1fi_getinfo(3)                  Libfabric v1.10.0                 fi_getinfo(3)
2
3
4

NAME

6       fi_getinfo, fi_freeinfo - Obtain / free fabric interface information
7
8       fi_allocinfo, fi_dupinfo - Allocate / duplicate an fi_info structure
9

SYNOPSIS

11              #include <rdma/fabric.h>
12
13              int fi_getinfo(int version, const char *node, const char *service,
14                      uint64_t flags, const struct fi_info *hints, struct fi_info **info);
15
16              void fi_freeinfo(struct fi_info *info);
17
18              struct fi_info *fi_allocinfo(void);
19
20              struct fi_info *fi_dupinfo(const struct fi_info *info);
21

ARGUMENTS

23       version
24              Interface version requested by application.
25
26       node   Optional, name or fabric address to resolve.
27
28       service
29              Optional, service name or port number of address.
30
31       flags  Operation flags for the fi_getinfo call.
32
33       hints  Reference  to  an  fi_info structure that specifies criteria for
34              selecting the returned fabric information.
35
36       info   A pointer to a linked list of fi_info structures containing  re‐
37              sponse information.
38

DESCRIPTION

40       fi_getinfo  returns  information  about  available  fabric services for
41       reaching specified node or service,  subject  to  any  provided  hints.
42       Callers  may  specify NULL for node, service, and hints in order to re‐
43       trieve information about what providers are available and their optimal
44       usage  models.   If  no  matching fabric information is available, info
45       will be set to NULL and the call will return -FI_ENODATA.
46
47       Based on the input hints, node, and service parameters, a list of  fab‐
48       ric  domains  and  endpoints  will be returned.  Each fi_info structure
49       will describe an endpoint that meets the application's specified commu‐
50       nication  criteria.   Each  endpoint  will be associated with a domain.
51       Applications can restrict the number of returned endpoints by including
52       additional criteria in their search hints.  Relaxing or eliminating in‐
53       put hints will increase the number  and  type  of  endpoints  that  are
54       available.   Providers  that  return  multiple  endpoints  to  a single
55       fi_getinfo call should return the endpoints that are highest performing
56       first.   Providers may indicate that an endpoint and domain can support
57       additional capabilities than those requested by the user only  if  such
58       support will not adversely affect application performance or security.
59
60       The version parameter is used by the application to request the desired
61       version of the interfaces.  The version determines the  format  of  all
62       data  structures  used  by  any of the fabric interfaces.  Applications
63       should use the FI_VERSION(major, minor) macro to indicate the  version,
64       with  hard-coded  integer  values  for the major and minor values.  The
65       FI_MAJOR_VERSION and FI_MINOR_VERSION enum values defined  in  fabric.h
66       specify  the  latest  version of the installed library.  However, it is
67       recommended that the integer values  for  FI_MAJOR_VERSION  and  FI_MI‐
68       NOR_VERSION be used, rather than referencing the enum types in order to
69       ensure compatibility with future versions of the  library.   This  pro‐
70       tects  against  the application being built from source against a newer
71       version of the library that introduces new fields to  data  structures,
72       which would not be initialized by the application.
73
74       Node,  service,  or  hints  may be provided, with any combination being
75       supported.  If node is provided, fi_getinfo will attempt to resolve the
76       fabric  address  to  the  given node.  If node is not given, fi_getinfo
77       will attempt to resolve the fabric addressing information based on  the
78       provided  hints.   Node  is  commonly used to provide a network address
79       (such as an IP address) or hostname.   Service  is  usually  associated
80       with a transport address (such as a TCP port number).  Node and service
81       parameters may be mapped by providers to native fabric addresses.   Ap‐
82       plications  may also pass in an FI_ADDR_STR formatted address (see for‐
83       mat details below) as the node parameter.  In such cases,  the  service
84       parameter must be NULL.
85
86       The  hints  parameter,  if provided, may be used to limit the resulting
87       output as indicated below.  As a general rule,  specifying  a  non-zero
88       value  for  input  hints indicates that a provider must support the re‐
89       quested value or fail the operation with -FI_ENODATA.  With the  excep‐
90       tion  of  mode  bits, hints that are set to zero are treated as a wild‐
91       card.  A zeroed hint value results in providers either returning a  de‐
92       fault  value or a value that works best for their implementation.  Mode
93       bits that are set to zero indicate the application does not support any
94       modes.
95
96       The caller must call fi_freeinfo to release fi_info structures returned
97       by this call.
98
99       The fi_allocinfo call will allocate and zero an fi_info  structure  and
100       all  related  substructures.   The  fi_dupinfo  will duplicate a single
101       fi_info structure and all the substructures within it.
102

FI_INFO

104              struct fi_info {
105                  struct fi_info        *next;
106                  uint64_t              caps;
107                  uint64_t              mode;
108                  uint32_t              addr_format;
109                  size_t                src_addrlen;
110                  size_t                dest_addrlen;
111                  void                  *src_addr;
112                  void                  *dest_addr;
113                  fid_t                 handle;
114                  struct fi_tx_attr     *tx_attr;
115                  struct fi_rx_attr     *rx_attr;
116                  struct fi_ep_attr     *ep_attr;
117                  struct fi_domain_attr *domain_attr;
118                  struct fi_fabric_attr *fabric_attr;
119                  struct fid_nic        *nic;
120              };
121
122       next   Pointer to the next fi_info structure in the list.  Will be NULL
123              if no more structures exist.
124
125       caps - fabric interface capabilities
126              If  specified,  indicates the desired capabilities of the fabric
127              interfaces.  Supported capabilities are listed in the  Capabili‐
128              ties section below.
129
130       mode   Operational  modes  supported  by the application.  See the Mode
131              section below.
132
133       addr_format - address format
134              If specified, indicates the format of  addresses  referenced  by
135              the  fabric  interfaces  and data structures.  Supported formats
136              are listed in the Addressing formats section below.
137
138       src_addrlen - source address length
139              Indicates the length of the source address.  This value must  be
140              >  0  if  src_addr  is  non-NULL.  This field will be ignored in
141              hints if FI_SOURCE flag is set, or src_addr is NULL.
142
143       dest_addrlen - destination address length
144              Indicates the length of the  destination  address.   This  value
145              must  be  >  0 if dest_addr is non-NULL.  This field will be ig‐
146              nored in hints unless the node and service parameters  are  NULL
147              or FI_SOURCE flag is set, or if dst_addr is NULL.
148
149       src_addr - source address
150              If  specified, indicates the source address.  This field will be
151              ignored in hints if FI_SOURCE flag is set.  On output a provider
152              shall  return  an address that corresponds to the indicated fab‐
153              ric, domain, node, and/or service fields.  The format of the ad‐
154              dress is indicated by the returned addr_format field.  Note that
155              any returned address is only used when opening a local endpoint.
156              The address is not guaranteed to be usable by a peer process.
157
158       dest_addr - destination address
159              If  specified,  indicates  the  destination address.  This field
160              will be ignored in hints unless the node and service  parameters
161              are  NULL  or FI_SOURCE flag is set.  If FI_SOURCE is not speci‐
162              fied, on output a provider shall return an  address  the  corre‐
163              sponds  to the indicated node and/or service fields, relative to
164              the fabric and domain.  Note that any returned address  is  only
165              usable locally.
166
167       handle - provider context handle
168              The  use  of this field is operation specific.  If hints->handle
169              is set to struct fid_pep, the hints->handle will  be  copied  to
170              info->handle   on  output  from  fi_getinfo.   Other  values  of
171              hints->handle will be handled in  a  provider  specific  manner.
172              The  fi_info::handle  field  is  also  used by fi_endpoint() and
173              fi_reject() calls when processing connection requests or to  in‐
174              herit  another  endpoint's  attributes.   See  fi_eq(3),  fi_re‐
175              ject(3), and fi_endpoint(3).  The info->handle field will be ig‐
176              nored by fi_dupinfo and fi_freeinfo.
177
178       tx_attr - transmit context attributes
179              Optionally  supplied transmit context attributes.  Transmit con‐
180              text attributes may be specified and returned as part of fi_get‐
181              info.   When  provided  as  hints,  requested  values  of struct
182              fi_tx_ctx_attr should be set.  On output,  the  actual  transmit
183              context  attributes that can be provided will be returned.  Out‐
184              put values will be greater than or equal to the requested  input
185              values.
186
187       rx_attr - receive context attributes
188              Optionally supplied receive context attributes.  Receive context
189              attributes may be specified and returned as part of  fi_getinfo.
190              When provided as hints, requested values of struct fi_rx_ctx_at‐
191              tr should be set.  On output, the  actual  receive  context  at‐
192              tributes  that  can be provided will be returned.  Output values
193              will be greater than or or equal to the requested input values.
194
195       ep_attr - endpoint attributes
196              Optionally supplied endpoint  attributes.   Endpoint  attributes
197              may  be specified and returned as part of fi_getinfo.  When pro‐
198              vided as hints, requested values of struct fi_ep_attr should  be
199              set.  On output, the actual endpoint attributes that can be pro‐
200              vided will be returned.  Output values will be greater  than  or
201              equal  to  requested  input  values.  See fi_endpoint(3) for de‐
202              tails.
203
204       domain_attr - domain attributes
205              Optionally supplied domain attributes.  Domain attributes may be
206              specified  and returned as part of fi_getinfo.  When provided as
207              hints, requested values of struct fi_domain_attr should be  set.
208              On  output,  the  actual  domain attributes that can be provided
209              will be returned.  Output values will be greater than  or  equal
210              to requested input values.  See fi_domain(3) for details.
211
212       fabric_attr - fabric attributes
213              Optionally supplied fabric attributes.  Fabric attributes may be
214              specified and returned as part of fi_getinfo.  When provided  as
215              hints,  requested values of struct fi_fabric_attr should be set.
216              On output, the actual fabric attributes  that  can  be  provided
217              will be returned.  See fi_fabric(3) for details.
218
219       nic - network interface details
220              Optional  attributes related to the hardware NIC associated with
221              the specified fabric, domain, and endpoint data.  This field  is
222              only  valid for providers where the corresponding attributes are
223              closely associated with a hardware NIC.  See fi_nic(3)  for  de‐
224              tails.
225

CAPABILITIES

227       Interface  capabilities  are obtained by OR-ing the following flags to‐
228       gether.  If capabilities in the hint parameter are set to 0, the under‐
229       lying provider will return the set of capabilities which are supported.
230       Otherwise, providers will return data matching the specified set of ca‐
231       pabilities.  Providers may indicate support for additional capabilities
232       beyond those requested when the use of expanded capabilities  will  not
233       adversely affect performance or expose the application to communication
234       beyond that which was requested.  Applications may use this feature  to
235       request a minimal set of requirements, then check the returned capabil‐
236       ities to enable additional optimizations.
237
238       FI_ATOMIC
239              Specifies that the endpoint supports some set of  atomic  opera‐
240              tions.   Endpoints supporting this capability support operations
241              defined by struct fi_ops_atomic.  In the absence of any relevant
242              flags, FI_ATOMIC implies the ability to initiate and be the tar‐
243              get of remote atomic reads and writes.  Applications can use the
244              FI_READ,  FI_WRITE, FI_REMOTE_READ, and FI_REMOTE_WRITE flags to
245              restrict the types of atomic operations  supported  by  an  end‐
246              point.
247
248       FI_DIRECTED_RECV
249              Requests  that the communication endpoint use the source address
250              of an incoming message when matching it with a  receive  buffer.
251              If  this  capability is not set, then the src_addr parameter for
252              msg and tagged receive operations is ignored.
253
254       FI_FENCE
255              Indicates that the endpoint support the FI_FENCE  flag  on  data
256              transfer  operations.  Support requires tracking that all previ‐
257              ous transmit requests to a specified  remote  endpoint  complete
258              prior to initiating the fenced operation.  Fenced operations are
259              often used to enforce ordering between operations that  are  not
260              otherwise guaranteed by the underlying provider or protocol.
261
262       FI_HMEM
263              Specifies that the endpoint should support transfers to and from
264              device memory.
265
266       FI_LOCAL_COMM
267              Indicates that the endpoint support  host  local  communication.
268              This  flag may be used in conjunction with FI_REMOTE_COMM to in‐
269              dicate that local and remote  communication  are  required.   If
270              neither  FI_LOCAL_COMM or FI_REMOTE_COMM are specified, then the
271              provider will indicate support for the configuration that  mini‐
272              mally affects performance.  Providers that set FI_LOCAL_COMM but
273              not FI_REMOTE_COMM, for example a shared  memory  provider,  may
274              only be used to communication between processes on the same sys‐
275              tem.
276
277       FI_MSG Specifies that an endpoint should support sending and  receiving
278              messages  or  datagrams.  Message capabilities imply support for
279              send and/or receive queues.  Endpoints supporting this capabili‐
280              ty support operations defined by struct fi_ops_msg.
281
282       The caps may be used to specify or restrict the type of messaging oper‐
283       ations that are supported.  In  the  absence  of  any  relevant  flags,
284       FI_MSG  implies the ability to send and receive messages.  Applications
285       can use the FI_SEND and  FI_RECV  flags  to  optimize  an  endpoint  as
286       send-only or receive-only.
287
288       FI_MULTICAST
289              Indicates  that  the  endpoint support multicast data transfers.
290              This capability must be paired with  FI_MSG.   Applications  can
291              use  FI_SEND  and  FI_RECV to optimize multicast as send-only or
292              receive-only.
293
294       FI_MULTI_RECV
295              Specifies that the endpoint must support the FI_MULTI_RECV  flag
296              when posting receive buffers.
297
298       FI_NAMED_RX_CTX
299              Requests  that endpoints which support multiple receive contexts
300              allow an initiator to target (or name) a specific  receive  con‐
301              text as part of a data transfer operation.
302
303       FI_READ
304              Indicates that the user requires an endpoint capable of initiat‐
305              ing reads against remote memory  regions.   This  flag  requires
306              that FI_RMA and/or FI_ATOMIC be set.
307
308       FI_RECV
309              Indicates  that the user requires an endpoint capable of receiv‐
310              ing message data transfers.  Message transfers include base mes‐
311              sage operations as well as tagged message functionality.
312
313       FI_REMOTE_COMM
314              Indicates that the endpoint support communication with endpoints
315              located at remote nodes (across the fabric).  See  FI_LOCAL_COMM
316              for  additional  details.  Providers that set FI_REMOTE_COMM but
317              not FI_LOCAL_COMM, for example NICs that lack loopback  support,
318              cannot be used to communicate with processes on the same system.
319
320       FI_REMOTE_READ
321              Indicates  that the user requires an endpoint capable of receiv‐
322              ing read memory operations from remote endpoints.  This flag re‐
323              quires that FI_RMA and/or FI_ATOMIC be set.
324
325       FI_REMOTE_WRITE
326              Indicates  that the user requires an endpoint capable of receiv‐
327              ing write memory operations from remote  endpoints.   This  flag
328              requires that FI_RMA and/or FI_ATOMIC be set.
329
330       FI_RMA Specifies  that  the  endpoint should support RMA read and write
331              operations.  Endpoints supporting this capability support opera‐
332              tions defined by struct fi_ops_rma.  In the absence of any rele‐
333              vant flags, FI_RMA implies the ability to initiate  and  be  the
334              target  of remote memory reads and writes.  Applications can use
335              the FI_READ, FI_WRITE, FI_REMOTE_READ, and FI_REMOTE_WRITE flags
336              to  restrict  the  types  of RMA operations supported by an end‐
337              point.
338
339       FI_RMA_EVENT
340              Requests that an endpoint support the generation  of  completion
341              events  when it is the target of an RMA and/or atomic operation.
342              This flag requires that FI_REMOTE_READ and/or FI_REMOTE_WRITE be
343              enabled on the endpoint.
344
345       FI_RMA_PMEM
346              Indicates  that  the  provider  is 'persistent memory aware' and
347              supports RMA operations to and from persistent memory.   Persis‐
348              tent  memory aware providers must support registration of memory
349              that is backed by non- volatile memory,  RMA  transfers  to/from
350              persistent memory, and enhanced completion semantics.  This flag
351              requires that FI_RMA be set.  This capability is experimental.
352
353       FI_SEND
354              Indicates that the user requires an endpoint capable of  sending
355              message  data transfers.  Message transfers include base message
356              operations as well as tagged message functionality.
357
358       FI_SHARED_AV
359              Requests or indicates support for address vectors which  may  be
360              shared among multiple processes.
361
362       FI_SOURCE
363              Requests that the endpoint return source addressing data as part
364              of its completion data.  This capability only applies to connec‐
365              tionless endpoints.  Note that returning source address informa‐
366              tion may require that the provider perform  address  translation
367              and/or  look-up based on data available in the underlying proto‐
368              col in order to provide the requested data, which may  adversely
369              affect  performance.   The performance impact may be greater for
370              address vectors of type FI_AV_TABLE.
371
372       FI_SOURCE_ERR
373              Must be paired with FI_SOURCE.  When  specified,  this  requests
374              that  raw  source addressing data be returned as part of comple‐
375              tion data for any address that has not been  inserted  into  the
376              local  address  vector.   Use of this capability may require the
377              provider to validate incoming source address  data  against  ad‐
378              dresses  stored in the local address vector, which may adversely
379              affect performance.
380
381       FI_TAGGED
382              Specifies that the endpoint should handle tagged message  trans‐
383              fers.   Tagged  message transfers associate a user-specified key
384              or tag with each message that is used for matching  purposes  at
385              the  remote  side.  Endpoints supporting this capability support
386              operations defined by struct fi_ops_tagged.  In the  absence  of
387              any  relevant  flags,  FI_TAGGED implies the ability to send and
388              receive tagged messages.  Applications can use the  FI_SEND  and
389              FI_RECV  flags  to  optimize  an  endpoint  as  send-only or re‐
390              ceive-only.
391
392       FI_TRIGGER
393              Indicates that the endpoint should support triggered operations.
394              Endpoints  support  this capability must meet the usage model as
395              described by fi_trigger.3.
396
397       FI_VARIABLE_MSG
398              Requests that the provider must notify a receiver when  a  vari‐
399              able  length message is ready to be received prior to attempting
400              to place the data.  Such notification will include the  size  of
401              the message and any associated message tag (for FI_TAGGED).  See
402              'Variable Length Messages' in fi_msg.3 for full details.   Vari‐
403              able  length  messages  are any messages larger than an endpoint
404              configurable  size.   This  flag  requires  that  FI_MSG  and/or
405              FI_TAGGED be set.
406
407       FI_WRITE
408              Indicates that the user requires an endpoint capable of initiat‐
409              ing writes against remote memory regions.   This  flag  requires
410              that FI_RMA and/or FI_ATOMIC be set.
411
412       Capabilities  may  be  grouped  into three general categories: primary,
413       secondary, and primary modifiers.  Primary capabilities must explicitly
414       be  requested by an application, and a provider must enable support for
415       only those primary capabilities which were selected.  Primary modifiers
416       are used to limit a primary capability, such as restricting an endpoint
417       to being send-only.  If no modifiers are specified  for  an  applicable
418       capability,  all relevant modifiers are assumed.  See above definitions
419       for details.
420
421       Secondary capabilities may optionally be requested by  an  application.
422       If  requested,  a  provider  must  support  the  capability or fail the
423       fi_getinfo request (FI_ENODATA).   A  provider  may  optionally  report
424       non-selected  secondary  capabilities  if doing so would not compromise
425       performance or security.
426
427       Primary capabilities: FI_MSG, FI_RMA, FI_TAGGED,  FI_ATOMIC,  FI_MULTI‐
428       CAST, FI_NAMED_RX_CTX, FI_DIRECTED_RECV, FI_VARIABLE_MSG, FI_HMEM
429
430       Primary modifiers: FI_READ, FI_WRITE, FI_RECV, FI_SEND, FI_REMOTE_READ,
431       FI_REMOTE_WRITE
432
433       Secondary   capabilities:   FI_MULTI_RECV,   FI_SOURCE,   FI_RMA_EVENT,
434       FI_SHARED_AV,   FI_TRIGGER,  FI_FENCE,  FI_LOCAL_COMM,  FI_REMOTE_COMM,
435       FI_SOURCE_ERR, FI_RMA_PMEM.
436

MODE

438       The operational mode bits are used to convey requirements that  an  ap‐
439       plication must adhere to when using the fabric interfaces.  Modes spec‐
440       ify optimal ways of accessing the reported endpoint or domain.   Appli‐
441       cations  that  are designed to support a specific mode of operation may
442       see improved performance when that mode is desired by the provider.  It
443       is  recommended  that  providers  support applications that disable any
444       provider preferred modes.
445
446       On input to fi_getinfo, applications set the mode bits that  they  sup‐
447       port.  On output, providers will clear mode bits that are not necessary
448       to achieve high-performance.  Mode bits that remain set indicate appli‐
449       cation  requirements  for using the fabric interfaces created using the
450       returned fi_info.  The set of modes are listed below.  If a NULL  hints
451       structure  is provided, then the provider's supported set of modes will
452       be returned in the info structure(s).
453
454       FI_ASYNC_IOV
455              Applications can reference multiple data buffers as  part  of  a
456              single operation through the use of IO vectors (SGEs).  Typical‐
457              ly, the contents of an IO vector are copied by the provider into
458              an internal buffer area, or directly to the underlying hardware.
459              However, when a large number of IOV entries are  supported,  IOV
460              buffering  may  have a negative impact on performance and memory
461              consumption.  The FI_ASYNC_IOV mode indicates that the  applica‐
462              tion must provide the buffering needed for the IO vectors.  When
463              set, an application must not modify an IO vector of length >  1,
464              including any related memory descriptor array, until the associ‐
465              ated operation has completed.
466
467       FI_BUFFERED_RECV
468              The buffered receive mode bit indicates that the  provider  owns
469              the data buffer(s) that are accessed by the networking layer for
470              received messages.  Typically, this implies that  data  must  be
471              copied  from  the  provider  buffer into the application buffer.
472              Applications that can handle message processing from network al‐
473              located data buffers can set this mode bit to avoid copies.  For
474              full details on application requirements to support  this  mode,
475              see the 'Buffered Receives' section in fi_msg(3).  This mode bit
476              applies to FI_MSG and FI_TAGGED receive operations.
477
478       FI_CONTEXT
479              Specifies that  the  provider  requires  that  applications  use
480              struct  fi_context  as their per operation context parameter for
481              operations that  generated  full  completions.   This  structure
482              should be treated as opaque to the application.  For performance
483              reasons, this structure must be allocated by the user,  but  may
484              be used by the fabric provider to track the operation.  Typical‐
485              ly, users embed  struct  fi_context  within  their  own  context
486              structure.   The  struct  fi_context must remain valid until the
487              corresponding operation completes or is  successfully  canceled.
488              As such, fi_context should NOT be allocated on the stack.  Doing
489              so is likely to result in stack corruption that will  be  diffi‐
490              cult  to debug.  Users should not update or interpret the fields
491              in this structure, or reuse it until the original operation  has
492              completed.  If an operation does not generate a completion (i.e.
493              the endpoint was configured with FI_SELECTIVE_COMPLETION and the
494              operation  was  not  initiated with the FI_COMPLETION flag) then
495              the context parameter is ignored by the  fabric  provider.   The
496              structure is specified in rdma/fabric.h.
497
498       FI_CONTEXT2
499              This  bit  is  similar to FI_CONTEXT, but doubles the provider's
500              requirement on the size of the per context structure.  When set,
501              this  specifies that the provider requires that applications use
502              struct fi_context2 as their  per  operation  context  parameter.
503              Or,  optionally,  an  application  can  provide  an array of two
504              fi_context structures (e.g.  struct fi_context[2]) instead.  The
505              requirements  for  using struct fi_context2 are identical as de‐
506              fined for FI_CONTEXT above.
507
508       FI_LOCAL_MR
509              The provider is optimized around  having  applications  register
510              memory  for locally accessed data buffers.  Data buffers used in
511              send and receive operations and as the source buffer for RMA and
512              atomic  operations must be registered by the application for ac‐
513              cess domains opened with this capability.  This flag is  defined
514              for  compatibility  and is ignored if the application version is
515              1.5 or later and the domain mr_mode is  set  to  anything  other
516              than  FI_MR_BASIC  or  FI_MR_SCALABLE.  See the domain attribute
517              mr_mode fi_domain(3) and fi_mr(3).
518
519       FI_MSG_PREFIX
520              Message prefix mode indicates that an application  will  provide
521              buffer  space  in  front of all message send and receive buffers
522              for use by the provider.   Typically,  the  provider  uses  this
523              space  to  implement a protocol, with the protocol headers being
524              written into the prefix area.  The contents of the prefix  space
525              should  be  treated as opaque.  The use of FI_MSG_PREFIX may im‐
526              prove application performance over certain providers by reducing
527              the  number  of IO vectors referenced by underlying hardware and
528              eliminating provider buffer allocation.
529
530       FI_MSG_PREFIX only applies to send and  receive  operations,  including
531       tagged sends and receives.  RMA and atomics do not require the applica‐
532       tion to provide prefix buffers.  Prefix buffer space must  be  provided
533       with  all sends and receives, regardless of the size of the transfer or
534       other transfer options.  The ownership of prefix buffers is treated the
535       same  as  the corresponding message buffers, but the size of the prefix
536       buffer is not counted toward any message limits, including inject.
537
538       Applications that support prefix mode must supply buffer  space  before
539       their  own  message  data.   The size of space that must be provided is
540       specified by the msg_prefix_size endpoint attribute.  Providers are re‐
541       quired  to define a msg_prefix_size that is a multiple of 8 bytes.  Ad‐
542       ditionally, applications may receive provider generated packets that do
543       not  contain  application data.  Such received messages will indicate a
544       transfer size of that is equal to or smaller than msg_prefix_size.
545
546       The buffer pointer given to all send and receive operations must  point
547       to the start of the prefix region of the buffer (as opposed to the pay‐
548       load).  For scatter-gather send/recv operations, the prefix buffer must
549       be  a  contiguous region, though it may or may not be directly adjacent
550       to the payload portion of the buffer.
551
552       FI_NOTIFY_FLAGS_ONLY
553              This bit indicates that general completion flags may not be  set
554              by  the  provider,  and  are  not needed by the application.  If
555              specified, completion flags which simply report the type of  op‐
556              eration  that  completed (e.g.  send or receive) may not be set.
557              However, completion flags that are used for remote notifications
558              will  still be set when applicable.  See fi_cq(3) for details on
559              which completion flags are valid when this mode bit is enabled.
560
561       FI_RESTRICTED_COMP
562              This bit indicates that the application will only share  comple‐
563              tion queues and counters among endpoints, transmit contexts, and
564              receive contexts that have the same set of capability flags.
565
566       FI_RX_CQ_DATA
567              This mode bit only applies to data  transfers  that  set  FI_RE‐
568              MOTE_CQ_DATA.   When set, a data transfer that carries remote CQ
569              data will consume a receive buffer at the target.  This is  true
570              even  for  operations that would normally not consume posted re‐
571              ceive buffers, such as RMA write operations.
572

ADDRESSING FORMATS

574       Multiple fabric interfaces take as input either a source or destination
575       address parameter.  This includes struct fi_info (src_addr and dest_ad‐
576       dr), CM calls (getname, getpeer, connect,  join,  and  leave),  and  AV
577       calls (insert, lookup, and straddr).  The fi_info addr_format field in‐
578       dicates the expected address format for these operations.
579
580       A provider may support one or more of the following addressing formats.
581       In  some  cases, a selected addressing format may need to be translated
582       or mapped into an address which is native to the fabric.  See fi_av(3).
583
584       FI_ADDR_BGQ
585              Address is an IBM proprietary format that  is  used  with  their
586              Blue Gene Q systems.
587
588       FI_ADDR_EFA
589              Address  is  an  Amazon Elastic Fabric Adapter (EFA) proprietary
590              format.
591
592       FI_ADDR_GNI
593              Address is a Cray proprietary format that is used with their GNI
594              protocol.
595
596       FI_ADDR_PSMX
597              Address  is  an Intel proprietary format used with their Perfor‐
598              mance Scaled Messaging protocol.
599
600       FI_ADDR_PSMX2
601              Address is an Intel proprietary format used with  their  Perfor‐
602              mance Scaled Messaging protocol version 2.
603
604       FI_ADDR_STR
605              Address is a formatted character string.  The length and content
606              of the string is address and/or provider specific, but in gener‐
607              al follows a URI model:
608
609              address_format[://[node][:[service][/[field3]...][?[key=value][&k2=v2]...]]]
610
611       Examples:      -     fi_sockaddr://10.31.6.12:7471     -     fi_sockad‐
612       dr_in6://[fe80::6:12]:7471 - fi_sockaddr://10.31.6.12:7471?qos=3
613
614       Since the string formatted address does not contain any provider infor‐
615       mation, the prov_name field of the fabric attribute structure should be
616       used to filter by provider if necessary.
617
618       FI_FORMAT_UNSPEC
619              FI_FORMAT_UNSPEC indicates that a provider specific address for‐
620              mat should be selected.  Provider specific addresses may be pro‐
621              tocol specific or a  vendor  proprietary  format.   Applications
622              that  select  FI_FORMAT_UNSPEC  should  be prepared to treat re‐
623              turned addressing data as opaque.  FI_FORMAT_UNSPEC targets apps
624              which make use of an out of band address exchange.  Applications
625              which use FI_FORMAT_UNSPEC may  use  fi_getname()  to  obtain  a
626              provider specific address assigned to an allocated endpoint.
627
628       FI_SOCKADDR
629              Address is of type sockaddr.  The specific socket address format
630              will be determined at  run  time  by  interfaces  examining  the
631              sa_family field.
632
633       FI_SOCKADDR_IB
634              Address is of type sockaddr_ib (defined in Linux kernel source)
635
636       FI_SOCKADDR_IN
637              Address is of type sockaddr_in (IPv4).
638
639       FI_SOCKADDR_IN6
640              Address is of type sockaddr_in6 (IPv6).
641
642       FI_ADDR_PSMX
643              Address  is  an Intel proprietary format that is used with their
644              PSMX (extended performance scaled messaging) protocol.
645

FLAGS

647       The operation of the fi_getinfo call may be controlled through the  use
648       of input flags.  Valid flags include the following.
649
650       FI_NUMERICHOST
651              Indicates  that the node parameter is a numeric string represen‐
652              tation of a fabric address, such as a dotted decimal IP address.
653              Use  of this flag will suppress any lengthy name resolution pro‐
654              tocol.
655
656       FI_PROV_ATTR_ONLY
657              Indicates that the caller is only querying  for  what  providers
658              are  potentially  available.   All providers will return exactly
659              one fi_info struct, regardless of whether that provider  is  us‐
660              able  on  the  current  platform  or  not.  The returned fi_info
661              struct will contain default values for all members, with the ex‐
662              ception  of  fabric_attr.   The fabric_attr member will have the
663              prov_name and prov_version values filled in.
664
665       FI_SOURCE
666              Indicates that the node and service parameters specify the local
667              source address to associate with an endpoint.  If specified, ei‐
668              ther the node and/or service parameter must be  non-NULL.   This
669              flag is often used with passive endpoints.
670

RETURN VALUE

672       fi_getinfo()  returns  0  on success.  On error, fi_getinfo() returns a
673       negative value corresponding to fabric errno.  Fabric errno values  are
674       defined in rdma/fi_errno.h.
675
676       fi_allocinfo() returns a pointer to a new fi_info structure on success,
677       or NULL on error.  fi_dupinfo() duplicates a single  fi_info  structure
678       and  all  the  substructures  within it, returning a pointer to the new
679       fi_info structure on success, or NULL on  error.   Both  calls  require
680       that the returned fi_info structure be freed via fi_freeinfo().
681

ERRORS

683       FI_EBADFLAGS
684              The  specified  endpoint or domain capability or operation flags
685              are invalid.
686
687       FI_ENODATA
688              Indicates that no providers could be found which support the re‐
689              quested fabric information.
690
691       FI_ENOMEM
692              Indicates that there was insufficient memory to complete the op‐
693              eration.
694

NOTES

696       If hints are provided, the operation will be controlled by  the  values
697       that  are supplied in the various fields (see section on fi_info).  Ap‐
698       plications that require specific communication interfaces, domains, ca‐
699       pabilities  or  other  requirements,  can  specify them using fields in
700       hints.  Libfabric returns a linked list in info that points to  a  list
701       of matching interfaces.  info is set to NULL if there are no communica‐
702       tion interfaces or none match the input hints.
703
704       If node is provided, fi_getinfo will attempt to resolve the fabric  ad‐
705       dress  to the given node.  If node is not provided, fi_getinfo will at‐
706       tempt to resolve the fabric addressing information based on the provid‐
707       ed  hints.   The caller must call fi_freeinfo to release fi_info struc‐
708       tures returned by fi_getinfo.
709
710       If neither node, service or hints are provided, then fi_getinfo  simply
711       returns the list all available communication interfaces.
712
713       Multiple  threads  may  call fi_getinfo simultaneously, without any re‐
714       quirement for serialization.
715

SEE ALSO

717       fi_open(3), fi_endpoint(3), fi_domain(3), fi_nic(3)
718

AUTHORS

720       OpenFabrics.
721
722
723
724Libfabric Programmer's Manual     2020-04-14                     fi_getinfo(3)
Impressum