Skip to content

Pytest plugin that lets you run tests in parallel with MPI.

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

firedrakeproject/pytest-mpi

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

12 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

pytest-mpi

Pytest plugin that lets you run tests in parallel with MPI.

Installation

To install pytest-mpi simply run:

$ python -m pip install /path/to/pytest-mpi-repo

Usage

Writing a parallel test simply requires marking the test with the parallel marker:

@pytest.mark.parallel(nprocs=5)  # run in parallel with 5 processes
def test_my_code_on_5_procs():
    ...

@pytest.mark.parallel(5)  # the "nprocs" kwarg is optional
def test_my_code_on_5_procs_again():
    ...

@pytest.mark.parallel  # run in parallel with the default number of processes (3)
def test_my_code_on_3_procs():
    ...

@pytest.mark.parallel()  # the brackets are optional
def test_my_code_on_3_procs_again():
    ...

One can also mark a test with a sequence of values for nprocs:

@pytest.mark.parallel(nprocs=[1, 2, 3])  # run in parallel on 1, 2 and 3 processes
def test_my_code_on_variable_nprocs():
    ...

@pytest.mark.parallel([1, 2, 3])  # again the "nprocs" kwarg is optional
def test_my_code_on_variable_nprocs_again():
    ...

If multiple numbers of processes are requested then the tests are parametrised and renamed to, in this case, test_my_code_on_variable_nprocs[nprocs=1], test_my_code_on_variable_nprocs[nprocs=2] and test_my_code_on_variable_nprocs[nprocs=3].

Extra markers

When running the code with these parallel markers, pytest-mpi adds extra markers to each test to allow one to select all tests with a particular number of processors. For example, to select all parallel tests on 3 processors, one should run

$ pytest -m "parallel[3]"

For serial tests - those either unmarked or marked @pytest.mark.parallel(1) - one can select these by running

$ pytest -m "not parallel or parallel[1]"

Forking mode

pytest-mpi can be run in one of two modes: forking or non-forking. The former works as follows:

  1. The user calls pytest (not mpiexec -n <# proc> pytest!). This launches the "parent" pytest process.
  2. This parent pytest process collects all the tests and begins to run them.
  3. When a test is found with the parallel marker, rather than executing the function as before, a subprocess is forked calling mpiexec -np <# proc> pytest this_specific_test_file.py::this_specific_test. This produces <# proc> "child" pytest processes that execute the test together.
  4. If this terminates successfully then the test is considered to have passed.

This is convenient for development for a number of reasons:

  • The plugin composes better with other pytest plugins like pytest-xdist.
  • It is not necessary to wrap pytest invocations with mpiexec calls, and all parallel and serial tests can be run at once.

However, the forking mode of pytest-mpi is restricted in that only one mainstream MPI distribution (MPICH) supports nested calls to MPI_Init. If your "parent" pytest process initialises MPI (for instance by executing from petsc4py import PETSc) then this will cause non-MPICH MPI distributions to crash. Further, forking a subprocess can be expensive since a completely fresh Python interpreter is launched each time.

Non-forking mode

With these significant limitations in mind, pytest-mpi therefore also supports a non-forking mode. To use it, one simply needs to wrap the pytest invocation with mpiexec, no additional configuration is necessary. For example, to run all of the parallel tests on 2 ranks one needs to execute:

$ mpiexec -n 2 pytest -m "parallel[2]"

This approach is agnostic to MPI distribution, and free from the forking startup overhead, but has a number of disadvantages:

  • pytest-xdist is strictly disallowed as threading would lead to deadlocks. It is therefore impossible to take full advantage of machines with many cores.
  • A different mpiexec instruction is required for each level of parallelism. Attempting to run with mpiexec with a mismatching number of processes to the parallel marker will result in an error.

Configuration

pytest-mpi respects the environment variable PYTEST_MPI_MAX_NPROCS, which defines the maximum number of processes that can be requested by a parallel marker. If this value is exceeded an error will be raised.

About

Pytest plugin that lets you run tests in parallel with MPI.

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published

Contributors 3

  •  
  •  
  •  

Languages