NAME

fi_bgq - The Blue Gene/Q Fabric Provider

OVERVIEW

The bgq provider is a native implementation of the libfabric interfaces that makes direct use of the unique hardware features such as the Messaging Unit (MU), Base Address Table (BAT), and L2 Atomics.

The purpose of this provider is to demonstrate the scalability and performance of libfabric, providing an “extreme scale” development environment for applications and middleware using the libfabric API, and to support a functional and performant version of MPI3 on Blue Gene/Q via MPICH CH4.

SUPPORTED FEATURES

The bgq provider supports most features defined for the libfabric API. Key features include:

Endpoint types
The Blue Gene/Q hardware is connectionless and reliable. Therefore, the bgq provider only supports the FI_EP_RDM endpoint type.
Capabilities
Supported capabilities include FI_MSG, FI_RMA, FI_TAGGED, FI_ATOMIC, FI_NAMED_RX_CTX, FI_READ, FI_WRITE, FI_SEND, FI_RECV, FI_REMOTE_READ, FI_REMOTE_WRITE, FI_MULTI_RECV, FI_DIRECTED_RECV, FI_SOURCE and FI_FENCE.

Notes on FI_DIRECTED_RECV capability: The immediate data which is sent within the senddata call to support FI_DIRECTED_RECV for BGQ must be exactly 4 bytes, which BGQ uses to completely identify the source address to an exascale-level number of ranks for tag matching on the recv and can be managed within the MU packet. Therefore the domain attribute cq_data_size is set to 4 which is the OFI standard minimum.

Modes
The bgq provider requires FI_CONTEXT and FI_ASYNC_IOV
Memory registration modes
Both FI_MR_SCALABLE and FI_MR_BASIC are supported, specified at configuration time with the “–with-bgq-mr” configure option. The base address table utilized by FI_MR_SCALABLE for rdma transfers is completely software emulated, supporting FI_ATOMIC, FI_READ, FI_WRITE, FI_REMOTE_READ, and FI_REMOTE_WRITE capabilities. With FI_MR_BASIC the FI_WRITE is completely hardware accelerated, the other rdma transfers are still software emulated but the use of a base address table is no longer required as the offset is now the virtual address of the memory from the application and the key is the delta from which the physical address can be computed if necessary.
Additional features
Supported additional features include FABRIC_DIRECT, scalable endpoints, and counters.
Progress
Both progress modes, FI_PROGRESS_AUTO and FI_PROGRESS_MANUAL, are supported. The progress mode may be specified via the “–with-bgq-progress” configure option.
Address vector
Only the FI_AV_MAP address vector format is supported.

UNSUPPORTED FEATURES

Endpoint types
Unsupported endpoint types include FI_EP_DGRAM and FI_EP_MSG
Capabilities
The bgq provider does not support the FI_RMA_EVENT, and FI_TRIGGER capabilities.
Address vector
The bgq provider does not support the FI_AV_TABLE address vector format. Support for FI_AV_TABLE may be added in the future.

LIMITATIONS

The bgq provider only supports FABRIC_DIRECT. The size of the fi_context structure for FI_CONTEXT is too small to be useful. In the ‘direct’ mode the bgq provider can re-define the struct fi_context to a larger size - currently 64 bytes which is the L1 cache size.

The fi_context structure for FI_CONTEXT must be aligned to 8 bytes. This requirement is because the bgq provider will use MU network atomics to track completions and the memory used with MU atomic operations must be aligned to 8 bytes. Unfortunately, the libfabric API has no mechanism for applications to programmatically determine these alignment requirements. Because unaligned MU atomics operations are a fatal error, the bgq provider will assert on the alignment for “debug” builds (i.e., the ‘-DNDEBUG’ pre-processor flag is not specified).

The progress thread used for FI_PROGRESS_AUTO effectively limits the maximum number of ranks-per-node to 32. However for FI_PROGRESS_MANUAL the maximum is 64.

For FI_MR_SCALABLE mr mode the memory region key size (mr_key_size) is 2 bytes; Valid key values are 0..2^16-1.

It is invalid to register memory at the base virtual address “0” with a length of “UINTPTR_MAX” (or equivalent). The Blue Gene/Q hardware operates on 37-bit physical addresses and all virtual addresses specified in the libfabric API, such as the location of source/destination data and remote memory locations, must be converted to a physical address before use. A 64-bit virtual address space will not fit into a 37-bit physical address space.

fi_trecvmsg() fnd fi_recvmsg() unctions do not support non-contiguous receives and the iovec count must be 1. The fi_trecvv() and fi_recvv() functions are currently not supported.

RUNTIME PARAMETERS

No runtime parameters are currently defined.

SEE ALSO

fabric(7), fi_provider(7), fi_getinfo(3)