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NAME

       appschema - LAM application schema format

SYNTAX

       #
       # comments
       #
       [<where>] [-np #] [-s <where>] [-wd <dir>] [-x <env>] <program> [<args>]
       [<where>] [-np #] [-s <where>] [-wd <dir>] [-x <env>] <program> [<args>]
        ...

DESCRIPTION

       The  application  schema  is  an ASCII file containing a description of the programs which
       constitute   an   application.    It   is   used   by   mpirun(1),   MPI_Comm_spawn,   and
       MPI_Comm_spawn_multiple  to  start an MPI application (the MPI_Info key "file" can be used
       to specify an app schema to MPI_Comm_spawn and MPI_Comm_spawn_multiple).  All tokens after
       the  program name will be passed as command line arguments to the new processes.  Ordering
       of the other elements on the command line is not important.

       The meaning of the options is the same as in mpirun(1).  See the mpirun(1) man page for  a
       lengthy  discussion  of  the nomenclature used for <where>.  Note, however, that if -wd is
       used in the application schema file, it will override  any  -wd  value  specified  on  the
       command line.

       For each program line, processes will be created on LAM nodes according to the presence of
       <where> and the process count option (-np).

       only <where>  One process is created on each node.

       only -np      The specified number of processes are scheduled across all LAM nodes/CPUs.

       both          The specified  number  of  processes  are  scheduled  across  the  specified
                     nodes/CPUs.

       neither       One process is created on the local node.

   Program Transfer
       By  default,  LAM  searches  for executable programs on the target node where a particular
       instantiation will run.   If  the  file  system  is  not  shared,  the  target  nodes  are
       homogeneous,  and  the  program is frequently recompiled, it can be convenient to have LAM
       transfer the program from a source node (usually the local node) to each target node.  The
       -s option specifies this behaviour and identifies the single source node.

EXAMPLE

       #
       # Example application schema
       # Note that it may be necessary to specify the entire pathname for
       # "master" and "slave" if you get "File not found" errors from
       # mpirun(1).
       #
       # This schema starts a "master" process on CPU 0 with the argument
       # "42.0", and then 10 "slave" processes (that are all sent from the
       # local node) scheduled across all available CPUs.
       #
       c0 master 42.0
       C -np 10 -s h slave

SEE ALSO

       mpirun(1), MPI_Comm_spawn(2), MPI_Comm_Spawn_multiple(2), MPIL_Spawn(2), introu(1)