ADC Home > Reference Library > Reference > Mac OS X > Mac OS X Man Pages

 

This document is a Mac OS X manual page. Manual pages are a command-line technology for providing documentation. You can view these manual pages locally using the man(1) command. These manual pages come from many different sources, and thus, have a variety of writing styles.

For more information about the manual page format, see the manual page for manpages(5).



MPI_Comm_spawn(3OpenMPI)                                                            MPI_Comm_spawn(3OpenMPI)



NAME
       MPI_Comm_spawn - Spawns a number of identical binaries.


SYNTAX
C Syntax
       #include <mpi.h>
       int MPI_Comm_spawn(char *command, char *argv[], int maxprocs,
            MPI_Info info, int root, MPI_Comm comm,
            MPI_Comm *intercomm, int array_of_errcodes[])


Fortran Syntax
       INCLUDE 'mpif.h'
       MPI_COMM_SPAWN(COMMAND, ARGV, MAXPROCS, INFO, ROOT, COMM,
            INTERCOMM, ARRAY_OF_ERRCODES, IERROR)

            CHARACTER*(*) COMMAND, ARGV(*)
            INTEGER   INFO, MAXPROCS, ROOT, COMM, INTERCOMM,
            ARRAY_OF_ERRORCODES(*), IERROR


C++ Syntax
       #include <mpi.h>
       MPI::Intercomm MPI::Intracomm::Spawn(const char* command,
            const char* argv[], int maxprocs, const MPI::Info& info,
            int root, int array_of_errcodes[]) const

       MPI::Intercomm MPI::Intracomm::Spawn(const char* command,
            const char* argv[], int maxprocs, const MPI::Info& info,
            int root) const


INPUT PARAMETERS
       command   Name of program to be spawned (string, significant only at root).

       argv      Arguments to command (array of strings, significant only at root).

       maxprocs  Maximum number of processes to start (integer, significant only at root).

       info      A  set  of  key-value pairs telling the runtime system where and how to start the processes
                 (handle, significant only at root).

       root      Rank of process in which previous arguments are examined (integer).

       comm      Intracommunicator containing group of spawning processes (handle).


OUTPUT PARAMETER
       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 tries to start maxprocs identical copies of the  MPI  program  specified  by  command,
       establishing  communication  with  them and returning an intercommunicator. The spawned processes are
       referred to as children. The children have their own MPI_COMM_WORLD, which is separate from  that  of
       the  parents. MPI_Comm_spawn is collective over comm, and also may not return until MPI_Init has been
       called in the children. Similarly, MPI_Init in the children may not return  until  all  parents  have
       called MPI_Comm_spawn. In this sense, MPI_Comm_spawn in the parents and MPI_Init in the children form
       a collective operation over the union of parent and child processes. The  intercommunicator  returned
       by  MPI_Comm_spawn  contains  the  parent processes in the local group and the child processes in the
       remote group. The ordering of processes in the local and remote groups is the  same  as  the  as  the
       ordering of the group of the comm in the parents and of MPI_COMM_WORLD of the children, respectively.
       This intercommunicator can be obtained in the children through the function MPI_Comm_get_parent.

       The MPI standard allows an implementation to use the MPI_UNIVERSE_SIZE attribute of MPI_COMM_WORLD to
       specify  the  number  of processes that will be active in a program.  Although this implementation of
       the MPI standard defines MPI_UNIVERSE_SIZE, it does not allow the user to set its value.  If you  try
       to set the value of MPI_UNIVERSE_SIZE, you will get an error message.

       The command Argument

       The  command argument is a string containing the name of a program to be spawned. The string is null-terminated nullterminated
       terminated in C. In Fortran, leading and trailing spaces are stripped. MPI looks for the  file  first
       in the working directory of the spawning process.

       The argv Argument

       argv is an array of strings containing arguments that are passed to the program. The first element of
       argv is the first argument passed to command, not, as is conventional in some contexts,  the  command
       itself.  The argument list is terminated by NULL in C and C++ and an empty string in Fortran. In For-tran, Fortran,
       tran, leading and trailing spaces are always stripped, so that a string consisting of all  spaces  is
       considered  an empty string. The constant MPI_ARGV_NULL may be used in C, C++ and Fortran to indicate
       an empty argument list. In C and C++, this constant is the same as NULL.

       In C, the MPI_Comm_spawn argument argv differs from the argv argument of main in two respects. First,
       it  is shifted by one element. Specifically, argv[0] of main  contains the name of the program (given
       by command). argv[1] of main corresponds to argv[0] in MPI_Comm_spawn, argv[2] of main to argv[1]  of
       MPI_Comm_spawn, and so on. Second, argv of MPI_Comm_spawn must be null-terminated, so that its length
       can be determined. Passing an argv of MPI_ARGV_NULL to MPI_Comm_spawn results in main receiving  argc
       of 1 and an argv whose element 0 is the name of the program.

       The maxprocs Argument

       Open MPI tries to spawn maxprocs processes. If it is unable to spawn maxprocs processes, it raises an
       error of  class  MPI_ERR_SPAWN.  If  MPI  is  able  to  spawn  the  specified  number  of  processes,
       MPI_Comm_spawn  returns  successfully and the number of spawned processes, m, is given by the size of
       the remote group of intercomm.

       A spawn call with the default behavior is called hard. A spawn call for  which  fewer  than  maxprocs
       processes may be returned is called soft.

       The info Argument

       The info argument is an opaque handle of type MPI_Info in C, MPI::Info in C++ and INTEGER in Fortran.
       It is a container for a number of user-speci ed (key,value) pairs. key and value are  strings  (null-terminated (nullterminated
       terminated char* in C, character*(*) in Fortran). Routines to create and manipulate the info argument
       are described in Section 4.10 of the MPI-2 standard.

       For the SPAWN calls, info provides additional, implementation-dependent instructions to MPI  and  the
       runtime system on how to start processes. An application may pass MPI_INFO_NULL in C or Fortran. Por-table Portable
       table programs not requiring detailed control over process locations should use MPI_INFO_NULL.

       The following values 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 value             Type      Description
       ----------            ----      -----------host ----------host

       host                  char *    Host on which the process should be spawned.
       wdir                  char *    Directory where the executable is located.


       The root Argument

       All  arguments  before the root argument are examined only on the process whose rank in comm is equal
       to root. The value of these arguments on other processes is ignored.

       The array_of_errcodes Argument

       The array_of_errcodes is an array of length maxprocs in which MPI reports the status of the processes
       that  MPI was requested to start. If all maxprocs processes were spawned, array_of_errcodes is filled
       in with the value MPI_SUCCESS. If anyof the processes are not spawned, array_of_errcodes is filled in
       with  the  value MPI_ERR_SPAWN. In C or Fortran, an application may pass MPI_ERRCODES_IGNORE if it is
       not interested in the error codes. In C++ this constant does not  exist,  and  the  array_of_errcodes
       argument may be omitted from the argument list.


NOTES
       Completion of MPI_Comm_spawn in the parent does not necessarily mean that MPI_Init has been called in
       the children (although the returned intercommunicator can be used immediately).



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_multiple(3)
       MPI_Comm_get_parent(3)
       mpirun(1)




Open MPI 1.2                                   September 2006                       MPI_Comm_spawn(3OpenMPI)

Did this document help you?
Yes: Tell us what works for you.
It’s good, but: Report typos, inaccuracies, and so forth.
It wasn’t helpful: Tell us what would have helped.