Section: Open MPI (3)Updated: Oct 05, 2010Local indexUp
NAME
MPI_File_write_ordered_begin - Writes a file at a location specified by a shared file pointer; beginning part of a split collective routine (nonblocking).
SYNTAX
C Syntax
#include <mpi.h>
int MPI_File_write_ordered_begin(MPI_File fh, void *buf,
int count, MPI_Datatype datatype)
Fortran Syntax
INCLUDE 'mpif.h'
MPI_FILE_WRITE_ORDERED_BEGIN(FH, BUF, COUNT, DATATYPE, IERROR)
<type> BUF(*)
INTEGER FH, COUNT, DATATYPE, IERROR
MPI_File_write_ordered_begin is the beginning part of a split collective, nonblocking routine that must
be called by all processes in the communicator group associated with
the file handle
fh.
Each process may pass different argument values
for the
datatype
and
count
arguments. After all processes of the
group have issued their respective calls, each process attempts to
write, into the file associated with
fh,
a total number of
count
data items having datatype type contained in the user's buffer
buf.
For
each process, the location in the file at which data is written is the
position at which the shared file pointer would be after all processes
whose ranks within the group are less than that of this process had
written their data.
NOTES
All the nonblocking collective routines for data access are "split" into two routines, each with _begin or _end as a suffix. These split collective routines are subject to the semantic rules described in Section 9.4.5 of the MPI-2 standard.
ERRORS
Almost all MPI routines return an error value; C routines as the value of the function and Fortran routines in the last argument. C++ functions do not return errors. If the default error handler is set to MPI::ERRORS_THROW_EXCEPTIONS, then on error the C++ exception mechanism will be used to throw an MPI:Exception object.
Before the error value is returned, the current MPI error handler is
called. For MPI I/O function errors, the default error handler is set to MPI_ERRORS_RETURN. The error handler may be changed with MPI_File_set_errhandler; the predefined error handler MPI_ERRORS_ARE_FATAL may be used to make I/O errors fatal. Note that MPI does not guarantee that an MPI program can continue past an error.