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When you send one MPI message that consist of n elements of some MPI_type in one process and then receive in another with receive count being > n are you guaranteed to always receive all of the n elements?

In essence, if you send one message via blocking-mode MPI_Send and then receive it via one blocking-mode MPI_Recv with big enough receive buffer are you guaranteed to get the whole message?

Or is there a chance that you might get only fist k < n elements and should call MPI_Recv repeatedly until you get the whole thing.

I'm pretty sure the answer is yes but looking at both the official documentation and specification notes I couldn't find a sure answer.

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    You cannot receive a truncated message in MPI May 26, 2019 at 0:14
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    As Gilles says, you never get a truncated message, i.e. if n > count then MPI will report an error and fail. However, if n <= count then the receive will complete but in general you don't know what the value of "n" is (the size of the incoming message). You need to extract this from the status variable via a call to MPI_Get_count(). May 26, 2019 at 15:46

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As Gilles and David said in comments, the answer is yes. As Gilles says, you never get a truncated message. If n > count then MPI will report an error and fail.

If n <= count then the receive will complete but in general you don't know what the value of n is (the size of the incoming message). You need to extract this from the status variable via a call to MPI_Get_count().

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