here may not be available in your simulators, depending on the
@ref install_src_config "compile-time options" that you used.
+\tableofcontents
+
\section options_using Passing configuration options to the simulators
There is several way to pass configuration options to the simulators.
\subsubsection options_model_network_crosstraffic Simulating cross-traffic
-As of SimGrid v3.7, cross-traffic effects can be taken into account in
+%As of SimGrid v3.7, cross-traffic effects can be taken into account in
analytical simulations. It means that ongoing and incoming
communication flows are treated independently. In addition, the LV08
model adds 0.05 of usage on the opposite direction for each new
\subsection options_virt_factory Selecting the virtualization factory
-In SimGrid, the user code is virtualized in a specific mecanism
-allowing the simulation kernel to control its execution: when a user
+In SimGrid, the user code is virtualized in a specific mechanism
+that allows the simulation kernel to control its execution: when a user
process requires a blocking action (such as sending a message), it is
interrupted, and only gets released when the simulated clock reaches
the point where the blocking operation is done.
- \b raw: amazingly fast factory using a context switching mecanism
of our own, directly implemented in assembly (only available for x86
and amd64 platforms for now)
+ - \b boost: This uses the [context implementation](http://www.boost.org/doc/libs/1_59_0/libs/context/doc/html/index.html)
+ of the boost library; you must have this library installed before
+ you compile SimGrid. (On Debian GNU/Linux based systems, this is
+ provided by the libboost-contexts-dev package.)
The only reason to change this setting is when the debugging tools get
fooled by the optimized context factories. Threads are the most
To disable the benchmarking/simulation of computation in the simulated
application, the variable \b
-smpi/simulation_computation should be set to no
+smpi/simulate_computation should be set to no
\subsection options_model_smpi_bw_factor smpi/bw_factor: Bandwidth factors
\b Default: 0 (false)
-Most of the time, you run MPI code through SMPI to compute the time it
-would take to run it on a platform that you don't have. But since the
+Most of the time, you run MPI code with SMPI to compute the time it
+would take to run it on a platform. But since the
code is run through the \c smpirun script, you don't have any control
-on the launcher code, making difficult to report the simulated time
+on the launcher code, making it difficult to report the simulated time
when the simulation ends. If you set the \b smpi/display_timing item
to 1, \c smpirun will display this information when the simulation ends. \verbatim
Simulation time: 1e3 seconds.
- \c smpi/privatize_global_variables: \ref options_smpi_global
- \c smpi/running_power: \ref options_smpi_bench
- \c smpi/send_is_detached_thresh: \ref options_model_smpi_detached
-- \c smpi/simulation_computation: \ref options_smpi_bench
+- \c smpi/simulate_computation: \ref options_smpi_bench
- \c smpi/test: \ref options_model_smpi_test
- \c smpi/use_shared_malloc: \ref options_model_smpi_use_shared_malloc
- \c smpi/wtime: \ref options_model_smpi_wtime