|
|
| |
MPI_Testsome(3) |
MPI |
MPI_Testsome(3) |
MPI_Testsome - Tests for some given requests to complete
int MPI_Testsome(int incount, MPI_Request array_of_requests[], int *outcount,
int array_of_indices[], MPI_Status array_of_statuses[])
- incount
- - length of array_of_requests (integer)
- array_of_requests
- - array of requests (array of handles)
- outcount
- - number of completed requests (integer)
- array_of_indices
- - array of indices of operations that completed (array of integers)
- array_of_statuses
- - array of status objects for operations that completed (array of Status).
May be MPI_STATUSES_IGNORE .
While it is possible to list a request handle more than once in the
array_of_requests , such an action is considered erroneous and may
cause the program to unexecpectedly terminate or produce incorrect results.
This routine is thread-safe. This means that this routine may be safely used by
multiple threads without the need for any user-provided thread locks. However,
the routine is not interrupt safe. Typically, this is due to the use of memory
allocation routines such as malloc or other non-MPICH runtime routines
that are themselves not interrupt-safe.
The MPI_ERROR field of the status return is only set if the return from
the MPI routine is MPI_ERR_IN_STATUS . That error class is only
returned by the routines that take an array of status arguments (
MPI_Testall , MPI_Testsome , MPI_Waitall , and
MPI_Waitsome ). In all other cases, the value of the MPI_ERROR
field in the status is unchanged. See section 3.2.5 in the MPI-1.1
specification for the exact text.
For send operations, the only use of status is for
MPI_Test_cancelled or in the case that there is an error in one of
the four routines that may return the error class MPI_ERR_IN_STATUS ,
in which case the MPI_ERROR field of status will be set. In that
case, the value will be set to MPI_SUCCESS for any send or receive
operation that completed successfully, or MPI_ERR_PENDING for any
operation which has neither failed nor completed.
All MPI routines in Fortran (except for MPI_WTIME and MPI_WTICK )
have an additional argument ierr at the end of the argument list.
ierr is an integer and has the same meaning as the return value of the
routine in C. In Fortran, MPI routines are subroutines, and are invoked with
the call statement.
All MPI objects (e.g., MPI_Datatype , MPI_Comm ) are
of type INTEGER in Fortran.
All MPI routines (except MPI_Wtime and MPI_Wtick ) return an error
value; C routines as the value of the function and Fortran routines in the
last argument. Before the value is returned, the current MPI error handler is
called. By default, this error handler aborts the MPI job. The error handler
may be changed with MPI_Comm_set_errhandler (for communicators),
MPI_File_set_errhandler (for files), and MPI_Win_set_errhandler
(for RMA windows). The MPI-1 routine MPI_Errhandler_set may be used but
its use is deprecated. 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; however,
MPI implementations will attempt to continue whenever possible.
- MPI_SUCCESS
- - No error; MPI routine completed successfully.
- MPI_ERR_IN_STATUS
- - The actual error value is in the MPI_Status argument. This error
class is returned only from the multiple-completion routines (
MPI_Testall , MPI_Testany , MPI_Testsome ,
MPI_Waitall , MPI_Waitany , and MPI_Waitsome ). The
field MPI_ERROR in the status argument contains the error value or
MPI_SUCCESS (no error and complete) or MPI_ERR_PENDING to
indicate that the request has not completed. The MPI Standard does not
specify what the result of the multiple completion routines is when an
error occurs. For example, in an MPI_WAITALL , does the routine
wait for all requests to either fail or complete, or does it return
immediately (with the MPI definition of immediately, which means
independent of actions of other MPI processes)? MPICH has chosen to make
the return immediate (alternately, local in MPI terms), and to use the
error class MPI_ERR_PENDING (introduced in MPI 1.1) to indicate
which requests have not completed. In most cases, only one request with an
error will be detected in each call to an MPI routine that tests multiple
requests. The requests that have not been processed (because an error
occured in one of the requests) will have their MPI_ERROR field
marked with MPI_ERR_PENDING .
Visit the GSP FreeBSD Man Page Interface. Output converted with ManDoc. |