loadgo

Langue: en

Autres versions - même langue

Version: 179504 (CentOS - 06/07/09)

Section: 1 (Commandes utilisateur)

NAME

loadgo - Run programs on LAM nodes.

SYNTAX

loadgo [-fhvw] [-s <srcnode>] <nodes> <programs> [-- <args>]

OPTIONS

-f
Do not configure standard I/O file descriptors - use defaults.
-h
Print useful information on this command.
-s <srcnode>
Load the programs from this source node <srcnode>.
-v
Report on important steps as they are done.
-w
Wait for all processes to complete before exiting loadgo. Report any abnormal exit codes.
-- <args>
Pass these runtime arguments to every new process. This must always be the last argument to loadgo.

DESCRIPTION

Most MPI users will not use this command; see mpirun(1). This command is only installed if LAM/MPI was configured with the --with-trillium switch.

All specified programs are executed on all specified nodes. Only one set of runtime arguments may be specified for all new processes. To load different programs on different nodes, or to pass different arguments to different programs, multiple loadgo invocations are necessary.

Program Transfer

By default, LAM searches for executable programs on the target node where a particular instantiation will run. If the file system is not shared, the target nodes are homogeneous, and the program is frequently recompiled, it can be convenient to have LAM transfer the program from a source node (usually the local node) to each target node. The -s option specifies this behaviour and identifies the single source node.

Locating Files

LAM looks for an executable program by searching the directories in the user's PATH environment variable as defined on the source node(s). This behaviour is consistent with logging into the source node and executing the program from the shell. On remote nodes, the "." path is the home directory.

Standard I/O

LAM directs UNIX standard input to /dev/null on all remote nodes. On the local node that invoked loadgo, standard input is inherited from loadgo. Use the -w option to prevent conflicting access to the terminal.

LAM directs UNIX standard output and error to the LAM daemon on all remote nodes. LAM ships all captured output/error to the node that invoked loadgo and prints it on the standard output/error of loadgo. Local processes inherit the standard output/error of loadgo and transfer to it directly.

Thus it is possible to redirect standard I/O for LAM applications by using the typical shell redirection procedure on loadgo.

% loadgo my_app < my_input > my_output

The -f option avoids all the setup required to support standard I/O described above. Remote processes are completely directed to /dev/null and local processes inherit file descriptors from lamboot(1).

Process Environment

Programs invoked via loadgo inherit their environment from the LAM daemon upon the node on which they execute. The environment of a LAM daemon is fixed upon booting of the LAM with lamboot(1) and is inherited from the user's shell. On the origin node this will be the shell from which lamboot(1) was invoked and on remote nodes this will be the shell started by rsh(1).

MPI Initialization

MPI applications should be started with mpirun(1) because of the initialization requirements of MPI. However, it is possible to start rudimentary process configurations of MPI applications with loadgo. Prior to starting LAM with lamboot(1), the user's environment on every node must set the variable, LAMWORLDNODES. One and only one process must be started on each and every node. Each process's rank in the MPI world group will equal its nodeid. This directly implies that the LAM nodeids must be contiguous. The same configuration can be achieved by logging into each node and starting each process from the shell (with the environment variable set as above).

EXAMPLES

loadgo N prog1
Load and execute prog1 on all nodes. Search for prog1 on each node.
loadgo n8-10 -vw -s n3 prog1 prog2 -- -q
Load and execute prog1 and prog2 on nodes 8, 9, and 10. Search for prog1 and prog2 on source node 3 and transfer the executables to the three target nodes. Report on each process as it is created. Pass the -q option to each new process. Wait for the processes to complete before exiting loadgo.

SEE ALSO

state(1), doom(1), mpirun(1)