LAMWIPE(1) | LAM TOOLS | LAMWIPE(1) |
lamwipe - Shutdown LAM.
lamwipe [-b] [-d] [-h] [-v] [-nn] [-np] [-n #] [-prefix /lam/install/path] [-prefix /lam/install/path/] [-sessionprefix value] [-sessionsuffix value] [-withlamprefixpath value] [-ssi key value] [bhost]
This command has been deprecated in favor of the lamhalt command. lamwipe should only be necessary if lamhalt fails and is unable to clean up the LAM run-time environment properly. The lamwipe tool terminates the LAM software on each of the machines specified in the boot schema, bhost. lamwipe is the topology tool that terminates LAM on the UNIX(tm) nodes of a multicomputer system. It invokes tkill(1) on each machine. See tkill(1) for a description of how LAM is terminated on each node.
The bhost file is a LAM boot schema written in the host file syntax. CPU counts in the boot schema are ignored by lamwipe. See bhost(5). Instead of the command line, a boot schema can be specified in the LAMBHOST environment variable. Otherwise a default file, bhost.def, is used. LAM searches for bhost first in the local directory and then in the installation directory under etc/.
lamwipe does not quit if a particular remote node cannot be reached or if tkill(1) fails on any node. A message is printed if either of these failures occur, in which case the user should investigate the cause of failure and, if necessary, terminate LAM by manually executing tkill(1) on the problem node(s). In extreme cases, the user may have to terminate individual LAM processes with kill(1).
lamwipe will terminate after a limited number of nodes if the -n option is given. This is mainly intended for use by lamboot(1), which invokes lamwipe when a boot does not successfully complete.
The -ssi switch allows the passing of parameters to various SSI modules. LAM's SSI modules are described in detail in lamssi(7). SSI modules have direct impact on MPI programs because they allow tunable parameters to be set at run time (such as which boot device driver to use, what parameters to pass to that driver, etc.).
The -ssi switch takes two arguments: key and value. The key argument generally specifies which SSI module will receive the value. For example, the key "boot" is used to select which RPI to be used for starting processes on remote nodes. The value argument is the value that is passed. For example:
And so on. LAM's boot SSI modules are described in lamssi_boot(7).
The -ssi switch can be used multiple times to specify different key and/or value arguments. If the same key is specified more than once, the values are concatenated with a comma (",") separating them.
Note that the -ssi switch is simply a shortcut for setting environment variables. The same effect may be accomplished by setting corresponding environment variables before running lamwipe. The form of the environment variables that LAM sets are: LAM_MPI_SSI_key=value.
Note that the -ssi switch overrides any previously set environment variables. Also note that unknown key arguments are still set as environment variable -- they are not checked (by lamwipe) for correctness. Illegal or incorrect value arguments may or may not be reported -- it depends on the specific SSI module.
All tweakable aspects of launching executables on remote nodes during lamwipe are discussed in lamssi(7) and lamssi_boot(7). Topics include (but are not limited to): discovery of remote shell, run-time overrides of the agent use to launch remote executables (e.g., rsh and ssh), etc.
recon(1), lamboot(1), tkill(1), bhost(5), lam-helpfile(5), lamssi(7), lamssi_boot(7)
July, 2007 | LAM 7.1.4 |