hwloc-distances(1) - Linux man page
Name
hwloc-distances - Displays distance matrices
Synopsis
hwloc-distances [options]
Options
-l --logical
- Display hwloc logical indexes (default) instead of physical/OS indexes.
- -p --physical
- Display OS/physical indexes instead of hwloc logical indexes.
- -i <file>, --input <file>
- Read topology from XML file <file> (instead of discovering the topology on the local machine). If <file> is "-", the standard input is used. XML support must have been compiled in to hwloc for this option to be usable.
- -i <directory>, --input <directory>
- Read topology from the chroot specified by <directory> (instead of discovering the topology on the local machine). This option is generally only available on Linux. The chroot was usually created by gathering another machine topology with hwloc-gather-topology.
- -i <specification>, --input <specification>
- Simulate a fake hierarchy (instead of discovering the topology on the local machine). If <specification> is "node:2 pu:3", the topology will contain two NUMA nodes with 3 processing units in each of them. The <specification> string must end with a number of PUs.
- --if <format>, --input-format <format>
- Enforce the input in the given format, among xml, fsroot and synthetic.
- --restrict <cpuset>
- Restrict the topology to the given cpuset.
- -v
Verbose messages.
- --version
- Report version and exit.
Description
hwloc-distances displays also distance matrices attached to the topology. A breadth-first traversal of the topology is performed starting from the root to find all distance matrices.
NOTE: lstopo may also display distance matrices in its verbose textual output. However lstopo only prints matrices that cover the entire topology while hwloc-distances also displays matrices that ignore part of the topology.
Examples
On a quad-socket opteron machine:
$ hwloc-distances Latency matrix between 4 NUMANodes (depth 2) by logical indexes: index 0 1 2 3 0 1.000 1.600 2.200 2.200 1 1.600 1.000 2.200 2.200 2 2.200 2.200 1.000 1.600 3 2.200 2.200 1.600 1.000
Return Value
Upon successful execution, hwloc-distances returns 0.
hwloc-distances will return nonzero if any kind of error occurs, such as (but not limited to) failure to parse the command line.