Difference between revisions of "Main Page/PIO"
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These numbers were used to indicate which I/O to use, in .rea file for a specific example, by parameter 103. | These numbers were used to indicate which I/O to use, in .rea file for a specific example, by parameter 103. | ||
− | + | Here param(103) = 0 means it's using Fortran I/O library, param(103) = 1 means it's using C-POSIX I/o libraries. These two approaches would produce one file per processor and we will refer them as "old libraries". | |
− | These I/O functions were initiated from cem_out function of cem_dg.F (and cem_dg2.F) | + | param(103) = 3 is NN binary case, param(103) = 4 is N1 binary case, param(103) = 5 is NM binary case, param(103) = 6 is NM1 binary case, param(103) = 8 is NMM binary case. |
− | + | ||
+ | These I/O functions were initiated from cem_out function of cem_dg.F (and cem_dg2.F). |
Revision as of 17:34, 24 August 2010
This is the document page for parallel I/O library developed in summer 2010 by Jing Fu and Misun Min.
Generally, several new parallel I/O approaches were developed, namely #3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8. These numbers were used to indicate which I/O to use, in .rea file for a specific example, by parameter 103.
Here param(103) = 0 means it's using Fortran I/O library, param(103) = 1 means it's using C-POSIX I/o libraries. These two approaches would produce one file per processor and we will refer them as "old libraries".
param(103) = 3 is NN binary case, param(103) = 4 is N1 binary case, param(103) = 5 is NM binary case, param(103) = 6 is NM1 binary case, param(103) = 8 is NMM binary case.
These I/O functions were initiated from cem_out function of cem_dg.F (and cem_dg2.F).