Fortran
call pvmfpack( what, xp, nitem, stride, info )
what options
STRING 0 REAL4 4
BYTE1 1 COMPLEX8 5
INTEGER2 2 REAL8 6
INTEGER4 3 COMPLEX16 7
An exception is pvm_pkstr() which by definition packs a NULL terminated character string and thus does not need nitem or stride arguments. The Fortran routine pvmfpack( STRING, ... ) expects nitem to be the number of characters in the string and stride to be 1.
A null string ("") can be packed; this is just a string with no characters before the terminating '\0'. However, packing a null string pointer, (char *)0, is not allowed.
If the packing is successful, info will be 0. If some error occurs then info will be < 0.
A single variable (not an array) can be packed by setting nitem = 1 and stride = 1.
The routine pvm_packf() uses a printf-like format expression to specify what and how to pack data into the send buffer. All variables are passed as addresses if count and stride are specified otherwise, variables are assumed to be values. A BNF-like description of the format syntax is:
format : null | init | format fmt
init : null | '%' '+'
fmt : '%' count stride modifiers fchar
fchar : 'c' | 'd' | 'f' | 'x' | 's'
count : null | [0-9]+ | '*'
stride : null | '.' ( [0-9]+ | '*' )
modifiers : null | modifiers mchar
mchar : 'h' | 'l' | 'u'
Formats: + means initsend - must match an int (how) in the param list.
c pack/unpack bytes
d integers
f float
x complex float
s string
Modifiers:
h short (int)
l long (int, float, complex float)
u unsigned (int)
Future extensions to the what argument in pvmfpack will include 64 bit types when XDR encoding of these types is available. Meanwhile users should be aware that precision can be lost when passing data from a 64 bit machine like a Cray to a 32 bit machine like a SPARCstation. As a mnemonic the what argument name includes the number of bytes of precision to expect. By setting encoding to PVMRAW (see pvmfinitsend) data can be transferred between two 64 bit machines with full precision even if the PVM configuration is heterogeneous.
Messages should be unpacked exactly like they were packed to insure data integrity. Packing integers and unpacking them as floats will often fail because a type encoding will have occurred transferring the data between heterogeneous hosts. Packing 10 integers and 100 floats then trying to unpack only 3 integers and the 100 floats will also fail.
PvmNoMem Malloc has failed. Message buffer size has exceeded
the available memory on this host.
PvmNoBuf There is no active send buffer to pack into.
Try calling pvm_initsend before packing message.