Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
170 lines (112 loc) · 5.36 KB

INSTALL.rst

File metadata and controls

170 lines (112 loc) · 5.36 KB

Using pip

You can install the latest mpi4py release from its source distribution at PyPI using pip:

$ python -m pip install mpi4py

You can also install the in-development version with:

$ python -m pip install git+https://github.com/mpi4py/mpi4py

or:

$ python -m pip install https://github.com/mpi4py/mpi4py/tarball/master

Note

Installing mpi4py from its source distribution (available at PyPI) or Git source code repository (available at GitHub) requires a C compiler and a working MPI implementation with development headers and libraries.

Warning

pip keeps previously built wheel files on its cache for future reuse. If you want to reinstall the mpi4py package using a different or updated MPI implementation, you have to either first remove the cached wheel file with:

$ python -m pip cache remove mpi4py

or ask pip to disable the cache:

$ python -m pip install --no-cache-dir mpi4py

Using conda

The conda-forge community provides ready-to-use binary packages from an ever growing collection of software libraries built around the multi-platform conda package manager. Four MPI implementations are available on conda-forge: Open MPI (Linux and macOS), MPICH (Linux and macOS), Intel MPI (Linux and Windows) and Microsoft MPI (Windows). You can install mpi4py and your preferred MPI implementation using the conda package manager:

  • to use MPICH do:

    $ conda install -c conda-forge mpi4py mpich
    
  • to use Open MPI do:

    $ conda install -c conda-forge mpi4py openmpi
    
  • to use Intel MPI do:

    $ conda install -c conda-forge mpi4py impi_rt
    
  • to use Microsoft MPI do:

    $ conda install -c conda-forge mpi4py msmpi
    

MPICH and many of its derivatives are ABI-compatible. You can provide the package specification mpich=X.Y.*=external_* (where X and Y are the major and minor version numbers) to request the conda package manager to use system-provided MPICH (or derivative) libraries. Similarly, you can provide the package specification openmpi=X.Y.*=external_* to use system-provided Open MPI libraries.

The openmpi package on conda-forge has built-in CUDA support, but it is disabled by default. To enable it, follow the instruction outlined during conda install. Additionally, UCX support is also available once the ucx package is installed.

Warning

Binary conda-forge packages are built with a focus on compatibility. The MPICH and Open MPI packages are build in a constrained environment with relatively dated OS images. Therefore, they may lack support for high-performance features like cross-memory attach (XPMEM/CMA). In production scenarios, it is recommended to use external (either custom-built or system-provided) MPI installations. See the relevant conda-forge documentation about using external MPI libraries .

Linux

On Fedora Linux systems (as well as RHEL and their derivatives using the EPEL software repository), you can install binary packages with the system package manager:

  • using dnf and the mpich package:

    $ sudo dnf install python3-mpi4py-mpich
    
  • using dnf and the openmpi package:

    $ sudo dnf install python3-mpi4py-openmpi
    

Please remember to load the correct MPI module for your chosen MPI implementation:

  • for the mpich package do:

    $ module load mpi/mpich-$(arch)
    $ python -c "from mpi4py import MPI"
    
  • for the openmpi package do:

    $ module load mpi/openmpi-$(arch)
    $ python -c "from mpi4py import MPI"
    

On Ubuntu Linux and Debian Linux systems, binary packages are available for installation using the system package manager:

$ sudo apt install python3-mpi4py

Note that on Ubuntu/Debian systems, the mpi4py package uses Open MPI. To use MPICH, install the libmpich-dev and python3-dev packages (and any other required development tools). Afterwards, install mpi4py from sources using pip.

macOS

macOS users can install mpi4py using the Homebrew package manager:

$ brew install mpi4py

Note that the Homebrew mpi4py package uses Open MPI. Alternatively, install the mpich package and next install mpi4py from sources using pip.

Windows

Windows users can install mpi4py from binary wheels hosted on the Python Package Index (PyPI) using pip:

$ python -m pip install mpi4py

The Windows wheels available on PyPI are specially crafted to work with either the Intel MPI or the Microsoft MPI runtime, therefore requiring a separate installation of any one of these packages.

Intel MPI is under active development and supports recent version of the MPI standard. Intel MPI can be installed with pip (see the impi-rt package on PyPI), being therefore straightforward to get it up and running within a Python environment. Intel MPI can also be installed system-wide as part of the Intel HPC Toolkit for Windows or via standalone online/offline installers.