laminfo - Online in the Cloud

This is the command laminfo that can be run in the OnWorks free hosting provider using one of our multiple free online workstations such as Ubuntu Online, Fedora Online, Windows online emulator or MAC OS online emulator

PROGRAM:

NAME


laminfo - Display configuration information about LAM/MPI

SYNOPSIS


laminfo [-arch] [-config] [-help|-h] [-param type module]
[-parsable|-pretty] [-path item] [-version item scope]

OPTIONS


-all Show all configuration information

-arch Show architecture that LAM was configured for

-config Show some information about LAM configuration

-help Show help message

-param Show SSI parameter(s) for a given SSI type and module

-parsable Show output in an easily parsable format

-path item Print a given configuration path

-pretty Show output in a prettyprint format (default)

-version Print some or part of a version number of a given item

DESCRIPTION


The laminfo command is used to display information about a LAM/MPI installation.
Particularly with the SSI run-time module selection system, the laminfo command can be
useful to scripts and resource managers to determine the capabilities of the installed
LAM/MPI in order to pass run-time parameters to MPI programs.

Output can be displayed in a "pretty" format (i.e., suitable for human reading) and also
in a parsable format (i.e., suitable for easy parsing by scripts or other automated
mechanisms). There are no other LAM API functions to retrieve this data (in any
language); the laminfo command is the best mechanism to obtain any configuration
information about LAM/MPI. The parsable output was designed such that common utilities
such as grep, awk, cut, and sed can easily be used to extract relevant information.

Running laminfo with no arguments will display a subset of configuration parameters in the
"pretty" format (see the EXAMPLES section, below). Several command line options are
available to limit exactly which information is displayed. These options, when used in
conjunction with the parsable output, can provide automated mechanisms specific
information about the capabilities of LAM/MPI.

GENERAL PARAMETERS
The -pretty and -parsable switches are used to select whether to display the output in
"pretty" or machine-parsable format, respectively. If neither is specified, -pretty is
the default.

The -arch switch will display the architecture that LAM/MPI was configured and compiled
on.

The -config switch will display a set of configuration information about the MPI
capabilities of LAM/MPI, such as whether there are C, C++, and Fortran MPI bindings
available, whether there is MPI profiling support for C, C++, and Fortran, whether ROMIO
support is available, whether IMPI support is available, whether debugging support is
available (mostly for LAM/MPI maintainers), and whether LAM/MPI is "purify clean" (meaning
that it is suitable for use with memory checking debuggers). Most of these are options to
the LAM/MPI configure script, and are configure/compile-time selections that cannot be
changed once LAM has been installed. While there is no fine-grained control to
individually request each of these pieces of information, using -config in conjunction
with -parsable and commands such as grep can return any individual piece of information.

PARAM PARAMETERS
The -param switch can be used to show available SSI parameters and their default values.
The type and module arguments can be used to specify a particular SSI type and/or module,
or use the special keyword "all" to indicate all available SSI types/modules
(respectively).

Available SSI types are:

all Show all SSI types

base Intrinsic LAM/MPI parameters

boot Boot modules (e.g., lamboot)

coll MPI collectives

cr Checkpoint / restart

RPI MPI point-to-point.

The names of the modules that are available are dependant upon which modules are available
for any given type. See EXAMPLES, below, for example usage.

PATH PARAMETERS
The -path switch returns various paths that were compiled into LAM/MPI. These were all
decided when LAM was configured, and cannot be changed at run-time. However, knowing the
location of these directories can be useful in order to find LAM data files, binaries,
include files, etc. The -path switch takes a parameter: item. Possible values for item
are:

prefix Display the prefix directory for LAM/MPI

bindir Display the directory where the LAM/MPI executables were installed

libdir Display the directory where the LAM/MPI libraries were installed

incdir Display the directory where the LAM/MPI include files were installed

pkglibdir Display the directory where the LAM/MPI dynamic libraries were installed

sysconfdir Display the directory where the LAM/MPI help and configuration files were
installed

Note that although LAM's GNU configure script defaults to certain values for all of these
directories based on the prefix (e.g., bindir is typically $prefix/bin), they can all be
overriden by command line switches to configure, and should therefore never be assumed.
Use laminfo to determine what values were selected at configure time.

VERSION PARAMETERS
Since each SSI module in LAM/MPI is an independant entity in itself, it may have an
entirely different version number than LAM/MPI itself. Indeed, each SSI module has three
version numbers: the version of the base SSI API that it supports, the version of the
component type API that it supports, and its own version number. Most users will only
care about the last one (the module's own version number).

The -path switch takes two parameters: item and scope.

The item can be the main LAM version itself, any of the SSI types, or a specific SSI
module. There are currently four kinds of SSI modules that can be queried: boot, coll,
rpi, and cr. Hence, the version numbers that can be obtained from the -version switch
are:

lam The version of LAM/MPI

boot The three versions of each boot SSI module

boot:name The three versions of a specific boot SSI module

coll The three versions of each coll SSI module

coll:name The three versions of a specific coll SSI module

rpi The three versions of each rpi SSI module

rpi:name The three versions of a specific rpi SSI module

cr The three versions of each cr SSI module

cr:name The three versions of a specific cr SSI module

The scope argument describes what part of the version number to display. This allows
either the full version number to be displayed, or any specific individual component of
the version number. Valid values for scope are:

full Display the full version number (i.e., all components). A sequence of rules
are used to run all the components together into a single string. Generally:
major and minor are always displayed, but other components are only displayed
if they are not zero.

major Display the major version number

minor Display the minor version number

release Display the release version number

alpha Display the alpha version number. In the full scope, if nonzero, this number
will be preceeded by "a".

beta Display the beta version number. In the full scope, if nonzero, this number
will be preceeded by "b".

cvs Display whether LAM was installed from a CVS checkout. In pretty mode, this
will be the string "cvs" if true, or blank if false. In parsable mode, this
will be 1 if true, 0 if false.

EXAMPLES


laminfo
With no parameters, laminfo displays a default set of information about the LAM/MPI
installation. This information includes:

- Version of LAM/MPI

- Installation prefix directory

- Architecture that LAM/MPI is installed for

- User who configured LAM/MPI

- Time/datestamp when LAM/MPI was configured

- Host that LAM/MPI was configured on

- Whether MPI bindings are provided for C, C++, Fortran

- Whether MPI profiling is available for C, C++, Fortran

- Whether ROMIO support is included

- Whether IMPI support is included

- Whether debug support is included (mainly for LAM/MPI maintainers; specifically
indicates whether --with-debug was used to configure LAM)

- Whether LAM/MPI is "purify clean" (suitable for memory-checking debuggers;
specifically indicates whether --with-purify was used to configure LAM)

- List all boot, coll, and rpi SSI modules that are available, and their corresponding
versions

laminfo -parsable
Display the same default set of information but in a machine-readable format.

laminfo -all
Display all information that is available to laminfo.

laminfo -param all all
Show all SSI parameters (and their corresponding default values) for all available SSI
types and modules.

laminfo -param rpi all
Show all SSI parameters (and their corresponding default values) for all rpi SSI
modules.

laminfo -param rpi tcp
Show all SSI parameters (and their corresponding default values) for the tcp rpi SSI
module.

laminfo -param rpi tcp -parsable
Show all SSI parameters (and their corresponding default values) for the tcp rpi SSI
module in a machine-readable format.

laminfo -path bindir -path sysconfdir -parsable
Display the directories where the LAM/MPI executables and help/configuration files
were installed in a machine-readable format.

laminfo -version lam full -parsable
Display the full version of LAM/MPI in a machine-readable format.

laminfo -version rpi:tcp full
Show the full version of the TCP RPI SSI module.

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