17.2.270. MPI_Op_create
MPI_Op_create — Creates a user-defined combination function handle.
17.2.270.1. SYNTAX
17.2.270.1.1. C Syntax
#include <mpi.h>
int MPI_Op_create(MPI_User_function *function, int commute,
MPI_Op *op)
17.2.270.1.2. Fortran Syntax
USE MPI
! or the older form: INCLUDE 'mpif.h'
MPI_OP_CREATE(FUNCTION, COMMUTE, OP, IERROR)
EXTERNAL FUNCTION
LOGICAL COMMUTE
INTEGER OP, IERROR
17.2.270.1.3. Fortran 2008 Syntax
USE mpi_f08
MPI_Op_create(user_fn, commute, op, ierror)
PROCEDURE(MPI_User_function) :: user_fn
LOGICAL, INTENT(IN) :: commute
TYPE(MPI_Op), INTENT(OUT) :: op
INTEGER, OPTIONAL, INTENT(OUT) :: ierror
17.2.270.2. INPUT PARAMETERS
function
: User-defined function (function).commute
: True if commutative; false otherwise.
17.2.270.3. OUTPUT PARAMETERS
op
: Operation (handle).ierror
: Fortran only: Error status (integer).
17.2.270.4. DESCRIPTION
MPI_Op_create binds a user-defined global operation to an op handle that can subsequently be used in MPI_Reduce, MPI_Allreduce, MPI_Reduce_scatter, and MPI_Scan. The user-defined operation is assumed to be associative. If commute = true, then the operation should be both commutative and associative. If commute = false, then the order of operands is fixed and is defined to be in ascending, process rank order, beginning with process zero. The order of evaluation can be changed, taking advantage of the associativity of the operation. If commute = true then the order of evaluation can be changed, taking advantage of commutativity and associativity.
function is the user-defined function, which must have the following four arguments: invec, inoutvec, len, and datatype.
The ANSI-C prototype for the function is the following:
typedef void MPI_User_function(void *invec, void *inoutvec,
int *len,
MPI_Datatype *datatype);
The Fortran declaration of the user-defined function appears below.
FUNCTION USER_FUNCTION( INVEC(*), INOUTVEC(*), LEN, TYPE)
<type> INVEC(LEN), INOUTVEC(LEN)
INTEGER LEN, TYPE
The datatype argument is a handle to the data type that was passed into the call to MPI_Reduce. The user reduce function should be written such that the following holds: Let u[0], …, u[len-1] be the len elements in the communication buffer described by the arguments invec, len, and datatype when the function is invoked; let v[0], …, v[len-1] be len elements in the communication buffer described by the arguments inoutvec, len, and datatype when the function is invoked; let w[0], …, w[len-1] be len elements in the communication buffer described by the arguments inoutvec, len, and datatype when the function returns; then w[i] = u[i] o v[i], for i=0 ,…, len-1, where o is the reduce operation that the function computes.
Informally, we can think of invec and inoutvec as arrays of len elements that function is combining. The result of the reduction over-writes values in inoutvec, hence the name. Each invocation of the function results in the pointwise evaluation of the reduce operator on len elements: i.e, the function returns in inoutvec[i] the value invec[i] o inoutvec[i], for i = 0…, count-1, where o is the combining operation computed by the function.
By internally comparing the value of the datatype argument to known, global handles, it is possible to overload the use of a single user-defined function for several different data types.
General datatypes may be passed to the user function. However, use of datatypes that are not contiguous is likely to lead to inefficiencies.
No MPI communication function may be called inside the user function. MPI_Abort may be called inside the function in case of an error.
17.2.270.5. NOTES
Suppose one defines a library of user-defined reduce functions that are overloaded: The datatype argument is used to select the right execution path at each invocation, according to the types of the operands. The user-defined reduce function cannot “decode” the datatype argument that it is passed, and cannot identify, by itself, the correspondence between the datatype handles and the datatype they represent. This correspondence was established when the datatypes were created. Before the library is used, a library initialization preamble must be executed. This preamble code will define the datatypes that are used by the library and store handles to these datatypes in global, static variables that are shared by the user code and the library code.
Example: Example of user-defined reduce:
Compute the product of an array of complex numbers, in C.
typedef struct {
double real,imag;
} Complex;
/* the user-defined function
*/
void myProd( Complex *in, Complex *inout, int *len,
MPI_Datatype *dptr )
{
int i;
Complex c;
for (i=0; i< *len; ++i) {
c.real = inout->real*in->real -
inout->imag*in->imag;
c.imag = inout->real*in->imag +
inout->imag*in->real;
*inout = c;
in++; inout++;
}
}
/* and, to call it...
*/
...
/* each process has an array of 100 Complexes
*/
Complex a[100], answer[100];
MPI_Op myOp;
MPI_Datatype ctype;
/* explain to MPI how type Complex is defined
*/
MPI_Type_contiguous( 2, MPI_DOUBLE, &ctype );
MPI_Type_commit( &ctype );
/* create the complex-product user-op
*/
MPI_Op_create( myProd, True, &myOp );
MPI_Reduce( a, answer, 100, ctype, myOp, root, comm );
/* At this point, the answer, which consists of 100 Complexes,
* resides on process root
*/
The Fortran version of MPI_Reduce will invoke a user-defined reduce function using the Fortran calling conventions and will pass a Fortran-type datatype argument; the C version will use C calling convention and the C representation of a datatype handle. Users who plan to mix languages should define their reduction functions accordingly.
17.2.270.6. NOTES ON COLLECTIVE OPERATIONS
The reduction functions ( MPI_Op ) do not return an error value. As a result, if the functions detect an error, all they can do is either call MPI_Abort or silently skip the problem. Thus, if you change the error handler from MPI_ERRORS_ARE_FATAL to something else, for example, MPI_ERRORS_RETURN , then no error may be indicated.
The reason for this is the performance problems in ensuring that all collective routines return the same error value.
17.2.270.7. ERRORS
Almost all MPI routines return an error value; C routines as the return result of the function and Fortran routines in the last argument.
Before the error value is returned, the current MPI error handler associated with the communication object (e.g., communicator, window, file) is called. If no communication object is associated with the MPI call, then the call is considered attached to MPI_COMM_SELF and will call the associated MPI error handler. When MPI_COMM_SELF is not initialized (i.e., before MPI_Init/MPI_Init_thread, after MPI_Finalize, or when using the Sessions Model exclusively) the error raises the initial error handler. The initial error handler can be changed by calling MPI_Comm_set_errhandler on MPI_COMM_SELF when using the World model, or the mpi_initial_errhandler CLI argument to mpiexec or info key to MPI_Comm_spawn/MPI_Comm_spawn_multiple. If no other appropriate error handler has been set, then the MPI_ERRORS_RETURN error handler is called for MPI I/O functions and the MPI_ERRORS_ABORT error handler is called for all other MPI functions.
Open MPI includes three predefined error handlers that can be used:
MPI_ERRORS_ARE_FATAL
Causes the program to abort all connected MPI processes.MPI_ERRORS_ABORT
An error handler that can be invoked on a communicator, window, file, or session. When called on a communicator, it acts as if MPI_Abort was called on that communicator. If called on a window or file, acts as if MPI_Abort was called on a communicator containing the group of processes in the corresponding window or file. If called on a session, aborts only the local process.MPI_ERRORS_RETURN
Returns an error code to the application.
MPI applications can also implement their own error handlers by calling:
Note that MPI does not guarantee that an MPI program can continue past an error.
See the MPI man page for a full list of MPI error codes.
See the Error Handling section of the MPI-3.1 standard for more information.