Mercury is an RPC framework specifically designed for use in HPC systems that allows asynchronous transfer of parameters and execution requests, as well as direct support of large data arguments. The network implementation is abstracted, allowing easy porting to future systems and efficient use of existing native transport mechanisms. Mercury's interface is generic and allows any function call to be serialized.
Please see the accompanying COPYING file for license details.
Contributions and patches are welcomed but require a Contributor License Agreement (CLA) to be filled out. Please contact us if you are interested in contributing to Mercury by subscribing to the mailing lists.
Architectures supported by MPI implementations are generally supported by the
network abstraction layer. MPI, BMI (tcp) and SM (shared-memory) plugins
fully implement the network abstraction layer and are currently supported.
The CCI plugin is experimental and underlying CCI transport plugins
(tcp
, sm
, verbs
, gni
) may require additional testing or fixes.
The libfabric plugin is experimental and underlying libfabric providers
(tcp
, verbs
, psm2
, gni
) may require additional testing or fixes.
See the plugin requirements section for plugin requirement details.
Please see the documentation available on the mercury website for a quick introduction to Mercury.
Compiling and running Mercury requires up-to-date versions of various software packages. Beware that using excessively old versions of these packages can cause indirect errors that are very difficult to track down.
To make use of the BMI plugin, please do:
git clone git://git.mcs.anl.gov/bmi && cd bmi
# If you are building BMI on a MacOS platform, then apply the following patch:
# patch -p1 < patches/bmi-osx.patch
./prepare && ./configure --enable-shared --enable-bmi-only
make && make install
To make use of the MPI plugin, Mercury requires a well-configured MPI
implementation (MPICH2 v1.4.1 or higher / OpenMPI v1.6 or higher) with
MPI_THREAD_MULTIPLE
available on targets that will accept remote
connections. Processes that are not accepting incoming connections are
not required to have a multithreaded level of execution.
To make use of the native NA SM (shared-memory) plugin on Linux, the cross-memory attach (CMA) feature introduced in kernel v3.2 is required. The yama security module must also be configured to allow remote process memory to be accessed (see this page). On MacOS, code signing with inclusion of the na_sm.plist file into the binary is currently required to allow process memory to be accessed.
To make use of the CCI plugin, please refer to the CCI build instructions available on this page.
To make use of the libfabric/OFI plugin, please refer to the libfabric build instructions available on this page.
For optional automatic code generation features (which are used for generating serialization and deserialization routines), the preprocessor subset of the BOOST library must be included (Boost v1.48 or higher is recommended). The library itself is therefore not necessary since only the header is used.
On Linux OpenPA v1.0.3 or higher is required (the version that is included
with MPICH can also be used) for systems that do not have stdatomic.h
(GCC version less than 4.8).
If you install the full sources, put the tarball in a directory where you have permissions (e.g., your home directory) and unpack it:
gzip -cd mercury-X.tar.gz | tar xvf -
or
bzip2 -dc mercury-X.tar.bz2 | tar xvf -
Replace "X" with the version number of the package.
(Optional) If you checked out the sources using git (without the --recursive option) and want to build the testing suite (which requires the kwsys submodule) or use checksums (which requires the mchecksum submodule), you need to issue from the root of the source directory the following command:
git submodule update --init
Mercury makes use of the CMake build-system and requires that you do an out-of-source build. In order to do that, you must create a new build directory and run the 'ccmake' command from it:
cd mercury-X
mkdir build
cd build
ccmake .. (where ".." is the relative path to the mercury-X directory)
Type 'c' multiple times and choose suitable options. Recommended options are:
BUILD_SHARED_LIBS ON (or OFF if the library you link
against requires static libraries)
BUILD_TESTING ON
Boost_INCLUDE_DIR /path/to/include/directory
CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX /path/to/install/directory
MERCURY_ENABLE_PARALLEL_TESTING ON/OFF
MERCURY_USE_BOOST_PP ON
MERCURY_USE_CHECKSUMS ON
MERCURY_USE_EAGER_BULK ON
MERCURY_USE_SYSTEM_MCHECKSUM ON/OFF
MERCURY_USE_XDR OFF
NA_USE_BMI ON/OFF
NA_USE_MPI ON/OFF
NA_USE_CCI ON/OFF
NA_USE_OFI ON/OFF
NA_USE_SM ON/OFF
Setting include directory and library paths may require you to toggle to the advanced mode by typing 't'. Once you are done and do not see any errors, type 'g' to generate makefiles. Once you exit the CMake configuration screen and are ready to build the targets, do:
make
(Optional) Verbose compile/build output:
This is done by inserting "VERBOSE=1" in the "make" command. E.g.:
make VERBOSE=1
Assuming that the CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX
has been set (see previous step)
and that you have write permissions to the destination directory, do
from the build directory:
make install
Tests can be run to check that basic function shipping (metadata and bulk data transfers) is properly working. CTest is used to run the tests, simply run from the build directory:
ctest .
(Optional) Verbose testing:
This is done by inserting -V
in the ctest
command. E.g.:
ctest -V .
Extra verbose information can be displayed by inserting -VV
. E.g.:
ctest -VV .
Tests run with one server process and X client processes. To change the
number of client processes that are being used, the MPIEXEC_MAX_NUMPROCS
variable needs to be modified (toggle to advanced mode if you do not see
it). The default value is 2.
Note that you need to run make
again after the makefile generation
to use the new value. Note also that this variable needs to be changed
if you run the tests manually and use a different number of client
processes.
(Optional) To run the tests manually with the MPI plugin, open up two terminal windows, one for the server and one for the client. From the same directory where you have write permissions (so that the port configuration file can be written by the server and read by the client) do:
mpirun -np 1 /path/to/binary/hg_test_server -c mpi
and in the other:
mpirun -np 2 /path/to/binary/hg_test_TESTNAME -c mpi
The same applies to other plugins, do ./hg_test_server -h
for more options.