Result for 151C0DD8B4503FC00893BDD112A0A2D613456989

Query result

Key Value
FileName./usr/lib/.build-id/6a/b3667df42f97ead4a16f8e688302c742d0c8f6
FileSize41
MD5BA13E5C9E1DFC3A7534B6B65AFFEF316
SHA-1151C0DD8B4503FC00893BDD112A0A2D613456989
SHA-256B147A0C9E3EF94881613D6D6C900783D07CF0E8C324479CACD239AE36F5F6D5B
SSDEEP3:gCDGvk9M4R9n:XzLHn
TLSH
hashlookup:parent-total10
hashlookup:trust100

Network graph view

Parents (Total: 10)

The searched file hash is included in 10 parent files which include package known and seen by metalookup. A sample is included below:

Key Value
MD53187B8D6967E909DFE95C320BF8AB751
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.
PackageMaintainerCentOS Buildsys <bugs@centos.org>
PackageNamepmix
PackageRelease1.el8
PackageVersion2.2.5
SHA-1D528C1B5EE5904711AFE8B7101B979D5DCAB3B43
SHA-2568904E3CB1810ECD300FB3BCAD0D81AAFD7F0130CD1A212226991607304693079
Key Value
MD53EFF1DCEDC469515D453913B86DA75AE
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.
PackageMaintainerCentOS Buildsys <bugs@centos.org>
PackageNamepmix
PackageRelease1.el8
PackageVersion2.2.5
SHA-160F74052E1E0A7AD3E8A1CC10B49E750AD5CF20D
SHA-256129848C9214B75F4D752D5DD3190DE0B3748CB65DF4402F50416FD0DB8C037F7
Key Value
MD5F181A777B2635B228373707E8E7CBC90
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.
PackageMaintainerCentOS Buildsys <bugs@centos.org>
PackageNamepmix
PackageRelease1.el8
PackageVersion2.2.5
SHA-14B79DC73A0A17BE0412D13850E643969981318FE
SHA-2568F9565917BB54ED645C6AB8C72E15885C9D13A0B0C90049DA019776A078FE3D8
Key Value
MD53794AAC08A93F1422B20EF7008193C3E
PackageArchppc64le
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.
PackageMaintainerCentOS Buildsys <bugs@centos.org>
PackageNamepmix
PackageRelease1.el8
PackageVersion2.2.4rc1
SHA-12E4D05BED392062F20DD2E696B7BE111AA084A3A
SHA-256EF3AE67010315EFFE4D71F63EBA25A87FC3B00DBFCD3DBC4B69CC2DBEFB1E2A7
Key Value
MD5CB9DC41C894207991F22E500C2FDAD4E
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.
PackageMaintainerCloudLinux Packaging Team <packager@cloudlinux.com>
PackageNamepmix
PackageRelease1.el8
PackageVersion2.2.4rc1
SHA-11B866145F1D31161E4E5C3EB4B15062C02A6B4BF
SHA-256DCD9728ADEE4C839D1D2AA79E633F866A38167D29CA71D90F59C9032D393C3AD
Key Value
MD52F36DEB64E4FE368AEBA7F00F0BA74AE
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.
PackageMaintainerCentOS Buildsys <bugs@centos.org>
PackageNamepmix
PackageRelease1.el8
PackageVersion2.2.4rc1
SHA-1AFE2F740DBB929DB304DA185B45C691492E2566C
SHA-256565FE1D4F735DA2E939F43DBB929D08673A917D162621A7DC6807BBC4BD1085E
Key Value
MD57A452E287F9DE4716E92E968BBA24010
PackageArchppc64le
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.
PackageMaintainerCentOS Buildsys <bugs@centos.org>
PackageNamepmix
PackageRelease1.el8
PackageVersion2.2.5
SHA-1951CFD673EA3FF8AD1CECA2E5A68F2386F914B4A
SHA-256F6D371B2FA88B6C205EBF8C75E6EA3FD4E2BAEA13FAD9F509EC16AFD75C61C25
Key Value
MD5351E709873D4EB68C5B4B8F6C2156961
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.
PackageMaintainerCentOS Buildsys <bugs@centos.org>
PackageNamepmix
PackageRelease1.el8
PackageVersion2.2.4rc1
SHA-1A33143DA2EDF35769BA3860413C54C169645F631
SHA-256C50F16B1B9101DD81DF61C5B40866BCAA016233AA343DE7F057EA8327F321583
Key Value
MD5AA9E323A2819D28E05D0BEE43768D03B
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.
PackageMaintainerCloudLinux Packaging Team <packager@cloudlinux.com>
PackageNamepmix
PackageRelease1.el8
PackageVersion2.2.4rc1
SHA-140B315F8FFC0991989E9774EB347583AF94CE7B3
SHA-2565AAF561A4DBDCEC749D48EA5CB889388F5ABDD5AF37BD513EC64D43C8D67DBBE
Key Value
MD5BE727656A4D414DC18105812025169B9
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.
PackageMaintainerCentOS Buildsys <bugs@centos.org>
PackageNamepmix
PackageRelease1.el8
PackageVersion2.2.4rc1
SHA-13583F052181A5351D00620D92F3C9DF151E71476
SHA-25672E22AE557152DC4BDF01C78BDABE7B9B995C1B43B3C3297898382D90A9CD47B