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Full Discussion: What else do you do?
The Lounge What is on Your Mind? What else do you do? Post 302141128 by Neo on Wednesday 17th of October 2007 10:42:53 PM
Old 10-17-2007
Hi blowtorch,

We are almost neighbors these days, I'm on business travel in Bangkok.

Cheers!
 
MPI_Graph_neighbors(3OpenMPI)											     MPI_Graph_neighbors(3OpenMPI)

NAME
MPI_Graph_neighbors - Returns the neighbors of a node associated with a graph topology. SYNTAX
C Syntax #include <mpi.h> int MPI_Graph_neighbors(MPI_Comm comm, int rank, int maxneighbors, int *neighbors) Fortran Syntax INCLUDE 'mpif.h' MPI_GRAPH_NEIGHBORS(COMM, RANK, MAXNEIGHBORS, NEIGHBORS, IERROR) INTEGER COMM, RANK, MAXNEIGHBORS, NEIGHBORS(*), IERROR C++ Syntax #include <mpi.h> void Graphcomm::Get_neighbors(int rank, int maxneighbors, int neighbors[]) const INPUT PARAMETERS
comm Communicator with graph topology (handle). rank Rank of process in group of comm (integer). maxneighbors Size of array neighbors (integer). OUTPUT PARAMETERS
neighbors Ranks of processes that are neighbors to specified process (array of integers). IERROR Fortran only: Error status (integer). DESCRIPTION
Example: Suppose that comm is a communicator with a shuffle-exchange topology. The group has 2n members. Each process is labeled by a(1), ..., a(n) with a(i) E{0,1}, and has three neighbors: exchange (a(1), ..., a(n) = a(1), ..., a(n-1), a(n) (a = 1 - a), shuffle (a(1), ..., a(n)) = a(2), ..., a(n), a(1), and unshuffle (a(1), ..., a(n)) = a(n), a(1), ..., a(n-1). The graph adjacency list is illus- trated below for n=3. exchange shuffle unshuffle node neighbors(1) neighbors(2) neighbors(3) 0(000) 1 0 0 1(001) 0 2 4 2(010) 3 4 1 3(011) 2 6 5 4(100) 5 1 2 5(101) 4 3 6 6(110) 7 5 3 7(111) 6 7 7 Suppose that the communicator comm has this topology associated with it. The following code fragment cycles through the three types of neighbors and performs an appropriate permutation for each. C assume: each process has stored a real number A. C extract neighborhood information CALL MPI_COMM_RANK(comm, myrank, ierr) CALL MPI_GRAPH_NEIGHBORS(comm, myrank, 3, neighbors, ierr) C perform exchange permutation CALL MPI_SENDRECV_REPLACE(A, 1, MPI_REAL, neighbors(1), 0, + neighbors(1), 0, comm, status, ierr) C perform shuffle permutation CALL MPI_SENDRECV_REPLACE(A, 1, MPI_REAL, neighbors(2), 0, + neighbors(3), 0, comm, status, ierr) C perform unshuffle permutation CALL MPI_SENDRECV_REPLACE(A, 1, MPI_REAL, neighbors(3), 0, + neighbors(2), 0, comm, status, ierr) ERRORS
Almost all MPI routines return an error value; C routines as the value of the function and Fortran routines in the last argument. C++ func- tions do not return errors. If the default error handler is set to MPI::ERRORS_THROW_EXCEPTIONS, then on error the C++ exception mechanism will be used to throw an MPI:Exception object. Before the error value is returned, the current MPI error handler is called. By default, this error handler aborts the MPI job, except for I/O function errors. The error handler may be changed with MPI_Comm_set_errhandler; the predefined error handler MPI_ERRORS_RETURN may be used to cause error values to be returned. Note that MPI does not guarantee that an MPI program can continue past an error. SEE ALSO
MPI_Graph_neighbors_count Open MPI 1.2 September 2006 MPI_Graph_neighbors(3OpenMPI)
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