DOKK / manpages / debian 12 / libfabric-dev / fi_rxm.7.en
fi_rxm(7) #VERSION# fi_rxm(7)

fi_rxm - The RxM (RDM over MSG) Utility Provider

The RxM provider (ofi_rxm) is an utility provider that supports FI_EP_RDM type endpoint emulated over FI_EP_MSG type endpoint(s) of an underlying core provider. FI_EP_RDM endpoints have a reliable datagram interface and RxM emulates this by hiding the connection management of underlying FI_EP_MSG endpoints from the user. Additionally, RxM can hide memory registration requirement from a core provider like verbs if the apps don’t support it.

RxM provider requires the core provider to support the following features:

MSG endpoints (FI_EP_MSG)
RMA read/write (FI_RMA) - Used for implementing rendezvous protocol for large messages.
FI_OPT_CM_DATA_SIZE of at least 24 bytes.

Since RxM emulates RDM endpoints by hiding connection management and connections are established only on-demand (when app tries to send data), the first several data transfer calls would return EAGAIN. Applications should be aware of this and retry until the operation succeeds.

If an application has chosen manual progress for data progress, it should also read the CQ so that the connection establishment progresses. Not doing so would result in a stall. See also the ERRORS section in fi_msg(3).

The RxM provider currently supports FI_MSG, FI_TAGGED, FI_RMA and FI_ATOMIC capabilities.

The provider supports only FI_EP_RDM.
The following data transfer interface is supported: FI_MSG, FI_TAGGED, FI_RMA, FI_ATOMIC.
The RxM provider supports both FI_PROGRESS_MANUAL and FI_PROGRESS_AUTO. Manual progress in general has better connection scale-up and lower CPU utilization since there’s no separate auto-progress thread.
FI_SOCKADDR, FI_SOCKADDR_IN
Memory Region
FI_MR_VIRT_ADDR, FI_MR_ALLOCATED, FI_MR_PROV_KEY MR mode bits would be required from the app in case the core provider requires it.

When using RxM provider, some limitations from the underlying MSG provider could also show up. Please refer to the corresponding MSG provider man pages to find about those limitations.

RxM provider does not support the following features:

op_flags: FI_FENCE.
Scalable endpoints
Shared contexts
FABRIC_DIRECT
FI_MR_SCALABLE
Authorization keys
Application error data buffers
Multicast
FI_SYNC_ERR
Reporting unknown source addr data as part of completions
Triggered operations

When sending large messages, an app doing an sread or waiting on the CQ file descriptor may not get a completion when reading the CQ after being woken up from the wait. The app has to do sread or wait on the file descriptor again. This is needed because RxM uses a rendezvous protocol for large message sends. An app would get woken up from waiting on CQ fd when rendezvous protocol request completes but it would have to wait again to get an ACK from the receiver indicating completion of large message transfer by remote RMA read.

The FI_ATOMIC capability will only be listed in the fi_info if the fi_info hints parameter specifies FI_ATOMIC. If FI_ATOMIC is requested, message order FI_ORDER_RAR, FI_ORDER_RAW, FI_ORDER_WAR, FI_ORDER_WAW, FI_ORDER_SAR, and FI_ORDER_SAW can not be supported.

RxM protocol peers should have same endian-ness otherwise connections won’t successfully complete. This enables better performance at run-time as byte order translations are avoided.

The ofi_rxm provider checks for the following environment variables.

Defines the transmit buffer size / inject size. Messages of size less than this would be transmitted via an eager protocol and those above would be transmitted via a rendezvous or SAR (Segmentation And Reassembly) protocol. Transmit data would be copied up to this size (default: ~16k).
Defines the maximum number of MSG provider CQ entries (default: 1) that would be read per progress (RxM CQ read).
Enables support for dynamic receive buffering, if available by the message endpoint provider. This feature allows direct placement of received message data into application buffers, bypassing RxM bounce buffers. This feature targets providers that provide internal network buffering, such as the tcp provider. (default: false)
Set this environment variable to control the RxM SAR (Segmentation And Reassembly) protocol. Messages of size greater than this (default: 128 Kb) would be transmitted via rendezvous protocol.
Set this to 1 to use shared receive context from MSG provider, or 0 to disable using shared receive context. Shared receive contexts reduce overall memory usage, but may increase in message latency. If not set, verbs will not use shared receive contexts by default, but the tcp provider will.
Defines default TX context size (default: 1024)
Defines default RX context size (default: 1024)
Defines FI_EP_MSG TX size that would be requested (default: 128).
Defines FI_EP_MSG RX size that would be requested (default: 128).
Defines the expected number of ranks / peers an endpoint would communicate with (default: 256).
Defines the duration of time in microseconds between calls to RxM CM progression functions when using manual progress. Higher values may provide less noise for calls to fi_cq read functions, but may increase connection setup time (default: 10000)
Defines the maximum number of message provider CQ entries that can be consecutively read across progress calls without checking to see if the CM progress interval has been reached (default: 128)

To optimize for bandwidth, ensure you use higher values than default for FI_OFI_RXM_TX_SIZE, FI_OFI_RXM_RX_SIZE, FI_OFI_RXM_MSG_TX_SIZE, FI_OFI_RXM_MSG_RX_SIZE subject to memory limits of the system and the tx and rx sizes supported by the MSG provider.

FI_OFI_RXM_SAR_LIMIT is another knob that can be experimented with to optimze for bandwidth.

To conserve memory, ensure FI_UNIVERSE_SIZE set to what is required. Similarly check that FI_OFI_RXM_TX_SIZE, FI_OFI_RXM_RX_SIZE, FI_OFI_RXM_MSG_TX_SIZE and FI_OFI_RXM_MSG_RX_SIZE env variables are set to only required values.

The data transfer API may return -FI_EAGAIN during on-demand connection setup of the core provider FI_MSG_EP. See fi_msg(3) for a detailed description of handling FI_EAGAIN.

If an RxM endpoint is expected to communicate with more peers than the default value of FI_UNIVERSE_SIZE (256) CQ overruns can happen. To avoid this set a higher value for FI_UNIVERSE_SIZE. CQ overrun can make a MSG endpoint unusable.

At higher # of ranks, there may be connection errors due to a node running out of memory. The workaround is to use shared receive contexts for the MSG provider (FI_OFI_RXM_USE_SRX=1) or reduce eager message size (FI_OFI_RXM_BUFFER_SIZE) and MSG provider TX/RX queue sizes (FI_OFI_RXM_MSG_TX_SIZE / FI_OFI_RXM_MSG_RX_SIZE).

fabric(7), fi_provider(7), fi_getinfo(3)

OpenFabrics.

2022-12-11 Libfabric Programmer’s Manual