The SimGrid Community
SimGrid is a free software, written by a community of people. It started as a little software to help ourselves in our own research, and as more people put their input into the pot, it turned into something that we hope to be valuable to many people. So yes. We hope that SimGrid is helping you doing what you want, and that you will join our community of happy simgriders.
Contacting the community
There are several locations where you can connect and discuss about SimGrid. If you have a question, please have a look at the documentation and examples first, but if some remain don’t hesitate to ask the community for help. If you do not have a question, just come to us and say hello! We love earing about how people use SimGrid.
For questions or remarks, drop us an email on the user mailing list (to subscribe, visit the web interface). We prefer you to not use private emails. SimGrid is an open framework, and you never know who have the time and knowledge to answer your question, so please keep messages on the public mailing list.
If you want to chat with the community, join us on Mattermost. Be warned that even if many people are connected to the channel, they may not be staring at their chat windows. So don’t be surprised if you don’t get an answer in the second, and please be patient.
If you prefer, you can reach us on IRC on #simgrid at
irc.debian.org
(the logs are available). When no non-french speaker are connected, we usually chat in french on these channel, but we do switch back to english when we have a guest.Asking your question on StackOverflow is also a good idea, as this site is very well indexed. We answer questions there too (don’t forget to use the SimGrid tag in your question so that we can see it), and they remain usable for the next users.
Giving back to SimGrid
We are sometimes asked by users how to give back to the project. Here are some ideas, but if you have new ones, feel free to share them with us.
Provide fresh-eyes feedback
We are working on the project since years. We take for granted things that are hard to infer at first, and traps we don’t even see anymore. Likewise, it’s hard for us to maintain the documentation uptodate with the current situation, because we don’t rely on the doc when navigating the project. This is why your first impression as a newcomer to the project is utterly precious for us. Please make sure to write a discovery report to enlight us. You can send it either as a bug report, as a mail on the list or simply post it as is to the Mattermost channel.
Spread the word
A simple way to help the SimGrid project is to use SimGrid for your research, and say so. Cite the SimGrid framework in your papers and speak of it with your colleagues to spread the word. The number of publications enabled by SimGrid is really important when asking for further fundings to sustain the project: The more you use the framework, the better for us.
Add a link to the SimGrid homepage on your site to improve our ranking in search engines.
You can also help us constituting an active and welcoming user community. Answer to the question sent to the mailing lists if you can, gently pointing to the relevant part of the documentation on need, and help newscomers becoming part of our community too.
Finally, you can invite us for a talk on SimGrid to events you organize. We have various format, ranging from a focused 20 minute talks to a 45mn dense tutorial, to a 2 hours seminar, or even to multi-days events. Note that even if most of these examples are from the same individual, several people in the team can present the project. It’s just that I wrote this paragraph so took the examples I knew, from my own experience :)
Report (and fix) issues
Because of its size and complexity, SimGrid far from perfect and contains a large amount of glitches and issues. When you find one, don’t assume that it’s here because we don’t care. It survived only because nobody told us. We unfortunately cannot endlessly review our large code and documentation base. So please, report any issue you find, be it a typo in the documentation, a paragraph that needs to be reworded, a bug in the code, or any other problem. The best way to do so is to open an issue on our Bug Tracker so that we don’t forget about it.
The worst way to report such issues is to go through private emails. These are unreliable, and we are trying to develop SimGrid openly, so private discussions are to be avoided if possible.
If you can provide a patch fixing the issue you report, that’s even better. If you cannot, then you need to give us a minimal working example (MWE), that is a ready to use solution that reproduces the problem you face. Your bug will take much more time for us to reproduce and fix if you don’t give us the MWE, so you want to help us helping you to get things efficient.
Of course, a very good way to give back to the SimGrid community is to triage and fix the bugs in the Bug Tracking Systems. If the bug report has no MWE, we’d love you to contribute one. If you can come up with a patch, we will be more than happy to apply your changes so that the whole community enjoys them.
Extending SimGrid and its Ecosystem
Contributing Code
If you deeply miss a feature in the framework, you should consider implementing it yourself. SimGrid is free software, meaning that you are free to help yourself. Of course, we’ll do our best to assist you in this task, so don’t hesitate to contact us with your idea.
You could write a new plugin extending SimGrid in some way, or a routing model for another kind of network. But even if you write your own platform file, this is probably interesting to other users too, and could be included to SimGrid. Modeling accurately a given platform is a difficult work, which outcome is very precious to us.
Or maybe you developed an independent tool on top of SimGrid. We’d love helping you gaining visibility by listing it in our Contrib.
Possible Enhancements
If you want to start working on the SimGrid codebase, here are a few ideas of things that could be done to improve the current code (not all of them are difficult, do trust yourself ;)
Time and duration
We should avoir using “-1” to mean “forever” at least in S4U and in the internal code. We should probably always use separate functions (wait vs wait_for).
Futures and Promises
Some features are missing in the Maestro future implementation (simgrid::kernel::Future, simgrid::kernel::Promise) could be extended to support additional features: when_any, shared_future, etc.
The corresponding feature might then be implemented in the user process futures (simgrid::simix::Future).
Currently .then() is not available for user futures. We would need to add a basic user event loop in order to queue the pending continuations.
We might need to provide an option to cancel a pending operation. This might be achieved by defining some Action or Operation class with an API compatible with Future (and convertible to it) but with an additional .cancel() method.
MC: Overhaul the state comparison code
The state comparison code is quite complicated. It has very long functions and is programmed mostly using C idioms and is difficult to understand and debug. It is in need of an overhaul:
cleanup, refactoring, usage of C++ features.
The state comparison code works by inferring types of blocks allocated on the heap by following pointers from known roots (global variables, local variables). Usually the first type found for a given block is used even if a better one could be found later. By using a first pass of type inference, on each snapshot before comparing the states, we might use a better type information on the different blocks.
We might benefit from adding logic for handling some known types. For example, both std::string and std::vector have a capacity which might be larger than the current size of the container. We should ignore the corresponding elements when comparing the states and inferring the types.
Another difficulty in the state comparison code is the detection of dangling pointers. We cannot easily know if a pointer is dangling and dangling pointers might lead us to choose the wrong type when inferring heap blocks. We might mitigate this problem by delaying the reallocation of a freed block until there is no blocks pointing to it anymore using some sort of basic garbage-collector.
MC: Hashing the states
In order to speed up the state comparison an idea was to create a hash of the state. Only states with the same hash would need to be compared using the state comparison algorithm. Some information should not be included in the hash in order to avoid considering different states which would otherwise would have been considered equal.
The states could be indexed by their hash. Currently they are indexed by the number of processes and the amount of heap currently allocated (see DerefAndCompareByNbProcessesAndUsedHeap).
Good candidate information for the state hashing:
number of processes;
their backtraces (instruction addresses);
their current simcall numbers;
some simcall arguments (eg. number of elements in a waitany);
number of pending communications;
etc.
Some basic infrastructure for this is already in the code (see mc_hash.cpp) but it is currently disabled.
Interface with the model-checked processes
The model checker reads many information about the model-checked process by process_vm_readv()-ing brutally the data structure of the model-checked process leading to some inefficient code such as maintaining copies of complex C++ structures in XBT dynars. We need a sane way to expose the relevant information to the model checker.
Generic simcalls
We have introduced some generic simcalls which can be used to execute a callback in a SimGrid Maestro context. It makes it a lot easier to interface the simulated process with the maestro. However, the callbacks for the model checker which cannot decide how it should handle them. We would need a solution for this if we want to be able to replace the simcalls the model checker cares about by generic simcalls.
Defining an API for writing Model-Checking algorithms
Currently, writing a new model-checking algorithms in SimGridMC is quite difficult: the logic of the model-checking algorithm is mixed with a lot of low-level concerns about the way the model checker is implemented. This makes it difficult to write new algorithms and difficult to understand, debug, and modify the existing ones. We need a clean API to express the model-checking algorithms in a form which is closer to the text-book/paper description. This API must be exposed in a language which is more adequate to this task.
Tasks:
Design and implement a clean API to express model-checking algorithms. A Session class currently exists for this but is not feature complete and should probably be rewritten. It should be easy to create bindings for different languages on top of this API.
Create a binding to some better suited, dynamic, scripting language (e.g., Lua).
Rewrite the existing model-checking algorithms in this language using the new API.