Building on Windows
Building GridPACK on Windows is not for the faint of heart.
Contents
System Preparation
The following are available as native Windows applications and can just be installed in the normal Windows way:
- Visual C++ in some form.
- The "free" ones, Visual Studio Express and Community, should work.
- Windows SDK
Usually, this is just installed with Visual Studio - CMake is required. During the installation process, the dialog will ask if you want CMake added to PATH variable. For some reason, the default is not to include CMake. You should change the selection to add CMake to the PATH for all users.
- A minimal Cygwin installation is necessary.
Cygwin is required to build, and test for, PETSc. If the system has a Cygwin installation that is being used, it would probably be best to make another installation for GridPACK installation exclusively. Ifgcc
andcmake
are already installed in Cygwin, you can rerun the installer and deselect these packages (they can be found under the developer category).- Minimum required packages:
- Base
- Python
- Rename /usr/bin/link.exe so it does not interfere with Windows LINK.EXE
- If you want to use a Cygwin shell to build and/or debug GridPACK applications:
- Do not install a compiler set.
- Do not install CMake.
- Minimum required packages:
- Microsoft MPI
This appears to be the only modern implementation available for Windows. In the past, the OpenMPI and MPICH implementations were available for Windows, but no more. You will need to download both the.msi
and.exe
files. - Some software to unpack .zip, .gz, and tar archives. Commands to unpack all of these archives are available with Cygwin. Windows can handle .zip archives natively.
- (optional) MS-MPI Debugger Extension is useful for debugging problem with parallel programs.
Build Required Libraries
- In these instructions, everything is done from the Command Prompt. Open a 64-bit Visual Studio command prompt, which should be available from the Start Menu. If your version of Visual Studio has more than one top of Command Prompt, use the developer prompt. You should bring up Command Prompts as administrator, otherwise Visual Studio has trouble finding the common tools folder. To do this, mouse over the Command Prompt field and right-click. A menu should show up with "Run as Administrator" as one of the options. Type, or copy and paste, the commands below into that command prompt window.
- The caret ^ character is the line continuation character for Command Prompt window.
- Choose a place to install libraries. C:\GridPACK is used in this case. Avoid a path with spaces or special characters in it. It's convenient to set an environment variable to hold this path. GridPACKDir is used here.
- Make a folder there in which source archives can be unpacked and the builds can be performed. C:\GridPACK\src is used here. Again, avoid a path with spaces or special characters in it.
- Prepare VS/CMake to use MPI. Enter the command
set msmpi
The response should be something like
MSMPI_BIN=C:\Program Files\Microsoft MPI\Bin\ MSMPI_INC=C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft SDKs\MPI\Include\ MSMPI_LIB32=C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft SDKs\MPI\Lib\x86\ MSMPI_LIB64=C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft SDKs\MPI\Lib\x64\
Boost
- Download source from here and unpack in %GridPACKDir%\src
- Remember to set msmpi as described above
- Bootstrap the boost.build, e.g.,
.\bootstrap.bat
- Add using mpi; to project-config.jam
- As you might imagine, Boost is not built on Windows with MPI often. Consequently, it's a little out of date. The file mpi.jam needs to be modified. It's in a different place depending on the version. In Boost 1.61 it is in ./tools/build/src/tools/mpi.jam. Modify mpi.jam to make it work using the following patch:
247a248,250 > local win_ms_mpi_sdk = "C:\\Program Files (x86)\\Microsoft SDKs\\MPI" ; > local win_ms_mpi = "C:\\Program Files\\Microsoft MPI" ; > 249,251c252,254 < local cluster_pack_path_native = "C:\\Program Files\\Microsoft Compute Cluster Pack" ; < local cluster_pack_path = [ path.make $(cluster_pack_path_native) ] ; < if [ GLOB $(cluster_pack_path_native)\\Include : mpi.h ] --- > # local cluster_pack_path_native = "C:\\Program Files\\Microsoft Compute Cluster Pack" ; > # local cluster_pack_path = [ path.make $(cluster_pack_path_native) ] ; > if [ GLOB $(win_ms_mpi_sdk)\\Include : mpi.h ] 255c258 < ECHO "Found Microsoft Compute Cluster Pack: $(cluster_pack_path_native)" ; --- > ECHO "Found Microsoft Compute Cluster Pack: $(win_ms_mpi_sdk)" ; 260,262c263,265 < options = <include>$(cluster_pack_path)/Include < <address-model>64:<library-path>$(cluster_pack_path)/Lib/amd64 < <library-path>$(cluster_pack_path)/Lib/i386 --- > options = <include>$(win_ms_mpi_sdk)/Include > <address-model>64:<library-path>$(win_ms_mpi_sdk)/Lib/x64 > <library-path>$(win_ms_mpi_sdk)/Lib/x86 268c271 < .mpirun = "\"$(cluster_pack_path_native)\\Bin\\mpiexec.exe"\" ; --- > .mpirun = "\"$(win_ms_mpi)\\Bin\\mpiexec.exe"\" ;
- Configure, build, and install. The python library is not needed; iostreams is skipped unless some additional libraries are installed; graph_parallel fails to build (see this ticket). There are two options for building:
- Option 1: just build what GridPACK requires (header-only libraries are still installed)
.\b2 ^ --prefix=%GridPACKDir% ^ --with-mpi ^ --with-serialization ^ --with-random ^ --with-filesystem ^ --with-system ^ --build-type=complete ^ threading=single ^ address-model=64 ^ link=static runtime-link=shared ^ install
- Option 2: build everything (except python -- I'm not sure what's required for that)
.\b2 ^ --prefix=%GridPACKDir% ^ --without-python ^ --build-type=complete ^ threading=single ^ address-model=64 ^ link=static runtime-link=shared ^ install
Notes:
- 1.58.0 works with VS 2013
- 1.61.0 works with VS 2010, but requires update 5 for VS 2013 (see this ticket)
- Boost decorates the library names with the compiler version, so explicitly specify the compiler and make sure that's the compiler you use for GridPACK. If multiple compilers are available, it is possible to force the boost configuration to pick a specific one by adding an option like -toolchain=msvc-11.0 to \.b2.
- Some references for these instructions:
- A pretty complete set of instructions for building Boost on Windows with MPI
- Some additional details.
- Official Boost build instructions.
- A pertinent Boost ticket.
Algebra Libraries
Ordinarily, several packages used by GridPACK can be built by having PETSc download and build them as part of the PETSc build. Unfortunately, while this works quite well on the Linux OS, it does not work in many cases for Windows. Consequently, these packages must be downloaded and built separately. Note that the builds below all assume that you are calling the cmake command in a separate directory, below the main library directory.
BLAS/LAPACK (CLAPACK)
Some implementation of BLAS/LAPACK is required for PETSc and some other libraries. The implementation described here was chosen because it does not require a Fortran compiler. It is apparently really slow. It will probably be necessary to install Intel compilers and MKL in order to get improvement in speed. The Windows port of CLAPACK is described here.
- Get the source here.
- Configure, build, and install
cmake -Wdev ^ -G "Visual Studio 10 2010 Win64" ^ -D CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX:PATH="%GridPACKDir%" ^ .. cmake --build . --config Release cmake --build . --target install --config Release
Depending on which version of Visual Studio you are using, the argument for -G will change. You can get a listing of options by typing cmake -G
.
SuiteSparse
- For use with PETSc
- Get the source for the Windows port from here.
- Needs BLAS/LAPACK that's consistent with PETSc, so try to just use the one PETSc likes. Note that you can verify that both SuiteSparse and PETSc are using the same BLAS/LAPACK libraries by explicitly specifying them in both the SuiteSparse configuration (via the configuration variables SUITESPARSE_CUSTOM_BLAS_LIB and SUITESPARSE_CUSTOM_LAPACK_LIB) and the PETSc configuration (via the configuration option --with-blas-lapack-lib).
- Edit CMakeLists.txt in the root directory by commenting out the following lines to remove the library suffix:
## get POSTFIX for lib install dir #if(CMAKE_SIZEOF_VOID_P MATCHES "8") # set(LIB_POSTFIX "64" CACHE STRING "suffix for 32/64 inst dir placement") #else() set(LIB_POSTFIX "" CACHE STRING "suffix for 32/64 inst dir placement") #endif() mark_as_advanced(LIB_POSTFIX)
- Configure, build, and install
cmake -Wdev ^ -G "Visual Studio 10 2010 Win64" ^ -D BUILD_METIS:BOOL=NO ^ -D SUITESPARSE_INSTALL_PREFIX:PATH="%GridPACKDir%" ^ -D SUITESPARSE_USE_CUSTOM_BLAS_LAPACK_LIBS:BOOL=ON ^ -D SUITESPARSE_CUSTOM_BLAS_LIB:PATH=%prefix%\lib\blas.lib ^ -D SUITESPARSE_CUSTOM_LAPACK_LIB:PATH=%prefix%\lib\lapack.lib ^ -D CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX:PATH="%GridPACKDir%" ^ .. cmake --build . --config Release cmake --build . --target install --config Release
ParMETIS
- Get the official distribution from here.
- The source distribution needs to modified to
- Have CMake look for MPI in the correct way
- Edit metis.h so that REALTYPEWIDTH is 64.
- Make sure metis.h is installed
- Here is the patch for the CMakeLists.txt file located in the root diretory:
diff -r -u parmetis-4.0.3/CMakeLists.txt parmetis-4.0.3.fixed/CMakeLists.txt --- parmetis-4.0.3/CMakeLists.txt 2013-03-30 09:24:50.000000000 -0700 +++ parmetis-4.0.3.fixed/CMakeLists.txt 2016-06-30 11:32:38.691121400 -0700 @@ -15,6 +15,7 @@ # message(FATAL_ERROR "mpi is not found") # endif() # set(CMAKE_C_FLAGS "${CMAKE_C_FLAGS} ${MPI_COMPILE_FLAGS}") +find_package(MPI REQUIRED)
# Prepare libraries. if(SHARED) @@ -33,6 +34,7 @@ include_directories(${METIS_PATH}/include)
# List of directories that cmake will look for CMakeLists.txt +add_subdirectory(${METIS_PATH}/include) add_subdirectory(${METIS_PATH}/libmetis ${CMAKE_BINARY_DIR}/libmetis) add_subdirectory(include) add_subdirectory(libparmetis) Only in parmetis-4.0.3.fixed/: CMakeLists.txt~ diff -r -u parmetis-4.0.3/metis/include/metis.h parmetis-4.0.3.fixed/metis/include/metis.h --- parmetis-4.0.3/metis/include/metis.h 2013-03-30 09:24:50.000000000 -0700 +++ parmetis-4.0.3.fixed/metis/include/metis.h 2016-06-30 11:08:21.791160800 -0700 @@ -40,7 +40,7 @@ 32 : single precission floating point (float) 64 : double precission floating point (double) --------------------------------------------------------------------------*/ -#define REALTYPEWIDTH 32 +#define REALTYPEWIDTH 64
- Configure and build
cmake ^ -G "Visual Studio 10 2010 Win64" ^ -D BUILD_SHARED_LIBS:BOOL=NO ^ -D METIS_INSTALL:BOOL=YES ^ -D CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX:PATH="C:\GridPACK" ^ .. cmake --build . --config Release cmake --build . --target install --config Release copy ..\metis\include\metis.h %prefix%\include
- Still need to copy metis.h and metis.lib to the installation directory.
PETSc
- These instructions mostly follow these and as well as the instructions for building Suitesparse on Windows with CMake
- PETSc must be built within a Cygwin shell. In this case, Cygwin was installed in C:\cygwin64
- As mentioned above, PETSc refuses to fetch and build many external packages when configured on Windows. They need to be built individually. See instructions above for the following:
- BLAS/LAPACK
- ParMETIS
- SparseSuite
- Start a VS Command Prompt
- Remember to set the Microsoft MPI environment
set msmpi
- Within the VS Command Prompt, start a minimal Cygwin terminal and get it ready
c:\cygwin64\bin\mintty.exe
- Within the Cygwin shell, review the contents of the PATH environment variable. Take out anything that is not directly related to the PETSc build. Then, make sure Cygwin commands are available:
export PATH="/usr/bin:$PATH"
- Configure and build for real values
prefix="/cygdrive/c/GridPACK" ./configure \ PETSC_ARCH=mswin-cxx-real-opt \ --with-cc="win32fe cl" \ --with-clanguage=c++ \ --with-c++-support=1 \ --download-f2cblaslapack=0 \ --with-blas-lapack-lib=[${prefix}/lib/lapack.lib,${prefix}/lib/blas.lib,${prefix}/lib/libf2c.lib] \ --download-superlu_dist=0 \ --download-metis=0 \ --with-metis=1 \ --with-metis-include=${prefix}/include \ --with-metis-lib=[${prefix}/lib/metis.lib] \ --download-parmetis=0 \ --with-parmetis=1 \ --with-parmetis-include=${prefix}/include \ --with-parmetis-lib=[${prefix}/lib/parmetis.lib] \ --download-suitesparse=0 \ --with-suitesparse=1 \ --with-suitesparse-include="${prefix}/include" \ --with-suitesparse-lib=[${prefix}/lib/libumfpack.lib,${prefix}/lib/libamd.lib,${prefix}/lib/libbtf.lib,${prefix}/lib/libcamd.lib,${prefix}/lib/libccolamd.lib,${prefix}/lib/libcolamd.lib,${prefix}/lib/libcholmod.lib,${prefix}/lib/libcxsparse.lib,${prefix}/lib/libklu.lib,${prefix}/lib/libspqr.lib,${prefix}/lib/libldl.lib,${prefix}/lib/suitesparseconfig.lib] \ --with-c-support=0 \ --with-fortran=0 \ --with-fc=0 \ --with-precision=double \ --with-scalar-type=real \ --with-mpi-include=/cygdrive/c/Program\ Files\ \(x86\)/Microsoft\ SDKs/MPI/Include \ --with-mpi-lib=['/cygdrive/c/Program\ Files\ \(x86\)/Microsoft\ SDKs/MPI/Lib/x64/msmpi.lib'] \ --with-mpi-mpiexec=/cygdrive/c/Program\ Files/Microsoft\ MPI/Bin/mpiexec.exe \ --with-debugging=0 \ --with-windows-graphics=0 \ --with-x11=0 \ --CFLAGS='-O2 -MD -wd4996' \ --CXXFLAGS='-O2 -MD -wd4996 -EHsc' make make test
- The -EHsc flag is to enable C++ exceptions. Change --with-scalar-type=real
- Verify installation by building the tests in GridPACK sandbox/petsc-cmake:
set path=%path%;c:\cygwin64\bin set CFLAGS="/D _ITERATOR_DEBUG_LEVEL=0" set CXXFLAGS="/D _ITERATOR_DEBUG_LEVEL=0" cmake -Wdev ^ -D BOOST_ROOT:PATH=C:\GridPACK ^ -D Boost_USE_STATIC_LIBS:BOOL=ON ^ -D BOOST_INCLUDEDIR=C:\GridPACK\include\boost-1_61 ^ -D PETSC_DIR:PATH="C:\GridPACK\src\petsc-3.6.4" ^ -D PETSC_ARCH:STRING='mswin-cxx-complex-opt' ^ -G "Visual Studio 10 2010 Win64" ^ .. cmake --build . --config Release
Global Arrays
- Get the source from the trunk Subversion repository (see the home page):
svn checkout https://svn.pnl.gov/svn/hpctools/trunk/ga ga-svn
- Note that you need to use the CMake build for GA. This has not been officially released but is available from the GA trunk. It is planned for release for GA version 5.6.
- Make a directory in which to build and change to that directory
mkdir ga-svn\build cd ga-svn\build
- Configure, build, and install
set CFLAGS="/D _ITERATOR_DEBUG_LEVEL=0" set CXXFLAGS="/D _ITERATOR_DEBUG_LEVEL=0" cmake -Wdev --debug-trycompile ^ -G "Visual Studio 10 2010 Win64" ^ -D ENABLE_BLAS:BOOL=No ^ -D ENABLE_FORTRAN:BOOL=No ^ -D ENABLE_CXX:BOOL=Yes ^ -D GA_RUNTIME:STRING=MPI_TS ^ -D CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX:PATH="%GridPACKDir%" ^ .. cmake --build . --config Release cmake --build . --config Release --target install
- Check using Global Arrays tests
- Check w/ GridPACK sandbox
cmake -Wdev --debug-trycompile ^ -G "Visual Studio 10 2010 Win64" ^ -D BOOST_ROOT:PATH="%GridPACKDir%" ^ -D Boost_USE_STATIC_LIBS:BOOL=ON ^ -D BOOST_INCLUDEDIR="%GridPACKDir%\include\boost-1_61" ^ -D GA_DIR:PATH="%GridPACKDir\ga-svn" ^ -D BOOST_ROOT:PATH="%GridPACKDir%" ^ ..
GridPACK
- Check out the Windows GridPACK fork
git clone -b windoze https://github.com/wperkins/GridPACK.git gridpack cd gridpack git submodule init git submoudle update
- Make a build directory and change into it
mkdir build cd build
- Configure
set path=%path%;c:\cygwin64\bin set prefix="C:\GridPACK" set CFLAGS="/D _ITERATOR_DEBUG_LEVEL=0" set CXXFLAGS="/D _ITERATOR_DEBUG_LEVEL=0" cmake -Wdev --debug-trycompile ^ -G "Visual Studio 10 2010 Win64" ^ -D USE_PROGRESS_RANKS:BOOL=OFF ^ -D BOOST_ROOT:PATH=C:\GridPACK ^ -D Boost_USE_STATIC_LIBS:BOOL=ON ^ -D Boost_USE_DEBUG_RUNTIME:BOOL=OFF ^ -D BOOST_INCLUDEDIR=C:\GridPACK\include\boost-1_61 ^ -D PETSC_DIR:PATH="C:\GridPACK\src\petsc-3.6.4" ^ -D PETSC_ARCH:STRING='mswin-cxx-complex-opt' ^ -D GA_DIR:PATH='C:\GridPACK\ga-svn' ^ -D GA_TEST_RUNS:BOOL=YES ^ -D PARMETIS_DIR:PATH=C:\GridPACK ^ -D MPIEXEC_MAX_NUMPROCS:STRING="2" ^ -D GRIDPACK_TEST_TIMEOUT:STRING=60 ^ ..
- Note: this is the contents of gridpack/example_configuration.bat
- Build
cmake --build . --config Release
- Install
cmake --build . --config Release --target install