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NAME

       gmap, gpart - compute static mappings and partitions sequentially

SYNOPSIS

       gmap [options] [gfile] [tfile] [mfile] [lfile]

       gpart [options] [nparts/pwght] [gfile] [mfile] [lfile]

DESCRIPTION

       The  gmap program computes, in a sequential way, a static mapping of a source graph onto a
       target graph.

       The gpart program is a simplified interface to gmap,  which  performs  graph  partitioning
       instead  of  static mapping. Consequently, the desired number of parts has to be provided,
       in lieu of the target architecture. When using  the  program  for  graph  clustering,  the
       number of parts turns into maximum cluster weight.

       The  -b  and  -c  options allow the user to set preferences on the behavior of the mapping
       strategy which is used by default. The -m option  allows  the  user  to  define  a  custom
       mapping strategy.

       The  -q  option turns the programs into graph clustering programs. In this case, gmap only
       accepts variable-sized target architectures.

       Source graph file gfile can only be  a  centralized  graph  file.  For  gmap,  the  target
       architecture  file  tfile describes either algorithmically-coded topologies such as meshes
       and hypercubes, or decomposition-defined architectures created by means of the  amk_grf(1)
       program. The resulting mapping is stored in file mfile. Eventual logging information (such
       as the one produced by option -v)  is  sent  to  file  lfile.  When  file  names  are  not
       specified,  data  is  read  from  standard  input and written to standard output. Standard
       streams can also be explicitely represented by a dash '-'.

       When the proper libraries have been included at compile time, gmap and gpart can  directly
       handle  compressed  graphs,  both  as  input and output. A stream is treated as compressed
       whenever its name is postfixed with a compressed file extension, such as in 'brol.grf.bz2'
       or  '-.gz'.  The compression formats which can be supported are the bzip2 format ('.bz2'),
       the gzip format ('.gz'), and the lzma format ('.lzma', on input only).

OPTIONS

       -bval  Set maximum load imbalance ratio for graph partitioning  or  static  mapping.  When
              programs  are  used  as  clustering  tools,  this  parameter  sets the maximum load
              imbalance ratio for recursive bipartitions. Exclusive with the -m option.

       -copt  Choose default mapping strategy according to one or several options among:

              b      enforce load balance as much as possible.

              q      privilege quality over speed (default).

              s      privilege speed over quality.

              t      enforce safety.

              It is exclusive with the -m option.

       -h     Display some help.

       -mstrat
              Use  sequential  mapping  strategy  strat  (see  Scotch  user's  manual  for   more
              information).

       -q     (for gpart)

       -qpwght
              (for  gmap) Use the programs as graph clustering tools instead of static mapping or
              graph partitioning tools. For gpart, the number of parts will  become  the  maximum
              cluster weight. For gmap, this number pwght has to be passed after the option.

       -V     Display program version and copyright.

       -vverb Set verbose mode to verb. It is a set of one of more characters which can be:

              m      mapping information.

              s      strategy information.

              t      timing information.

TARGET ARCHITECTURES

       Target  architectures  represent  graphs  onto which source graphs are mapped. In order to
       speed-up  the  obtainment  of  target  architecture  topological  properties  during   the
       computation  of  mappings,  some  classical  topologies are algorithmically coded into the
       mapper itself. These topologies are  consequently  simply  defined  by  their  code  name,
       followed by their dimensional parameters:

       cmplt dim
              unweighted complete graph of size dim.

       cmpltw dim w0 w1 ... wdim-1
              weighted complete graph of size size and of respective loads w0, w1, ..., wdim-1.

       hcub dim
              hypercube of dimension dim.

       leaf hgt n0 w0 ... nhgt-1 whgt-1
              tree-leaf  graph  of  height hgt with (n0 times n1 times ... nhgt-1) vertices, with
              inter-cluster link weights of w0, w1, ... whgt-1.

       mesh2D dimX dimY
              2D mesh of dimX times dimY nodes.

       mesh3D dimX dimY dimZ
              23 mesh of dimX times dimY times dimZ nodes.

       torus2D dimX dimY
              2D torus of dimX times dimY nodes.

       torus3D dimX dimY dimZ
              3D torus of dimX times dimY times dimZ nodes.

       Other target topologies can be created from their source graph description  by  using  the
       amk_grf(1)  command.  In  this  case, the target description will begin with the code name
       deco.

MAPPINGS

       Mappings are represented by as many lines as there are vertices in the source graph.  Each
       of  these  lines  is made of two figures: the number of the vertex (or its label if source
       graph vertices are labeled) and the index of the  target  vertex  to  which  it  has  been
       assigned.  Target  vertex  indices  range  from  0 to the number of vertices in the target
       architecture (that is, the number of parts) minus one.

       This block of lines is always preceded by the number of such lines. In most  cases,  since
       full mappings are requested, the number of lines is equal to the number of vertices in the
       source graph.

EXAMPLES

       Run gpart to compute a partition into 7 parts of graph 'brol.grf' and save  the  resulting
       ordering to file 'brol.map'.

           $ gpart 7 brol.grf brol.map

       Run  gmap  to compute a partition, into 3 parts of respective weights 1, 2 and 4, of graph
       'brol.grf' and save the resulting mapping to file 'brol.map'. The dash '-'  standard  file
       name  is used so that the target architecture description is read from the standard input,
       through the pipe, as provided by the 'echo' shell command.

           $ echo "cmpltw 3 1 2 4" | gmap brol.grf - brol.map

SEE ALSO

       amk_grf(1), acpl(1), gmtst(1), dgmap(1).

       Scotch user's manual.

AUTHOR

       Francois Pellegrini <francois.pellegrini@labri.fr>

                                        September 01, 2011                                gmap(1)