Provided by: hwloc_1.8-1ubuntu1.14.04.1_amd64 bug

NAME

       hwloc-distances - Displays distance matrices

SYNOPSIS

       hwloc-distances [options]

OPTIONS

       -l --logical
              Display hwloc logical indexes (default) instead of physical/OS indexes.

       -p --physical
              Display OS/physical indexes instead of hwloc logical indexes.

       -i <file>, --input <file>
              Read  topology  from  XML  file  <file> (instead of discovering the topology on the
              local machine).  If <file> is "-", the standard input is used.   XML  support  must
              have been compiled in to hwloc for this option to be usable.

       -i <directory>, --input <directory>
              Read  topology from the chroot specified by <directory> (instead of discovering the
              topology on the local machine).  This option is generally only available on  Linux.
              The  chroot  was  usually created by gathering another machine topology with hwloc-
              gather-topology.

       -i <specification>, --input <specification>
              Simulate a fake hierarchy  (instead  of  discovering  the  topology  on  the  local
              machine).  If  <specification> is "node:2 pu:3", the topology will contain two NUMA
              nodes with 3 processing units in each of them.  The <specification> string must end
              with a number of PUs.

       --if <format>, --input-format <format>
              Enforce the input in the given format, among xml, fsroot and synthetic.

       --restrict <cpuset>
              Restrict the topology to the given cpuset.

       --whole-system
              Do not consider administration limitations.

       -v --verbose
              Verbose messages.

       --version
              Report version and exit.

DESCRIPTION

       hwloc-distances displays also distance matrices attached to the topology.  A breadth-first
       traversal of the topology is performed  starting  from  the  root  to  find  all  distance
       matrices.

       NOTE:  lstopo  may  also display distance matrices in its verbose textual output.  However
       lstopo only prints matrices that cover the  entire  topology  while  hwloc-distances  also
       displays matrices that ignore part of the topology.

EXAMPLES

       On a quad-socket opteron machine:

           $ hwloc-distances
           Latency matrix between 4 NUMANodes (depth 2) by logical indexes:
             index     0     1     2     3
                 0 1.000 1.600 2.200 2.200
                 1 1.600 1.000 2.200 2.200
                 2 2.200 2.200 1.000 1.600
                 3 2.200 2.200 1.600 1.000

RETURN VALUE

       Upon successful execution, hwloc-distances returns 0.

       hwloc-distances  will return nonzero if any kind of error occurs, such as (but not limited
       to) failure to parse the command line.

SEE ALSO

       hwloc(7), lstopo(1)