MPI4py
MPI for Python provides Python bindings for the Message Passing Interface (MPI) standard, allowing Python applications to exploit multiple processors on workstations, clusters and supercomputers.
Available versions[edit]
mpi4py
is available as a module, and not from the wheelhouse as typical Python packages are.
You can find available version with
[name@server ~]$ module spider mpi4py
and look for more information on a specific version with
[name@server ~]$ module spider mpi4py/X.Y.Z
where X.Y.Z
is the exact desired version, for instance 4.0.0
.
Famous first words: Hello World[edit]
1. Run a short interactive job.
[name@server ~]$ salloc --account=<your account> --ntasks=5
2. Load the module.
[name@server ~]$ module load mpi4py/4.0.0 python/3.12
3. Run a Hello World test.
[name@server ~]$ srun python -m mpi4py.bench helloworld
Hello, World! I am process 0 of 5 on node1.
Hello, World! I am process 1 of 5 on node1.
Hello, World! I am process 2 of 5 on node3.
Hello, World! I am process 3 of 5 on node3.
Hello, World! I am process 4 of 5 on node3.
In the case above, two nodes (node1
and node3
) were allocated, and the tasks were distributed across the available resources.
mpi4py as a package dependency[edit]
Often mpi4py
is a dependency of another package. In order to fulfill this dependency :
1. Deactivate any Python virtual environment.
[name@server ~]$ test $VIRTUAL_ENV && deactivate
Note: If you had a virtual environment activated, it is important to deactivate it first, then load the module, before reactivating your virtual environment.
2. Load the module.
[name@server ~]$ module load mpi4py/4.0.0 python/3.12
3. Check that it is visible by pip
[name@server ~]$ pip list | grep mpi4py
mpi4py 4.0.0
and is accessible for your currently loaded python module.
[name@server ~]$ python -c 'import mpi4py'
If no errors are raised, then everything is OK!
4. Create a virtual environment and install your packages.
Running jobs[edit]
You can run mpi jobs distributed across multiple nodes or cores. For efficient MPI scheduling, please see:
CPU[edit]
1. Write your python code, for instance, broadcasting a numpy array.
from mpi4py import MPI
import numpy as np
comm = MPI.COMM_WORLD
rank = comm.Get_rank()
if rank == 0:
data = np.arange(100, dtype='i')
else:
data = np.empty(100, dtype='i')
comm.Bcast(data, root=0)
for i in range(100):
assert data[i] == i
The example above is based on the mpi4py tutorial.
2. Write your submission script.
#!/bin/bash
#SBATCH --account=def-someprof # adjust this to match the accounting group you are using to submit jobs
#SBATCH --time=08:00:00 # adjust this to match the walltime of your job
#SBATCH --ntasks=4 # adjust this to match the number of tasks/processes to run
#SBATCH --mem-per-cpu=4G # adjust this according to the memory you need per process
# Run on cores across the system : https://docs.alliancecan.ca/wiki/Advanced_MPI_scheduling#Few_cores,_any_number_of_nodes
# Load modules dependencies.
module load StdEnv/2023 gcc mpi4py/4.0.0 python/3.12
# create the virtual environment on each allocated node:
srun --ntasks $SLURM_NNODES --tasks-per-node=1 bash << EOF
virtualenv --no-download $SLURM_TMPDIR/env
source $SLURM_TMPDIR/env/bin/activate
pip install --no-index --upgrade pip
pip install --no-index numpy==2.1.1
EOF
# activate only on main node
source $SLURM_TMPDIR/env/bin/activate;
# srun exports the current env, which contains $VIRTUAL_ENV and $PATH variables
srun python mpi4py-np-bc.py;
#!/bin/bash
#SBATCH --account=def-someprof # adjust this to match the accounting group you are using to submit jobs
#SBATCH --time=01:00:00 # adjust this to match the walltime of your job
#SBATCH --nodes=2 # adjust this to match the number of whole node
#SBATCH --ntasks-per-node=40 # adjust this to match the number of tasks/processes to run per node
#SBATCH --mem-per-cpu=1G # adjust this according to the memory you need per process
# Run on N whole nodes : https://docs.alliancecan.ca/wiki/Advanced_MPI_scheduling#Whole_nodes
# Load modules dependencies.
module load StdEnv/2023 gcc openmpi mpi4py/4.0.0 python/3.12
# create the virtual environment on each allocated node:
srun --ntasks $SLURM_NNODES --tasks-per-node=1 bash << EOF
virtualenv --no-download $SLURM_TMPDIR/env
source $SLURM_TMPDIR/env/bin/activate
pip install --no-index --upgrade pip
pip install --no-index numpy==2.1.1
EOF
# activate only on main node
source $SLURM_TMPDIR/env/bin/activate;
# srun exports the current env, which contains $VIRTUAL_ENV and $PATH variables
srun python mpi4py-np-bc.py;
2. Test your script.
Before submitting your job, it is important to test that your submission script will start without errors. You can do a quick test in an interactive job.
3. Submit your job to the scheduler.
[name@server ~]$ sbatch submit-mpi4py-distributed.sh
GPU[edit]
1. From a login node, download the demo example.
[name@server ~]$ wget https://raw.githubusercontent.com/mpi4py/mpi4py/refs/heads/master/demo/cuda-aware-mpi/use_cupy.py
The example above and others, can be found in the demo folder.
2. Write your submission script: {{File |name=submit-mpi4py-gpu.sh |lang="bash" |contents=
- !/bin/bash
- SBATCH --account=def-someprof # adjust this to match the accounting group you are using to submit jobs
- SBATCH --time=08:00:00 # adjust this to match the walltime of your job
- SBATCH --ntasks=2 # adjust this to match the number of tasks/processes to run
- SBATCH --mem-per-cpu=2G # adjust this according to the memory you need per process
- SBATCH --gpus=1
- Load modules dependencies.
module load StdEnv/2023 gcc cuda/12 mpi4py/4.0.0 python/3.11
- create the virtual environment on each allocated node:
virtualenv --no-download $SLURM_TMPDIR/env source $SLURM_TMPDIR/env/bin/activate
pip install --no-index --upgrade pip pip install --no-index cupy numba
srun python use_cupy.py;
2. Test your script.
Before submitting your job, it is important to test that your submission script will start without errors. You can do a quick test in an interactive job.
3. Submit your job to the scheduler.
[name@server ~]$ sbatch submit-mpi4py-gpu.sh
Troubleshooting[edit]
ModuleNotFoundError: No module named 'mpi4py'[edit]
If mpi4py
is not accessible, you may get the following error when importing it:
ModuleNotFoundError: No module named 'mpi4py'
Possible solutions:
- check which Python versions are compatible with your loaded mpi4py module using
module spider mpi4py/X.Y.Z
. Once a compatible Python module is loaded, check thatpython -c 'import mpi4py'
works. - load the module before activating your virtual environment: please see the mpi4py as a package dependency section above.
See also ModuleNotFoundError: No module named 'X'.