Result for 136DB8CA7D1825CE01E90E352693459988A1672A

Query result

Key Value
FileName./usr/share/doc/pmix/README
FileSize14116
MD5FD7D8E1766B537CC79E5304543B958DC
SHA-1136DB8CA7D1825CE01E90E352693459988A1672A
SHA-256E34B620D30DED8EB3AC0D9FFB393532D9655DC3DBE583C5DC351FD4CE3387EFE
SSDEEP384:dnr5m+nqVIuohLcsLte2RDbZ+8VnF5ZaOwHN5a:dncyOohLcsZdDb1xZaOy6
TLSHT1E452923FBF08133A1781C1F2495D92D1EF2582BD2BA26428745D42281743BADB3BF7A5
hashlookup:parent-total8
hashlookup:trust90

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Parents (Total: 8)

The searched file hash is included in 8 parent files which include package known and seen by metalookup. A sample is included below:

Key Value
MD5152F31CB9C53D2FA66A4AA5E69CA3BF0
PackageArcharmv7hl
PackageDescriptionThe Process Management Interface (PMI) has been used for quite some time as a means of exchanging wireup information needed for interprocess communication. Two versions (PMI-1 and PMI-2) have been released as part of the MPICH effort. While PMI-2 demonstrates better scaling properties than its PMI-1 predecessor, attaining rapid launch and wireup of the roughly 1M processes executing across 100k nodes expected for exascale operations remains challenging. PMI Exascale (PMIx) represents an attempt to resolve these questions by providing an extended version of the PMI standard specifically designed to support clusters up to and including exascale sizes. The overall objective of the project is not to branch the existing pseudo-standard definitions - in fact, PMIx fully supports both of the existing PMI-1 and PMI-2 APIs - but rather to (a) augment and extend those APIs to eliminate some current restrictions that impact scalability, and (b) provide a reference implementation of the PMI-server that demonstrates the desired level of scalability.
PackageMaintainerFedora Project
PackageNamepmix
PackageRelease1.fc32
PackageVersion3.1.5
SHA-10C26A0AC969724CA2F723365360997EFBB94D896
SHA-25694CC2E6C4E10332C311737C5AF1B4D63040FC56B9802CC7F7D1E1583EC6FC185
Key Value
MD5AC51C182868731384FF690A145D45B60
PackageArchx86_64
PackageDescriptionThe Process Management Interface (PMI) has been used for quite some time as a means of exchanging wireup information needed for interprocess communication. Two versions (PMI-1 and PMI-2) have been released as part of the MPICH effort. While PMI-2 demonstrates better scaling properties than its PMI-1 predecessor, attaining rapid launch and wireup of the roughly 1M processes executing across 100k nodes expected for exascale operations remains challenging. PMI Exascale (PMIx) represents an attempt to resolve these questions by providing an extended version of the PMI standard specifically designed to support clusters up to and including exascale sizes. The overall objective of the project is not to branch the existing pseudo-standard definitions - in fact, PMIx fully supports both of the existing PMI-1 and PMI-2 APIs - but rather to (a) augment and extend those APIs to eliminate some current restrictions that impact scalability, and (b) provide a reference implementation of the PMI-server that demonstrates the desired level of scalability.
PackageMaintainerFedora Project
PackageNamepmix
PackageRelease1.fc32
PackageVersion3.1.5
SHA-199AE59AC6F7D6F21EA815916AC8B472B7DE61976
SHA-2564442EB245220137073C685BE03A25ADCCFB7CC774E1067DBFC7DF6BB7F03D3FE
Key Value
MD5BEB4787990FE5525A03262D3A0F1185F
PackageArcharmv7hl
PackageDescriptionThe Process Management Interface (PMI) has been used for quite some time as a means of exchanging wireup information needed for interprocess communication. Two versions (PMI-1 and PMI-2) have been released as part of the MPICH effort. While PMI-2 demonstrates better scaling properties than its PMI-1 predecessor, attaining rapid launch and wireup of the roughly 1M processes executing across 100k nodes expected for exascale operations remains challenging. PMI Exascale (PMIx) represents an attempt to resolve these questions by providing an extended version of the PMI standard specifically designed to support clusters up to and including exascale sizes. The overall objective of the project is not to branch the existing pseudo-standard definitions - in fact, PMIx fully supports both of the existing PMI-1 and PMI-2 APIs - but rather to (a) augment and extend those APIs to eliminate some current restrictions that impact scalability, and (b) provide a reference implementation of the PMI-server that demonstrates the desired level of scalability.
PackageMaintainerFedora Project
PackageNamepmix
PackageRelease0.1.rc1.fc33
PackageVersion3.1.6
SHA-161BF069851ABD6C9F37DA32364EA7A1DDD6CAE33
SHA-256CA2BB547C3C193BEBA50927C64652871EB3A03A0FC74FF9AADDB5064F19B2428
Key Value
MD5DF352972FDC2C6D30D7119E7119FFF29
PackageArchaarch64
PackageDescriptionThe Process Management Interface (PMI) has been used for quite some time as a means of exchanging wireup information needed for interprocess communication. Two versions (PMI-1 and PMI-2) have been released as part of the MPICH effort. While PMI-2 demonstrates better scaling properties than its PMI-1 predecessor, attaining rapid launch and wireup of the roughly 1M processes executing across 100k nodes expected for exascale operations remains challenging. PMI Exascale (PMIx) represents an attempt to resolve these questions by providing an extended version of the PMI standard specifically designed to support clusters up to and including exascale sizes. The overall objective of the project is not to branch the existing pseudo-standard definitions - in fact, PMIx fully supports both of the existing PMI-1 and PMI-2 APIs - but rather to (a) augment and extend those APIs to eliminate some current restrictions that impact scalability, and (b) provide a reference implementation of the PMI-server that demonstrates the desired level of scalability.
PackageMaintainerFedora Project
PackageNamepmix
PackageRelease0.1.rc1.fc33
PackageVersion3.1.6
SHA-17519BE5113D7BB699B54F55B7FB4DB504772AFAE
SHA-2569EF63D4CF15934EF52915D0F16655BB28C8E9DF12DC23267D7F1C50DCC178FAC
Key Value
MD5364243CA5D161F0F617D48610EE937B8
PackageArchaarch64
PackageDescriptionThe Process Management Interface (PMI) has been used for quite some time as a means of exchanging wireup information needed for interprocess communication. Two versions (PMI-1 and PMI-2) have been released as part of the MPICH effort. While PMI-2 demonstrates better scaling properties than its PMI-1 predecessor, attaining rapid launch and wireup of the roughly 1M processes executing across 100k nodes expected for exascale operations remains challenging. PMI Exascale (PMIx) represents an attempt to resolve these questions by providing an extended version of the PMI standard specifically designed to support clusters up to and including exascale sizes. The overall objective of the project is not to branch the existing pseudo-standard definitions - in fact, PMIx fully supports both of the existing PMI-1 and PMI-2 APIs - but rather to (a) augment and extend those APIs to eliminate some current restrictions that impact scalability, and (b) provide a reference implementation of the PMI-server that demonstrates the desired level of scalability.
PackageMaintainerFedora Project
PackageNamepmix
PackageRelease1.fc32
PackageVersion3.1.5
SHA-1B30CC1EDDEE0B82C5A0305F4E36FA791D961BF67
SHA-256C7AC86469C54927195B46E3DFAA5B3067D3A4AAD7106E9FE525849067CC71B35
Key Value
MD5100B04E1A2D1823058BCD5BB371A923A
PackageArchi686
PackageDescriptionThe Process Management Interface (PMI) has been used for quite some time as a means of exchanging wireup information needed for interprocess communication. Two versions (PMI-1 and PMI-2) have been released as part of the MPICH effort. While PMI-2 demonstrates better scaling properties than its PMI-1 predecessor, attaining rapid launch and wireup of the roughly 1M processes executing across 100k nodes expected for exascale operations remains challenging. PMI Exascale (PMIx) represents an attempt to resolve these questions by providing an extended version of the PMI standard specifically designed to support clusters up to and including exascale sizes. The overall objective of the project is not to branch the existing pseudo-standard definitions - in fact, PMIx fully supports both of the existing PMI-1 and PMI-2 APIs - but rather to (a) augment and extend those APIs to eliminate some current restrictions that impact scalability, and (b) provide a reference implementation of the PMI-server that demonstrates the desired level of scalability.
PackageMaintainerFedora Project
PackageNamepmix
PackageRelease0.1.rc1.fc33
PackageVersion3.1.6
SHA-1A7B0C64645A1FF53262A7038FFF9D76D73C5D970
SHA-256E3E9B6F42C727B72EE82C8CA8C372EF80E4639F2444FA351D92F45F0E7CA129C
Key Value
MD5EF705F6C761FB4045D0B32F5922DD54A
PackageArchx86_64
PackageDescriptionThe Process Management Interface (PMI) has been used for quite some time as a means of exchanging wireup information needed for interprocess communication. Two versions (PMI-1 and PMI-2) have been released as part of the MPICH effort. While PMI-2 demonstrates better scaling properties than its PMI-1 predecessor, attaining rapid launch and wireup of the roughly 1M processes executing across 100k nodes expected for exascale operations remains challenging. PMI Exascale (PMIx) represents an attempt to resolve these questions by providing an extended version of the PMI standard specifically designed to support clusters up to and including exascale sizes. The overall objective of the project is not to branch the existing pseudo-standard definitions - in fact, PMIx fully supports both of the existing PMI-1 and PMI-2 APIs - but rather to (a) augment and extend those APIs to eliminate some current restrictions that impact scalability, and (b) provide a reference implementation of the PMI-server that demonstrates the desired level of scalability.
PackageMaintainerFedora Project
PackageNamepmix
PackageRelease0.1.rc1.fc33
PackageVersion3.1.6
SHA-10ABB9914C369D5EF4926B3685BD2EC3837296E96
SHA-256AFD14BE70A8F285E6D75AFDB75F4A633F3A30812C6A52F027783304A39ED4F68
Key Value
MD5AC5ADDFED3E71FE79176D8C4186512D9
PackageArchi686
PackageDescriptionThe Process Management Interface (PMI) has been used for quite some time as a means of exchanging wireup information needed for interprocess communication. Two versions (PMI-1 and PMI-2) have been released as part of the MPICH effort. While PMI-2 demonstrates better scaling properties than its PMI-1 predecessor, attaining rapid launch and wireup of the roughly 1M processes executing across 100k nodes expected for exascale operations remains challenging. PMI Exascale (PMIx) represents an attempt to resolve these questions by providing an extended version of the PMI standard specifically designed to support clusters up to and including exascale sizes. The overall objective of the project is not to branch the existing pseudo-standard definitions - in fact, PMIx fully supports both of the existing PMI-1 and PMI-2 APIs - but rather to (a) augment and extend those APIs to eliminate some current restrictions that impact scalability, and (b) provide a reference implementation of the PMI-server that demonstrates the desired level of scalability.
PackageMaintainerFedora Project
PackageNamepmix
PackageRelease1.fc32
PackageVersion3.1.5
SHA-1F4A4AB7B2A88E4DC09E7222583C2B97D1032BB96
SHA-256030279A7935B0B8F17A18E232B2D24571196D83CBAF676230C6276564419BC26