Detailed Description
Be sure to see the figure in Terms and Definitions that shows a complete topology tree, including depths, child/sibling/cousin relationships, and an example of an asymmetric topology where one socket has fewer caches than its peers.
Enumeration Type Documentation
- Enumerator:
HWLOC_TYPE_DEPTH_UNKNOWN |
No object of given type exists in the topology.
|
HWLOC_TYPE_DEPTH_MULTIPLE |
Objects of given type exist at different depth in the topology.
|
Function Documentation
Returns the type of objects at depth depth
.
- Returns:
- -1 if depth
depth
does not exist.
unsigned hwloc_get_nbobjs_by_depth |
( |
hwloc_topology_t |
topology, |
|
|
unsigned |
depth |
|
) |
| |
Returns the width of level at depth depth
.
Returns the width of level type type
.
If no object for that type exists, 0 is returned. If there are several levels with objects of that type, -1 is returned.
Returns the depth of objects of type type
.
If no object of this type is present on the underlying architecture, or if the OS doesn't provide this kind of information, the function returns HWLOC_TYPE_DEPTH_UNKNOWN.
If type is absent but a similar type is acceptable, see also hwloc_get_type_or_below_depth() and hwloc_get_type_or_above_depth().
If some objects of the given type exist in different levels, for instance L1 and L2 caches, the function returns HWLOC_TYPE_DEPTH_MULTIPLE.
Get the depth of the hierarchical tree of objects.
This is the depth of HWLOC_OBJ_PU objects plus one.
Does the topology context come from this system?
- Returns:
- 1 if this topology context was built using the system running this program.
-
0 instead (for instance if using another file-system root, a XML topology file, or a synthetic topology).