Totalview® for HPC Reference Guide : About this Guide : About this Guide : TotalView for HPC Documentation
TotalView for HPC Documentation
The following table describes all available TotalView for HPC documentation.
Product
Title
Description
HTML
PDF
Print
General TotalView for HPC Documentation
 
Getting Started with TotalView for HPC Products
Introduces the basic features of TotalView for HPC, MemoryScape, and ReplayEngine, with links for more detailed information
X
X
 
 
TotalView for HPC Platforms and System Requirements
Defines platform and system requirements for TotalView for HPC, MemoryScape, and ReplayEngine
X
X
 
 
TotalView for HPC Evaluation Guide
Brochure that introduces basic TotalView for HPC features
 
X
X
User Guides
 
 
 
 
 
 
TotalView for HPC User Guide
Primary resource for information on using the TotalView for HPC GUI and the CLI
X
X
 
 
Debugging Memory Problems with MemoryScape
How to debug memory issues, relevant to both TotalView for HPC and the MemoryScape standalone product
X
X
 
 
Reverse Debugging with Replay Engine
How to perform reverse debugging using the embedded add-on ReplayEngine
X
X
 
Reference Guides
 
 
 
 
 
TotalView for HPC Reference Guide
A reference of CLI commands, how to run TotalView for HPC, and platform-specific detail
X
X
 
Installation Guides
 
X
X
 
 
TotalView for HPC Install Guide
Installing TotalView for HPC and the FLEXlm license manager
 
 
 
 
MemoryScape Install Guide
Installing MemoryScape as a standalone product
 
 
 
In-Product Help
Help screens launched from within the product’s GUI
 
 
 
 
TotalView for HPC Help
Context-sensitive help launched from TotalView for HPC
X
 
 
 
MemoryScape Help
Context-sensitive help launched from MemoryScape
X
 
 
 
Conventions
The following table describes the conventions used in this book:
Convention
Meaning
[ ]
Brackets are used when describing optional parts of a command.
arguments
In a command description, text in italics represents information you enter. Elsewhere, italics is used for emphasis.
Bold text
In a command description, bold text represents keywords or options that must be entered exactly as displayed. Elsewhere, it represents words that are used in a programmatic way rather than their normal way.
Example text
In program listings, this represents a program or something you’d enter in response to a shell or CLI prompt. Bold text here indicates exactly what you should type. If you’re viewing this information online, example text is in color.