Because every parallel computation environment is different, Open MPI
is a highly configurable piece of software. As such, a single set of
build options is not sufficient to meet everyone's needs. The source
RPM therefore accepts a wide variety of configuration options on the
"rpmbuild --rebuild " command line. The following text
describes the options that are available.
A script to build an Open MPI RPM from a source tarball is available here, and is
referred to as "buildrpm.sh " in the text below.
Additionally, you can build an Open MPI RPM from the SRPM (also
described below).
The text below is specific to the series of
Open MPI and is available here in a
printer-friendly format.
Note that the spec file (that the text below refers to) has many
more comments and explanations of rpmbuild-time configuration options,
and is available here.
Copyright (c) 2004-2006 The Trustees of Indiana University and Indiana
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Copyright (c) 2004-2006 The University of Tennessee and The University
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Copyright (c) 2004-2006 High Performance Computing Center Stuttgart,
University of Stuttgart. All rights reserved.
Copyright (c) 2004-2006 The Regents of the University of California.
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Copyright (c) 2006-2016 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
$COPYRIGHT$
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===========================================================================
Note that you probably want to download the latest release of the SRPM
for any given Open MPI version. The SRPM release number is the
version after the dash in the SRPM filename. For example,
"openmpi-1.6.3-2.src.rpm" is the 2nd release of the SRPM for Open MPI
v1.6.3. Subsequent releases of SRPMs typically contain bug fixes for
the RPM packaging, but not Open MPI itself.
The buildrpm.sh script takes a single mandatory argument -- a filename
pointing to an Open MPI tarball (may be either .gz or .bz2). It will
create one or more RPMs from this tarball:
1. Source RPM
2. "All in one" RPM, where all of Open MPI is put into a single RPM.
3. "Multiple" RPM, where Open MPI is split into several sub-package
RPMs:
- openmpi-runtime
- openmpi-devel
- openmpi-docs
The folowing arguments could be used to affect script behaviour.
Please, do NOT set the same settings with parameters and config vars.
-b
If you specify this option, only the all-in-one binary RPM will
be built. By default, only the source RPM (SRPM) is built. Other
parameters that affect the all-in-one binary RPM will be ignored
unless this option is specified.
-n name
This option will change the name of the produced RPM to the "name".
It is useful to use with "-o" and "-m" options if you want to have
multiple Open MPI versions installed simultaneously in the same
enviroment. Requires use of option "-b".
-o
With this option the install path of the binary RPM will be changed
to /opt/_NAME_/_VERSION_. Requires use of option "-b".
-m
This option causes the RPM to also install modulefiles
to the location specified in the specfile. Requires use of option "-b".
-i
Also build a debuginfo RPM. By default, the debuginfo RPM is not built.
Requires use of option "-b".
-f lf_location
Include support for Libfabric. "lf_location" is Libfabric install
path. Requires use of option "-b".
-t tm_location
Include support for Torque/PBS Pro. "tm_location" is path of the
Torque/PBS Pro header files. Requires use of option "-b".
-d
Build with debugging support. By default,
the RPM is built without debugging support.
-c parameter
Add custom configure parameter.
-r parameter
Add custom RPM build parameter.
-s
If specified, the script will try to unpack the openmpi.spec
file from the tarball specified on the command line. By default,
the script will look for the specfile in the current directory.
-R directory
Specifies the top level RPM build direcotry.
-h
Prints script usage information.
Target architecture is currently hard-coded in the beginning
of the buildrpm.sh script.
Alternatively, you can build directly from the openmpi.spec spec file
or SRPM directly. Many options can be passed to the building process
via rpmbuild's --define option (there are older versions of rpmbuild
that do not seem to handle --define'd values properly in all cases,
but we generally don't care about those old versions of rpmbuild...).
The available options are described in the comments in the beginning
of the spec file in this directory.
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