This is a pretty basic MPI question, but I can\'t wrap my head around it. I have a main function that calls another function that uses MPI. I want the main function to execute i
@suszterpatt is correct to state that "MPI processes run in parallel in their entirety". When you run a parallel program using, for example, mpirun
or mpiexec
this starts the number of processes you requested (with the -n
flag) and each process begins execution at the start of main
. So in your example code
int main (int argc, char *argv[])
{
//some serial code goes here
parallel_function(arg1, arg2);
//some more serial code goes here
}
every process will execute the //some serial code goes here
and //some more serial code goes here
parts (and of course they will all call parallel_function
). There isn't one master process which calls parallel_function
and then spawns other processes once MPI_Init
is called.
Generally it is best to avoid doing what you are doing: MPI_Init
should be one of the first function calls in your program (ideally it should be the first). In particular, take note of the following (from here):
The MPI standard does not say what a program can do before an MPI_INIT or after an MPI_FINALIZE. In the MPICH implementation, you should do as little as possible. In particular, avoid anything that changes the external state of the program, such as opening files, reading standard input or writing to standard output.
Not respecting this can lead to some nasty bugs.
It is better practice to rewrite your code to something like the following:
int main (int argc, char *argv[])
{
// Initialise MPI
MPI_Init(NULL, NULL);
MPI_Comm_size(MPI_COMM_WORLD, &p);
MPI_Comm_rank(MPI_COMM_WORLD, &my_rank);
// Serial part: executed only by process with rank 0
if (my_rank==0)
{
// Some serial code goes here
}
// Parallel part: executed by all processes.
// Serial part: executed only by process with rank 0
if (my_rank==0)
{
// Some more serial code goes here
}
// Finalize MPI
MPI_Finalize();
return 0;
}
Note: I am not a C programmer, so use the above code with care. Also, shouldn't main
always return something, especially when defined as int main()
?