REG_HOSTER(3PVM) PVM Version 3.4 REG_HOSTER(3PVM)NAMEpvm_reg_hoster - Register task as PVM slave starter.
SYNOPSIS
C #include <pvmsdpro.h>
int cc = pvm_reg_hoster()
Fortran Not Available
DESCRIPTION
Registers the calling task as a PVM slave pvmd starter. When the mas‐
ter pvmd receives a DM_ADD message, instead of starting the new slave
pvmd processes itself, it passes a message to the hoster, which does
the dirty work and sends a message back to the pvmd.
Note: This function isn't for beginners. If you don't grok what it
does, you probably don't need it. For a more complete explanation of
what's going on here, you should refer to the PVM source code and/or
user guide section on implementation; this is just a man page. That
said...
When the master pvmd receives a DM_ADD message (request to add hosts to
the virtual machine), it looks up the new host IP addresses, gets
parameters from the host file if it was started with one, and sets
default parameters. It then either attempts to start the processes
(using rsh or rexec()) or, if a hoster has registered, sends it a
SM_STHOST message.
The format of the SM_STHOST message is:
int nhosts // number of hosts
{
int tid // of host
string options // from hostfile so= field
string login // in form ``[username@]hostname.domain''
string command // to run on remote host
} [nhosts]
The hoster should attempt to run each command on each host and record
the result. A command usually looks like:
$PVM_ROOT/lib/pvmd -s-d8-nhonk 1 80a9ca95:0f5a 4096 3
80a95c43:0000
and a reply from a slave pvmd like:
ddpro<2312> arch<ALPHA> ip<80a95c43:0b3f> mtu<4096>
When finished, the hoster should send a SM_STHOSTACK message back to
the address of the sender (the master pvmd). The format of the reply
message is:
{
int tid // of host, must match request
string status // result line from slave or error code
} [] // implied count
The TIDs in the reply must match those in the request. They may be in
a different order, however.
The result string should contain the entire reply (a single line) from
each new slave pvmd, or an error code if something went wrong. Legal
error codes are the literal names of the pvm_errno codes, for example
``PvmCantStart''. The default PVM hoster can return PvmDSysErr or Pvm‐
CantStart, and the slave pvmd itself can return PvmDupHost.
The hoster must use pvm_setmwid() to set the wait ID in the reply mes‐
sage to the same value as in the request. The wait ID in the request
is obtained by calling pvm_getmwid().
The hoster task must use pvm_setopt(PvmResvTids, 1) to allow sending
reserved messages. Messages should be packed using encoding PvmDataDe‐
fault to ensure they can be unpacked anywhere in the system.
pvm_reg_hoster() returns PvmOk when successful.
SEE ALSOpvm_addhosts(3PVM), pvm_config(3PVM), pvm_setmwid(3PVM)
4 March, 1994 REG_HOSTER(3PVM)