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PVM_INTRO(1PVM)                 PVM Version 3.4                PVM_INTRO(1PVM)

NAME
       PVM, pvm_intro - Parallel Virtual Machine System Version 3

DESCRIPTION
       PVM  is  a  software  system that enables a collection of heterogeneous
       computers to be used as a coherent  and  flexible  concurrent  computa-
       tional resource.

       The  individual  computers  may be shared- or local-memory multiproces-
       sors, vector supercomputers, specialized graphics  engines,  or  scalar
       workstations, that may be interconnected by a variety of networks, such
       as ethernet, FDDI.

       User programs written in C, C++ or Fortran access PVM  through  library
       routines (libpvm3.a and libfpvm3.a).

       Daemon  programs  (pvmd3) provide communication and process control be-
       tween computers.

MACHINE ARCHITECTURE
       In the PVM system, machines are assigned a  short  string  to  identify
       their architectures (this includes operating system type as well as CPU
       type).  The types currently predefined in the distribution are:
              AFX8          Alliant FX/8
              ALPHA         DEC Alpha/OSF-1
              ALPHAMP       DEC Alpha/OSF-1 / using shared memory
              AIX46K        IBM/RS6000 / AIX 4.x
              AIX4MP        IBM SMP / shared memory transport / AIX 4.x
              AIX4SP2       IBM SP-2 / using MPI / AIX 4.x
              APOLLO        HP 300 running Domain/OS
              ATT           AT&T/NCR 3600 running SysVR4
              BAL           Sequent Balance
              BFLY          BBN Butterfly TC2000
              BSD386        80[345]86 running BSDI or BSD386
              CM2           Thinking Machines CM-2 Sun front-end
              CM5           Thinking Machines CM-5
              CNVX          Convex using IEEE floating-point
              CNVXN         Convex using native f.p.
              CRAY          Cray
              CRAY2         Cray-2
              CRAYSMP       Cray S-MP
              CSPP          Convex Exemplar
              CYGWIN        POSIX emulation layer on top of Windows32
              DGAV,DGIX     Data General Aviion
              E88K          Encore 88000
              FREEBSD       80[345]86 running FreeBSD
              HP300         HP 9000 68000 cpu
              HPPA          HP 9000 PA-Risc
              HPPAMP        HP 9000 PA-Risc / shared memory transport
              KSR1          Kendall Square
              I860          Intel RX Hypercube
              IPSC2         Intel IPSC/2
              LINUX         80[345]86 running Linux
              LINUXALPHA    DEC Alpha running Linux
              LINUXARM      Strogarm running Linux
              LINUXHPPA     HP 9000 running Linux
              LINUXPPC      PowerPC running Linux
              LINUXSPARC    Sparc running Linux
              M88K          Motorola M88100 running Real/IX
              M88K          Motorola M88100 running Real/IX
              MASPAR        Maspar
              MIPS          Mips
              NETBSDALPHA   DEC Alpha running NetBSD
              NETBSDAMIGA   Amiga running NetBSD
              NETBSDARM32   Strongarm running NetBSD
              NETBSDHP300   HP 300 running NetBSD
              NETBSDI386    80[345]86 running NetBSD
              NETBSDM68K    Any Motorola 68K running NetBSD
              NETBSDMAC68K  Macintosh running NetBSD
              NETBSDMIPSEB  Mips EB running NetBSD
              NETBSDMIPSEL  Mips EL running NetBSD
              NETBSDNS32K   NS32K running NetBSD
              NETBSDPMAX    DEC Pmax running NetBSD
              NETBSDPOWERPC PowerPC running NetBSD
              NETBSDSH3     SH3 running NetBSD
              NETBSDSPARC   Sparc running NetBSD
              NETBSDSPARC64 Sparc64 running NetBSD
              NETBSDSUN3    SUN 3 running NetBSD
              NETBSDVAX     Vax running NetBSD
              NEXT          NeXT
              OS2           OS/2
              PGON          Intel Paragon
              PMAX          DEC/Mips arch (3100, 5000, etc.)
              RS6K          IBM/RS6000 / AIX 3.x
              RS6KMP        IBM SMP / shared memory transport / AIX 3.x
              RT            IBM/RT
              SCO           80[345]86 running SCO Unix
              SGI           Silicon Graphics IRIS
              SGI5          Silicon Graphics IRIS running OS 5.0
              SGI6          Silicon Graphics IRIS running OS >= 6.0
              SGI64         Silicon Graphics IRIS running 64 bit
              SGIMP         Silicon Graphics IRIS / OS 5.x / using shared mem-
                            ory
              SGIMP6        Silicon Graphics IRIS / OS 6.x / using shared mem-
                            ory
              SGIMP64       Silicon Graphics IRIS / 64 bit / using shared mem-
                            ory
              SP2MPI        IBM SP-2 / using MPI / AIX 3.x
              SUN3          Sun 3
              SUN4          Sun 4, 4c, sparc, etc.
              SUN4SOL2      Sun 4 running Solaris 2.x
              SUNMP         Sun 4 / using shared memory / Solaris 2.x
              SX3           NEC SX-3
              SYMM          Sequent Symmetry
              TITN          Stardent Titan
              U370          IBM 3090 running AIX
              UTS2          Amdahl running UTS
              UVAX          DEC/Microvax
              UWARE         Uware
              UXPM          Fujitsu running UXP/M
              VCM2          Thinking Machines CM-2 Vax front-end
              WIN32         Windows 95/98/NT
              X86SOL2       80[345]86 running Solaris 2.x

ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
       The  following  environment variables are read by PVM and may be set in
       order to customize your PVM environment.  To set them, you can add com-
       mands to your .cshrc or .profile or equivalent shell startup file.  See
       the manual page for the shell you normally use  for  information  about
       how to do this.  You can also include an appropriate shell startup file
       stub to set PVM environment variables and to  add  PVM  directories  to
       your    execution    path.     Inert    the    matching    stub   file,
       pvm3/lib/cshrc.stub, pvm3/lib/kshrc.stub or pvm3/lib/bashrc.stub, after
       your declaration of PVM_ROOT in your shell startup file.

       For  csh users: Note that setting them in .login does not have the same
       effect.  The .login script file is only read when you are actually log-
       ging in, whereas .cshrc is read every time csh starts up.  PVM needs to
       have environment variables set when it starts a slave  pvmd  with  "rsh
       host pvmd ...", so they must be set in .cshrc.

       For those using a shell that doesn't always read a startup script (e.g.
       sh, ksh), there is another way to set environment  variables  for  PVM.
       Before  running  the  PVM executables, the pvm and pvmd startup scripts
       source any commands in $HOME/.pvmprofile if this file exists.

       The following environment variables are supported by PVM 3.4.4:

       PVM_ROOT
              The path where PVM libraries and system programs are  installed,
              for  example  /usr/local/pvm3 or $HOME/pvm3.  This variable must
              be set on each host where PVM is used in order for PVM to  func-
              tion.  There is no default value.

       PVM_TMP
              The path for PVM temporary files, such as the daemon socket file
              pvmd.<uid> and the log file pvml.<uid>.   Use  this  environment
              variable  to  use  a  directory  other  than /tmp (or C:\TEMP on
              Win32), or to introduce added security by using a protected sub-
              directory  in  /tmp  that  is owned by your userid and cannot be
              easily corrupted.

       PVM_RSH
              The path to the "rsh" program on your system, if different  than
              that  defined  in the $PVM_ROOT/conf/$PVM_ARCH.def configuration
              file.  This environment variable can also  be  used  to  replace
              "rsh" with "ssh" for added security.

       PVM_PATH
              The  execution path to be searched for PVM programs on your sys-
              tem.  By default,  PVM  looks  in  $HOME/pvm3/bin/$PVM_ARCH  and
              $PVM_ROOT/bin/$PVM_ARCH  for  your PVM applications.  This envi-
              ronment variable does not override the ep= host file option.

       PVM_WD The working directory for spawned PVM programs on  your  system.
              By  default,  PVM spawns your PVM applications in $HOME, but for
              convenience in accessing data or input files using relative path
              names,  an  alternate  working directory can be specified.  This
              environment variable does not override the wd= host file option.

       PVM_EXPORT
              Names of environment variables to export from a parent  task  to
              children tasks through pvm_spawn().  Multiple names must be sep-
              arated by ':'.  If PVM_EXPORT is not set, no environment is  ex-
              ported.

       PVM_DEBUGGER
              The  debugger script to use when pvm_spawn() is called with Pvm-
              TaskDebug set.  The default is $PVM_ROOT/lib/debugger.

       PVM_DPATH
              The   path   of   the   pvmd   startup   script   (default    is
              $PVM_ROOT/lib/pvmd).  It is overridden by host file option dx=.

              This variable is useful if you use a shell that doesn't automat-
              ically execute a startup script (such as .cshrc) to  allow  set-
              ting  PVM_ROOT on slave (added) hosts.  If you set it to the ab-
              solute or relative path of the pvmd startup script (for  example
              /usr/local/pvm3/lib/pvmd  or pvm3/lib/pvmd), the script will au-
              tomatically set PVM_ROOT.  Note that for this to work, you  must
              set it to run the pvmd script, not the pvmd3 executable itself.

       PVM_WINDPATH
              This  variable  serves  the same purpose as the PVM_DPATH above,
              but specifically for Win32  systems.   This  second  environment
              variable  allows  for alternate specification of the path to the
              pvmd3.exe daemon executable using appropriate DOS file path syn-
              tax         and        environment        variables        (e.g.
              %PVM_ROOT%\lib\WIN32\pvmd3.exe).

       PVMHOSTFILE
              Specifies the path to an optional host file to be  used  by  de-
              fault  when  starting PVM.  This alleviates the need to manually
              pass a host file path argument to the "pvm"  console  or  "pvmd"
              script when starting PVM.

       PVMDLOGMAX
              Sets  the  maximum  length  of the pvmd error log file.  Default
              value is the PVMDLOGMAX parameter in the source, 1 Mbyte.

       PVMDDEBUG
              Sets the default pvmd debugging mask (as does the  pvmd  -d  op-
              tion).   Value  can  be  in hexadecimal (0x...), octal (0...) or
              decimal.  Used to debug the pvmd (not intended to be used to de-
              bug application programs).

       PVMTASKDEBUG
              Sets   the  default  libpvm  debugging  mask  (as  does  pvm_se-
              topt(PvmDebugMask, x)).  Value can be  in  hexadecimal  (0x...),
              octal  (0...) or decimal.  Used to debug libpvm (not intended to
              be used to debug application programs).

       PVMTASK
              Sets additional flag bits for the pvm_spawn() library call.  Al-
              lows override at run time of flags compiled into the pvm_spawn()
              calls in PVM application, e.g. to turn on PvmTaskDebug for  pop-
              ping up child tasks in a debugger window.

       PVMBUFSIZE
              Sets  the  size  of the shared memory buffers used by libpvm and
              the pvmd.  The default value is 1048576.  If your  program  com-
              poses messages longer than this size, you must increase it.

       PVM_VMID
              A  new feature in PVM 3.4.4 is the concept of a "Virtual Machine
              ID".  You can now set the PVM_VMID environment  variable  to  an
              arbitrary  string  (or  use the "id=" option in a host file, see
              man page for pvmd3), and this will distinguish and allow  multi-
              ple  virtual  machines to run on the same set of hosts under the
              same userid.  (This feature was originally introduced by SGI  in
              their  commercial  PVM product, and has now been generalized for
              the public PVM system.)  This feature seems to be something that
              people  often want, and the PVM_VMID is the cleanest way to pro-
              vide this functionality, rather than overloading  the  SHAREDTMP
              compiler flag and other internals.

              Setting  the  PVM_VMID  environment variable before starting PVM
              will create an encapsulated virtual machine with the given  VMID
              name.   By default, all other hosts which are added to this vir-
              tual machine will inherit the same VMID.  If hosts are added  to
              the  virtual  machine  which  are  running older versions of PVM
              (prior to 3.4.4), then the VMID will be ignored for those hosts,
              and  hence  these  machines can only be added to one virtual ma-
              chine for the given user.  The VMID need not  be  consistent  on
              every  host in a virtual machine (although this is not necessar-
              ily advisable), and the VMID can be set for individual hosts us-
              ing the "id=" host file option (see man page for pvmd3).

       The  following  environment variables are used by PVM internally.  With
       the exception of PVM_ARCH, their values should not be  modified.   This
       is for information only.

       PVM_ARCH
              The  PVM  architecture name of the host on which it is set, used
              to  distinguish  between  machines  with  different   executable
              (a.out)  formats.   Copies  of a program for different architec-
              tures are installed in parallel directories named for PVM archi-
              tectures.

       PVMSOCK
              Is  passed  from  pvmd to spawned task, and gives the address of
              the pvmd local socket.

       PVMEPID
              Holds the expected process id of a spawned task  exec'd  by  the
              pvmd.   This  is a magic cookie used by the task to identify it-
              self when reconnecting to the pvmd, in order to get the  correct
              task slot.

       PVMTMASK
              The libpvm trace mask, passed from the pvmd to spawned tasks.

       PVMTRCBUF
              The  libpvm trace buffer size.  If specified determines the num-
              ber of bytes of trace event message buffer to be  collected  be-
              fore sending to front-end tracer program.

       PVMTRCOPT
              The  libpvm trace option setting.  Determines the level of trac-
              ing to be performed on invocations of PVM library calls.

       PVMINPLACEDELAY
              Used to optimize sending of PvmDataInPlace messages on MPP  sys-
              tems.

       PVMKEY PVM  uses  this value, combined with the process id, to generate
              shared-memory segment keys.  The default value is  your  numeric
              uid.  PVM automatically detects collisions when generating a key
              and picks a new key, so it should almost never need  to  be  set
              explicitly.

SEE ALSO
       aimk(1PVM),  pvm(1PVM), pvmd3(1PVM), PVM 3.3 User's Guide and Reference
       Manual

AUTHORS
       A. L. Beguelin [4,5], J. J. Dongarra [1,2], G.  A.  Geist  [2],  W.  C.
       Jiang [1], R. J. Manchek [1], B. K. Moore [1], V. S. Sunderam [3]

       1.  University of Tennessee, Knoxville TN.
       2.  Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Oak Ridge TN.
       3.  Emory University, Atlanta GA.
       4.  Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh PA
       5.  Pittsburgh Supercomputer Center, Pittsburgh PA

                                11 April, 1995                 PVM_INTRO(1PVM)

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