhile. Maybe a >>> file://stdin kind of approach could work? Or perhaps some other kind >>> of URI/IPC...? (I really haven't thought through the
Re: [OMPI devel] Multiworld MCA parameter values broken
Sorry -- I'm just joining this conversation late: what's the problem with opal_cmd_line_parse? It should obey all quoting from shells, etc. I.e., it shouldn't care about tokens with special characters (to include spaces) because the shell divides all of that stuff up -- it just gets a char*[] that it treats as discrete tokens. Is it doing something wrong? On Nov 19, 2007, at 8:39 AM, Ralph H Castain wrote: I'm not sure it is really necessary - the problem is solely within opal_cmd_line_parse and (if someone can parse that code ;-)) is truly simple to fix. The overly long cmd line issue is due to a bug that Josh was going to look at (may already have done so while I was out of touch). Ralph On 11/9/07 5:10 AM, "Jeff Squyres" wrote: Should there be another option for passing MCA parameters between processes, such as via stdin (or any file descriptor)? I.e., during the command line parsing to check for command line MCA params, perhaps a new argument could be introduced: -mcauri , where could be a few different forms: - file://stdin: (note the 2 //, not 3, so "stdin" would never conflict with a real file named /stdin) Read the parameters in off stdin. - rml://...rml contact info...: read in the MCA params via the RML (although I assume that reading via the RML would be *wy* to late during the MCA setup process -- I mentioned this option for completeness, even though I don't think it'll work) - ip://ipaddress:port: open a socket back and read the MCA params in over a socket. This could have some scalability issues...? But who knows; it could be tied into the hierarchical startup such that we wouldn't have to have an all-to-one connection scheme. Certainly it would cause scalability problems when paired with today's all-to-one RML connection scheme for the OOB. I'm not sure that the rml: and ip: schemes are worthwhile. Maybe a file://stdin kind of approach could work? Or perhaps some other kind of URI/IPC...? (I really haven't thought through the issues -- this is off the top of my head) On Nov 8, 2007, at 2:36 PM, Ralph H Castain wrote: Might I suggest: https://svn.open-mpi.org/trac/ompi/ticket/1073 It deals with some of these issues and explains the boundaries of the problem. As for what a string param can contain, I have no opinion. I only note that it must handle special characters such as ';', '/', etc. that are typically found in uri's. I cannot think of any reason it should have a quote in it. Ralph On 11/8/07 12:25 PM, "Tim Prins" wrote: The alias option you presented does not work. I think we do some weird things to find the absolute path for ssh, instead of just issuing the command. I would spend some time fixing this, but I don't want to do it wrong. We could quote all the param values, and change the parser to remove the quotes, but this is assuming that a mca param does not contain quotes. So I guess there are 2 questions that need to be answered before a fix is made: 1. What exactly can a string mca param contain? Can it have quotes or spaces or? 2. Which mca parameters should be forwarded? Should it be just the ones from the command line? From the environment? From config files? Tim Ralph Castain wrote: What changed is that we never passed mca params to the orted before - they always went to the app, but it's the orted that has the issue. There is a bug ticket thread on this subject - I forget the number immediately. Basically, the problem was that we cannot generally pass the local environment to the orteds when we launch them. However, people needed various mca params to get to the orteds to control their behavior. The only way to resolve that problem was to pass the params via the command line, which is what was done. Except for a very few cases, all of our mca params are single values that do not include spaces, so this is not a problem that is causing widespread issues. As I said, I already had to deal with one special case that didn't involve spaces, but did have special characters that required quoting, which identified the larger problem of dealing with quoted strings. I have no objection to a more general fix. Like I said in my note, though, the general fix will take a larger effort. If someone is willing to do so, that is fine with me - I was only offering solutions that would fill the interim time as I haven't heard anyone step up to say they would fix it anytime soon. Please feel free to jump in and volunteer! ;-) I'm willing to put the quotes around things if you will fix the mca cmd line parser to cleanly remove them on the other end. Ralph On 11/7/07 5:50 PM, "Tim Prins" wrote: I'm curious what changed to make this a problem. How were we passing mca param from the base to the app before, and why did it change? I think that options 1 & 2 below are no good, since we, in general, allow string mca params to have spaces (as far as I understand it). So a more general approach is needed. T
Re: [OMPI devel] Multiworld MCA parameter values broken
I'm not sure it is really necessary - the problem is solely within opal_cmd_line_parse and (if someone can parse that code ;-)) is truly simple to fix. The overly long cmd line issue is due to a bug that Josh was going to look at (may already have done so while I was out of touch). Ralph On 11/9/07 5:10 AM, "Jeff Squyres" wrote: > Should there be another option for passing MCA parameters between > processes, such as via stdin (or any file descriptor)? I.e., during > the command line parsing to check for command line MCA params, perhaps > a new argument could be introduced: -mcauri , where could > be a few different forms: > > - file://stdin: (note the 2 //, not 3, so "stdin" would never conflict > with a real file named /stdin) Read the parameters in off stdin. > > - rml://...rml contact info...: read in the MCA params via the RML > (although I assume that reading via the RML would be *wy* to late > during the MCA setup process -- I mentioned this option for > completeness, even though I don't think it'll work) > > - ip://ipaddress:port: open a socket back and read the MCA params in > over a socket. This could have some scalability issues...? But who > knows; it could be tied into the hierarchical startup such that we > wouldn't have to have an all-to-one connection scheme. Certainly it > would cause scalability problems when paired with today's all-to-one > RML connection scheme for the OOB. > > I'm not sure that the rml: and ip: schemes are worthwhile. Maybe a > file://stdin kind of approach could work? Or perhaps some other kind > of URI/IPC...? (I really haven't thought through the issues -- this > is off the top of my head) > > > > On Nov 8, 2007, at 2:36 PM, Ralph H Castain wrote: > >> Might I suggest: >> >> https://svn.open-mpi.org/trac/ompi/ticket/1073 >> >> It deals with some of these issues and explains the boundaries of the >> problem. As for what a string param can contain, I have no opinion. >> I only >> note that it must handle special characters such as ';', '/', etc. >> that are >> typically found in uri's. I cannot think of any reason it should >> have a >> quote in it. >> >> Ralph >> >> >> >> On 11/8/07 12:25 PM, "Tim Prins" wrote: >> >>> The alias option you presented does not work. I think we do some >>> weird >>> things to find the absolute path for ssh, instead of just issuing the >>> command. >>> >>> I would spend some time fixing this, but I don't want to do it >>> wrong. We >>> could quote all the param values, and change the parser to remove the >>> quotes, but this is assuming that a mca param does not contain >>> quotes. >>> >>> So I guess there are 2 questions that need to be answered before a >>> fix >>> is made: >>> >>> 1. What exactly can a string mca param contain? Can it have quotes or >>> spaces or? >>> >>> 2. Which mca parameters should be forwarded? Should it be just the >>> ones >>> from the command line? From the environment? From config files? >>> >>> Tim >>> >>> Ralph Castain wrote: What changed is that we never passed mca params to the orted before - they always went to the app, but it's the orted that has the issue. There is a bug ticket thread on this subject - I forget the number immediately. Basically, the problem was that we cannot generally pass the local environment to the orteds when we launch them. However, people needed various mca params to get to the orteds to control their behavior. The only way to resolve that problem was to pass the params via the command line, which is what was done. Except for a very few cases, all of our mca params are single values that do not include spaces, so this is not a problem that is causing widespread issues. As I said, I already had to deal with one special case that didn't involve spaces, but did have special characters that required quoting, which identified the larger problem of dealing with quoted strings. I have no objection to a more general fix. Like I said in my note, though, the general fix will take a larger effort. If someone is willing to do so, that is fine with me - I was only offering solutions that would fill the interim time as I haven't heard anyone step up to say they would fix it anytime soon. Please feel free to jump in and volunteer! ;-) I'm willing to put the quotes around things if you will fix the mca cmd line parser to cleanly remove them on the other end. Ralph On 11/7/07 5:50 PM, "Tim Prins" wrote: > I'm curious what changed to make this a problem. How were we > passing mca > param > from the base to the app before, and why did it change? > > I think that options 1 & 2 below are no good, since we, in > general, allow > string mca params to have spaces (as far as I understand it).
Re: [OMPI devel] Multiworld MCA parameter values broken
Should there be another option for passing MCA parameters between processes, such as via stdin (or any file descriptor)? I.e., during the command line parsing to check for command line MCA params, perhaps a new argument could be introduced: -mcauri , where could be a few different forms: - file://stdin: (note the 2 //, not 3, so "stdin" would never conflict with a real file named /stdin) Read the parameters in off stdin. - rml://...rml contact info...: read in the MCA params via the RML (although I assume that reading via the RML would be *wy* to late during the MCA setup process -- I mentioned this option for completeness, even though I don't think it'll work) - ip://ipaddress:port: open a socket back and read the MCA params in over a socket. This could have some scalability issues...? But who knows; it could be tied into the hierarchical startup such that we wouldn't have to have an all-to-one connection scheme. Certainly it would cause scalability problems when paired with today's all-to-one RML connection scheme for the OOB. I'm not sure that the rml: and ip: schemes are worthwhile. Maybe a file://stdin kind of approach could work? Or perhaps some other kind of URI/IPC...? (I really haven't thought through the issues -- this is off the top of my head) On Nov 8, 2007, at 2:36 PM, Ralph H Castain wrote: Might I suggest: https://svn.open-mpi.org/trac/ompi/ticket/1073 It deals with some of these issues and explains the boundaries of the problem. As for what a string param can contain, I have no opinion. I only note that it must handle special characters such as ';', '/', etc. that are typically found in uri's. I cannot think of any reason it should have a quote in it. Ralph On 11/8/07 12:25 PM, "Tim Prins" wrote: The alias option you presented does not work. I think we do some weird things to find the absolute path for ssh, instead of just issuing the command. I would spend some time fixing this, but I don't want to do it wrong. We could quote all the param values, and change the parser to remove the quotes, but this is assuming that a mca param does not contain quotes. So I guess there are 2 questions that need to be answered before a fix is made: 1. What exactly can a string mca param contain? Can it have quotes or spaces or? 2. Which mca parameters should be forwarded? Should it be just the ones from the command line? From the environment? From config files? Tim Ralph Castain wrote: What changed is that we never passed mca params to the orted before - they always went to the app, but it's the orted that has the issue. There is a bug ticket thread on this subject - I forget the number immediately. Basically, the problem was that we cannot generally pass the local environment to the orteds when we launch them. However, people needed various mca params to get to the orteds to control their behavior. The only way to resolve that problem was to pass the params via the command line, which is what was done. Except for a very few cases, all of our mca params are single values that do not include spaces, so this is not a problem that is causing widespread issues. As I said, I already had to deal with one special case that didn't involve spaces, but did have special characters that required quoting, which identified the larger problem of dealing with quoted strings. I have no objection to a more general fix. Like I said in my note, though, the general fix will take a larger effort. If someone is willing to do so, that is fine with me - I was only offering solutions that would fill the interim time as I haven't heard anyone step up to say they would fix it anytime soon. Please feel free to jump in and volunteer! ;-) I'm willing to put the quotes around things if you will fix the mca cmd line parser to cleanly remove them on the other end. Ralph On 11/7/07 5:50 PM, "Tim Prins" wrote: I'm curious what changed to make this a problem. How were we passing mca param from the base to the app before, and why did it change? I think that options 1 & 2 below are no good, since we, in general, allow string mca params to have spaces (as far as I understand it). So a more general approach is needed. Tim On Wednesday 07 November 2007 10:40:45 am Ralph H Castain wrote: Sorry for delay - wasn't ignoring the issue. There are several fixes to this problem - ranging in order from least to most work: 1. just alias "ssh" to be "ssh -Y" and run without setting the mca param. It won't affect anything on the backend because the daemon/procs don't use ssh. 2. include "pls_rsh_agent" in the array of mca params not to be passed to the orted in orte/mca/pls/base/pls_base_general_support_fns.c, the orte_pls_base_orted_append_basic_args function. This would fix the specific problem cited here, but I admit that listing every such param by name would get tedious. 3. we could ea
Re: [OMPI devel] Multiworld MCA parameter values broken
Might I suggest: https://svn.open-mpi.org/trac/ompi/ticket/1073 It deals with some of these issues and explains the boundaries of the problem. As for what a string param can contain, I have no opinion. I only note that it must handle special characters such as ';', '/', etc. that are typically found in uri's. I cannot think of any reason it should have a quote in it. Ralph On 11/8/07 12:25 PM, "Tim Prins" wrote: > The alias option you presented does not work. I think we do some weird > things to find the absolute path for ssh, instead of just issuing the > command. > > I would spend some time fixing this, but I don't want to do it wrong. We > could quote all the param values, and change the parser to remove the > quotes, but this is assuming that a mca param does not contain quotes. > > So I guess there are 2 questions that need to be answered before a fix > is made: > > 1. What exactly can a string mca param contain? Can it have quotes or > spaces or? > > 2. Which mca parameters should be forwarded? Should it be just the ones > from the command line? From the environment? From config files? > > Tim > > Ralph Castain wrote: >> What changed is that we never passed mca params to the orted before - they >> always went to the app, but it's the orted that has the issue. There is a >> bug ticket thread on this subject - I forget the number immediately. >> >> Basically, the problem was that we cannot generally pass the local >> environment to the orteds when we launch them. However, people needed >> various mca params to get to the orteds to control their behavior. The only >> way to resolve that problem was to pass the params via the command line, >> which is what was done. >> >> Except for a very few cases, all of our mca params are single values that do >> not include spaces, so this is not a problem that is causing widespread >> issues. As I said, I already had to deal with one special case that didn't >> involve spaces, but did have special characters that required quoting, which >> identified the larger problem of dealing with quoted strings. >> >> I have no objection to a more general fix. Like I said in my note, though, >> the general fix will take a larger effort. If someone is willing to do so, >> that is fine with me - I was only offering solutions that would fill the >> interim time as I haven't heard anyone step up to say they would fix it >> anytime soon. >> >> Please feel free to jump in and volunteer! ;-) I'm willing to put the quotes >> around things if you will fix the mca cmd line parser to cleanly remove them >> on the other end. >> >> Ralph >> >> >> >> On 11/7/07 5:50 PM, "Tim Prins" wrote: >> >>> I'm curious what changed to make this a problem. How were we passing mca >>> param >>> from the base to the app before, and why did it change? >>> >>> I think that options 1 & 2 below are no good, since we, in general, allow >>> string mca params to have spaces (as far as I understand it). So a more >>> general approach is needed. >>> >>> Tim >>> >>> On Wednesday 07 November 2007 10:40:45 am Ralph H Castain wrote: Sorry for delay - wasn't ignoring the issue. There are several fixes to this problem - ranging in order from least to most work: 1. just alias "ssh" to be "ssh -Y" and run without setting the mca param. It won't affect anything on the backend because the daemon/procs don't use ssh. 2. include "pls_rsh_agent" in the array of mca params not to be passed to the orted in orte/mca/pls/base/pls_base_general_support_fns.c, the orte_pls_base_orted_append_basic_args function. This would fix the specific problem cited here, but I admit that listing every such param by name would get tedious. 3. we could easily detect that a "problem" character was in the mca param value when we add it to the orted's argv, and then put "" around it. The problem, however, is that the mca param parser on the far end doesn't remove those "" from the resulting string. At least, I spent over a day fighting with a problem only to discover that was happening. Could be an error in the way I was doing things, or could be a real characteristic of the parser. Anyway, we would have to ensure that the parser removes any surrounding "" before passing along the param value or this won't work. Ralph On 11/5/07 12:10 PM, "Tim Prins" wrote: > Hi, > > Commit 16364 broke things when using multiword mca param values. For > instance: > > mpirun --debug-daemons -mca orte_debug 1 -mca pls rsh -mca pls_rsh_agent > "ssh -Y" xterm > > Will crash and burn, because the value "ssh -Y" is being stored into the > argv orted_cmd_line in orterun.c:1506. This is then added to the launch > command for the orted: > > /usr/bin/ssh -Y odin004 PATH=/san/homedirs/tprins/usr/rsl/bin:$PATH ; > export PATH ; > LD_LIBRARY_PATH=/san
Re: [OMPI devel] Multiworld MCA parameter values broken
The alias option you presented does not work. I think we do some weird things to find the absolute path for ssh, instead of just issuing the command. I would spend some time fixing this, but I don't want to do it wrong. We could quote all the param values, and change the parser to remove the quotes, but this is assuming that a mca param does not contain quotes. So I guess there are 2 questions that need to be answered before a fix is made: 1. What exactly can a string mca param contain? Can it have quotes or spaces or? 2. Which mca parameters should be forwarded? Should it be just the ones from the command line? From the environment? From config files? Tim Ralph Castain wrote: What changed is that we never passed mca params to the orted before - they always went to the app, but it's the orted that has the issue. There is a bug ticket thread on this subject - I forget the number immediately. Basically, the problem was that we cannot generally pass the local environment to the orteds when we launch them. However, people needed various mca params to get to the orteds to control their behavior. The only way to resolve that problem was to pass the params via the command line, which is what was done. Except for a very few cases, all of our mca params are single values that do not include spaces, so this is not a problem that is causing widespread issues. As I said, I already had to deal with one special case that didn't involve spaces, but did have special characters that required quoting, which identified the larger problem of dealing with quoted strings. I have no objection to a more general fix. Like I said in my note, though, the general fix will take a larger effort. If someone is willing to do so, that is fine with me - I was only offering solutions that would fill the interim time as I haven't heard anyone step up to say they would fix it anytime soon. Please feel free to jump in and volunteer! ;-) I'm willing to put the quotes around things if you will fix the mca cmd line parser to cleanly remove them on the other end. Ralph On 11/7/07 5:50 PM, "Tim Prins" wrote: I'm curious what changed to make this a problem. How were we passing mca param from the base to the app before, and why did it change? I think that options 1 & 2 below are no good, since we, in general, allow string mca params to have spaces (as far as I understand it). So a more general approach is needed. Tim On Wednesday 07 November 2007 10:40:45 am Ralph H Castain wrote: Sorry for delay - wasn't ignoring the issue. There are several fixes to this problem - ranging in order from least to most work: 1. just alias "ssh" to be "ssh -Y" and run without setting the mca param. It won't affect anything on the backend because the daemon/procs don't use ssh. 2. include "pls_rsh_agent" in the array of mca params not to be passed to the orted in orte/mca/pls/base/pls_base_general_support_fns.c, the orte_pls_base_orted_append_basic_args function. This would fix the specific problem cited here, but I admit that listing every such param by name would get tedious. 3. we could easily detect that a "problem" character was in the mca param value when we add it to the orted's argv, and then put "" around it. The problem, however, is that the mca param parser on the far end doesn't remove those "" from the resulting string. At least, I spent over a day fighting with a problem only to discover that was happening. Could be an error in the way I was doing things, or could be a real characteristic of the parser. Anyway, we would have to ensure that the parser removes any surrounding "" before passing along the param value or this won't work. Ralph On 11/5/07 12:10 PM, "Tim Prins" wrote: Hi, Commit 16364 broke things when using multiword mca param values. For instance: mpirun --debug-daemons -mca orte_debug 1 -mca pls rsh -mca pls_rsh_agent "ssh -Y" xterm Will crash and burn, because the value "ssh -Y" is being stored into the argv orted_cmd_line in orterun.c:1506. This is then added to the launch command for the orted: /usr/bin/ssh -Y odin004 PATH=/san/homedirs/tprins/usr/rsl/bin:$PATH ; export PATH ; LD_LIBRARY_PATH=/san/homedirs/tprins/usr/rsl/lib:$LD_LIBRARY_PATH ; export LD_LIBRARY_PATH ; /san/homedirs/tprins/usr/rsl/bin/orted --debug --debug-daemons --name 0.1 --num_procs 2 --vpid_start 0 --nodename odin004 --universe tpr...@odin.cs.indiana.edu:default-universe-27872 --nsreplica "0.0;tcp://129.79.240.100:40907;tcp6://2001:18e8:2:240:2e0:81ff:fe2d:21a0 :4090 8" --gprreplica "0.0;tcp://129.79.240.100:40907;tcp6://2001:18e8:2:240:2e0:81ff:fe2d:21a0 :4090 8" -mca orte_debug 1 -mca pls_rsh_agent ssh -Y -mca mca_base_param_file_path /u/tprins/usr/rsl/share/openmpi/amca-param-sets:/san/homedirs/tprins/rsl/ examp les -mca mca_base_param_file_path_force /san/homedirs/tprins/rsl/examples Notice that in this command we now have "-mca pls_rsh_agent ssh -Y". So the quotes have been lost, as we die a horrible death. So we nee
Re: [OMPI devel] Multiworld MCA parameter values broken
What changed is that we never passed mca params to the orted before - they always went to the app, but it's the orted that has the issue. There is a bug ticket thread on this subject - I forget the number immediately. Basically, the problem was that we cannot generally pass the local environment to the orteds when we launch them. However, people needed various mca params to get to the orteds to control their behavior. The only way to resolve that problem was to pass the params via the command line, which is what was done. Except for a very few cases, all of our mca params are single values that do not include spaces, so this is not a problem that is causing widespread issues. As I said, I already had to deal with one special case that didn't involve spaces, but did have special characters that required quoting, which identified the larger problem of dealing with quoted strings. I have no objection to a more general fix. Like I said in my note, though, the general fix will take a larger effort. If someone is willing to do so, that is fine with me - I was only offering solutions that would fill the interim time as I haven't heard anyone step up to say they would fix it anytime soon. Please feel free to jump in and volunteer! ;-) I'm willing to put the quotes around things if you will fix the mca cmd line parser to cleanly remove them on the other end. Ralph On 11/7/07 5:50 PM, "Tim Prins" wrote: > I'm curious what changed to make this a problem. How were we passing mca param > from the base to the app before, and why did it change? > > I think that options 1 & 2 below are no good, since we, in general, allow > string mca params to have spaces (as far as I understand it). So a more > general approach is needed. > > Tim > > On Wednesday 07 November 2007 10:40:45 am Ralph H Castain wrote: >> Sorry for delay - wasn't ignoring the issue. >> >> There are several fixes to this problem - ranging in order from least to >> most work: >> >> 1. just alias "ssh" to be "ssh -Y" and run without setting the mca param. >> It won't affect anything on the backend because the daemon/procs don't use >> ssh. >> >> 2. include "pls_rsh_agent" in the array of mca params not to be passed to >> the orted in orte/mca/pls/base/pls_base_general_support_fns.c, the >> orte_pls_base_orted_append_basic_args function. This would fix the specific >> problem cited here, but I admit that listing every such param by name would >> get tedious. >> >> 3. we could easily detect that a "problem" character was in the mca param >> value when we add it to the orted's argv, and then put "" around it. The >> problem, however, is that the mca param parser on the far end doesn't >> remove those "" from the resulting string. At least, I spent over a day >> fighting with a problem only to discover that was happening. Could be an >> error in the way I was doing things, or could be a real characteristic of >> the parser. Anyway, we would have to ensure that the parser removes any >> surrounding "" before passing along the param value or this won't work. >> >> Ralph >> >> On 11/5/07 12:10 PM, "Tim Prins" wrote: >>> Hi, >>> >>> Commit 16364 broke things when using multiword mca param values. For >>> instance: >>> >>> mpirun --debug-daemons -mca orte_debug 1 -mca pls rsh -mca pls_rsh_agent >>> "ssh -Y" xterm >>> >>> Will crash and burn, because the value "ssh -Y" is being stored into the >>> argv orted_cmd_line in orterun.c:1506. This is then added to the launch >>> command for the orted: >>> >>> /usr/bin/ssh -Y odin004 PATH=/san/homedirs/tprins/usr/rsl/bin:$PATH ; >>> export PATH ; >>> LD_LIBRARY_PATH=/san/homedirs/tprins/usr/rsl/lib:$LD_LIBRARY_PATH ; >>> export LD_LIBRARY_PATH ; /san/homedirs/tprins/usr/rsl/bin/orted --debug >>> --debug-daemons --name 0.1 --num_procs 2 --vpid_start 0 --nodename >>> odin004 --universe tpr...@odin.cs.indiana.edu:default-universe-27872 >>> --nsreplica >>> "0.0;tcp://129.79.240.100:40907;tcp6://2001:18e8:2:240:2e0:81ff:fe2d:21a0 >>> :4090 8" >>> --gprreplica >>> "0.0;tcp://129.79.240.100:40907;tcp6://2001:18e8:2:240:2e0:81ff:fe2d:21a0 >>> :4090 8" >>> -mca orte_debug 1 -mca pls_rsh_agent ssh -Y -mca >>> mca_base_param_file_path >>> /u/tprins/usr/rsl/share/openmpi/amca-param-sets:/san/homedirs/tprins/rsl/ >>> examp les >>> -mca mca_base_param_file_path_force /san/homedirs/tprins/rsl/examples >>> >>> Notice that in this command we now have "-mca pls_rsh_agent ssh -Y". So >>> the quotes have been lost, as we die a horrible death. >>> >>> So we need to add the quotes back in somehow, or pass these options >>> differently. I'm not sure what the best way to fix this. >>> >>> Thanks, >>> >>> Tim > >
Re: [OMPI devel] Multiworld MCA parameter values broken
I'm curious what changed to make this a problem. How were we passing mca param from the base to the app before, and why did it change? I think that options 1 & 2 below are no good, since we, in general, allow string mca params to have spaces (as far as I understand it). So a more general approach is needed. Tim On Wednesday 07 November 2007 10:40:45 am Ralph H Castain wrote: > Sorry for delay - wasn't ignoring the issue. > > There are several fixes to this problem - ranging in order from least to > most work: > > 1. just alias "ssh" to be "ssh -Y" and run without setting the mca param. > It won't affect anything on the backend because the daemon/procs don't use > ssh. > > 2. include "pls_rsh_agent" in the array of mca params not to be passed to > the orted in orte/mca/pls/base/pls_base_general_support_fns.c, the > orte_pls_base_orted_append_basic_args function. This would fix the specific > problem cited here, but I admit that listing every such param by name would > get tedious. > > 3. we could easily detect that a "problem" character was in the mca param > value when we add it to the orted's argv, and then put "" around it. The > problem, however, is that the mca param parser on the far end doesn't > remove those "" from the resulting string. At least, I spent over a day > fighting with a problem only to discover that was happening. Could be an > error in the way I was doing things, or could be a real characteristic of > the parser. Anyway, we would have to ensure that the parser removes any > surrounding "" before passing along the param value or this won't work. > > Ralph > > On 11/5/07 12:10 PM, "Tim Prins" wrote: > > Hi, > > > > Commit 16364 broke things when using multiword mca param values. For > > instance: > > > > mpirun --debug-daemons -mca orte_debug 1 -mca pls rsh -mca pls_rsh_agent > > "ssh -Y" xterm > > > > Will crash and burn, because the value "ssh -Y" is being stored into the > > argv orted_cmd_line in orterun.c:1506. This is then added to the launch > > command for the orted: > > > > /usr/bin/ssh -Y odin004 PATH=/san/homedirs/tprins/usr/rsl/bin:$PATH ; > > export PATH ; > > LD_LIBRARY_PATH=/san/homedirs/tprins/usr/rsl/lib:$LD_LIBRARY_PATH ; > > export LD_LIBRARY_PATH ; /san/homedirs/tprins/usr/rsl/bin/orted --debug > > --debug-daemons --name 0.1 --num_procs 2 --vpid_start 0 --nodename > > odin004 --universe tpr...@odin.cs.indiana.edu:default-universe-27872 > > --nsreplica > > "0.0;tcp://129.79.240.100:40907;tcp6://2001:18e8:2:240:2e0:81ff:fe2d:21a0 > >:4090 8" > > --gprreplica > > "0.0;tcp://129.79.240.100:40907;tcp6://2001:18e8:2:240:2e0:81ff:fe2d:21a0 > >:4090 8" > > -mca orte_debug 1 -mca pls_rsh_agent ssh -Y -mca > > mca_base_param_file_path > > /u/tprins/usr/rsl/share/openmpi/amca-param-sets:/san/homedirs/tprins/rsl/ > >examp les > > -mca mca_base_param_file_path_force /san/homedirs/tprins/rsl/examples > > > > Notice that in this command we now have "-mca pls_rsh_agent ssh -Y". So > > the quotes have been lost, as we die a horrible death. > > > > So we need to add the quotes back in somehow, or pass these options > > differently. I'm not sure what the best way to fix this. > > > > Thanks, > > > > Tim
Re: [OMPI devel] Multiworld MCA parameter values broken
Sorry for delay - wasn't ignoring the issue. There are several fixes to this problem - ranging in order from least to most work: 1. just alias "ssh" to be "ssh -Y" and run without setting the mca param. It won't affect anything on the backend because the daemon/procs don't use ssh. 2. include "pls_rsh_agent" in the array of mca params not to be passed to the orted in orte/mca/pls/base/pls_base_general_support_fns.c, the orte_pls_base_orted_append_basic_args function. This would fix the specific problem cited here, but I admit that listing every such param by name would get tedious. 3. we could easily detect that a "problem" character was in the mca param value when we add it to the orted's argv, and then put "" around it. The problem, however, is that the mca param parser on the far end doesn't remove those "" from the resulting string. At least, I spent over a day fighting with a problem only to discover that was happening. Could be an error in the way I was doing things, or could be a real characteristic of the parser. Anyway, we would have to ensure that the parser removes any surrounding "" before passing along the param value or this won't work. Ralph On 11/5/07 12:10 PM, "Tim Prins" wrote: > Hi, > > Commit 16364 broke things when using multiword mca param values. For > instance: > > mpirun --debug-daemons -mca orte_debug 1 -mca pls rsh -mca pls_rsh_agent > "ssh -Y" xterm > > Will crash and burn, because the value "ssh -Y" is being stored into the > argv orted_cmd_line in orterun.c:1506. This is then added to the launch > command for the orted: > > /usr/bin/ssh -Y odin004 PATH=/san/homedirs/tprins/usr/rsl/bin:$PATH ; > export PATH ; > LD_LIBRARY_PATH=/san/homedirs/tprins/usr/rsl/lib:$LD_LIBRARY_PATH ; > export LD_LIBRARY_PATH ; /san/homedirs/tprins/usr/rsl/bin/orted --debug > --debug-daemons --name 0.1 --num_procs 2 --vpid_start 0 --nodename > odin004 --universe tpr...@odin.cs.indiana.edu:default-universe-27872 > --nsreplica > "0.0;tcp://129.79.240.100:40907;tcp6://2001:18e8:2:240:2e0:81ff:fe2d:21a0:4090 > 8" > --gprreplica > "0.0;tcp://129.79.240.100:40907;tcp6://2001:18e8:2:240:2e0:81ff:fe2d:21a0:4090 > 8" > -mca orte_debug 1 -mca pls_rsh_agent ssh -Y -mca > mca_base_param_file_path > /u/tprins/usr/rsl/share/openmpi/amca-param-sets:/san/homedirs/tprins/rsl/examp > les > -mca mca_base_param_file_path_force /san/homedirs/tprins/rsl/examples > > Notice that in this command we now have "-mca pls_rsh_agent ssh -Y". So > the quotes have been lost, as we die a horrible death. > > So we need to add the quotes back in somehow, or pass these options > differently. I'm not sure what the best way to fix this. > > Thanks, > > Tim