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MPI standard 3 was released in 2011 with no C++ bindings ! my question is how to program distributed computing in C++ without MPI (note we need also OpenMP CUDA Openacc) is there an alternative to MPI in C++ (not MPI 2.2, boost MPI)? is MPI built on TCP/IP so i can build my own way using TCP/IP in C++ ?

is there open source binding to MPI 3 for C++ ?

or just you must stick to C GTK+ CUDA OpenMP OpenGL MPI 3

what if you want C++ QT CUDA OpenMP OpenGL + distributed computing API ?

Ubuntu and many Linux distros seeks to replace Xserver with Wayland and MIR both will write special API and layer to create context for OpenGL desktop to replace GLX also GTK+ will has MIR Wayland integeration so on Linux if something changed some people and groups try to fix it try to develop new solution

but MPI 3 C++ binding i don't find a solution to it

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    You know, C APIs can be used perfectly fine from C++... Nov 4, 2014 at 2:56
  • As @Deduplicator has stated, The C API can be used perfectly well. In fact this is what Boost and friends use. Nov 4, 2014 at 2:58
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    The C++ API was dropped from MPI-3 since it offered no real advantage over the C bindings, instead being a simple wrapper layer. MPI users coding in C++ are advised to use Boost.MPI which offers real object-oriented interface and supports things like serialisation of classes so that objects could be sent directly as messages. Nov 4, 2014 at 7:45
  • @Deduplicator Thank you for your comment yes while i was learning C for the first time from an excellent book "C primer plus 6th edition" and from other books like GCC COmplete reference it says you can mix c and c++ you can call c from c++ even you can call Java from C and the opposite so i Guess you can call MPI 3 C code from C++ and use it is that what you mean ? Nov 4, 2014 at 17:45
  • @TimothyBrown so Boost just use C in C++ it bind C MPI 3 into C++ classes in an OOP classes but is BOOST MPI implementation include MPI standard 3 or just 2.2 and 2 and 1 Nov 4, 2014 at 17:46

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The official recommendation is to use the C bindings, for the reasons given in the comments. The only loss of functionality here pertains to exceptions and you won't miss it because no implementation was fault-tolerant in the MPI-2 era anyways.

Boost::MPI is nice but supports very few features (the most popular ones).

Rolling your own C++ wrappers is encouraged. Elemental (libelemental.org) has a nice set that do magic with type inference.

I have some personal interest in developing a new set of C++ bindings but haven't had time to make progress. There's a StackExchange Computational Science post with a detailed discussion to which you might contribute.

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  • You mean writing my own mpi .c code and calling it from inside my c++ code like writing Python app and write the bottleneck code in c and all it from inside Python yeah that's the perfect solution but what about compiling and linking mpi c c++ it requires a lot of experimentation and practice Thank you for your answer Nov 6, 2015 at 8:03
  • No, it's not like Python calling C. C89 is a subset of C++ and the MPI C bindings are C89, so the MPI C bindings are native C++ bindings - they just don't use any C++ features. Using the MPI C bindings from C++ should not require experimentation and practice, at least not more than the usage of MPI independent of host language issues. Apr 5, 2018 at 21:33

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