Here you will find information that will allow you to create startup profiles for environments that Rogue Wave Software doesn’t define. These definitions will show up in the
Parallel tab of the
New Program dialog box.
Rogue Wave Software products know about different Message Passing Interface (MPI) implementations. Because so many implementations are standard, our products usually do the right thing. Unfortunately, subtle differences in your environment or an implementation can cause difficulties that prevent our products from automatically starting your program. In these cases, you must declare what needs to be done.
The only way MemoryScape users can alter the way an MPI program starts up is by altering the
parallel_support.tvd file, which is contained within the
totalview/lib installation directory area. TotalView users can also alter this file and they can create a local definition.
If you are using a locally-installed MPI implementation, you should add it to your PATH variable. By default, our products use the information in PATH to find the parallel launcher (for example,
mpirun,
mpiexec,
poe,
srun,
prun,
dmpirun, and so on). Generally, if you can run your parallel job from a command line, TotalView and MemoryScape can also run it.
If you have multiple installed MPI systems—for example, multiple versions of MPICH installed on a common file server—only one can be in your path. In this case, you would need to specify an absolute path to launch it, which means you will need to customize the
TV::parallel_configs list variable or the
parallel_support.tvd file contained within your installation directory so that it does not rely on your PATH variable.
The easiest way to create your own startup configuration is to copy a similar configuration from the
TV::private::parallel_configs_base variable to the
TV::parallel_configs variable, then make changes.
When you add configurations, they are simply added to a list. This means that if Rogue Wave Software supplies a definition named
foo and you create a definition named
foo, both exist and your product chooses the first one in the list. Because both are displayed, you must be careful to give each new definition a unique names.