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Linux Cross-Memory Attach
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wrrobin/xpmem
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*************************************************************************** *************************************************************************** *************************************************************************** If you wish to contribute to or want to see the latest version of XPMEM the new repository is @ http://gitlab.com/hjelmn/xpmem. I do not intent to continue to use github for this repository. *************************************************************************** *************************************************************************** *************************************************************************** This is an experimental version of XPMEM based on a version provided by Cray and uploaded to https://code.google.com/p/xpmem. This version supports any kernel 3.12 and newer. Keep in mind there may be bugs and this version may cause kernel panics, code crashes, eat your cat, etc. XPMEM is a Linux kernel module that enables a process to map the memory of another process into its virtual address space. Source code can be obtained by cloning the Git repository, original Mercurial repository or by downloading a tarball from the link above. The XPMEM API has three main functions: xpmem_make() xpmem_get() xpmem_attach() A process calls xpmem_make() to export a region of its virtual address space. Other processes can then attach to the region by calling xpmem_get() and xpmem_attach(). After a memory region is attached, it is accessed via direct loads and stores. This enables upper-level protocols such as MPI and SHMEM to perform single-copy address-space to address-space transfers, completely at user-level. Note, there is a limitation to the usage of an attached region. Any system call that will call get_user_pages() on the region from the non-owning process with get EFAULT. This include pthread mutexes and condition variable, and SYS V semaphores. We intend to address this limitation in a future release. XPMEM regions are free to have "holes" in them, meaning virtual memory regions that are not allocated. This makes XPMEM somewhat more flexible than mmap(). A process could, for example, export a region via XPMEM starting at address 0 and extending 4 GB. Accesses to allocated (valid) virtual addresses in this region proceed normally, and pages are mapped between address spaces on demand. A segfault will occur if the source process or any other process mapping the region tries to access an unallocated (invalid) virtual address in the region.
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Linux Cross-Memory Attach
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