There are many ways to install ULFM. For large scale experiments or large platforms, you should follow the instructions from the ULFM 2.0 repository. However, for a quick test, or for a small non-performance critical test, one might want to spend time on working on the concepts instead of installing. Thus, we provide a docker image for those who want to quickly test it’s capabilities.
Using the Docker Image
- Install Docker
- Docker can be seen as a “lightweight” virtual machine.
- Docker is available for a wide range of systems (MacOS, Windows, Linux).
- You can install Docker quickly, either by downloading one of the official builds for MacOS or Windows, or by installing Docker from your Linux package manager (e.g. `yum install docker`, `apt-get docker-io`, `port install docker-io`, etc.)
- In a terminal, Run
docker run hello-world
to verify that the docker installation works.
- Load the pre-compiled ULFM Docker machine into your Docker installation
docker pull abouteiller/mpi-ft-ulfm
- Source the docker aliases in a terminal, this will redirect the “make”
and “mpirun” command in the local shell to execute in the Docker machine.alias make='docker run -v $PWD:$PWD:V -w $PWD abouteiller/mpi-ft-ulfm make' alias mpirun='docker run -v $(pwd):$(pwd):V -w $(pwd) abouteiller/mpi-ft-ulfm mpirun --oversubscribe -mca btl tcp,self'
- Run some example to see how this works. Quick examples can be found in the tutorial examples directory. You can now type `make` to compile the examples using the Docker provided “mpicc”, and you can execute the generated examples in the Docker machine using
mpirun -np 10 example
Have fun!