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=======================================================================
=======================================================================

              *** GASNet-EX Software Release ***

GASNet-EX is the next generation of the GASNet-1 communication system. 
The GASNet interfaces are being redesigned to accommodate the emerging
needs of exascale supercomputing, providing communication services to a
variety of PGAS programming models on current and future HPC architectures.

GASNet-EX is a work-in-progress.
Many features remain to be specified, implemented, and/or tuned.

Users interested in learning what's new in GASNet-EX are recommended to peruse 
the ChangeLog file in this directory for a summary of recent developments.
The docs/GASNet-EX.txt file provides more detailed information about
the evolving EX specification.

GASNet-EX notably includes a backwards-compatibility layer to assist in
migration of current GASNet-1 client software. Existing GASNet clients can
get started by relying on this layer (provided in gasnet.h), and incrementally 
add calls to the new gex_* interfaces (defined in gasnetex.h, which is 
automatically included by gasnet.h) to access new EX features and capabilities.
For details, see docs/gasnet1_differences.md.

Feedback or questions on any matters related to the GASNet-EX project are
welcomed at: [email protected]

EX-Specific Implementation Notes:

* gasnet_fwd.h provides a dependency-free useful subset of the API
  declarations, suitable for inclusion into application-level code.

* The following public headers may be included in any order:
  - gasnetex.h       : GASNet-EX API + Tools
  - gasnet.h         : GASNet-1 API (also includes gasnetex.h)
  - gasnet_fwd.h     : Forward declaration subset for app inclusion
  - gasnet_ratomic.h : Remote Atomics API
  - gasnet_vis.h     : Non-contiguous RMA (VIS) API
  - gasnet_coll.h    : Collectives API

=======================================================================
=======================================================================

README file for GASNet
https://gasnet.lbl.gov

This is a user manual for GASNet. Anyone planning on using GASNet (either
directly or indirectly) should consult this file for usage instructions.

Other documentation:
 * In this README the "docs directory" means either docs/ in the source
   directory or ${prefix}/share/doc/gasnet/ in an installation of GASNet.
 * For GASNet licensing and usage terms, see license.txt.
 * For documentation on a particular GASNet conduit, see the README file in the
   conduit directory (also installed as README-<conduit> in the docs directory).
 * For documentation on job spawning mechanisms, see the README file in the
   corresponding other/*-spawner directory (also installed as README-*-spawner
   in the docs directory).
 * For documentation on the communication-independent GASNet-tools library,
   see README-tools.
 * Additional information, including the GASNet specification and our bug
   tracking database, is available from https://gasnet.lbl.gov
 * Anyone planning to modify or add to the GASNet code base should also read
   the developer documents, available in the GASNet git repository, which 
   can be browsed online: https://bitbucket.org/berkeleylab/gasnet/src/develop
   + README-devel: GASNet design information and coding standards
   + README-git: Rules developers are expected to follow when committing
   + template-conduit: A fill-in-the-blanks conduit code skeleton

Contents of this file:
 * Introduction
 * Building and Installing GASNet
 * Manual control over compile and link flags
 * Basic Usage Information
 * Conduit Status
 * Launching/Running GASNet Applications
 * Single-node Development Options
 * Supported Platforms
 * Recognized Environment Variables
 * GASNet exit
 * GASNet tracing & statistical collection
 * GASNet Collectives
 * GASNet debug malloc services
 * GASNet inter-Process SHared Memory (PSHM)
 * MPI Interoperability
 * Contact Info and Support

Introduction
============

GASNet is a language-independent, low-level networking layer that provides
network-independent, high-performance communication primitives tailored for
implementing parallel global address space SPMD languages and libraries such as
UPC, UPC++, Co-Array Fortran, Legion, Chapel, and many others. The interface is
primarily intended as a compilation target and for use by runtime library
writers (as opposed to end users), and the primary goals are high performance,
interface portability, and expressiveness. GASNet stands for "Global-Address
Space Networking".

The GASNet API is defined in the specification, which is included with this 
archive in docs/, and the definitive version is located on the GASNet webpage:

  https://gasnet.lbl.gov/

This README accompanies the GASNet source distribution, which includes
implementations of the GASNet API for various popular HPC and general-purpose
network hardwares.  We use the term "conduit" to refer to any complete
implementation of the GASNet API which targets a specific network device or
lower-level networking layer. A conduit is comprised of any required headers,
source files and supporting libraries necessary to provide the functionality of
the GASNet API to GASNet clients. This distribution additionally includes
a library of communication-independent portability tools called the "GASNet tools",
which are used in the conduit implementations and also made available to clients
(see README-tools for details).

System Requirements
===================
GASNet is extremely portable, and runs on most systems that are relevant to HPC
production or development (and many that are not).

The minimum system requirements are:

 * A POSIX-like environment, e.g. Linux or another version of Unix.
   For Mac systems, the free 'Xcode command-line tools' from the Apple Store.
   For Windows systems one needs either of two options:
   + The free 'Cygwin' toolkit (https://www.cygwin.com/)
   + Windows 10 Subsystem for Linux, a.k.a. WSL
     (https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/wsl/)
 * GNU make (version 3.79 or newer).
 * Perl (version 5.005 or newer).
 * The following standard Unix tools: 'awk', 'sed', 'env', 'basename', 'dirname',
   and a Bourne-compatible shell (e.g. bash).
 * A C compiler with at least minimal C99 support.

We explicitly support most OS's, architectures and compilers in widespread use today.
See the 'Supported Platforms' section for details on systems we've recently validated.

Most distributed-memory GASNet conduits have additional requirements, based on their
interactions with network hardware and other implementation details. For example:

 * mpi-conduit requires an MPI-1.1 or newer compliant MPI implementation.
 * udp-conduit requires POSIX socket libraries and a C++98 or newer compiler.

See each conduit README for additional details on system requirements.

Building and Installing GASNet
==============================
Here are the steps to build GASNet:

* Step 0 (optional): ./Bootstrap  
  Runs the autoconf tools to build a configure script (this can be done on any
system and may already have been done for you).
  If you are keeping a copy of the GASNet sources in your own source control
repository (CVS, svn, Hg, Git, etc.), then please also see "Source Control and
GASNet" in README-devel (in the GASNet git repo).

* Step 1: ./configure (options)
  Generate the Makefiles tailored to your system, creating a build tree in the
current working directory.  You can run configure from a different directory to
place your build files somewhere other than inside the source tree (a nice
option when maintaining several build trees on the same source tree). 
Any compiler flags required for correct operation on your system (e.g. to 
select the correct ABI) should be included in the values of CC, CXX and MPI_CC.
For example to build 32-bit code when your gcc and g++ default to 64-bit:
  configure CC='gcc -m32' CXX='g++ -m32' MPI_CC='mpicc -m32'
or similarly, if you want libgasnet to contain debugging symbols:
  configure CC='gcc -g' CXX='g++ -g'   (however also see --enable-debug, below)

  Some of the useful configure options:

    --help - display all available configure options
    --prefix=/install/path - set the directory where GASNet will be installed
    --enable-debug - build GASNet in a debugging mode. This turns on C-level
      debugger options and also enables extensive error and sanity checking 
      system-wide, which is highly recommended for developing and debugging 
      GASNet clients (but should NEVER be used for performance testing). 
      --enable-debug also implies --enable-{trace,stats,debug-malloc},
      but these can still be selectively --disable'd.
    --enable-trace - turn on GASNet tracing (see usage info below)
    --enable-stats - turn on GASNet statistical collection (see usage info below)
    --enable-debug-malloc - use GASNet debugging malloc (see usage info below)
    --enable-segment-{fast,large,everything} - select a GASNet segment 
      configuration (see the GASNet spec for more info)
    --enable-pshm - Build GASNet with inter-Process SHared Memory (PSHM) support.
      This feature uses shared memory communication among the processes (aka
      GASNet nodes) within a single compute node (where the other alternatives
      are multi-threading via a PAR or PARSYNC build; or use of the conduit's
      API to perform the communication).
      Note that not all conduits and operating systems support this feature.
      For more information, see the section below entitled "GASNet inter-Process
      SHared Memory (PSHM)".
    --with-max-segsize=<val> - configure-time default value for GASNET_MAX_SEGSIZE,
      which is used when GASNET_MAX_SEGSIZE is not set at runtime. See the description 
      of the GASNET_MAX_SEGSIZE environment variable below for details.
      
  Configure will detect various interesting features about your system and
compilers, including which GASNet conduits are supported.

  For cross-compilation support, look for an appropriate cross configure
script in other/contrib/ and link it into your top-level source directory and
invoke it in place of configure.  Example for the Cray XC with slurm:
     cd <path-to-gasnet-src>
     ln -s other/contrib/cross-configure-cray-aries-slurm .
     cd <your-build-dir>
     <path-to-gasnet-src>/cross-configure-cray-aries-slurm (configure_options)

  For cross-compilation support on platforms without scripts in other/contrib
see the instructions in other/cross-configure-help.c.
[NOTE: We currently don't distribute the cross-configure-help.c in our
normal distribution.  If you think you need it, contact us at [email protected]]

  On HPE Cray EX (aka "Shasta") systems, we recommend the following configure
  arguments to use the vendor's compiler wrappers:
    --with-cc=cc --with-cxx=CC --with-mpi-cc=cc
  Additionally, exactly one of the following is recommended to ensure that
  ofi-conduit is built for the appropriate libfabric provider:
    * HPE Cray EX with Slingshot-10 (100Gbps) NICs: --with-ofi-provider=verbs
    * HPE Cray EX with Slingshot-11 (200Gbps) NICs: --with-ofi-provider=cxi
    * HPE Cray EX with BOTH NIC types: --with-ofi-provider=generic

  On Linux clusters with Omni-Path networks from Intel or Cornelis Networks, we
  recommend the following configure arguments to avoid using ibv-conduit over
  an emulated libibverbs:
    --disable-ibv --enable-ofi --with-ofi-provider=psm2

  On Linux InfiniBand clusters with InfiniPath HCAs from PathScale/QLogic or
  True Scale HCAs from Intel, we recommend the following configure arguments to
  use mpi-conduit (and to avoid using ibv-conduit or ofi-conduit):
    --enable-mpi --disable-ibv --disable-ofi

* Step 2: make all
  Build the GASNet libraries. A number of other useful makefile targets 
  are available from the top-level:
    make {seq,par,parsync}
      build the conduit libraries in a given mode
    make tests-{seq,par,parsync}  
      build all the GASNet tests in a given mode
    make run-tests-{seq,par,parsync}  
      build and run all the GASNet tests in a given mode
    make (run-)tests-installed-{seq,par,parsync}
      use the installed library to build (and run) all the GASNet tests
    make run-tests
      run whatever tests are already built in the conduit directories
    make run-tests TESTS="test1 test2..."
      run specifically-listed tests that are already built in the conduit directories
    make DO_WHAT="<makefile target>"
      build selected makefile target in all supported conduit directories
  Each conduit directory also has several useful makefile targets:
    make {seq,par,parsync}
      build the conduit libraries in a given mode
    make tests-{seq,par,parsync}  
      build the conduit tests in a given mode
    make testXXX 
      build just testXXX, in SEQ mode
    make testXXX-{seq,par,parsync}
      build just testXXX, in a given mode
    make run-tests-{seq,par,parsync}  
      build and run the conduit tests in a given mode
    make (run-)tests-installed-{seq,par,parsync}
      use the installed library to build (and run) all the GASNet tests
    make run-tests
      run whatever tests are already built in the conduit directory
    make run-tests TESTS="test1 test2..."
      run specifically-listed tests that are already built in the conduit directory
    make run-testexit
      build a script to run the testexit tester and run it
  Compilation and linker flags for the GASNet libraries and tests can be
  augmented from the command-line by setting the following variables in the make
  command, as described in more detail in the next section:
    make MANUAL_CFLAGS=...    Flags to add on the C compile for GASNet libs, clients & tests
    make MANUAL_CXXFLAGS=...  Flags to add on the C++ compile for GASNet libs, clients & tests
    make MANUAL_MPICFLAGS=... Flags to add on the mpicc compile for GASNet libs, clients & tests
    make MANUAL_DEFINES=...   Flags to add on all compiles for GASNet libs, clients & tests
    make MANUAL_LDFLAGS=...   Linker flags to add for GASNet clients & tests
    make MANUAL_LIBS=...      Linker library flags to add for GASNet clients & tests
  Note this feature should be used sparingly, as some flags can invalidate the
  results of tests performed at configure time. The preferred way to add arbitrary
  flags is in the $CC, $CXX and $MPI_CC variables passed to configure.
  The following misc make variables can also be set to affect GASNet compilation:
    make SEPARATE_CC=1        
      Build libgasnet using separate C compiler invocations, rather than one big one.
    make KEEPTMPS=1           
      Keep temporary files generated by the C compiler, if supported.

* Step 3 (optional): make install
  Install GASNet to the directory chosen at configure time. This will create an
include directory with a sub-directory for each supported conduit, and a lib
directory containing a library file for each supported conduit, as well as any
supporting libraries.
  GASNet may also be used directly from the build directory, as a convenience to
eliminate steps if you are making changes to GASNet or its configuration.

Manual control over compile and link flags
==========================================

As described in the previous section, the recommended mechanism for passing
flags to the compilers used by GASNet is to include them in the definition of
the compiler variable itself (e.g. CC='gcc -m64').  These will be followed on
the command line by flags chosen by GASNet's configure script instead of using
the standard CFLAGS and CXXFLAGS make variables.  If there is a need to pass
flags that override ones chosen by configure, then one may set MANUAL_CFLAGS,
MANUAL_CXXFLAGS and MANUAL_MPICFLAGS on the 'make' command line, and these are
guaranteed to appear on the compilation command line after the ones chosen by
configure.  Additionally, MANUAL_DEFINES is provided to pass flags to all
three compilers, but its order on the command line is not guaranteed (since it
is intended for position-independent command line options such as '-Dfoo=10').

Note that GASNet does not assume that MPI_CC is the same compiler as CC
(though that is recommended), and therefore invokes it using a distinct
MANUAL_MPICFLAGS, instead of MANUAL_CFLAGS.  The MPI C compiler is used to
compile a portion of mpi-conduit (AMMPI) and the MPI-based spawner code used
by several conduits; and to link executables for mpi-conduit and any conduit
in which the MPI-based spawner is enabled.  Similarly, the C++ compiler is
used to compile a portion of udp-conduit (AMUDP) and to link udp-conduit
executables.

Finally, the make variables MANUAL_LDFLAGS and MANUAL_LIBS are provided to add
to the link command lines, after the respective configure-detected settings.
They are intended for flags such as '-Ldir' and '-lfoo', respectively.  Since
they do not have compiler-specific variants, their use is limited to
compiler-independent flags unless special care is taken with the selection of
the make target to ensure that make only invokes one compiler as a linker.

All of the MANUAL_* make variables described above are honored by the Makefile
infrastructure used to build GASNet's libraries and tests.  Additionally, the
makefile fragments (next section) use these variables when compiling client
code.

Basic Usage Information
=======================
See the README for each GASNet conduit implementation for specific usage
information, but generally client programs should #include <gasnetex.h>
(and nothing else), and use the conduit-provided compilation settings.

The best way to get the correct compiler flags for your GASNet client is to 
"include" the appropriate makefile fragment for the conduit and configuration 
you want in your Makefile, and use the variables it defines in the Makefile 
rules for your GASNet client code.

For example:
  ----------------------------
  include $(gasnet_prefix)/include/mpi-conduit/mpi-seq.mak 

  .c.o:
	  $(GASNET_CC) $(GASNET_CPPFLAGS) $(GASNET_CFLAGS) -c -o $@ $<

  .cc.o:
	  $(GASNET_CXX) $(GASNET_CXXCPPFLAGS) $(GASNET_CXXFLAGS) -c -o $@ $<

  myprog: myprog.o
	  $(GASNET_LD) $(GASNET_LDFLAGS) -o $@ $< $(GASNET_LIBS)
  ----------------------------

See tests/Makefile for another example of compiling GASNet client code.

For more fine-grained control, the flags variables break-down as follows:
  GASNET_CFLAGS is an alias for:
     $(GASNET_OPT_CFLAGS) $(GASNET_MISC_CFLAGS)
  GASNET_CPPFLAGS is an alias for:
     $(GASNET_MISC_CPPFLAGS) $(GASNET_DEFINES) $(GASNET_INCLUDES)
  GASNET_CXXFLAGS is an alias for:
     $(GASNET_OPT_CXXFLAGS) $(GASNET_MISC_CXXFLAGS)
  GASNET_CXXCPPFLAGS is an alias for:
     $(GASNET_MISC_CXXCPPFLAGS) $(GASNET_DEFINES) $(GASNET_INCLUDES)

The content of these variables follow these general guidelines:
* GASNET_[CC,CXX] contain the configure-detected C and C++ compilers used to build
  GASNet and guaranteed to work with any compiler-specific flags embedded in the
  corresponding variables. Clients are strongly advised to compile all modules
  using these same compilers to ensure object compatibility.
* GASNET_INCLUDES contains only and all -I preprocessor flags
* GASNET_DEFINES contains only and all -D or -U preprocessor flags
* GASNET_OPT_* contain compiler-specific flags controlling the debug/opt level
* GASNET_MISC_* contain other needed compiler-specific compile-time flags
* GASNET_LD contains one of the configure-detected compilers (CC, CXX or MPI_CC)
  which should be used to link the GASNet client executable, in order to guarantee
  satisfaction of conduit library dependencies (eg on C++ or MPI).
* GASNET_LIBS contains only and all -L or -l link-time flags
* GASNET_LDFLAGS contains other needed link-time flags, which may be GASNET_LD-specific
This summary is provided for informational purposes only - altering or omitting
any of the flags contained in these variables could result in a non-functional
build environment.

Using GASNet with pkg-config 
----------------------------

As a convenience, the same variables described in the previous section are also
available via the UNIX pkg-config utility.  For example, if pkg-config is installed
on your system and the GASNet .pc files are in your PKG_CONFIG_PATH, then you
can retrieve the value for GASNET_CC for udp-conduit in GASNET_SEQ mode with a
command like:

   pkg-config gasnet-udp-seq --variable=GASNET_CC

Note the pkg-config --cflags and --libs arguments retrieve the appropriate subset of 
GASNet variables, but pkg-config does not offer aliases corresponding to GASNET_CC,
GASNET_LD or the GASNET_*CXX* variables. Use the `pkg-config --variable=` syntax 
to retrieve these.

Here is a complete example of using pkg-config with GASNet in a Makefile:

  PKG_CONFIG_PATH = $(gasnet_prefix)/lib/pkgconfig
  pkg = gasnet-udp-seq

  .c.o:
          `pkg-config $(pkg) --variable=GASNET_CC` `pkg-config $(pkg) --cflags` -c -o $@ $<

  .cc.o:
          `pkg-config $(pkg) --variable=GASNET_CXX` `pkg-config $(pkg) --variable=GASNET_CXXCPPFLAGS` \
                         `pkg-config $(pkg) --variable=GASNET_CXXFLAGS` -c -o $@ $<

  myprog: myprog.o
          `pkg-config $(pkg) --variable=GASNET_LD` -o $@ $< `pkg-config $(pkg) --libs`


Conduit Status
==============

The GASNet distribution includes multiple complete implementations of the GASNet API
targeting particular lower-level networking layers. Each of these implementations 
is called a 'conduit'. In some cases the lower-level layer is a proprietary or 
hardware-specific network API, whereas in other cases the target API is a
portable standard (although in some cases this distinction is blurred). The corresponding 
GASNet conduits can be loosely categorized as either 'native' or 'portable' conduits.

Below is the list of conduits in the current distribution, and their high-level status.
Many conduits are supported on multiple platforms (CPU architectures, operating systems 
and compilers) - see the 'Supported Platforms' section for more details on platforms.
For more detailed info about each conduit, please consult the corresponding conduit README.

Portable conduits:
-----------------

smp-conduit: SMP loopback (shared memory)
 The conduit of choice for GASNet operation within a single shared-memory node.
 Rigorously tested and supported on all current platforms. 
  
udp-conduit: UDP/IP (part of the TCP/IP protocol suite)
 The conduit of choice for GASNet over Ethernet, supported on any TCP/IP-compliant network.
 Rigorously tested over Ethernet and supported on most current platforms (see below).
 
mpi-conduit: MPI (Message Passing Interface)
 A portable implementation of GASNet over MPI-1.1 or later.
 Intended as a reference implementation for systems lacking native conduit support.
 Rigorously tested and supported on most current platforms (see below).

ucx-conduit: Unified Communication X framework [EXPERIMENTAL]
 GASNet over the Unified Communication X framework (UCX).
 This conduit is currently experimental, and is not yet carefully tuned for performance.
 It has only been validated on NVIDIA/Mellanox InfiniBand devices starting from ConnectX-5.

ofi-conduit: Open Fabrics Interfaces (most providers)
 GASNet over the Open Fabrics Interface framework (libfabric).
 This conduit is functionally complete but not yet carefully tuned for performance.
 With the exception of Slingshot and Omni-Path networks (where ofi-conduit
 is either the best or only option and considered "native"), users are advised to
 use other conduits compatible with their hardware.

Native, high-performance conduits:
---------------------------------

aries-conduit:  Cray XC Aries
 The conduit of choice for GASNet on the Aries networks in Cray XC systems.
 Rigorously tested and supported.

ibv-conduit: InfiniBand Verbs
 GASNet over the OpenFabrics Verbs API.
 Rigorously tested and supported over InfiniBand hardware on all supported systems (see below).
 Believed to also work on other hardware offering a standard-compliant Verbs layer.

ofi-conduit: Open Fabrics Interfaces (select providers/networks)
 GASNet over the Open Fabrics Interface framework (libfabric).
 This conduit is functionally complete but not yet carefully tuned for performance.
 On Slingshot and Omni-Path networks, ofi-conduit is either the best
 or only option available.  On only those systems, ofi-conduit is categorized as a
 native, high-performance conduit.

Launching/Running GASNet Applications
=====================================

This section provides pointers to information regarding the configuration
and use of the job spawning mechanisms provided in GASNet.

Often, runtimes or frameworks which are clients of GASNet provide their own
utilities for application launch (aka spawning).  Users of such utilities should
refer to their respective documentation for advice which is specific to the
client.  However, the information referenced in this section most often remains
relevant to configuration.

smp-conduit:
 This conduit uses a conduit-specific spawning mechanism.
 See smp-conduit/README for documentation.

udp-conduit:
 This conduit offers a choice among several conduit-specific spawning mechanisms.
 See udp-conduit/README for documentation.

mpi-conduit:
 This conduit uses MPI for job spawning.
 In addition to the documentation for the `mpirun` (or equivalent) specific to
 your MPI implementation, see mpi-conduit/README and other/mpi-spawner/README
 for documentation.

aries-conduit:
 By default, this conduit uses PMI for spawning, though MPI is also an option.
 See aries-conduit/README and other/pmi-spawner/README for documentation.

ibv-conduit, ofi-conduit and ucx-conduit:
 These conduits can use ssh, MPI or PMI for spawning.
 For documentation, see the individual *-conduit/README files, as well as the files
 other/ssh-spawner/README, other/mpi-spawner/README and other/pmi-spawner/README

In the text above, document locations are given as those in the GASNet sources.
When installed, they are located in $prefix/share/doc/GASNet as README-[topic],
where [topic] may be a conduit such as "ibv" or a spawner such as "ssh-spawner".

Single-node Development Options
===============================

GASNet supports hardware configurations ranging from HPC supercomputers and
clusters to individual workstations and laptops.  Often the easiest way to
develop and debug code is in a single-node environment, so this section
provides conduit recommendations for development.  It should also be noted
that configure option --enable-debug is highly recommended for finding bugs
when developing GASNet client code.

Option 1.  smp-conduit
----------------------
This is a pure shared-memory implementation and should be the fastest and
easiest to use option.  GASNet's shared memory support should work "out of
the box" (no special configuration options required) on common laptop,
desktop, and workstation environments, including Linux, macOS, Windows with
Cygwin, Windows 10 Subsystem for Linux (WSL), and Solaris.

Option 2.  udp-conduit
----------------------
By default this will be a shared-memory implementation within your single
node, indistinguishable from smp-conduit except for small issues like job
launch and stdin/out/err handling.  However, one can disable shared memory
(by passing --disable-pshm at configure time or by setting the environment
variable GASNET_SUPERNODE_MAXSIZE=1 at runtime).  This may be more realistic
for testing of the expected behaviors in multi-node systems.

Option 3.  mpi-conduit
----------------------
If you have a MPI installed (and in your $PATH when GASNet is configured)
then everything said for udp-conduit holds true for mpi-conduit, including
the ability to disable shared-memory support.  Additionally, since MPI will
very likely use shared-memory internally, you can get multi-node like
isolation at the GASNet level with the performance of shared-memory
communication (much better than udp).

Supported Platforms
===================

Platforms where GASNet and Berkeley UPC have been successfully tested include:

      OS/Architecture/compiler/ABI: network conduits
      ----------------------------------------------
    * Linux/x86-Ethernet/{gcc,clang}32: smp, mpi, udp
    * Linux/x86-InfiniBand/gcc/32:     smp, mpi, udp, ibv
    * Linux/x86/IntelC/32:           smp, mpi, udp
    * Linux/x86/PortlandGroupC/32:   smp, mpi, udp
    * Linux/x86_64-Ethernet/{gcc,clang,PGI}/{32,64}: smp, mpi, udp, ofi
    * Linux/x86_64-InfiniBand/{gcc,clang,PathScale,NVHPC,IntelC,Intel oneAPI}/64: smp, mpi, udp, ibv
    * Linux/x86_64-Omni-Path/gcc/64: smp, mpi, udp, ofi
    * Linux/x86_64/x86-Open64/64:   smp, udp, #

    * Linux/PowerPC-Ethernet/{gcc,clang}/{32,64}: smp, mpi, udp
    * Linux/PowerPC-HFI/gcc/32: smp, mpi, udp &
    * Linux/PPC64le/{gcc,clang,pgi,NVHPC,xlc}/64:     smp, mpi, udp, ibv #

    * Linux/MIPS/gcc/{32,n32,64}:       smp, udp, #
    * Linux/MIPS64el/gcc/{32,n32,64}:   smp, udp, #

    * FreeBSD/{x86,amd64}/{gcc,clang}/{32,64}: smp, mpi, udp
    * OpenBSD/{x86,amd64}/{gcc,clang}/{32,64}: smp, mpi, udp
    * NetBSD/{x86,amd64}/{gcc,clang}/{32,64}:  smp, mpi, udp

    * Solaris10/SPARC/gcc/{32,64}: smp, udp, mpi
    * Solaris10/x86/gcc/{32,64}:   smp, udp, mpi
    * OpenSolaris/x86/gcc/{32,64}: smp, udp, #
    * Solaris11Express/x86/gcc/{32,64}: smp, udp, mpi, ibv
    * Solaris11/x86/gcc/{32,64}: smp, udp, mpi, ibv

    * MSWindows-Cygwin/{x86,x86_64}/{gcc,clang}/{32,64}: smp, udp, mpi (OpenMPI)
    * MSWindows10-Linux(WSL)/{gcc,clang}/64: smp, udp, mpi

    * macOS/{x86,x86_64}/icc/{32,64}: smp, udp, mpi &
    * macOS/{x86,x86_64}/{gcc,clang}/{32,64}: smp, udp, mpi
    * macOS/{x86,x86_64}/PGI/{32,64}: smp, udp, #
    * macOS/AARCH64/{gcc,clang}/64:   smp, udp, #

    * CNL/Cray-XT/{gcc,PGI,PathScale,Intel}/64: smp, mpi &

    * CNL/Cray-XE/{gcc,PGI,PathScale,Intel,Cray}/64: smp, mpi &
    * CNL/Cray-XK/{gcc,PGI,PathScale,Intel,Cray}/64: smp, mpi &

    * CNL/Cray-XC/{gcc,Intel,Cray}/64: smp, mpi, aries, ofi

    * CNL/HPE-Cray-EX/{gcc,Cray}/64: smp, mpi, ofi

    * Linux/Cray-XD1/{gcc,PGI}/64: smp, mpi &

    * ucLinux/Microblaze/gcc/32: smp, udp, #%&

    * Linux/ARM/{gcc,clang}/32:       smp, udp, #
    * Linux/AARCH64/{gcc,clang}/64:   smp, udp, mpi

# = We have not tested MPI but have no reasons to doubt that mpi-conduit would work.
% = System lacks pthreads or they are broken
& = System has not been tested in recent releases due to lack of access.
    Reports of success or failure on this system are strongly encouraged.
BETA = Support for this system is in beta state, please report your experiences.

This list is not meant to be exhaustive.
Other combinations of the platforms above are likely to also work, these are
just the systems we've personally tested. Several of the systems listed using a
vendor-specific C compiler can also use gcc as the underlying C compiler,
although we generally recommend the vendor C compiler for performance reasons.

The following compilers are believed to work on platforms listed above, 
with the provided minimum version:
Gnu (gcc 3.0+), LLVM (clang 3.6+), Apple (Xcode 7.1+), PGI (pgcc 11.0 to 20.4),
NVHPC (20.9+), Intel (icc 16+), Intel oneAPI (icx 21+), IBM XL (xlc 13+),
Cray (CCE 8.6+)

Recognized Environment Variables
================================

Users of language- or application-specific wrappers for job launch should also
consult the wrapper's documentation.  Such wrappers often have options to set
these environment variables while also enabling any corresponding language- or
application-specific support.

In the following descriptions, a "Boolean" setting is one which accepts "1",
"y" and "yes" as TRUE and "0", "n" and "no" as FALSE (all case-insensitive).
While the descriptions use "0" or "1" to be concrete, one may substitute any of
these aliases.

* GASNET_VERBOSEENV: Boolean setting to output information about environment
 variable settings read by the conduit that affect conduit behavior.

* GASNET_FREEZE: Boolean setting to make GASNet pause and wait for a debugger
 to attach on startup

* GASNET_FREEZE_ON_ERROR: Boolean setting to make GASNet pause and wait for a
 debugger to attach on any fatal errors or fatal signals

* GASNET_FREEZE_SIGNAL: set to a signal name (e.g. "SIGINT" or "SIGUSR1") to
 specify a signal that will cause the process to freeze and await debugger attach.

* GASNET_TRACEFILE, GASNET_TRACEMASK, GASNET_STATSFILE, GASNET_STATSMASK, 
  GASNET_TRACEFLUSH, GASNET_TRACELOCAL, GASNET_TRACENODES, GASNET_STATSNODES:
   control tracing & statistical features, if enabled at configure time.
   See usage information below.

* GASNET_TEST_POLITE_SYNC: Boolean setting to enable polite-mode synchronization
  for the GASNet tests (only), for running with overcommitted CPUs.

* GASNET_MALLOC_* : control the GASNet debug malloc features, if enabled at configure time.
 See usage information below.

* GASNET_MAX_SEGSIZE - control the upper limit for FAST/LARGE segment size on most conduits
 This setting defaults to the value passed to configure: --with-max-segsize=<val>
 In FAST and LARGE segment configurations, GASNet probes each compute node at
 startup to determine an upper-limit on the available space for use in the
 GASNet segment (and some other large internal objects). This value provides
 one upper-limit to that probe, which also has the effect of limiting the 
 space available for client segments (as reported by gasnet_getMaxLocalSegmentSize()).
 <val> has the following format: size_spec ( / opt_suffix )
 where 'size_spec' is either an absolute memory size: [0-9]+{KB,MB,GB}
 or a fraction of compute node physical memory: 0.85
 and 'opt_suffix' is one of the following: (or empty, which means "P")
  "P" : means the limit is per-process and EXCLUDES internal GASNet objects
  "H" : means the limit is host-wide and INCLUDES internal GASNet objects 
 Examples:
  "0.85/H" : limit host-wide use at 85% of physical memory (this is also the default)
  "4GB/P"  : try to ensure 4GB per process of GASNet shared segment space
 The default behavior of this option has grown considerably smarter over time, so
 it's anticipated that most clients will never need to set this.

* GASNET_DISABLE_MUNMAP - Boolean setting to request the use of mallopt() on
 glibc systems to disable mmap-based allocation for satisfying malloc. This
 can be used to work-around a known bug in firehose (bug 495) that could lead
 to incorrect behavior after free()ing out-of-segment memory areas previously
 used for communication. Note that on some systems (32-bit Linux in
 particular) the disable is only partly effective because once the
 sbrk()-controlled heap reaches the bottom of shared libraries, glibc will use
 mmap() used to obtain memory regardless of any options one can control.
 The default is conduit-dependent.

* GASNET_MAX_THREADS - per-node limit on the number of GASNet client pthreads 
  (in PAR and PARSYNC modes) that can simultaneously be live on each GASNet node.
  This is subject to the hard limit established by configure --with-max-pthreads-per-node,
  and pthread limits that may be imposed by specific conduits (see conduit README).

* GASNET_SUPERNODE_MAXSIZE - limit on size of a GASNet "supernode".
 This is the maximum number of processes (GASNet "nodes") that will be grouped
 into a shared-memory "supernode", as reported by gasnet_getNodeInfo() and used
 by shared-memory communication (PSHM).  A value of zero means no limit.

* GASNET_PSHM_BARRIER_HIER - Boolean setting to enable/disable hierarchical
 shared-memory barrier.  When shared-memory communication (PSHM) is enabled,
 the default behavior of most of GASNet's barrier implementations is to use a
 two-stage barrier which coordinates within each supernode before
 communicating across the network.
 This variable can be set to "0" to disable this optimization.

* GASNET_USE_HUGEPAGES - Boolean setting to enable/disable use of huge pages.
 This variable is silently ignored if hugetlbfs support was not enabled at
 configure time.  Otherwise, the value defaults to "1" if the environment
 variable "HUGETLB_DEFAULT_PAGE_SIZE" is set and "0" if it is not.
 A value of "1" enables the use of libhugetlbfs for certain memory allocations
 such as GASNet-allocated segments and some internal buffers.  A value of
 "0" tells GASNet-EX to instead allocate normal pages, as it would if hugetlbfs
 support was not enabled.

* GASNET_CATCH_EXIT - Boolean setting, where a "0" prevents GASNet from forcing
 global job termination (via atexit() or on_exit()) when a process calls
 exit() or returns from main().  GASNet's default behavior helps prevent
 orphaned processes that can occur in some systems after an incomplete job
 termination, but may interfere with some profiling tools that write output
 inside atexit handlers.  Setting this variable may allow those tools to
 operate, but the client code (or other entity) must assume responsibility for
 ensuring no orphan processes are left behind.

 Note this variable does not affect the behavior of explicit calls to gasnet_exit() 
 (either directly or indirectly via calls like upc_global_exit(), returning from 
 UPC main(), or reaching the GASNet default fatal signal handler) which will still bypass
 atexit handlers and kill the job. The recommended method to ensure the execution of 
 atexit handlers is to run with GASNET_CATCH_EXIT=0 and collectively invoke libc exit().

* GASNET_NO_CATCH_SIGNAL - specify a comma separated list of signals
 to exclude from GASNet default signal handling. Formats "SIGSEGV",
 "SEGV", "sigsegv", "segv", and "11" are accepted. If the value of
 this environment variable is "*" (alone, with no leading or trailing
 whitespace), GASNet will not register the default handler for any
 signal.
 
 The default handler provides GASNet's backtrace support and ensures clean
 exits when fatal signals are received.  Disabling this handler may
 allow use of other tools for debugging of signals, but is not intended
 for production use.

* GASNET_BACKTRACE - Boolean setting to request the generation of stack
 backtraces on most fatal errors.  The format/content of these backtraces
 varies by platform.  On some platforms no backtrace support is available and
 this variable will be ignored.  Backtraces are sent to stderr and to the
 trace file if tracing is active (see below).

 WARNING: Some fatal errors may involve memory corruption or other abnormal
 conditions that could cause the backtrace code to hang. For this reason we
 do not recommend setting GASNET_BACKTRACE by default (though there is no
 performance penalty for doing so).
 When reporting bugs, one is strongly encouraged to include a backtrace if
 possible.  The backtrace is almost always more detailed if GASNet is built
 with debugging enabled, but may still be useful to a GASNet developer in a
 non-debug build.  If tracing is active (see below) then a copy of the
 backtrace will be sent to the trace file.  This file may provide developers
 with potentially useful information about activities prior to the error.

* GASNET_BACKTRACE_NODES - if enabled by GASNET_BACKTRACE then this provides
 an optional list of nodes on which to permit backtraces.  The list may
 contain one or more integers or ranges separated by commas, such as "0,2-4,6".
 If unset, empty, or equal to "*" then all nodes may generate backtraces.

* GASNET_BACKTRACE_SIGNAL: set to a signal name (e.g. "SIGINT" or "SIGUSR1") to
 specify a signal that will cause the process to generate an immediate backtrace,
 and then continue executing. This is useful for getting a convenient
 backtrace for a "hung" process.

* GASNET_BACKTRACE_TYPE - set to a comma-delimited, ordered list of mechanisms 
 (i.e. different debugger tools) to try when generating a backtrace for
 GASNET_BACKTRACE. The default value (visible via GASNET_VERBOSEENV) includes
 all mechanisms detected as supported on the current platform.

* GASNET_BACKTRACE_MT - Boolean setting requesting multi-threaded backtraces
 when supported by the backtrace mechanism. This overrides the default, which
 is generally "1" for thread-safe builds and SEQ builds with conduit-internal
 threads. Otherwise, the default is "0".

* GASNET_DISABLE_ENVDECODE/GASNET_DISABLE_ARGDECODE - Boolean setting to disable
 the automatic decoding of environment variable values/command-line arguments.
 Some GASNet spawners automatically encode shell meta-characters passing
 through non-GASNet spawn scripts, in to order to ensure their safe delivery
 to the GASNet client program.

* GASNET_SPAWN_VERBOSE - Boolean setting to enable console debugging output of
 operations related to job creation and teardown. Details vary by configuration.

* GASNET_BARRIER - select the communication algorithm for use in GASNet barriers.
 The following values are available on all conduits:
  AMDISSEM - uses Active Messages to implement the Dissemination barrier
   algorithm as described in section 3.3 of
    John M. Mellor-Crummey and Michael L. Scott. "Algorithms for scalable
    synchronization on shared-memory multiprocessors." ACM ToCS, 9(1):21 65, 1991.
  RDMADISSEM - uses Put operations to implement the Dissemination algorithm.
  DISSEM - auto-selects either AMDISSEM or RDMADISSEM
   The AMDISSEM or RDMADISSEM algorithm is selected automatically based on
   conduit-specific criteria.  In general RDMADISSEM is favored when the GASNet
   Extended API is implemented natively.
  AMCENTRAL - uses Active Messages to manipulate a single centralized counter.
   This is an inherently non-scalable barrier which does not honor the setting
   of GASNET_PSHM_BARRIER_HIER to enable shared-memory optimizations.
   Therefore, this choice is available only for debugging purposes.
 In addition to those choices, many conduits have additional network-specific
 barrier algorithms documented in the corresponding conduit READMEs.
 The default is DISSEM, unless the conduit README documents another default.

* GASNET_PSHM_BARRIER_RADIX - set radix for intra-node barrier algorithm
 For configurations using PSHM (a function of OS and conduit) the GASNet barrier
 is performed in intra-node and inter-node stages.  This environment variable
 is the radix of the tree-based intra-node (shared-memory) barrier.
   If zero (default) then radix = size - 1, resulting in a "flat tree" (linear time)
   If positive, then the given value is the out-degree of an N-ary tree.
   If negative, then a tree is built with the processes in groups of size = -radix.
     The first process in each group is the parent of the others in that group.
     The rank==0 process is the parent of the other group-representatives (in
     addition to being the parent of the others in its own group).
 The default is 0 (linear) on most platforms.

* GASNET_PSHM_NETWORK_DEPTH - set depth of the intra-node AM network
 For configurations using PSHM (the default on most systems) GASNet implements
 intra-node Active Messages using a shared-memory queue.  This variable sets
 the "network depth" of this implementation in units of maximum-sized messages.
 A process can send at least this many out-bound intra-node AMs concurrently
 (to any peer) before the implementation might stall awaiting peer attentiveness
 to retire AMs.  When sending smaller messages, the effective depth is greater
 due to allocating less space in the queue than would be needed for a
 maximum-sized message.
 The default is 32 and the minimum is 4.

* GASNET_NODEMAP_EXACT - Boolean setting to enable an exact algorithm for
 discovery of shared memory nodes.
 Several GASNet conduits use mmap() and/or conduit-specific memory registration
 resources to establish the GASNet segment.  When multiple GASNet nodes (processes)
 run on the same O/S node, there is a potential for competition for resources which
 can be managed by coordinating among the processes.
 When PSHM support is enabled, multiple processes on the same O/S node must be
 identified so they can cross-mmap() their GASNet segments.
 Processes sharing the same O/S node can be discovered using an algorithm
 that runs in time linear in the number of GASNet nodes, and which is sufficient
 for all common process layout patterns.  However, this approach may fail to
 discover sharing in unusual cases.  Setting this variable to "1" enables an
 algorithm that is certain to find all sharing of memory, but has an expected
 running time proportional to N*log(N).
 The default is currently "1": use of the slower, but safer, exact algorithm.

* GASNET_VIS_AMPIPE - Boolean setting to enable packing of most non-contiguous
 put/gets into AMMediums, with each packet of size approx MaxMedium (the only
 exception being cases where both sides happen to be fully contiguous, in
 which case we skip packing). The default is conduit-dependent.

* GASNET_VIS_{PUT,GET}_MAXCHUNK - limits the max size of a contiguous chunk which
 will be packed by AM pipelining in a strided put/get or indexed put/get, respectively.
 The chunk size may additionally be limited based on the size that will fit in one MaxMedium.
 The default value is conduit-specific.

* GASNET_VIS_MAXCHUNK - Provides a default value for GASNET_VIS_{PUT,GET}_MAXCHUNK,
 to be used when the more specific knob is unset.

* GASNET_VIS_REMOTECONTIG - Boolean setting to enable a pack & RDMA algorithm for
 gather puts and scatter gets - i.e. cases that are locally non-contiguous but
 remotely contiguous. The default is conduit-dependent.

* GASNET_COLL_SCRATCH_SIZE - Specifies the size of the scratch space allocated
 on each rank for internal use in collective communications.  This is the
 preferred size allocated for the initial team, and is the value returned from
 a query using GEX_FLAG_TM_SCRATCH_SIZE_RECOMMENDED.
 If the size is set too low, then the performance of collectives may suffer.
 This parameter must be single-valued (same value on all processes).
 A value of zero is permitted, but any value below some implementation-specific
 minimum value will be silently increased to that minimum.
 Defaults to 2MB per rank.

* GASNET_COLL_ENABLE_SEARCH - Boolean setting to enable autotuning of collectives
* GASNET_COLL_TUNING_FILE - file to read and/or write collective autotuning data
 For usage information, see the file autotuner.txt in the docs directory.

* GASNET_FS_SYNC - Boolean setting to enable a sync() call (or equivalent) at
 exit time.  Default is "0".  Try this setting if you experience truncated
 output.

* GASNET_TMPDIR: if set to a valid directory name this is used instead of TMPDIR
 or "/tmp" as a location for creating temporary files.

* GASNET_SD_INIT, GASNET_SD_INITVAL and GASNET_SD_INITLEN
 These variables are *only* recognized in a build configured with --enable-debug.

 When using the negotiated-payload AM APIs, GASNet can optionally initialize the
 start of buffers it allocates at Prepare time with a defined pattern, and verify
 at Commit time that the client has over-written this "canary".  To reduce
 overhead, only a fixed-length pattern is used.  However, to avoid false alarms,
 this length must be sufficiently long to make the probability of matching the
 client data very low.

 GASNET_SD_INIT - Boolean setting which defaults to "1" in debug builds (and is
   effectively "0" otherwise)
   Setting to a "0" disables the initialization and checking
 GASNET_SD_INITVAL - Defaults to "NAN"
   Specifies the initialization pattern.
   See GASNET_MALLOC_INITVAL for more info.
 GASNET_SD_INITLEN - Defaults to 128
   Specifies the length of the "canary" used for this checking.
   If 'nbytes' passed to the Commit call is less than this length, then no
   checking will be performed.
   If set too small then the likelihood of random payloads corresponding to the
   initialization pattern may lead to false positives.
   The minimum is 1 byte and smaller values will be silently replaced by 1.

* GASNET_HOST_DETECT
 To implement gex_System_QueryHostInfo() and to construct shared-memory
 "nbrhds", GASNet must map the hosts (compute nodes) in a job.  This requires
 a unique identifier for each host.  This string-valued setting selects the
 identifier used.
 The following are implemented for most conduits:
   "gethostid" - the 32-bit value returned by POSIX gethostid()
   "hostname" - a 64-bit hash of the hostname (as reported by POSIX gethostname())
 Some conduits support:
   "conduit" - a network-specific identifier (such as a MAC address)
 On networks providing the "conduit" option, conduit-specific documentation will
 describe whether it is supported in addition to the two listed above, or if
 it is the *only* supported option.
 The default is determined as follows (from highest to lowest priority):
   IF "conduit" is supported THEN "conduit" is the default.
   ELSEIF configured using '--with-host-detect=...' THEN the "..." is the default.
   ELSEIF gethostid() is available THEN "gethostid" is the default.
   ELSE "hostname" is the default.

* OPTIONAL: GASNET_EXITTIMEOUT, GASNET_EXITTIMEOUT_MAX, GASNET_EXITTIMEOUT_MIN, and
 GASNET_EXITTIMEOUT_FACTOR - control exit-coordination timeout.  Some conduits use a
 timeout to distinguish orderly job exit from uncoordinated failure of one or more
 nodes.  This is important to help avoid leaving "orphan" processes on the nodes.
 These environment variables allow the user to adjust the length of time that the
 conduit will wait to establish contact among all nodes before deciding that an exit
 is uncoordinated.  By default, the timeout is computed as
   GASNET_EXITTIMEOUT = min(GASNET_EXITTIMEOUT_MAX,
                            GASNET_EXITTIMEOUT_MIN + nodes * GASNET_EXITTIMEOUT_FACTOR)
 Setting GASNET_EXITTIMEOUT provides a specific value, ignoring this formula.
 Setting one or more of the others will compute a value for GASNET_EXITTIMEOUT using
 the formula above (and defaults for any variables not set in the environment).
 Currently most conduits honor these settings.
 Smp-conduit honors these settings only when PSHM-support is enabled.
 Default values differ among these conduits.

* OPTIONAL: GASNET_THREAD_STACK_MIN, GASNET_THREAD_STACK_PAD
 Some conduits spawn additional threads internally for various purposes, which may
 include running client's AM handlers.  If such AM handlers have unusually large
 stack space requirements, a mechanism is required to ensure these internal threads
 will have large enough stacks.
 These settings allow one to control the stack sizes of these internal threads.
 The stack size requested from the system will be computed as
    stack_size = MAX(GASNET_THREAD_STACK_MIN,
                     GASNET_THREAD_STACK_PAD + default) 
 where "default" denotes the system's default thread stack size, and values
 of both variables have been rounded-up to a multiple of the page size.
 The actual stack size may be smaller (e.g. to satisfy rlimits) or larger
 (for instance, the next power of two in some implementations).
 The default for both settings is zero, which results in using the system
 default size for thread stacks.

* OPTIONAL: topology-aware environment variables
 Some conduits are capable of applying a certain degree of intelligence to the
 selection of NICs based on the job and host topology.  They have in common the
 use of the behaviors described here.  Current variables of this sort are:
    ibv-conduit:      'GASNET_IBV_PORTS_TYPE'      (default: "Socket")
    ofi-conduit:      'GASNET_OFI_DEVICE_TYPE'     (default: "Socket")
 This description uses '[BASE]' to replace the portion of these variable names
 preceding '_TYPE'.  Single-quotes (') are used to identify variable names (or
 portions of them) in prose, while double-quotes (") are use for example values.
 Where a conduit documents a "topology-aware environment variable":
    - Values of '[BASE]_TYPE' are matched using case-insensitive comparisons.
    - If '[BASE]_TYPE' is unset, the default value listed above is used.
    - If '[BASE]_TYPE' is set to "None" then it, and the computed-name
      variables described below, are ignored and the conduit will use the value
      of the variable '[BASE]', subject to conduit-specific defaults.
    - A valid value of '[BASE]_TYPE' consists of a required type (defined next)
      optionally followed by an arithmetic operation (described later).
    - Valid types name either a GASNet-defined property (based on process rank
      numbering) or hwloc-defined object type (based on process pinning and
      affinity to elements of the system).
    - The following GASNet-defined types are always supported:
        + "JRank"
          Process's jobrank
          Such as returned from `gex_System_QueryJobRank()`
        + "HRank"
          Process's host-relative rank
          Such as from the third argument to `gex_System_QueryHostInfo()`
        + "NRank"
          Process's nbrhd-relative rank
          Such as from the third argument to `gex_System_QueryNbrhdInfo()`
    - If 'hwloc' is detected at configure time, then its set of object types are
      also valid types.  Documentation for your version of hwloc should be
      considered definitive.  However, the following are some example object
      types which are known to be useful:
        + "Core"
          Logical ID (or IDs) of the CPU core(s) to which the process is bound.
        + "Node" or "NUMANode"
          Logical ID (or IDs) of the NUMA node(s) containing the CPU core(s) to
          which the process is bound.
        + "Socket" or "Package"
          Logical ID (or IDs) of the CPU package(s) containing the CPU core(s)
          to which the process is bound.
    - Independently on every process, the selected type is used to identify one
      or more integers, which are used to generate a process-specific
      integer-suffixed "computed variable name".  When more than a single
      integer is applicable, they are used in increasing order and separated by
      underscores.
        + Example 1:
              [BASE]_TYPE = "HRank"
          The first process on each host will use the variable named '[BASE]_0'.
          The second process on each host will use the variable named '[BASE]_1'.
        + Example 2:
              [BASE]_TYPE = "NUMANode"
          A process bound to at least one core each in NUMA nodes 0 and 2 (and
          in no other NUMA nodes) will use the variable name '[BASE]_0_2'
    - If the computed-name variable is set, then it takes precedence over the
      variable '[BASE]'.  Otherwise, '[BASE]' is used if set.  Finally, the
      conduit-specific default value for '[BASE]' will be used if '[BASE]' is
      also unset.
        + Example 3:
              GASNET_IBV_PORTS_TYPE = "Socket"
              GASNET_IBV_PORTS      = "mlx5_0+mlx5_1"
              GASNET_IBV_PORTS_0    = "mlx5_0"
              GASNET_IBV_PORTS_1    = "mlx5_1"
              GASNET_IBV_PORTS_0_1    is unset
          This example may be suitable for use of ibv-conduit on a hypothetical
          dual-socket system having one NIC with affinity to each socket.  Any
          process bound entirely to cores in socket 0 will use "mlx5_0" while
          any process bound entirely to cores in socket 1 will use "mlx5_1".
          Processes which are bound to a set of cores spanning both sockets
          (including the case of no binding) will have a computed variable name
          of 'GASNET_IBV_PORTS_0_1'.  Since that variable is unset, the
          defaulting behavior will cause such processes to use the value of
          '[BASE]'.  In this example 'GASNET_IBV_PORTS' = "mlx5_0+mlx5_1",
          which denotes use of both NICs via ibv-conduit's multi-rail support.
    - As noted earlier, the value of the '[BASE]_TYPE' variable may optionally
      include an arithmetic operation "[OP][N]" after the type, as follows:
         + Whitespace is permitted before and after the [OP].
         + The [N] must be an integer constant.  Base-10 is the default, but a
           "0" prefix causes parsing as an octal (base-8) value and a "0x"
           prefix causes parsing as a hexadecimal (base-16) value.
         + Valid [OP] values (operations) are:
             * [OP] = "/" (division):
               Yields the quotient from integer division by [N]
             * [OP] = "%" (modulo):
               Yields the remainder from integer division by [N]
         + Only zero or one operation suffix is supported.  Providing more than
           one such suffix yields an error.
    - Use of an operation suffix can be useful to assign processes to NICs when
      there is not a one-to-one mapping to/from an hwloc object type.
         + Example 4:  Round-robin placement by host rank with four IB NICs
               GASNET_IBV_PORTS_TYPE = "HRank % 4"
               GASNET_IBV_PORTS_0    = "mlx5_0"
               GASNET_IBV_PORTS_1    = "mlx5_1"
               GASNET_IBV_PORTS_2    = "mlx5_2"
               GASNET_IBV_PORTS_3    = "mlx5_3"
           This example may be suitable for use of ibv-conduit on a hypothetical
           system with four NICs which are topologically equidistant from all
           CPU cores.
         + Example 5:  Blocked placement by core with four IB NICs
               GASNET_IBV_PORTS_TYPE = "Core/8"
               GASNET_IBV_PORTS_0    = "mlx5_0"
               GASNET_IBV_PORTS_1    = "mlx5_1"
               GASNET_IBV_PORTS_2    = "mlx5_0"
               GASNET_IBV_PORTS_3    = "mlx5_1"
           This example may be suitable for use of ibv-conduit on a hypothetical
           32-core system in which cores 0-7 and 16-23 are topologically
           nearest to NIC "mlx5_0", and the others are nearest to NIC "mlx5_1".
           Similar to the case in Example 3 (without an arithmetic operation),
           processes with bindings spanning multiple values of the computed
           type value will have computed variable names such as
           'GASNET_IBV_PORTS_0_3'.  One can make reasonable assignment for the
           "good" cases with the addition of the following two settings, which
           cover bindings spanning multiple core ranges with affinity to the
           same NIC:
               GASNET_IBV_PORTS_0_2  = "mlx5_0"
               GASNET_IBV_PORTS_1_3  = "mlx5_1"
           Thanks to defaulting, just one more setting is sufficient to cover
           all possible cases involving cores with a mix of affinities,
           including the unbound case, where we will elect to use both NICs:
               GASNET_IBV_PORTS      = "mlx5_0+mlx5_1"
           This is notably much simpler than explicit settings for each of the
           nine remaining cases involving two, three or four type values.
    - Note that the hwloc object types are all related to the CPU binding of a
      process.  Use with a process which is not bound could lead to use of
      suffixed variable names like '[BASE]_0_1_2_3_4_5_6_7' (or worse).  The
      means to achieve CPU binding of processes depends on multiple factors,
      the most common of which is the choice of batch system.
      Documentation for this topic is beyond the scope of this document.


* see conduit-specific documentation in conduit directories for more settings

GASNet exit
===========

GASNet clients desiring robustness and portability should not call _exit().
Normal process termination should be done using gasnet_exit(), exit() or
return from main().  Use of these paths allows GASNet to ensure proper
shutdown.  This includes efforts to avoid zombie/orphan processes in the case
of non-collective exits, and proper release of network resources.  This second
point is important because we are aware of multiple network stacks which can
permanently leak system resources if they are not explicitly released.

We acknowledge that this represents a restriction that may be hard to satisfy.
We fully intend to separate library termination from process termination in a
future release.
 
GASNet tracing & statistical collection
=======================================

GASNet includes an extensive tracing and statistical collection 
utility for monitoring communication events in GASNet applications.
To use, configure with --enable-stats and/or --enable-trace 
(or --enable-debug, which implies both of these by default), and
run your program as usual. In order to see the trace/stats output, 
you must set the environment variable GASNET_TRACEFILE and/or 
GASNET_STATSFILE as explained below.

Note that system performance is likely to be degraded as a result of tracing and 
statistical collection. This is still true even when output is disabled
by not setting this GASNET_TRACEFILE/GASNET_STATSFILE (so production builds
should not enable tracing/stats at GASNet configure time).

Optional environment variable settings:

 GASNET_TRACEFILE - specify a file name to receive the trace output
   may also be "stdout" or "stderr", (or "-" to indicate stderr)
   each node may have its output directed to a separate file, 
   and any '%' character in the value is replaced by the node number at runtime
   (e.g. GASNET_TRACEFILE="mytrace-%")
   unsetting this environment variable (or setting it to empty) disables 
   tracing output (although the trace code still has performance impact)

 GASNET_TRACENODES - specify an optional list of nodes on which to generate
   tracing output (if enabled by GASNET_TRACEFILE).  List may contain one
   or more integers or ranges separated by commas, such as "0,2-4,6".
   If empty or equal to "*" then all nodes may generate tracing output.

 GASNET_STATSFILE - specify a filename to receive statistical output
   operates analogously to GASNET_TRACEFILE

 GASNET_STATSNODES - limit nodes to generate statistical output
   operates analogously to GASNET_TRACENODES

 GASNET_TRACEMASK - specify the types of trace messages to report
   A string containing one or more of the following letters:
     G - gets
     P - puts
     R - remote atomics
     S - non-blocking synchronization
     W - collective operations (excluding barriers)
     B - barriers
     L - locks
     A - AM requests/replies (and handler execution, if conduit-supported)
     X - AMPoll
     I - informational messages about system status or performance alerts
     O - Object creation, modification and destruction
     C - conduit-specific (low-level) messages
     D - Detailed message data for gets/puts/AMreqrep
     N - Line number information from client source files
     H - High-level messages from the client
     U - Unsuppressable messages, which are always output (use with caution)
  default: (all of the above)
  Additionally, use of '^' as the first character of the mask causes the mask
  to be interpreted as its complement.  For instance "^X" enables all types
  except "X" (with "U" remaining unsuppressable).

 GASNET_STATSMASK - specify the types of statistics to collect and report
   operates analogously to GASNET_TRACEMASK

 GASNET_TRACEFLUSH - set this variable to force a file system flush 
   after every write to the tracefile. This seriously degrades tracing
   performance, but ensures any final trace messages before a crash
   are flushed into the tracefile.
 
 GASNET_TRACELOCAL - set to control whether the PG trace messages for
   local (i.e. loopback) put/get operations are entered into the trace file 
   or suppressed (they are included by default). This can be used to reduce 
   tracing overhead and trace file size for clients with a large number of 
   local put/get operations which are not of interest.

GASNet Collectives
==================

GASNet includes interfaces for collective operations, which is still
evolving.  The design for the interfaces is located under the source directory
in docs/collective_notes.txt.  Anyone planning to implement a client that
uses these collective should contact us ([email protected]) first to determine
the completeness and stability of the relevant portions of the implementation.

In GASNet 1.14.0 we introduce a mechanism for auto-tuning of collectives
in which a variety of algorithms are tried for each collective operation in
a user's application and the best choice can be recorded in a file for use
in future runs.  For more information, see the file autotuner.txt in the
docs directory.

GASNet debug malloc services
============================

GASNet includes a debug malloc implementation that can be used to find local
heap corruption bugs in GASNet itself and also in GASNet client applications
(notably Berkeley UPC). To use, configure GASNet with --enable-debug-malloc
(or --enable-debug which implies --enable-debug-malloc), and run your
program as usual.  GASNet will regularly scan the heap for corruption at malloc
events and AMPoll's and report any detected problems.  If you're a GASNet
client writer, you should see the gasnett_debug_malloc functions in
gasnet_tools.h to tie your applications into the GASNet debug malloc services.

Note the debug malloc implementation imposes some CPU and memory consumption
overhead relative to the system malloc implementation (it's implemented as a
thin wrapper around the system malloc).  This means heap behavior is likely to
be somewhat perturbed relative to the normal mode of operation, however the
overhead is probably less than it would be with third-party heap corruption
tools such as efence or purify (at some cost in lost precision).

Optional environment variable settings (recognized only when debugging
malloc is enabled):

GASNET_MALLOC_INIT: When set to 1, every byte of allocated memory is
 initialized to the value specified by GASNET_MALLOC_INITVAL. This can be useful
 for detecting use of uninitialized data.

GASNET_MALLOC_CLOBBER: When set to 1, every byte of freed memory is overwritten
 with the value specified by GASNET_MALLOC_CLOBBERVAL. This can be useful for
 detecting inadvertent use of freed data.

GASNET_MALLOC_INITVAL, GASNET_MALLOC_CLOBBERVAL: The data value to use for
 allocation init or free clobbering, respectively. The value may be specified
 as a decimal integer matching the pattern: "-?[0-9]+" or a hexadecimal integer
 matching the pattern: "0x[0-9A-F]+".  If the value is between 0 and 255
 (inclusive) it is taken to be an 8-bit value which is used to overwrite every
 byte in the given region. Otherwise, it is taken to be a 64-bit value which is
 used to overwrite the given region in 8-byte chunks.  The value may also be one
 of "NAN", "sNAN" or "qNAN", which select a double-precision signaling or quiet
 NAN, which is likely to propagate through floating point calculations and cause
 segmentation faults when used as a pointer. Both values default to "NAN". 

GASNET_MALLOC_LEAKALL: set to 1 to leak all freed objects, ensuring they are
 not re-allocated during subsequent mallocs. This has an obvious cost in memory
 consumption, but can be helpful for tracking bugs in conjunction with
 GASNET_MALLOC_CLOBBER for tracking usage of dead objects.

GASNET_MALLOC_SCANFREED: set to 1 to enable scanning of freed objects, to
 detect write-after-free errors. This option implies GASNET_MALLOC_LEAKALL and
 GASNET_MALLOC_CLOBBER.

GASNET_MALLOC_EXTRACHECK: set to 1 to enable more frequent checking for memory
 corruption (at a cost in performance)

GASNET_MALLOCFILE: specify a file name to receive a report of malloc heap
 behavior and utilization at process exit. Includes a list of leaked objects.
 The filename may also be "stdout" or "stderr", (or "-" to indicate stderr)
 Each node may have its output directed to a separate file,
 and any '%' character in the value is replaced by the node number at runtime
 (e.g. GASNET_MALLOCFILE="mallocreport-%"). These output files are
 human-readable, but can be passed to gasnet_trace for summarization.

GASNET_MALLOCNODES: limit which nodes will generate a malloc report.
   operates analogously to GASNET_TRACENODES

GASNet inter-Process SHared Memory (PSHM)
=========================================

GASNet's PSHM support provides mechanism to communicate through shared memory among
processes on the same compute node (ie sharing a cache-coherent physical memory).
Inter-process communication through shared memory is usually the fastest way for
processes sharing a compute node to communicate. GASNet clients are free to use
any combination of processes communicating through PSHM and client pthreads within 
processes (in GASNET_PAR mode) to implement on-node parallelism, and all such 
execution contexts may perform network communication (with an appropriate conduit).

GASNet's PSHM support is enabled by default unless one is cross-compiling, or
running Cygwin prior to version 2.0.  However, most cross-compilation scripts
enable it with any additional settings as required.  If desired, PSHM can be
disabled by passing --disable-pshm at configure time.

In addition to configure-time control, the environment variable
GASNET_SUPERNODE_MAXSIZE sets a limit on the number of processes that will be
grouped into a shared-memory "supernode".  By default all co-located processes
are grouped into one supernode, but the value can be set to 1 to disable the
use of shared-memory for communication.

The PSHM support in GASNet can operate via three generic mechanisms: POSIX
shared memory, SystemV shared memory, or mmap()ed disk files.

POSIX shared memory is recommended as the best option in most cases, but is
not always available (many kernels can be configured not to support it), or
may not permit large-enough allocations.  See "System Settings for POSIX
Shared Memory", below, for information on sizing of allocations.

In the absence of the POSIX shared memory, users are advised to use the
SystemV shared memory as the next-best option.  However, see "System Settings
for SystemV Shared Memory", below, for information about configuring a system
to use SystemV shared memory.

In the absence of both POSIX and SystemV shared memory, a user may try
using mmap()ed disk files.  However, on some systems we see significant
performance degradation when using files (apparently due to committing the
changes from memory to disk).

Unless PSHM is disabled, the default behavior of the configure step is to probe
for support via exactly one preferred mechanism.  For Solaris the preferred
mechanism is SystemV, while for all other platforms it is POSIX.  If the
preferred mechanism is not supported (or is explicitly disabled) then there
is no automatic fallback to any other mechanism.  So, if one wishes to use
another mechanism, one should explicitly disable the default (POSIX or SysV)
support and enable the desired mechanism:

        Common Usage Summary (flags to pass to the configure script):
        ----------------------------------------------------------
          OFF: --disable-pshm
        POSIX: no flags required (default unless cross-compiling)
         SYSV: --disable-pshm-posix --enable-pshm-sysv
         FILE: --disable-pshm-posix --enable-pshm-file

        Solaris Usage Summary (as above except that SysV is default)
        ----------------------------------------------------------
          OFF: --disable-pshm
        POSIX: --disable-pshm-sysv --enable-pshm-posix
         SYSV: no flags required (default)
         FILE: --disable-pshm-sysv --enable-pshm-file

There are also implementations which are specific to certain platforms:

For Cray XE, XK and XC systems, PSHM-over-XPMEM is enabled automatically
by the corresponding cross-configure scripts.  However, one can also
optionally enable PSHM-over-XPMEM on an SGI Altix as follows:
        XPMEM: --enable-pshm --disable-pshm-posix --enable-pshm-xpmem

For Linux systems with libhugetlbfs and a hugetlbfs mount, there is also
experimental support for mmap()ed files on hugetlbfs, which can be
enabled with:
    HUGETLBFS: --disable-pshm-posix --enable-pshm-hugetlbfs

System Settings for POSIX Shared Memory:
---------------------------------------
On most systems (all but Solaris and some cross-compiled platforms), the
default implementation of PSHM uses POSIX shared memory.  On many operating
systems the amount of available POSIX shared memory is controlled by the
sizing of a pseudo-filesystem that consumes space in memory (and sometimes
swap space) rather than stable storage.  If this filesystem is not large
enough, it can limit the amount of POSIX shared memory which can be allocated
for the GASNet segment.

Insufficient available POSIX shared memory may either lead to failures at
start-up, or to SIGBUS or SIGSEGV later in a run (if the OS has permitted
allocation of more virtual address space than is actually available).  If one
encounters either of these failure modes when GASNet is configured to use
POSIX shared memory, then one should check the space available (see below) and
may need to increase the corresponding system settings.  Setting these
parameters is system-specific and requires administrator privileges.

On most modern Linux distribution, POSIX shared memory allocations reside in
the /dev/shm filesystem (of type 'tmpfs'), though /var/shm and /run/shm are
also used in some cases.  The mechanism for sizing of this filesystem varies
greatly between distributions.  Please consult the documentation for your
specific Linux distribution for instructions to resize.  In particular, be
advised that distributions may mount this filesystem early in the boot
process, without regards to any entry in /etc/fstab.

On macOS, Cygwin and Solaris, there are no settings (known to us at this time)
required to increase the space available for allocation as POSIX shared
memory.

On FreeBSD, POSIX shared memory allocations reside in the /tmp filesystem,
which is normally of type 'tmpfs'.  This filesystem often defaults to having
no limit on its size other than the sum of physical memory and swap space.
However, the size can be set in /etc/fstab.  See the fstab(5) and tmpfs(5)
manpages for more information.

On NetBSD, POSIX shared memory allocations reside in the /var/shm filesystem
(of type 'tmpfs'), which can be sized in /etc/fstab.  See the fstab(5) and
mount_tmpfs(8) manpages for more information.

On OpenBSD, POSIX shared memory allocations reside in the /tmp filesystem,
which is normally a filesystem of type 'mfs' and can be sized in /etc/fstab.
See the fstab(5) and mount_mfs(8) manpages for more information.

System Settings for SystemV Shared Memory:
-----------------------------------------
SystemV shared memory is the second most widely used implementation of PSHM
after POSIX shared memory.  It is used by default on Solaris, and is
recommended on most other systems when POSIX does not work for any reason.
On most operating systems the amount of available SystemV shared memory and
the number of shared memory segments is controlled by the kernel parameters:
shmmax, shmall and shmmni.
   shmmax = largest size of a shared memory segment (in bytes)
   shmall = total amount of memory allocatable as shared (in pages)
   shmmni = maximum number of shared memory segments

Insufficient amount of SystemV shared memory will lead to failures at
start-up of any application using a runtime configured to use PSHM over
SystemV.  Setting these parameters is system-specific and requires
administrator privileges.

* Examples of configuration:

These examples are for 64-bit systems, and essentially allow
unlimited amounts of memory to be used for GASNet segments.

These assume you are running no more than 127 processes per
node.  If you have more cores (or cpu threads) then increase
the shmmni value to the maximum number of processes you wish
to be be able to run, plus 1.  Some examples below do not
include a setting for shmmni because the system defaults are
large enough in general, and often cannot be reduced.

For 32-bit systems, use 2147483647 for the shmmax value to
avoid a potential overflow.

   - Linux:
        Add the following three lines to /etc/sysctl.conf (sudo required):
kernel.shmmax=1099511627776
kernel.shmall=268435456
kernel.shmmni=128

        To activate the new settings reboot, or run the following:
        sudo /sbin/sysctl -p /etc/sysctl.conf

   - macOS:
        Add the following three lines to /etc/sysctl.conf (sudo required):
kern.sysv.shmmax=1099511627776
kern.sysv.shmall=268435456
kern.sysv.shmmni=128

        To activate the new settings reboot, or run the following:
        grep ^kern.sysv.shm /etc/sysctl.conf | sudo xargs /usr/sbin/sysctl -w

   - FreeBSD:
        Add the following two lines to /etc/sysctl.conf (sudo required):
kern.ipc.shmmax=1099511627776
kern.ipc.shmall=268435456

        To activate the new settings reboot, or run the following:
        sudo /sbin/sysctl -f /etc/sysctl.conf

   - NetBSD:
        Add the following two lines to /etc/sysctl.conf (sudo required):
kern.ipc.shmmax=1099511627776
kern.ipc.shmmaxpgs=268435456

        To activate the new settings reboot, or run the following:
        sudo /sbin/sysctl -f /etc/sysctl.conf

   - OpenBSD:
        Add the following two lines to /etc/sysctl.conf (sudo required):
kern.shminfo.shmmax=2147483647
kern.shminfo.shmall=268435456

        To activate the new settings reboot, or run the following:
        grep ^kern.shminfo /etc/sysctl.conf | sudo xargs /sbin/sysctl -w

   - Solaris:
        Depends on version.  Please see the Sun/Oracle documentation.
        However, on recent releases the defaults are sufficient.

   - Cygwin:
        If you have not done so yet, please Read the Cygwin documentation
        on "cygserver-config" to create an initial /etc/cygsever.conf
        and start the server as a Windows service (optional).
        You may then edit /etc/cygserver to edit
          kern.ipc.shmmaxpgs
          kern.ipc.shmmni
          kern.ipc.shmseg
        Except for shmmaxpgs, the defaults are often large enough.
        These configuration values are only read when cygserver starts.
        So, read the Cygwin documentation to determine if/how to restart
        the cygserver service.
        Under Cygwin-1.5 you may also need to add "server" to the value
        of the CYGWIN environment variable.  Again, you should see the
        Cygwin documentation for more information on this subject.

Warning to users of macOS:
-------------------------
We have evidence which suggests that there is a kernel bug in all releases of
macOS though at least 10.12 (Sierra) which leads to a small leak of kernel
memory (perhaps a few 10s of bytes) each time POSIX or SystemV shared memory
is used.  This may, after tens of thousands of runs of GASNet applications
using PSHM, lead to a low memory condition contributing to slow performance
and eventually to total memory exhaustion.  In normal usage, it is reasonable
to expect that a Mac laptop or desktop system will be rebooted for software
updates frequently enough that this leak will not impact normal users.
Also note that --enable-pshm-file is NOT recommended for use on macOS, where
it has been seen to cause VERY slow startup times.

IMPORTANT: SYSTEM CLEANING OF PSHM OBJECTS:
------------------------------------------
If a GASNet application using PSHM is terminated before ending the
initialization phase, there is a possibility that the shared memory objects
will remain in the system.  A large amount of memory or disk space can
remain allocated, preventing users from fully utilizing all available
hardware resources.

In the SystemV case, the allocated (but not released) shared memory
segments can be listed via the "ipcs" command, and can be removed via the
"ipcrm" command.  Note that on the systems with a batch scheduler, the
"ipcs" and "ipcrm" instructions need to be run on the compute nodes.

In the mmap()ed file case, the allocated but not released shared memory files
can be found in the directory pointed by the TMPDIR environment variable
(default: /tmp). These files are named with the prefix GASNT (the lack of an
'E' is not a typo), and can be deleted using the "rm" command.

The case of mmap()ed file on hugetlbfs is like the regular mmap()ed file
case except that the directory will be the hugetlbfs mount point.  This is
typically something like /dev/hugepages.  If uncertain of the mount point,
the command "mount|grep hugetlbfs" should locate it for you.

The case of POSIX shared memory is OS-specific, but in most cases the
shared memory objects are visible in the file system.  On systems we use
for development, we have observed the following defaults:
* Linux:   located in /dev/shm with a filename prefix of "GASNT"
* Cygwin:  located in /dev/shm with a filename prefix of "GASNT"
* Solaris: located in /tmp with a filename prefix of ".SHMDGASNT"
* OpenBSD: located in /tmp with long random names suffixed by ".shm"
* NetBSD:  located in /var/shm with a filename prefix of ".shmobj_GASNT"

MPI Interoperability
====================

The Message Passing Interface (MPI) is a ubiquitous portable interface for
communication in scientific computing and is used both directly and indirectly
by various applications and libraries.  In most cases GASNet is implemented
natively on the various SAN interconnects, bypassing the MPI layer in order to
provide the best possible performance. This means that in general GASNet does
NOT use MPI for performing communication (the only notable exception being
mpi-conduit, which is a portable implementation of GASNet over MPI).  In some
cases GASNet can use MPI to assist in parallel job creation and termination
(thereby taking advantage of the existing MPI infrastructure), but in those
cases it will not use MPI during the steady state of operation - only at
startup and shutdown.

Although GASNet is not implemented using MPI, it is *compatible* with MPI -
GASNet and MPI can be used together within the same network and even within the
same program.  However, there are a few subtle issues to be dealt with when
using both communication systems in the same process, because in those cases
GASNet and MPI must both be initialized properly and cooperate to "share" the
resources of the network and physical memory. This section describes issues
that arise when combining the use of MPI-based communication and GASNet
communication within a single process. The information described here applies
to any case where a single process attempts to access the network hardware
using both GASNet and MPI, even when such usage occurs at different levels
within a layered application (for example, a UPC application which uses GASNet
via the Berkeley UPC compiler and makes calls to a helper library that
communicates using MPI).

MPI requires exactly one initialization call before MPI communication can be used
within a process.  The GASNet implementation may or may not automatically
initialize the MPI library, depending on the conduit and various configuration
settings. Therefore, processes using both communication libraries must be
prepared to correctly handle either situation - the recommended way to
arbitrate this is using the MPI_Initialized() call which reports whether or not
the MPI layer has been initialized.  Here is some example code for
accomplishing this:

int isMPIinit;
int main(int argc, char **argv) {
  size_t segment_size = 64*1024*1024; /* want 64MB segment in this example */
  size_t segment_max;

  gasnet_init(&argc, &argv);

  segment_max = gasnet_getMaxGlobalSegmentSize();
  if (segment_size > segment_max) segment_size = segment_max;

  gasnet_attach(NULL, 0, segment_size, 0);

  gasnet_barrier_notify(0, GASNET_BARRIERFLAG_ANONYMOUS);
  gasnet_barrier_wait(0, GASNET_BARRIERFLAG_ANONYMOUS);

  if (MPI_Initialized(&isMPIinit) != MPI_OK) { /* test if MPI already init */
    fprintf(stderr, "Error calling MPI_Initialized()\n");
    abort();
  }
  if (!isMPIinit) MPI_Init(argc, argv); /* MPI not init, so do it */

  /* ... use MPI as usual ... */

  MPI_Barrier(MPI_COMM_WORLD);

  /* ... use GASNet as usual ... */

  gasnet_barrier_notify(0, GASNET_BARRIERFLAG_ANONYMOUS);
  gasnet_barrier_wait(0, GASNET_BARRIERFLAG_ANONYMOUS);

  ...

  if (!isMPIinit) MPI_Finalize(); 
  return 0;
}

The MPI_Initialized call checks to make sure MPI hasn't already been
initialized by GASNet, which will be the case on mpi-conduit and possibly on
other conduits that use MPI for job startup. Any MPI usage internal to GASNet
uses a private MPI communicator, preventing any potential interference with MPI
use by the GASNet client. The code which initializes the MPI layer is also
responsible for finalizing it before exit.

An extensive example is available in tests/testmpi.c, which implements various
interoperability tests between GASNet and MPI.

There are a few other important caveats to be aware of when mixing GASNet and MPI:

* GASNet must be configured with MPI_CC set to the exact *same* MPI
 installation that will be used when building any GASNet client code using MPI.
 Note that many MPI implementations are not binary-compatible across versions,
 so upgrading the MPI compiler usually requires a fresh configure/build/install
 of GASNet with the new MPI implementation if you intend to mix GASNet and MPI.

* When a node is inside a blocking MPI call, most conduits will be prevented
 from servicing many GASNet requests from remote nodes. Similarly, GASNet
 blocking calls will generally not ensure progress of MPI communication. This
 means that arbitrarily interleaving blocking MPI calls with GASNet calls
 (e.g. UPC shared accesses) can easily lead to deadlock. In order to ensure
 safety and portably correct operation across networks, GASNet communication
 operations and user MPI calls should be isolated from each other by barriers, 
 by strictly adhering to the following "Time-Phasing" protocol:

   - When the application starts, the first MPI or GASNet call issued from any
     node should be considered to put the application in 'MPI' or 'GASNet'
     mode, respectively. 

   - When an application is in 'MPI' mode, and needs to switch to using GASNet,
     it should collectively execute an 'MPI_Barrier()' as the last MPI call
     before issuing any GASNet communication calls. Once any GASNet communication has
     occurred from any node, the program should be considered to have switched to
    'GASNet' mode. 

   - When an application is in 'GASNet' mode, and an MPI call that may cause
     network traffic is needed, a collective call to 'gasnet_barrier_notify()' followed
     by a 'gasnet_barrier_wait()' should be executed as the last GASNet communication
     before any MPI calls are made. Once any MPI functions have been called from any
     thread, the program should be considered to be in 'MPI' mode. 

 If this simple construct--GASNet code must be followed by a GASNet barrier,
 and MPI code must be followed by an MPI_Barrier--is followed, this deadlock should
 not occur. This protocol is demonstrated in the code above.

* GASNet and MPI both number processes with a unique non-negative index (i.e. gasnet_mynode()
  and MPI_Comm_rank(MPI_COMM_WORLD)). Every attempt is made to ensure this
  numbering matches between layers, but it might not always be possible to ensure this. 
  To maximize portability, apps using both layers should use a GASNet or MPI collective 
  (e.g. AllGather) to build a table of ids and translate rank identifiers as needed.

* Note that GASNet language clients such as UPC or Titanium might include 
  compilation modes where multiple language-level threads are implemented as pthreads
  within a single process, which will map to a single GASNet node id (and hence
  a single MPI rank). Clients using such threading should ensure they are using
  a pthread-safe implementation of MPI (GASNet is thread-safe by virtue of PAR mode),
  and be aware that MPI messages sent to a particular node might be received by any
  pthread at the target (unless steps are taken to avoid this, e.g. using an MPI tag).

* There are various network-specific issues that may arise when combining
 GASNet with specific MPI implementations, most notably related to job creation
 and spawning mechanisms. Please see the README file in each conduit directory
 for network-specific discussion of issues with MPI interoperability.

Contact Info and Support
========================

For the latest GASNet downloads, publications, and specifications, please visit:

  https://gasnet.lbl.gov

For bug reports and feature requests, please submit a ticket in the GASNet Bugzilla:

  https://gasnet-bugs.lbl.gov

You may find an instant solution to your problem by searching the bug database!

GASNet has several mailing lists for support:

  [email protected]     General questions or inquiries regarding the installation or 
                           use of GASNet. Any users can join the list from the web site above.

  [email protected]     GASNet developers list (multi-institution)

  [email protected]  GASNet release announcements. Join on the web site above.

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  or visit the GASNet home page at:   https://gasnet.lbl.gov
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