NAME¶
MPI_Comm_spawn_multiple - Spawns multiple binaries, or the same binary
with multiple sets of arguments.
SYNTAX¶
C Syntax¶
#include <mpi.h>
int MPI_Comm_spawn_multiple(int count, char *array_of_commands[],
char ** array_of_argv[], int array_of_maxprocs[], MPI_Info
array_of_info[], int root, MPI_Comm comm, MPI_Comm *intercomm,
int array_of_errcodes[])
Fortran Syntax¶
INCLUDE 'mpif.h'
MPI_COMM_SPAWN_MULTIPLE( COUNT, ARRAY_OF_COMMANDS, ARRAY_OF_ARGV,
ARRAY_OF_MAXPROCS, ARRAY_OF_INFO, ROOT, COMM, INTERCOMM,
ARRAY_OF_ERRCODES, IERROR)
INTEGER COUNT, ARRAY_OF_INFO(*), ARRAY_OF_MAXPROCS(*), ROOT,
COMM, INTERCOMM, ARRAY_OF_ERRCODES(*), IERROR
CHARACTER*(*) ARRAY_OF_COMMANDS(*), ARRAY_OF_ARGV(COUNT, *)
C++ Syntax¶
#include <mpi.h>
MPI::Intercomm MPI::Intracomm::Spawn_multiple(int count,
const char* array_of_commands[], const char** array_of_argv[],
const int array_of_maxprocs[], const MPI::Info array_of_info[],
int root, int array_of_errcodes[])
MPI::Intercomm MPI::Intracomm::Spawn_multiple(int count,
const char* array_of_commands[], const char** array_of_argv[],
const int array_of_maxprocs[], const MPI::Info array_of_info[],
int root)
- count
- Number of commands (positive integer, significant to MPI
only at root -- see NOTES).
- array_of_commands
- Programs to be executed (array of strings, significant only
at root).
- array_of_argv
- Arguments for commands (array of array of strings,
significant only at root).
- array_of_maxprocs
- Maximum number of processes to start for each command
(array of integers, significant only at root).
- array_of_info
- Info objects telling the runtime system where and how to
start processes (array of handles, significant only at root).
- root
- Rank of process in which previous arguments are examined
(integer).
- comm
- Intracommunicator containing group of spawning processes
(handle).
OUTPUT PARAMETERS¶
- intercomm
- Intercommunicator between original group and the newly
spawned group (handle).
- array_of_errcodes
- One code per process (array of integers).
- IERROR
- Fortran only: Error status (integer).
DESCRIPTION¶
MPI_Comm_spawn_multiple is identical to
MPI_Comm_spawn(3) except that it can
specify multiple executables. The first argument,
count, indicates the
number of executables. The next three arguments are arrays of the
corresponding arguments in
MPI_Comm_spawn(3). The next argument,
array_of_info, is an array of
info arguments; however, only the
first argument in that array is used. Any subsequent arguments in the array
are ignored because an
info argument applies to the entire job that is
spawned, and cannot be different for each executable in the job. See the INFO
ARGUMENTS section for more information.
For the Fortran version of
array_of_argv, the element
array_of_argv(i,j) is the jth argument to command number i.
In any language, an application may use the constant MPI_ARGVS_NULL (which is
likely to be (char ***)0 in C) to specify that no arguments should be passed
to any commands. The effect of setting individual elements of
array_of_argv to MPI_ARGV_NULL is not defined. To specify arguments for
some commands but not others, the commands without arguments should have a
corresponding
argv whose first element is null ((char *)0 in C and
empty string in Fortran).
All of the spawned processes have the same MPI_COMM_WORLD. Their ranks in
MPI_COMM_WORLD correspond directly to the order in which the commands are
specified in MPI_Comm_spawn_multiple. Assume that m1 processes are generated
by the first command, m2 by the second, etc. The processes corresponding to
the first command have ranks 0, 1,..., m1-1. The processes in the second
command have ranks m1, m1+1, ..., m1+m2-1. The processes in the third have
ranks m1+m2, m1+m2+1, ..., m1+m2+m3-1, etc.
The
array_of_errcodes argument is 1-dimensional array of size
_ count
\ n ,
/_ i=1 i
where i is the ith element of
array_of_maxprocs. Command number
i
corresponds to the i contiguous slots in this array from element
_ _
_ i-1 | _ i |
\ n , to | \ n | -1
/_ j=1 i | /_ j=1 j |
|_ _|
Error codes are treated as for
MPI_Comm_spawn(3).
INFO ARGUMENTS¶
The following keys for
info are recognized in "Open MPI". (The
reserved values mentioned in Section 5.3.4 of the MPI-2 standard are not
implemented.)
Key Type Description
--- ---- -----------
host char * Host on which the process should be spawned.
wdir char * Directory where the executable is located.
ompi_prefix char * Same as the --prefix command line argument
to mpirun.
ompi_non_mpi bool If set to true, launching a non-MPI
application; the returned communicator
will be MPI_COMM_NULL.
bool info keys are actually strings but are evaluated as follows: if the
string value is a number, it is converted to an integer and cast to a boolean
(meaning that zero integers are false and non-zero values are true). If the
string value is (case-insensitive) "yes" or "true", the
boolean is true. If the string value is (case-insensitive) "no" or
"false", the boolean is false. All other string values are
unrecognized, and therefore false.
Note that if any of the info handles have
ompi_non_mpi set to true, then
all info handles must have it set to true. If some are set to true, but others
are set to false (or are unset), MPI_ERR_INFO will be returned.
Note that in "Open MPI", the first array location in
array_of_info is applied to all the commands in
array_of_commands.
NOTES¶
The argument
count is interpreted by MPI only at the root, as is
array_of_argv. Since the leading dimension of
array_of_argv is
count, a nonpositive value of
count at a nonroot node could
theoretically cause a runtime bounds check error, even though
array_of_argv should be ignored by the subroutine. If this happens, you
should explicitly supply a reasonable value of
count on the nonroot
nodes.
Similar to
MPI_Comm_spawn(3), it is the application's responsibility to
terminate each individual set of argv in the
array_of_argv argument. In
C, each argv array is terminated by a NULL pointer. In Fortran, each argv
array is terminated by an empty string (note that compilers will not
automatically insert this blank string; the application must ensure to have
enough space for an empty string entry as the last element of the array).
Other restrictions apply to the
array_of_argv parameter; see
MPI_Comm_spawn(3)'s description of the
argv parameter for more details.
Calling
MPI_Comm_spawn(3) many times would create many sets of children with
different MPI_COMM_WORLDs, whereas MPI_Comm_spawn_multiple creates children
with a single MPI_COMM_WORLD, so the two methods are not completely
equivalent. Also if you need to spawn multiple executables, you may get better
performance by using MPI_Comm_spawn_multiple instead of calling
MPI_Comm_spawn(3) several times.
ERRORS¶
Almost all MPI routines return an error value; C routines as the value of the
function and Fortran routines in the last argument. C++ functions do not
return errors. If the default error handler is set to
MPI::ERRORS_THROW_EXCEPTIONS, then on error the C++ exception mechanism will
be used to throw an MPI:Exception object.
Before the error value is returned, the current MPI error handler is called. By
default, this error handler aborts the MPI job, except for I/O function
errors. The error handler may be changed with MPI_Comm_set_errhandler; the
predefined error handler MPI_ERRORS_RETURN may be used to cause error values
to be returned. Note that MPI does not guarantee that an MPI program can
continue past an error.
SEE ALSO¶
MPI_Comm_spawn(3)
MPI_Comm_get_parent(3)
mpirun(1)