+------------------------
+
+As a SMPI user, you are supposed to provide a description of your
+virtual platform, that is mostly a set of simulated hosts and network
+links with some performance characteristics. SimGrid provides a plenty
+of :ref:`documentation <platform>` and examples (in the
+`examples/platforms <https://framagit.org/simgrid/simgrid/tree/master/examples/platforms>`_
+source directory), and this section only shows a small set of introductory
+examples.
+
+Feel free to skip this section if you want to jump right away to usage
+examples.
+
+Simple Example with 3 hosts
+...........................
+
+At the most basic level, you can describe your simulated platform as a
+graph of hosts and network links. For instance:
+
+.. image:: /tuto_smpi/3hosts.png
+ :align: center
+
+.. literalinclude:: /tuto_smpi/3hosts.xml
+ :language: xml
+
+Note the way in which hosts, links, and routes are defined in
+this XML. All hosts are defined with a speed (in Gflops), and links
+with a latency (in us) and bandwidth (in MBytes per second). Other
+units are possible and written as expected. Routes specify the list of
+links encountered from one route to another. Routes are symmetrical by
+default.
+
+Cluster with a Crossbar
+.......................
+
+A very common parallel computing platform is a homogeneous cluster in
+which hosts are interconnected via a crossbar switch with as many
+ports as hosts, so that any disjoint pairs of hosts can communicate
+concurrently at full speed. For instance:
+
+.. literalinclude:: ../../examples/platforms/cluster_crossbar.xml
+ :language: xml
+ :lines: 1-3,18-
+
+One specifies a name prefix and suffix for each host, and then give an
+integer range. In the example the cluster contains 65535 hosts (!),
+named ``node-0.simgrid.org`` to ``node-65534.simgrid.org``. All hosts
+have the same power (1 Gflop/sec) and are connected to the switch via
+links with same bandwidth (125 MBytes/sec) and latency (50
+microseconds).
+
+.. todo::
+
+ Add the picture.
+
+Cluster with a Shared Backbone
+..............................
+
+Another popular model for a parallel platform is that of a set of
+homogeneous hosts connected to a shared communication medium, a
+backbone, with some finite bandwidth capacity and on which
+communicating host pairs can experience contention. For instance:
+
+
+.. literalinclude:: ../../examples/platforms/cluster_backbone.xml
+ :language: xml
+ :lines: 1-3,18-
+
+The only differences with the crossbar cluster above are the ``bb_bw``
+and ``bb_lat`` attributes that specify the backbone characteristics
+(here, a 500 microseconds latency and a 2.25 GByte/sec
+bandwidth). This link is used for every communication within the
+cluster. The route from ``node-0.simgrid.org`` to ``node-1.simgrid.org``
+counts 3 links: the private link of ``node-0.simgrid.org``, the backbone
+and the private link of ``node-1.simgrid.org``.
+
+.. todo::
+
+ Add the picture.
+
+Torus Cluster
+.............
+
+Many HPC facilities use torus clusters to reduce sharing and
+performance loss on concurrent internal communications. Modeling this
+in SimGrid is very easy. Simply add a ``topology="TORUS"`` attribute
+to your cluster. Configure it with the ``topo_parameters="X,Y,Z"``
+attribute, where ``X``, ``Y`` and ``Z`` are the dimension of your
+torus.
+
+.. image:: ../../examples/platforms/cluster_torus.svg
+ :align: center
+
+.. literalinclude:: ../../examples/platforms/cluster_torus.xml
+ :language: xml
+
+Note that in this example, we used ``loopback_bw`` and
+``loopback_lat`` to specify the characteristics of the loopback link
+of each node (i.e., the link allowing each node to communicate with
+itself). We could have done so in previous example too. When no
+loopback is given, the communication from a node to itself is handled
+as if it were two distinct nodes: it goes twice through the private
+link and through the backbone (if any).
+
+Fat-Tree Cluster
+................
+
+This topology was introduced to reduce the amount of links in the
+cluster (and thus reduce its price) while maintaining a high bisection
+bandwidth and a relatively low diameter. To model this in SimGrid,
+pass a ``topology="FAT_TREE"`` attribute to your cluster. The
+``topo_parameters=#levels;#downlinks;#uplinks;link count`` follows the
+semantic introduced in the `Figure 1B of this article
+<http://webee.eedev.technion.ac.il/wp-content/uploads/2014/08/publication_574.pdf>`_.
+
+Here is the meaning of this example: ``2 ; 4,4 ; 1,2 ; 1,2``
+
+- That's a two-level cluster (thus the initial ``2``).
+- Routers are connected to 4 elements below them, regardless of its
+ level. Thus the ``4,4`` component that is used as
+ ``#downlinks``. This means that the hosts are grouped by 4 on a
+ given router, and that there is 4 level-1 routers (in the middle of
+ the figure).
+- Hosts are connected to only 1 router above them, while these routers
+ are connected to 2 routers above them (thus the ``1,2`` used as
+ ``#uplink``).
+- Hosts have only one link to their router while every path between a
+ level-1 routers and level-2 routers use 2 parallel links. Thus the
+ ``1,2`` that is used as ``link count``.
+
+.. image:: ../../examples/platforms/cluster_fat_tree.svg
+ :align: center
+
+.. literalinclude:: ../../examples/platforms/cluster_fat_tree.xml
+ :language: xml
+ :lines: 1-3,10-
+
+
+Dragonfly Cluster
+.................
+
+This topology was introduced to further reduce the amount of links
+while maintaining a high bandwidth for local communications. To model
+this in SimGrid, pass a ``topology="DRAGONFLY"`` attribute to your
+cluster.
+
+.. literalinclude:: ../../examples/platforms/cluster_dragonfly.xml
+ :language: xml
+
+.. todo::
+
+ Add the image, and the documuentation of the topo_parameters.
+
+Final Word
+..........
+
+We only glanced over the abilities offered by SimGrid to describe the
+platform topology. Other networking zones model non-HPC platforms
+(such as wide area networks, ISP network comprising set-top boxes, or
+even your own routing schema). You can interconnect several networking
+zones in your platform to form a tree of zones, that is both a time-
+and memory-efficient representation of distributed platforms. Please
+head to the dedicated :ref:`documentation <platform>` for more
+information.
+
+Hands-on!
+---------
+
+It is time to start using SMPI yourself. For that, you first need to
+install it somehow, and then you will need a MPI application to play with.
+
+Using Docker
+............
+
+The easiest way to take the tutorial is to use the dedicated Docker
+image. Once you `installed Docker itself
+<https://docs.docker.com/install/>`_, simply do the following:
+
+.. code-block:: shell
+
+ docker pull simgrid/tuto-smpi
+ docker run -it --rm --name simgrid --volume ~/smpi-tutorial:/source/tutorial simgrid/tuto-smpi bash
+
+This will start a new container with all you need to take this
+tutorial, and create a ``smpi-tutorial`` directory in your home on
+your host machine that will be visible as ``/source/tutorial`` within the
+container. You can then edit the files you want with your favorite
+editor in ``~/smpi-tutorial``, and compile them within the
+container to enjoy the provided dependencies.
+
+.. warning::
+
+ Any change to the container out of ``/source/tutorial`` will be lost
+ when you log out of the container, so don't edit the other files!
+
+All needed dependencies are already installed in this container
+(SimGrid, the C/C++/Fortran compilers, make, pajeng and R). Vite being
+only optional in this tutorial, it is not installed to reduce the
+image size.
+
+The container also include the example platform files from the
+previous section as well as the source code of the NAS Parallel
+Benchmarks. These files are available under
+``/source/simgrid-template-smpi`` in the image. You should copy it to
+your working directory when you first log in:
+
+.. code-block:: shell
+
+ cp -r /source/simgrid-template-smpi/* /source/tutorial
+ cd /source/tutorial
+
+Using your Computer Natively
+............................
+
+To take the tutorial on your machine, you first need to :ref:`install
+SimGrid <install>`, the C/C++/Fortran compilers and also ``pajeng`` to
+visualize the traces. You may want to install `Vite
+<http://vite.gforge.inria.fr/>`_ to get a first glance at the
+traces. The provided code template requires make to compile. On
+Debian and Ubuntu for example, you can get them as follows:
+
+.. code-block:: shell
+
+ sudo apt install simgrid pajeng make gcc g++ gfortran vite
+
+To take this tutorial, you will also need the platform files from the
+previous section as well as the source code of the NAS Parallel
+Benchmarks. Just clone `this repository
+<https://framagit.org/simgrid/simgrid-template-smpi>`_ to get them all:
+
+.. code-block:: shell
+
+ git clone git@framagit.org:simgrid/simgrid-template-smpi.git
+ cd simgrid-template-smpi/
+
+If you struggle with the compilation, then you should double check
+your :ref:`SimGrid installation <install>`. On need, please refer to
+the :ref:`Troubleshooting your Project Setup
+<install_yours_troubleshooting>` section.
+
+Lab 0: Hello World
+------------------
+
+It is time to simulate your first MPI program. Use the simplistic
+example `roundtrip.c
+<https://framagit.org/simgrid/simgrid-template-smpi/raw/master/roundtrip.c?inline=false>`_
+that comes with the template.
+
+.. literalinclude:: /tuto_smpi/roundtrip.c
+ :language: c
+
+Compiling and Executing
+.......................
+
+Compiling the program is straightforward (double check your
+:ref:`SimGrid installation <install>` if you get an error message):
+
+
+.. code-block:: shell
+
+ $ smpicc -O3 roundtrip.c -o roundtrip
+
+
+Once compiled, you can simulate the execution of this program on 16
+nodes from the ``cluster_crossbar.xml`` platform as follows:
+
+.. code-block:: shell
+
+ $ smpirun -np 16 -platform cluster_crossbar.xml -hostfile cluster_hostfile ./roundtrip
+
+- The ``-np 16`` option, just like in regular MPI, specifies the
+ number of MPI processes to use.
+- The ``-hostfile cluster_hostfile`` option, just like in regular
+ MPI, specifies the host file. If you omit this option, ``smpirun``
+ will deploy the application on the first machines of your platform.
+- The ``-platform cluster_crossbar.xml`` option, **which doesn't exist
+ in regular MPI**, specifies the platform configuration to be
+ simulated.
+- At the end of the line, one finds the executable name and
+ command-line arguments (if any -- roundtrip does not expect any arguments).