wiki:AppPlanSpec

Version 24 (modified by davea, 10 years ago) (diff)

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Specifying plan classes in XML

You can specify plan classes using an XML configuration file with the format

<plan_classes>
   <plan_class>
      ... specification of a plan class
   </plan_class>
   ... more plan class specifications
</plan_classes>

Name this file plan_class_spec.xml and put it in your project directory. This will replace the built in plan classes!

Examples

An example configuration file is here. This file specifies the predefined plan classes.

Specification format

The specification of a plan class has the following format. All elements except <name> are optional. In version numbers, M is major, m is minor, R is release.

<name>X</name>
the name of the plan class
<max_core_client_version>MMmmrr</max_core_client_version>
send only to BOINC clients of less than or equal version number.
<min_core_client_version>MMmmrr</min_core_client_version>
send only to BOINC clients of greater than or equal version number.
<projected_flops_scale>x</projected_flops_scale>
multiply projected FLOPS by this factor. Use this to favor one class over another. For example, if you have both SSE and non-SSE versions, use 1.1 and 1.0 respectively.
<os_regex>regex</os_regex>
use only hosts whose operating system version matches the given regular expression
<min_os_version>x</min_os_version>
use only hosts which provide this minimal numerical OS version. Numerical OS version is defined only for Microsoft Windows and Darwin (Apple Mac OSX) and parsed from the numerical information provided by the client in the os_version string. Examples: 1) plan class requires OSX "Lion" 10.7.0, client reports Darwin "11.00.00", numerical os version is 110000. 2) plan class requires Windows 7 SP1, client reports "(Microsoft Windows 7 ..., Service Pack 1, (06.01.7601.00))", numerical os version is 601760100.
<max_os_version>x</max_os_version>
max numerical OS version (see above)
<cpu_feature>x</cpu_feature>
a required CPU feature (such as sse3). You can include more than one.
<host_summary_regex>regex</host_summary_regex>
only sends the app version to hosts with host.serialnum field that matches the given regular expression.

The following lets you use a project preference to decide whether to use the app version:

<project_prefs_tag>x</project_prefs_tag>
the name of the tag
<project_prefs_regex>x</project_prefs_regex>
the contents must match this regular expression
<project_prefs_default_true/>
treat the absence of the project_prefs_tag (i.e. the user didn't set it yet) as if the project_prefs_regex matched.

Fields for multicore apps

<min_ncpus>x</min_ncpus>
run only on hosts with at least X usable CPUs.
<max_threads>x</max_threads>
use at most this many CPUs

Fields for GPU apps

Required:

<gpu_type>X</gpu_type>
the GPU type (generally nvidia, amd, or intel)

Optional:

<cpu_frac>x</cpu_frac>
the fraction of total FLOPs that are done by the CPU. This is used to calculate CPU usage and estimated FLOPS. Default 0.1.
<min_gpu_ram_mb>x</min_gpu_ram_mb>
The minimum amount of GPU RAM. This is needed because older clients report total RAM but not available RAM.
<gpu_ram_used_mb>x</gpu_ram_used_mb>
require this much available GPU RAM
<gpu_peak_flops_scale>x</gpu_peak_flops_scale>
scale GPU peak speed by this (default 1).
<ngpus>x</ngpus>
how many GPUs will be used (possibly fractional); default 1.
<min_driver_version>x</min_driver_version>
minimum display driver version. AMD driver versions are represented as MMmmRRRR. NVIDIA driver versions are represented as MMMmm.
<max_driver_version>x</max_driver_version>
maximum display driver version
<cuda/>
CUDA application (NVIDIA)
<cal/>
CAL application (AMD)
<gpu_utilization_tag>x</gpu_utilization_tag>
you can use a project-specific preferences to let users scale the # of GPUs used. This is the tag name.
<without_opencl>0|1</without_opencl>
send this version only to hosts without OpenCL capability

Fields for AMD/ATI GPU apps

<need_ati_libs/>
Require libraries named "ati", not "amd".
<need_amd_libs/>
Require libraries named "amd". You can verify which DLLs your application is linked against using Dependency Walker against your application. If your executable contains DLL names prefixed with 'ati', use this option. These flags are usually not needed for OpenCL apps.
<min_cal_target>N</min_cal_target>
<max_cal_target>N</max_cal_target>
Min and max CAL targets:
typedef enum CALtargetEnum {
    CAL_TARGET_600,                /**< R600 GPU ISA */     
    CAL_TARGET_610,                /**< RV610 GPU ISA */    
    CAL_TARGET_630,                /**< RV630 GPU ISA */
    CAL_TARGET_670,                /**< RV670 GPU ISA */
    CAL_TARGET_7XX,                /**< R700 class GPU ISA */
    CAL_TARGET_770,                /**< RV770 GPU ISA */
    CAL_TARGET_710,                /**< RV710 GPU ISA */
    CAL_TARGET_730,                /**< RV730 GPU ISA */
    CAL_TARGET_CYPRESS,            /**< CYPRESS GPU ISA */
    CAL_TARGET_JUNIPER,            /**< JUNIPER GPU ISA */
    CAL_TARGET_REDWOOD,            /**< REDWOOD GPU ISA */
    CAL_TARGET_CEDAR,               /**< CEDAR GPU ISA */
    CAL_TARGET_RESERVED0,
    CAL_TARGET_RESERVED1,           
    CAL_TARGET_WRESTLER,            /**< WRESTLER GPU ISA */
    CAL_TARGET_CAYMAN,              /**< CAYMAN GPU ISA */
    CAL_TARGET_KAUAI,           /** added by me **/
    CAL_TARGET_BARTS,               /**< BARTS GPU ISA */
    CAL_TARGET_TURKS,          /** added by me **/
    CAL_TARGET_CAICOS   /** added by me **/
} CALtarget;

Fields for NVIDIA GPU apps

<min_nvidia_compcap>MMmm</min_nvidia_compcap>
minimum compute capability
<max_nvidia_compcap>MMmm</max_nvidia_compcap>
maximum compute capability

Fields for CUDA apps

<min_cuda_version>MMmmm</min_cuda_version>
minimum CUDA version
<max_cuda_version>MMmmm</max_cuda_version>
maximum CUDA version

Fields for OpenCL apps (CPU or GPU)

<opencl/>
include this for OpenCL applications
<min_opencl_version>MMmm</min_opencl_version>
minimum OpenCL version
<max_opencl_version>MMmm</max_opencl_version>
maximum OpenCL version
<double_precision_fp>
reject plan class if the device doesn't support double precision floating point math

Fields for OpenCL apps for AMD

<min_opencl_driver_revision>MMmmrr</min_opencl_driver_revision>
minimum OpenCL driver revision
<max_opencl_driver_revision>MMmmrr</max_opencl_driver_revision>
maximum OpenCL driver revision

Fields for VirtualBox apps

<virtualbox/>
VirtualBox application; send only to hosts with VirtualBox installed
<min_vbox_version>MMmmrr</min_vbox_version>
minimum VirtualBox version
<max_vbox_version>MMmmrr</max_vbox_version>
maximum VirtualBox version
<exclude_vbox_version>MMmmrr</exclude_vbox_version>
exclude a particular VirtualBox version (can have > 1 of these)
<is64bit/>
64-bit application.
<vm_accel_required/>
send only to hosts with enabled VM hardware acceleration.

Note: VirtualBox apps can be multicore (set <min_ncpus> and <max_threads>). However, when sent to hosts without enabled VM hardware acceleration, they'll be run single-core.

Fields for non-compute-intensive apps

<avg_ncpus>x</avg_ncpus>
average # CPUs used. Use for non-compute-intensive apps; for others it's calculated for you.