Provided by: coop-computing-tools_9.9-4ubuntu4_amd64 bug

NAME

       allpairs_master - executes All-Pairs workflow in parallel on distributed systems

SYNOPSIS

       allparis_master [options] <set A> <set B> <compare function>

DESCRIPTION

       allpairs_master  computes  the  Cartesian  product of two sets (<set A> and <set B>), generating a matrix
       where each cell M[i,j] contains the output of the function F (<compare function>)  on  objects  A[i]  (an
       item in <set A>) and B[j] (an item in <set B>). The resulting matrix is displayed on the standard output,
       one comparison result per line along with the associated X and Y indices.

       allpairs_master uses the Work Queue system to distribute tasks among processors.  Each processor utilizes
       the  allpairs_multicore(1)  program to execute the tasks in parallel if multiple cores are present. After
       starting allpairs_master, you must start a number of work_queue_worker(1) processes on  remote  machines.
       The workers will then connect back to the master process and begin executing tasks.

OPTIONS

       -p, --port=<port>
              The port that the master will be listening on.

       -e, --extra-args=<args>
              Extra arguments to pass to the comparison function.

       -f, --input-file=<file>
              Extra input file needed by the comparison function. (may be given multiple times)

       -o, --debug-file=<file>
              Write  debugging output to this file. By default, debugging is sent to stderr (":stderr"). You may
              specify logs to be sent to stdout (":stdout") instead.

       -O, ----output-file=<file>
              Write task output to this file (default to standard output)

       -t, --estimated-time=<seconds>
              Estimated time to run one comparison. (default chosen at runtime)

       -x, --width=<item>
              Width of one work unit, in items to compare. (default chosen at runtime)

       -y, --height=<items>
              Height of one work unit, in items to compare. (default chosen at runtime)

       -N, --project-name=<project>
              Report the master information to a catalog server with the project name - <project>

       -P, --priority=<integer>
              Priority. Higher the value, higher the priority.

       -d, --debug=<flag>
              Enable debugging for this subsystem. (Try -d all to start.)

        -v, --version
              Show program version.

        -h,--help <>
              Display this message.

       -Z, --port-file=<file>
              Select port at random and write it to this file.  (default is disabled)

        --work-queue-preferred-connection <connection>
              Indicate preferred connection. Chose one of by_ip or by_hostname. (default is by_ip)

EXIT STATUS

       On success, returns zero.  On failure, returns non-zero.

EXAMPLES

       Let's suppose you have a whole lot of files that you want to compare all to each other, named  a,  b,  c,
       and  so  on. Suppose that you also have a program named compareit that when invoked as compareit a b will
       compare files a and b and produce some output summarizing the difference between the two, like this:

                a b are 45 percent similar

       To use the allpairs framework, create a file called set.list that lists each of your files, one per line:

                a
                b
                c
                ...

       Because allpairs_master utilizes allpairs_multicore(1), so please make sure allpairs_multicore(1)  is  in
       your  PATH  before  you proceed.To run a All-Pairs workflow sequentially, start a single work_queue_work‐
       er(1) process in the background. Then, invoke allpairs_master.

                % work_queue_worker localhost 9123 &
                % allpairs_master set.list set.list compareit

       The framework will carry out all possible comparisons of the objects, and print the results  one  by  one
       (note that the first two columns are X and Y indices in the resulting matrix):

                1    1    a a are 100 percent similar
                1    2    a b are 45 percent similar
                1    3    a c are 37 percent similar
                ...

       To  speed  up  the process, run more work_queue_worker(1) processes on other machines, or use condor_sub‐
       mit_workers(1) or sge_submit_workers(1) to start hundreds of workers in your local batch system.

       The following is an example of adding more workers to execute a All-Pairs  workflow.  Suppose  your  all‐
       pairs_master  is running on a machine named barney.nd.edu. If you have access to login to other machines,
       you could simply start worker processes on each one, like this:

                % work_queue_worker barney.nd.edu 9123

       If you have access to a batch system like Condor, you can submit multiple workers at once:

                % condor_submit_workers barney.nd.edu 9123 10
                Submitting job(s)..........
                Logging submit event(s)..........
                10 job(s) submitted to cluster 298.

COPYRIGHT

       The Cooperative Computing Tools are Copyright (C) 2005-2019 The University of Notre Dame.  This  software
       is distributed under the GNU General Public License.  See the file COPYING for details.

SEE ALSO

       •   The Cooperative Computing Tools ("http://ccl.cse.nd.edu/software/manuals")

       •   All-Pairs User Manual ("http://ccl.cse.nd.edu/software/manuals/allpairs.html")

       •   Work Queue User Manual ("http://ccl.cse.nd.edu/software/manuals/workqueue.html")

       •   work_queue_worker(1)condor_submit_workers(1)sge_submit_workers(1)allpairs_multicore(1)

CCTools 8.0.0 DEVELOPMENT                                                                     allpairs_master(1)