Provided by: libhwloc-doc_1.11.2-3_all bug

NAME

       hwlocality_configuration - Topology Detection Configuration and Query

   Data Structures
       struct hwloc_topology_discovery_support
       struct hwloc_topology_cpubind_support
       struct hwloc_topology_membind_support
       struct hwloc_topology_support

   Enumerations
       enum hwloc_topology_flags_e { HWLOC_TOPOLOGY_FLAG_WHOLE_SYSTEM, HWLOC_TOPOLOGY_FLAG_IS_THISSYSTEM,
           HWLOC_TOPOLOGY_FLAG_IO_DEVICES, HWLOC_TOPOLOGY_FLAG_IO_BRIDGES, HWLOC_TOPOLOGY_FLAG_WHOLE_IO,
           HWLOC_TOPOLOGY_FLAG_ICACHES }

   Functions
       int hwloc_topology_ignore_type (hwloc_topology_t topology, hwloc_obj_type_t type)
       int hwloc_topology_ignore_type_keep_structure (hwloc_topology_t topology, hwloc_obj_type_t type)
       int hwloc_topology_ignore_all_keep_structure (hwloc_topology_t topology)
       int hwloc_topology_set_flags (hwloc_topology_t topology, unsigned long flags)
       unsigned long hwloc_topology_get_flags (hwloc_topology_t topology)
       int hwloc_topology_set_pid (hwloc_topology_t restrict topology, hwloc_pid_t pid)
       int hwloc_topology_set_fsroot (hwloc_topology_t restrict topology, const char *restrict fsroot_path)
       int hwloc_topology_set_synthetic (hwloc_topology_t restrict topology, const char *restrict description)
       int hwloc_topology_set_xml (hwloc_topology_t restrict topology, const char *restrict xmlpath)
       int hwloc_topology_set_xmlbuffer (hwloc_topology_t restrict topology, const char *restrict buffer, int
           size)
       int hwloc_topology_set_custom (hwloc_topology_t topology)
       int hwloc_topology_set_distance_matrix (hwloc_topology_t restrict topology, hwloc_obj_type_t type,
           unsigned nbobjs, unsigned *os_index, float *distances)
       int hwloc_topology_is_thissystem (hwloc_topology_t restrict topology)
       const struct hwloc_topology_support * hwloc_topology_get_support (hwloc_topology_t restrict topology)
       void hwloc_topology_set_userdata (hwloc_topology_t topology, const void *userdata)
       void * hwloc_topology_get_userdata (hwloc_topology_t topology)

Detailed Description

       Several functions can optionally be called between hwloc_topology_init() and hwloc_topology_load() to
       configure how the detection should be performed, e.g. to ignore some objects types, define a synthetic
       topology, etc.

       If none of them is called, the default is to detect all the objects of the machine that the caller is
       allowed to access.

       This default behavior may also be modified through environment variables if the application did not
       modify it already. Setting HWLOC_XMLFILE in the environment enforces the discovery from a XML file as if
       hwloc_topology_set_xml() had been called. HWLOC_FSROOT switches to reading the topology from the
       specified Linux filesystem root as if hwloc_topology_set_fsroot() had been called. Finally,
       HWLOC_THISSYSTEM enforces the return value of hwloc_topology_is_thissystem().

Enumeration Type Documentation

   enum hwloc_topology_flags_e
       Flags to be set onto a topology context before load. Flags should be given to hwloc_topology_set_flags().
       They may also be returned by hwloc_topology_get_flags().

       Enumerator

       HWLOC_TOPOLOGY_FLAG_WHOLE_SYSTEM
              Detect  the  whole system, ignore reservations and offline settings. Gather all resources, even if
              some were disabled by the administrator. For instance, ignore Linux Cgroup/Cpusets and gather  all
              processors and memory nodes, and ignore the fact that some resources may be offline.

       When  this  flag  is  not  set,  PUs  that  are  disallowed are not added to the topology. Parent objects
       (package, core, cache, etc.) are added only if some of their children are allowed. NUMA nodes are  always
       added but their available memory is set to 0 when disallowed.

       HWLOC_TOPOLOGY_FLAG_IS_THISSYSTEM
              Assume  that  the  selected  backend provides the topology for the system on which we are running.
              This forces hwloc_topology_is_thissystem() to return 1, i.e. makes hwloc assume that the  selected
              backend  provides  the  topology for the system on which we are running, even if it is not the OS-
              specific backend but the XML backend  for  instance.  This  means  making  the  binding  functions
              actually  call  the  OS-specific  system  calls and really do binding, while the XML backend would
              otherwise provide empty hooks just returning success.

       Setting the environment variable HWLOC_THISSYSTEM may also result in the same behavior.

       This can be used for efficiency reasons to first detect the topology once, save it to an  XML  file,  and
       quickly reload it later through the XML backend, but still having binding functions actually do bind.

       HWLOC_TOPOLOGY_FLAG_IO_DEVICES
              Detect  PCI  devices.  By default, I/O devices are ignored. This flag enables I/O device detection
              using the pci backend. Only the common PCI devices (GPUs,  NICs,  block  devices,  ...)  and  host
              bridges (objects that connect the host objects to an I/O subsystem) will be added to the topology.
              Additionally  it  also enables MemoryModule misc objects. Uncommon devices and other bridges (such
              as PCI-to-PCI bridges) will be ignored.

       HWLOC_TOPOLOGY_FLAG_IO_BRIDGES
              Detect PCI bridges. This flag should be combined with HWLOC_TOPOLOGY_FLAG_IO_DEVICES to enable the
              detection of both common devices and of all useful bridges (bridges that have at least one  device
              behind them).

       HWLOC_TOPOLOGY_FLAG_WHOLE_IO
              Detect  the whole PCI hierarchy. This flag enables detection of all I/O devices (even the uncommon
              ones such as DMA channels) and bridges (even those that have no device behind them) using the  pci
              backend. This implies HWLOC_TOPOLOGY_FLAG_IO_DEVICES.

       HWLOC_TOPOLOGY_FLAG_ICACHES
              Detect instruction caches. This flag enables detection of Instruction caches, instead of only Data
              and Unified caches.

Function Documentation

   unsigned long hwloc_topology_get_flags (hwloc_topology_t topology)
       Get OR'ed flags of a topology. Get the OR'ed set of hwloc_topology_flags_e of a topology.

       Returns:
           the flags previously set with hwloc_topology_set_flags().

   const struct hwloc_topology_support* hwloc_topology_get_support (hwloc_topology_t restrict topology)
       Retrieve the topology support.

   void* hwloc_topology_get_userdata (hwloc_topology_t topology)
       Retrieve the topology-specific userdata pointer. Retrieve the application-given private data pointer that
       was previously set with hwloc_topology_set_userdata().

   int hwloc_topology_ignore_all_keep_structure (hwloc_topology_t topology)
       Ignore  all  objects that do not bring any structure. Ignore all objects that do not bring any structure:
       This is equivalent to calling hwloc_topology_ignore_type_keep_structure() for all object types.

   int hwloc_topology_ignore_type (hwloc_topology_t topology, hwloc_obj_type_t type)
       Ignore an object type. Ignore all objects from the given type. The bottom-level type HWLOC_OBJ_PU may not
       be ignored. The top-level object of the hierarchy will never be ignored, even if this function  succeeds.
       Group  objects  are  always  ignored  if  they  do not bring any structure since they are designed to add
       structure to the topology. I/O objects may not be ignored, topology flags should  be  used  to  configure
       their discovery instead.

   int hwloc_topology_ignore_type_keep_structure (hwloc_topology_t topology, hwloc_obj_type_t type)
       Ignore  an object type if it does not bring any structure. Ignore all objects from the given type as long
       as they do not bring any structure: Each ignored object should have a single  children  or  be  the  only
       child  of  its  parent.  The  bottom-level  type  HWLOC_OBJ_PU may not be ignored. I/O objects may not be
       ignored, topology flags should be used to configure their discovery instead.

   int hwloc_topology_is_thissystem (hwloc_topology_t restrict topology)
       Does the topology context come from this system?

       Returns:
           1 if this topology context was built using the system running this program.

           0 instead (for instance if using another file-system root,  a  XML  topology  file,  or  a  synthetic
           topology).

   int hwloc_topology_set_custom (hwloc_topology_t topology)
       Prepare  the  topology for custom assembly. The topology then contains a single root object. It must then
       be built by inserting  other  topologies  with  hwloc_custom_insert_topology()  or  single  objects  with
       hwloc_custom_insert_group_object_by_parent().  hwloc_topology_load()  must  be called to finalize the new
       topology as usual.

       Note:
           If nothing is inserted in the topology, hwloc_topology_load() will fail with errno set to EINVAL.

           The cpuset and nodeset of the root object are NULL because these sets are meaningless when assembling
           multiple topologies.

           On success, the custom component replaces the previously enabled component (if any), but the topology
           is not actually modified until hwloc_topology_load().

   int hwloc_topology_set_distance_matrix (hwloc_topology_t restrict topology, hwloc_obj_type_t  type,  unsigned
       nbobjs, unsigned * os_index, float * distances)
       Provide  a  distance  matrix. Provide the matrix of distances between a set of objects of the given type.
       The set may or may not contain all the existing objects of this type. The objects are specified by  their
       OS/physical  index  in the os_index array. The distances matrix follows the same order. The distance from
       object i to object j in the i*nbobjs+j.

       A single latency matrix may be defined for each type. If another distance matrix already exists  for  the
       given  type, either because the user specified it or because the OS offers it, it will be replaced by the
       given one. If nbobjs is 0, os_index is NULL and distances is NULL, the existing distance matrix  for  the
       given type is removed.

       Note:
           Distance matrices are ignored in multi-node topologies.

   int hwloc_topology_set_flags (hwloc_topology_t topology, unsigned long flags)
       Set  OR'ed  flags  to  non-yet-loaded topology. Set a OR'ed set of hwloc_topology_flags_e onto a topology
       that was not yet loaded.

       If this function is called multiple times, the last invokation will erase and replace the  set  of  flags
       that was previously set.

       The flags set in a topology may be retrieved with hwloc_topology_get_flags()

   int hwloc_topology_set_fsroot (hwloc_topology_t restrict topology, const char *restrict fsroot_path)
       Change the file-system root path when building the topology from sysfs/procfs. On Linux system, use sysfs
       and  procfs  files as if they were mounted on the given fsroot_path instead of the main file-system root.
       Setting the environment variable HWLOC_FSROOT may also result in this behavior. Not using the main  file-
       system root causes hwloc_topology_is_thissystem() to return 0.

       Note that this function does not actually load topology information; it just tells hwloc where to load it
       from. You'll still need to invoke hwloc_topology_load() to actually load the topology information.

       Returns:
           -1 with errno set to ENOSYS on non-Linux and on Linux systems that do not support it.

           -1 with the appropriate errno if fsroot_path cannot be used.

       Note:
           For  convenience,  this backend provides empty binding hooks which just return success. To have hwloc
           still actually call OS-specific hooks, the HWLOC_TOPOLOGY_FLAG_IS_THISSYSTEM has to be set to  assert
           that the loaded file is really the underlying system.

           On  success, the Linux component replaces the previously enabled component (if any), but the topology
           is not actually modified until hwloc_topology_load().

   int hwloc_topology_set_pid (hwloc_topology_t restrict topology, hwloc_pid_t pid)
       Change which process the topology is viewed from. On some systems, processes may have different views  of
       the  machine,  for  instance the set of allowed CPUs. By default, hwloc exposes the view from the current
       process. Calling hwloc_topology_set_pid() permits to make it expose the topology of the machine from  the
       point of view of another process.

       Note:
           hwloc_pid_t is pid_t on Unix platforms, and HANDLE on native Windows platforms.

           -1 is returned and errno is set to ENOSYS on platforms that do not support this feature.

   int hwloc_topology_set_synthetic (hwloc_topology_t restrict topology, const char *restrict description)
       Enable  synthetic  topology.  Gather  topology  information from the given description, a space-separated
       string of numbers describing the arity of each level. Each number may be prefixed with a type and a colon
       to enforce the type of a level. If only some level types are enforced, hwloc will try to choose the other
       types according to usual topologies, but it may fail and  you  may  have  to  specify  more  level  types
       manually. See also the Synthetic topologies.

       If description was properly parsed and describes a valid topology configuration, this function returns 0.
       Otherwise -1 is returned and errno is set to EINVAL.

       Note that this function does not actually load topology information; it just tells hwloc where to load it
       from. You'll still need to invoke hwloc_topology_load() to actually load the topology information.

       Note:
           For convenience, this backend provides empty binding hooks which just return success.

           On  success,  the  synthetic  component  replaces  the previously enabled component (if any), but the
           topology is not actually modified until hwloc_topology_load().

   void hwloc_topology_set_userdata (hwloc_topology_t topology, const void * userdata)
       Set the topology-specific userdata pointer. Each topology may store one  application-given  private  data
       pointer. It is initialized to NULL. hwloc will never modify it.

       Use it as you wish, after hwloc_topology_init() and until hwloc_topolog_destroy().

       This pointer is not exported to XML.

   int hwloc_topology_set_xml (hwloc_topology_t restrict topology, const char *restrict xmlpath)
       Enable  XML-file  based topology. Gather topology information from the XML file given at xmlpath. Setting
       the environment variable HWLOC_XMLFILE may also  result  in  this  behavior.  This  file  may  have  been
       generated earlier with hwloc_topology_export_xml() or lstopo file.xml.

       Note that this function does not actually load topology information; it just tells hwloc where to load it
       from. You'll still need to invoke hwloc_topology_load() to actually load the topology information.

       Returns:
           -1 with errno set to EINVAL on failure to read the XML file.

       Note:
           See  also  hwloc_topology_set_userdata_import_callback()  for  importing  application-specific object
           userdata.

           For convenience, this backend provides empty binding hooks which just return success. To  have  hwloc
           still  actually call OS-specific hooks, the HWLOC_TOPOLOGY_FLAG_IS_THISSYSTEM has to be set to assert
           that the loaded file is really the underlying system.

           On success, the XML component replaces the previously enabled component (if any), but the topology is
           not actually modified until hwloc_topology_load().

   int hwloc_topology_set_xmlbuffer (hwloc_topology_t restrict topology, const char *restrict buffer, int size)
       Enable XML based topology using a memory buffer (instead of a file,  as  with  hwloc_topology_set_xml()).
       Gather  topology  information  from the XML memory buffer given at buffer and of length size. This buffer
       may have been filled earlier with hwloc_topology_export_xmlbuffer().

       Note that this function does not actually load topology information; it just tells hwloc where to load it
       from. You'll still need to invoke hwloc_topology_load() to actually load the topology information.

       Returns:
           -1 with errno set to EINVAL on failure to read the XML buffer.

       Note:
           See also  hwloc_topology_set_userdata_import_callback()  for  importing  application-specific  object
           userdata.

           For  convenience,  this backend provides empty binding hooks which just return success. To have hwloc
           still actually call OS-specific hooks, the HWLOC_TOPOLOGY_FLAG_IS_THISSYSTEM has to be set to  assert
           that the loaded file is really the underlying system.

           On success, the XML component replaces the previously enabled component (if any), but the topology is
           not actually modified until hwloc_topology_load().

Author

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Version 1.11.2                                   Tue Feb 16 2016                     hwlocality_configuration(3)