Detailed Description
Be sure to see the figure in Terms and Definitions that shows a complete topology tree, including depths, child/sibling/cousin relationships, and an example of an asymmetric topology where one socket has fewer caches than its peers.
Enumeration Type Documentation
- Enumerator:
| HWLOC_TYPE_DEPTH_UNKNOWN |
No object of given type exists in the topology.
|
| HWLOC_TYPE_DEPTH_MULTIPLE |
Objects of given type exist at different depth in the topology.
|
Function Documentation
Returns the type of objects at depth depth.
- Returns:
- -1 if depth
depth does not exist.
| unsigned hwloc_get_nbobjs_by_depth |
( |
hwloc_topology_t |
topology, |
|
|
unsigned |
depth |
|
) |
| |
Returns the width of level at depth depth.
Returns the width of level type type.
If no object for that type exists, 0 is returned. If there are several levels with objects of that type, -1 is returned.
Returns the depth of objects of type type.
If no object of this type is present on the underlying architecture, or if the OS doesn't provide this kind of information, the function returns HWLOC_TYPE_DEPTH_UNKNOWN.
If type is absent but a similar type is acceptable, see also hwloc_get_type_or_below_depth() and hwloc_get_type_or_above_depth().
If some objects of the given type exist in different levels, for instance L1 and L2 caches, the function returns HWLOC_TYPE_DEPTH_MULTIPLE.
Get the depth of the hierarchical tree of objects.
This is the depth of HWLOC_OBJ_PU objects plus one.
Does the topology context come from this system?
- Returns:
- 1 if this topology context was built using the system running this program.
-
0 instead (for instance if using another file-system root, a XML topology file, or a synthetic topology).