Provided by: libfabric-dev_1.5.3-1_amd64 bug

NAME

       fi_atomic - Remote atomic functions

       fi_atomic / fi_atomicv / fi_atomicmsg / fi_inject_atomic : Initiates an atomic operation to remote memory

       fi_fetch_atomic / fi_fetch_atomicv / fi_fetch_atomicmsg : Initiates an atomic operation to remote memory,
       retrieving the initial value.

       fi_compare_atomic / fi_compare_atomicv / fi_compare_atomicmsg : Initiates an atomic compare-operation  to
       remote memory, retrieving the initial value.

       fi_atomicvalid  /  fi_fetch_atomicvalid  /  fi_compare_atomicvalid  /  fi_query_atomic  :  Indicates if a
       provider supports a specific atomic operation

SYNOPSIS

              #include <rdma/fi_atomic.h>

              ssize_t fi_atomic(struct fid_ep *ep, const void *buf,
                  size_t count, void *desc, fi_addr_t dest_addr,
                  uint64_t addr, uint64_t key,
                  enum fi_datatype datatype, enum fi_op op, void *context);

              ssize_t fi_atomicv(struct fid_ep *ep, const struct fi_ioc *iov,
                  void **desc, size_t count, fi_addr_t dest_addr,
                  uint64_t addr, uint64_t key,
                  enum fi_datatype datatype, enum fi_op op, void *context);

              ssize_t fi_atomicmsg(struct fid_ep *ep, const struct fi_msg_atomic *msg,
                  uint64_t flags);

              ssize_t fi_inject_atomic(struct fid_ep *ep, const void *buf,
                  size_t count, fi_addr_t dest_addr,
                  uint64_t addr, uint64_t key,
                  enum fi_datatype datatype, enum fi_op op);

              ssize_t fi_fetch_atomic(struct fid_ep *ep, const void *buf,
                  size_t count, void *desc, void *result, void *result_desc,
                  fi_addr_t dest_addr, uint64_t addr, uint64_t key,
                  enum fi_datatype datatype, enum fi_op op, void *context);

              ssize_t fi_fetch_atomicv(struct fid_ep *ep, const struct fi_ioc *iov,
                  void **desc, size_t count, struct fi_ioc *resultv,
                  void **result_desc, size_t result_count, fi_addr_t dest_addr,
                  uint64_t addr, uint64_t key, enum fi_datatype datatype,
                  enum fi_op op, void *context);

              ssize_t fi_fetch_atomicmsg(struct fid_ep *ep,
                  const struct fi_msg_atomic *msg, struct fi_ioc *resultv,
                  void **result_desc, size_t result_count, uint64_t flags);

              ssize_t fi_compare_atomic(struct fid_ep *ep, const void *buf,
                  size_t count, void *desc, const void *compare,
                  void *compare_desc, void *result, void *result_desc,
                  fi_addr_t dest_addr, uint64_t addr, uint64_t key,
                  enum fi_datatype datatype, enum fi_op op, void *context);

              size_t fi_compare_atomicv(struct fid_ep *ep, const struct fi_ioc *iov,
                     void **desc, size_t count, const struct fi_ioc *comparev,
                     void **compare_desc, size_t compare_count, struct fi_ioc *resultv,
                     void **result_desc, size_t result_count, fi_addr_t dest_addr,
                     uint64_t addr, uint64_t key, enum fi_datatype datatype,
                     enum fi_op op, void *context);

              ssize_t fi_compare_atomicmsg(struct fid_ep *ep,
                  const struct fi_msg_atomic *msg, const struct fi_ioc *comparev,
                  void **compare_desc, size_t compare_count,
                  struct fi_ioc *resultv, void **result_desc, size_t result_count,
                  uint64_t flags);

              int fi_atomicvalid(struct fid_ep *ep, enum fi_datatype datatype,
                  enum fi_op op, size_t *count);

              int fi_fetch_atomicvalid(struct fid_ep *ep, enum fi_datatype datatype,
                  enum fi_op op, size_t *count);

              int fi_compare_atomicvalid(struct fid_ep *ep, enum fi_datatype datatype,
                  enum fi_op op, size_t *count);

              int fi_query_atomic(struct fid_domain *domain,
                  enum fi_datatype datatype, enum fi_op op,
                  struct fi_atomic_attr *attr, uint64_t flags);

ARGUMENTS

       ep : Fabric endpoint on which to initiate atomic operation.

       buf : Local data buffer that specifies first operand of atomic operation

       iov / comparev / resultv : Vectored data buffer(s).

       count / compare_count /  result_count  :  Count  of  vectored  data  entries.   The  number  of  elements
       referenced, where each element is the indicated datatype.

       addr : Address of remote memory to access.

       key : Protection key associated with the remote memory.

       datatype : Datatype associated with atomic operands

       op : Atomic operation to perform

       compare : Local compare buffer, containing comparison data.

       result : Local data buffer to store initial value of remote buffer

       desc  / compare_desc / result_desc : Data descriptor associated with the local data buffer, local compare
       buffer, and local result buffer, respectively.

       dest_addr : Destination address for connectionless atomic operations.  Ignored for connected endpoints.

       msg : Message descriptor for atomic operations

       flags : Additional flags to apply for the atomic operation

       context : User specified pointer to associate with the operation.

DESCRIPTION

       Atomic transfers are used to read and update data located in remote memory regions in an atomic  fashion.
       Conceptually,  they  are  similar to local atomic operations of a similar nature (e.g.  atomic increment,
       compare and swap, etc.).  Updates to remote data involve one of several operations on the data,  and  act
       on  specific  types  of data, as listed below.  As such, atomic transfers have knowledge of the format of
       the data being accessed.  A single atomic function may operate across an array of data applying an atomic
       operation to each entry, but the atomicity of an operation is limited to a single datatype or entry.

   Atomic Data Types
       Atomic  functions may operate on one of the following identified data types.  A given atomic function may
       support any datatype, subject to provider implementation constraints.

       FI_INT8 : Signed 8-bit integer.

       FI_UINT8 : Unsigned 8-bit integer.

       FI_INT16 : Signed 16-bit integer.

       FI_UINT16 : Unsigned 16-bit integer.

       FI_INT32 : Signed 32-bit integer.

       FI_UINT32 : Unsigned 32-bit integer.

       FI_INT64 : Signed 64-bit integer.

       FI_UINT64 : Unsigned 64-bit integer.

       FI_FLOAT : A single-precision floating point value (IEEE 754).

       FI_DOUBLE : A double-precision floating point value (IEEE 754).

       FI_FLOAT_COMPLEX : An ordered pair of single-precision floating point values (IEEE 754), with  the  first
       value  representing  the  real  portion  of  a  complex  number and the second representing the imaginary
       portion.

       FI_DOUBLE_COMPLEX : An ordered pair of double-precision floating point values (IEEE 754), with the  first
       value  representing  the  real  portion  of  a  complex  number and the second representing the imaginary
       portion.

       FI_LONG_DOUBLE : A double-extended precision floating point value (IEEE 754).  Note that the  size  of  a
       long  double  and  number  of  bits  used  for precision is compiler, platform, and/or provider specific.
       Developers that use long double should ensure that libfabric is built using a long double format that  is
       compatible  with their application, and that format is supported by the provider.  The mechanism used for
       this validation is currently beyond the scope of the libfabric API.

       FI_LONG_DOUBLE_COMPLEX : An ordered pair of double-extended precision floating point values  (IEEE  754),
       with  the  first  value representing the real portion of a complex number and the second representing the
       imaginary portion.

   Atomic Operations
       The following atomic operations are defined.  An atomic operation often acts against a  target  value  in
       the  remote  memory  buffer and source value provided with the atomic function.  It may also carry source
       data to replace the target value in compare and  swap  operations.   A  conceptual  description  of  each
       operation is provided.

       FI_MIN : Minimum

              if (buf[i] < addr[i])
                  addr[i] = buf[i]

       FI_MAX : Maximum

              if (buf[i] > addr[i])
                  addr[i] = buf[i]

       FI_SUM : Sum

              addr[i] = addr[i] + buf[i]

       FI_PROD : Product

              addr[i] = addr[i] * buf[i]

       FI_LOR : Logical OR

              addr[i] = (addr[i] || buf[i])

       FI_LAND : Logical AND

              addr[i] = (addr[i] && buf[i])

       FI_BOR : Bitwise OR

              addr[i] = addr[i] | buf[i]

       FI_BAND : Bitwise AND

              addr[i] = addr[i] & buf[i]

       FI_LXOR : Logical exclusive-OR (XOR)

              addr[i] = ((addr[i] && !buf[i]) || (!addr[i] && buf[i]))

       FI_BXOR : Bitwise exclusive-OR (XOR)

              addr[i] = addr[i] ^ buf[i]

       FI_ATOMIC_READ : Read data atomically

              result[i] = addr[i]

       FI_ATOMIC_WRITE : Write data atomically

              addr[i] = buf[i]

       FI_CSWAP : Compare values and if equal swap with data

              if (compare[i] == addr[i])
                  addr[i] = buf[i]

       FI_CSWAP_NE : Compare values and if not equal swap with data

              if (compare[i] != addr[i])
                  addr[i] = buf[i]

       FI_CSWAP_LE : Compare values and if less than or equal swap with data

              if (compare[i] <= addr[i])
                  addr[i] = buf[i]

       FI_CSWAP_LT : Compare values and if less than swap with data

              if (compare[i] < addr[i])
                  addr[i] = buf[i]

       FI_CSWAP_GE : Compare values and if greater than or equal swap with data

              if (compare[i] >= addr[i])
                  addr[i] = buf[i]

       FI_CSWAP_GT : Compare values and if greater than swap with data

              if (compare[i] > addr[i])
                  addr[i] = buf[i]

       FI_MSWAP : Swap masked bits with data

              addr[i] = (buf[i] & compare[i]) | (addr[i] & ~compare[i])

   Base Atomic Functions
       The base atomic functions -- fi_atomic, fi_atomicv, fi_atomicmsg -- are used to transmit data to a remote
       node, where the specified atomic operation is performed against the target data.  The result  of  a  base
       atomic  function is stored at the remote memory region.  The main difference between atomic functions are
       the number and type of parameters that they accept as input.  Otherwise, they perform  the  same  general
       function.

       The  call fi_atomic transfers the data contained in the user-specified data buffer to a remote node.  For
       unconnected endpoints, the destination endpoint is specified through the dest_addr parameter.  Unless the
       endpoint  has  been  configured differently, the data buffer passed into fi_atomic must not be touched by
       the application until the fi_atomic call completes asynchronously.  The target buffer of  a  base  atomic
       operation must allow for remote read an/or write access, as appropriate.

       The  fi_atomicv  call  adds support for a scatter-gather list to fi_atomic.  The fi_atomicv transfers the
       set of data buffers referenced by the ioc parameter to the remote node for processing.

       The fi_inject_atomic call is an optimized version of fi_atomic.  The fi_inject_atomic function behaves as
       if  the  FI_INJECT  transfer  flag  were  set,  and  FI_COMPLETION were not.  That is, the data buffer is
       available for reuse immediately on returning from from fi_inject_atomic, and no completion event will  be
       generated  for  this  atomic.   The completion event will be suppressed even if the endpoint has not been
       configured with FI_SELECTIVE_COMPLETION.  See the flags discussion below for more details.  The requested
       message size that can be used with fi_inject_atomic is limited by inject_size.

       The  fi_atomicmsg  call supports atomic functions over both connected and unconnected endpoints, with the
       ability to control the atomic operation per call through the use of  flags.   The  fi_atomicmsg  function
       takes a struct fi_msg_atomic as input.

              struct fi_msg_atomic {
                  const struct fi_ioc *msg_iov; /* local scatter-gather array */
                  void                **desc;   /* local access descriptors */
                  size_t              iov_count;/* # elements in ioc */
                  const void          *addr;    /* optional endpoint address */
                  const struct fi_rma_ioc *rma_iov; /* remote SGL */
                  size_t              rma_iov_count;/* # elements in remote SGL */
                  enum fi_datatype    datatype; /* operand datatype */
                  enum fi_op          op;       /* atomic operation */
                  void                *context; /* user-defined context */
                  uint64_t            data;     /* optional data */
              };

              struct fi_ioc {
                  void        *addr;    /* local address */
                  size_t      count;    /* # target opearnds */
              };

              struct fi_rma_ioc {
                  uint64_t    addr;     /* target address */
                  size_t      count;    /* # target operands */
                  uint64_t    key;      /* access key */
              };

       The  following  list of atomic operations are usable with base atomic operations: FI_MIN, FI_MAX, FI_SUM,
       FI_PROD, FI_LOR, FI_LAND, FI_BOR, FI_BAND, FI_LXOR, FI_BXOR, and FI_ATOMIC_WRITE.

   Fetch-Atomic Functions
       The fetch atomic functions -- fi_fetch_atomic, fi_fetch_atomicv, and fi_fetch atomicmsg -- behave similar
       to  the  equivalent base atomic function.  The difference between the fetch and base atomic calls are the
       fetch atomic routines return the initial value that was stored at the target to the  user.   The  initial
       value is read into the user provided result buffer.  The target buffer of fetch-atomic operations must be
       enabled for remote read access.

       The following list of atomic operations are usable with fetch atomic operations: FI_MIN, FI_MAX,  FI_SUM,
       FI_PROD, FI_LOR, FI_LAND, FI_BOR, FI_BAND, FI_LXOR, FI_BXOR, FI_ATOMIC_READ, and FI_ATOMIC_WRITE.

       For FI_ATOMIC_READ operations, the source buffer operand (e.g.  fi_fetch_atomic buf parameter) is ignored
       and may be NULL.  The results are written into the result buffer.

   Compare-Atomic Functions
       The compare atomic functions -- fi_compare_atomic, fi_compare_atomicv, and fi_compare  atomicmsg  --  are
       used  for  operations  that  require  comparing  the target data against a value before performing a swap
       operation.  The compare  atomic  functions  support:  FI_CSWAP,  FI_CSWAP_NE,  FI_CSWAP_LE,  FI_CSWAP_LT,
       FI_CSWAP_GE, FI_CSWAP_GT, and FI_MSWAP.

   Atomic Valid Functions
       The atomic valid functions -- fi_atomicvalid, fi_fetch_atomicvalid, and fi_compare_atomicvalid --indicate
       which operations the local provider supports.  Needed operations not supported by the  provider  must  be
       emulated  by  the application.  Each valid call corresponds to a set of atomic functions.  fi_atomicvalid
       checks whether a provider supports a specific base atomic operation for a given datatype  and  operation.
       fi_fetch_atomicvalid  indicates  if  a  provider  supports  a specific fetch-atomic operation for a given
       datatype  and  operation.   And  fi_compare_atomicvalid  checks  if  a  provider  supports  a   specified
       compare-atomic operation for a given datatype and operation.

       If an operation is supported, an atomic valid call will return 0, along with a count of atomic data units
       that a single function call will operate on.

   Query Atomic Attributes
       The fi_query_atomic call acts as an enhanced atomic  valid  operation  (see  the  atomic  valid  function
       definitions  above).   It  is  provided,  in part, for future extensibility.  The query operation reports
       which atomic operations are supported by the domain, for suitably configured endpoints.

       The behavior of fi_query_atomic is adjusted based on the flags  parameter.   If  flags  is  0,  then  the
       operation  reports  the supported atomic attributes for base atomic operations, similar to fi_atomicvalid
       for  endpoints.   If  flags  has  the  FI_FETCH_ATOMIC  bit  set,  the  operation  behaves   similar   to
       fi_fetch_atomicvalid.    Similarly,   the   flag   bit  FI_COMPARE_ATOMIC  results  in  query  acting  as
       fi_compare_atomicvalid.  The FI_FETCH_ATOMIC and FI_COMPARE_ATOMIC bits may not both be set.

       If the FI_TAGGED bit is set, the provider will indicate  if  it  supports  atomic  operations  to  tagged
       receive buffers.  The FI_TAGGED bit may be used by itself, or in conjunction with the FI_FETCH_ATOMIC and
       FI_COMPARE_ATOMIC flags.

       The output of fi_query_atomic is struct fi_atomic_attr:

              struct fi_atomic_attr {
                  size_t count;
                  size_t size;
              };

       The count attribute field is as defined for the atomic valid calls.  The size field indicates the size in
       bytes of the atomic datatype.

   Completions
       Completed atomic operations are reported to the user through one or more event collectors associated with
       the endpoint.  Users provide context which are associated with each operation, and  is  returned  to  the
       user as part of the event completion.  See fi_cq for completion event details.

       Updates to the target buffer of an atomic operation are visible to processes running on the target system
       either after a completion has been generated, or after the completion of an operation initiated after the
       atomic  call  with  a  fencing  operation  occurring  in between.  For example, the target process may be
       notified by the initiator sending a message after the atomic call completes, or sending a fenced  message
       immediately after initiating the atomic operation.

FLAGS

       The  fi_atomicmsg,  fi_fetch_atomicmsg,  and  fi_compare_atomicmsg  calls allow the user to specify flags
       which can change the default data transfer operation.  Flags specified  with  atomic  message  operations
       override  most  flags  previously configured with the endpoint, except where noted (see fi_control).  The
       following list of flags are usable with atomic message calls.

       FI_COMPLETION : Indicates that a completion entry should be generated for the specified  operation.   The
       endpoint  must  be  bound  to  a  completion  queue  with FI_SELECTIVE_COMPLETION that corresponds to the
       specified operation, or this flag is ignored.

       FI_MORE : Indicates that the user has additional requests that  will  immediately  be  posted  after  the
       current  call returns.  Use of this flag may improve performance by enabling the provider to optimize its
       access to the fabric hardware.

       FI_INJECT : Indicates that the outbound non-const data buffers (buf and  compare  parameters)  should  be
       returned  to  user  immediately  after the call returns, even if the operation is handled asynchronously.
       This may require that the underlying provider implementation copy  the  data  into  a  local  buffer  and
       transfer  out of that buffer.  The use of output result buffers are not affected by this flag.  This flag
       can only be used with messages smaller than inject_size.

       FI_FENCE : Indicates that the requested operation, also known as the fenced operation, be deferred  until
       all previous operations targeting the same target endpoint have completed.

       FI_TAGGED  :  Specifies  that the target of the atomic operation is a tagged receive buffer instead of an
       RMA buffer.  When a tagged buffer is the target memory region, the addr parameter is used  as  a  0-based
       byte offset into the tagged buffer, with the key parameter specifying the tag.

RETURN VALUE

       Returns  0  on  success.   On  error, a negative value corresponding to fabric errno is returned.  Fabric
       errno values are defined in rdma/fi_errno.h.

ERRORS

       -FI_EAGAIN : See fi_msg(3) for a detailed description of handling FI_EAGAIN.

       -FI_EOPNOTSUPP : The requested atomic operation is not supported on this endpoint.

       -FI_EMSGSIZE : The number of atomic operations  in  a  single  request  exceeds  that  supported  by  the
       underlying provider.

NOTES

       Atomic  operations  operate  on an array of values of a specific data type.  Atomicity is only guaranteed
       for each data type operation, not across the entire array.  The following pseudo-code  demonstrates  this
       operation  for  64-bit  unsigned  atomic  write.   ATOMIC_WRITE_U64  is  a  platform dependent macro that
       atomically writes 8 bytes to an aligned memory location.

              fi_atomic(ep, buf, count, NULL, dest_addr, addr, key,
                    FI_UINT64, FI_ATOMIC_WRITE, context)
              {
                  for (i = 1; i < count; i ++)
                      ATOMIC_WRITE_U64(((uint64_t *) addr)[i],
                               ((uint64_t *) buf)[i]);
              }

       The number of array elements to operate on is specified through a count parameter.  This must be  between
       1  and the maximum returned through the relevant valid operation, inclusive.  The requested operation and
       data type must also be valid for the given provider.

SEE ALSO

       fi_getinfo(3), fi_endpoint(3), fi_domain(3), fi_cq(3), fi_rma(3)

AUTHORS

       OpenFabrics.