srun - Online in the Cloud

This is the command srun that can be run in the OnWorks free hosting provider using one of our multiple free online workstations such as Ubuntu Online, Fedora Online, Windows online emulator or MAC OS online emulator

PROGRAM:

NAME


srun - Run parallel jobs

SYNOPSIS


srun [OPTIONS...] executable [args...]

DESCRIPTION


Run a parallel job on cluster managed by Slurm. If necessary, srun will first create a
resource allocation in which to run the parallel job.

The following document describes the the influence of various options on the allocation of
cpus to jobs and tasks.
http://slurm.schedmd.com/cpu_management.html

OPTIONS


--accel-bind=<options>
Control how tasks are bound to generic resources of type gpu, mic and nic.
Multiple options may be specified. Supported options are as include:

g Bind each task to GPUs which are closest to the allocated CPUs.

m Bind each task to MICs which are closest to the allocated CPUs.

n Bind each task to NICs which are closest to the allocated CPUs.

v Verbose mode. Log how tasks are bound to GPU and NIC devices.

-A, --account=<account>
Charge resources used by this job to specified account. The account is an
arbitrary string. The account name may be changed after job submission using the
scontrol command.

--acctg-freq
Define the job accounting and profiling sampling intervals. This can be used to
override the JobAcctGatherFrequency parameter in Slurm's configuration file,
slurm.conf. The supported format is follows:

--acctg-freq=<datatype>=<interval>
where <datatype>=<interval> specifies the task sampling interval for
the jobacct_gather plugin or a sampling interval for a profiling type
by the acct_gather_profile plugin. Multiple, comma-separated
<datatype>=<interval> intervals may be specified. Supported datatypes
are as follows:

task=<interval>
where <interval> is the task sampling interval in seconds for
the jobacct_gather plugins and for task profiling by the
acct_gather_profile plugin. NOTE: This frequency is used to
monitor memory usage. If memory limits are enforced the highest
frequency a user can request is what is configured in the
slurm.conf file. They can not turn it off (=0) either.

energy=<interval>
where <interval> is the sampling interval in seconds for energy
profiling using the acct_gather_energy plugin

network=<interval>
where <interval> is the sampling interval in seconds for
infiniband profiling using the acct_gather_infiniband plugin.

filesystem=<interval>
where <interval> is the sampling interval in seconds for
filesystem profiling using the acct_gather_filesystem plugin.

The default value for the task sampling interval
is 30. The default value for all other intervals is 0. An interval of 0 disables
sampling of the specified type. If the task sampling interval is 0, accounting
information is collected only at job termination (reducing Slurm interference with
the job).
Smaller (non-zero) values have a greater impact upon job performance, but a value
of 30 seconds is not likely to be noticeable for applications having less than
10,000 tasks.

-B --extra-node-info=<sockets[:cores[:threads]]>
Request a specific allocation of resources with details as to the number and type
of computational resources within a cluster: number of sockets (or physical
processors) per node, cores per socket, and threads per core. The total amount of
resources being requested is the product of all of the terms. Each value specified
is considered a minimum. An asterisk (*) can be used as a placeholder indicating
that all available resources of that type are to be utilized. As with nodes, the
individual levels can also be specified in separate options if desired:
--sockets-per-node=<sockets>
--cores-per-socket=<cores>
--threads-per-core=<threads>
If task/affinity plugin is enabled, then specifying an allocation in this manner
also sets a default --cpu_bind option of threads if the -B option specifies a
thread count, otherwise an option of cores if a core count is specified, otherwise
an option of sockets. If SelectType is configured to select/cons_res, it must have
a parameter of CR_Core, CR_Core_Memory, CR_Socket, or CR_Socket_Memory for this
option to be honored. This option is not supported on BlueGene systems
(select/bluegene plugin is configured). If not specified, the scontrol show job
will display 'ReqS:C:T=*:*:*'.

--bb=<spec>
Burst buffer specification. The form of the specification is system dependent.
Also see --bbf.

--bbf=<file_name>
Path of file containing burst buffer specification. The form of the specification
is system dependent. Also see --bb.

--bcast[=<dest_path>]
Copy executable file to allocated compute nodes. If a file name is specified, copy
the executable to the specified destination file path. If no path is specified,
copy the file to a file named "slurm_bcast_<job_id>.<step_id>" in the current
working. For example, "srun --bcast=/tmp/mine -N3 a.out" will copy the file
"a.out" from your current directory to the file "/tmp/mine" on each of the three
allocated compute nodes and execute that file.

--begin=<time>
Defer initiation of this job until the specified time. It accepts times of the
form HH:MM:SS to run a job at a specific time of day (seconds are optional). (If
that time is already past, the next day is assumed.) You may also specify
midnight, noon, fika (3 PM) or teatime (4 PM) and you can have a time-of-day
suffixed with AM or PM for running in the morning or the evening. You can also say
what day the job will be run, by specifying a date of the form MMDDYY or MM/DD/YY
YYYY-MM-DD. Combine date and time using the following format
YYYY-MM-DD[THH:MM[:SS]]. You can also give times like now + count time-units, where
the time-units can be seconds (default), minutes, hours, days, or weeks and you can
tell Slurm to run the job today with the keyword today and to run the job tomorrow
with the keyword tomorrow. The value may be changed after job submission using the
scontrol command. For example:
--begin=16:00
--begin=now+1hour
--begin=now+60 (seconds by default)
--begin=2010-01-20T12:34:00

Notes on date/time specifications:
- Although the 'seconds' field of the HH:MM:SS time specification is allowed by
the code, note that the poll time of the Slurm scheduler is not precise enough to
guarantee dispatch of the job on the exact second. The job will be eligible to
start on the next poll following the specified time. The exact poll interval
depends on the Slurm scheduler (e.g., 60 seconds with the default sched/builtin).
- If no time (HH:MM:SS) is specified, the default is (00:00:00).
- If a date is specified without a year (e.g., MM/DD) then the current year is
assumed, unless the combination of MM/DD and HH:MM:SS has already passed for that
year, in which case the next year is used.

--checkpoint=<time>
Specifies the interval between creating checkpoints of the job step. By default,
the job step will have no checkpoints created. Acceptable time formats include
"minutes", "minutes:seconds", "hours:minutes:seconds", "days-hours",
"days-hours:minutes" and "days-hours:minutes:seconds".

--checkpoint-dir=<directory>
Specifies the directory into which the job or job step's checkpoint should be
written (used by the checkpoint/blcr and checkpoint/xlch plugins only). The
default value is the current working directory. Checkpoint files will be of the
form "<job_id>.ckpt" for jobs and "<job_id>.<step_id>.ckpt" for job steps.

--comment=<string>
An arbitrary comment.

-C, --constraint=<list>
Nodes can have features assigned to them by the Slurm administrator. Users can
specify which of these features are required by their job using the constraint
option. Only nodes having features matching the job constraints will be used to
satisfy the request. Multiple constraints may be specified with AND, OR, matching
OR, resource counts, etc. Supported constraint options include:

Single Name
Only nodes which have the specified feature will be used. For example,
--constraint="intel"

Node Count
A request can specify the number of nodes needed with some feature by
appending an asterisk and count after the feature name. For example
"--nodes=16 --constraint=graphics*4 ..." indicates that the job requires 16
nodes and that at least four of those nodes must have the feature
"graphics."

AND If only nodes with all of specified features will be used. The ampersand is
used for an AND operator. For example, --constraint="intel&gpu"

OR If only nodes with at least one of specified features will be used. The
vertical bar is used for an OR operator. For example,
--constraint="intel|amd"

Matching OR
If only one of a set of possible options should be used for all allocated
nodes, then use the OR operator and enclose the options within square
brackets. For example: "--constraint=[rack1|rack2|rack3|rack4]" might be
used to specify that all nodes must be allocated on a single rack of the
cluster, but any of those four racks can be used.

Multiple Counts
Specific counts of multiple resources may be specified by using the AND
operator and enclosing the options within square brackets. For example:
"--constraint=[rack1*2&rack2*4]" might be used to specify that two nodes
must be allocated from nodes with the feature of "rack1" and four nodes must
be allocated from nodes with the feature "rack2".

WARNING: When srun is executed from within salloc or sbatch,
the constraint value can only contain a single feature name. None of the other
operators are currently supported for job steps.

--contiguous
If set, then the allocated nodes must form a contiguous set. Not honored with the
topology/tree or topology/3d_torus plugins, both of which can modify the node
ordering. Not honored for a job step's allocation.

--cores-per-socket=<cores>
Restrict node selection to nodes with at least the specified number of cores per
socket. See additional information under -B option above when task/affinity plugin
is enabled.

--cpu_bind=[{quiet,verbose},]type
Bind tasks to CPUs. Used only when the task/affinity or task/cgroup plugin is
enabled. The configuration parameter TaskPluginParam may override these options.
For example, if TaskPluginParam is configured to bind to cores, your job will not
be able to bind tasks to sockets. NOTE: To have Slurm always report on the
selected CPU binding for all commands executed in a shell, you can enable verbose
mode by setting the SLURM_CPU_BIND environment variable value to "verbose".

The following informational environment variables are set when --cpu_bind is in
use:
SLURM_CPU_BIND_VERBOSE
SLURM_CPU_BIND_TYPE
SLURM_CPU_BIND_LIST

See the ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES section for a more detailed description of the
individual SLURM_CPU_BIND variables. These variable are available only if the
task/affinity plugin is configured.

When using --cpus-per-task to run multithreaded tasks, be aware that CPU binding is
inherited from the parent of the process. This means that the multithreaded task
should either specify or clear the CPU binding itself to avoid having all threads
of the multithreaded task use the same mask/CPU as the parent. Alternatively, fat
masks (masks which specify more than one allowed CPU) could be used for the tasks
in order to provide multiple CPUs for the multithreaded tasks.

By default, a job step has access to every CPU allocated to the job. To ensure
that distinct CPUs are allocated to each job step, use the --exclusive option.

Note that a job step can be allocated different numbers of CPUs on each node or be
allocated CPUs not starting at location zero. Therefore one of the options which
automatically generate the task binding is recommended. Explicitly specified masks
or bindings are only honored when the job step has been allocated every available
CPU on the node.

Binding a task to a NUMA locality domain means to bind the task to the set of CPUs
that belong to the NUMA locality domain or "NUMA node". If NUMA locality domain
options are used on systems with no NUMA support, then each socket is considered a
locality domain.

Auto Binding
Applies only when task/affinity is enabled. If the job step allocation
includes an allocation with a number of sockets, cores, or threads equal to
the number of tasks times cpus-per-task, then the tasks will by default be
bound to the appropriate resources (auto binding). Disable this mode of
operation by explicitly setting "--cpu_bind=none". Use
TaskPluginParam=autobind=[threads|cores|sockets] to set a default cpu
binding in case "auto binding" doesn't find a match.

Supported options include:

q[uiet]
Quietly bind before task runs (default)

v[erbose]
Verbosely report binding before task runs

no[ne] Do not bind tasks to CPUs (default unless auto binding is applied)

rank Automatically bind by task rank. The lowest numbered task on each
node is bound to socket (or core or thread) zero, etc. Not supported
unless the entire node is allocated to the job.

map_cpu:<list>
Bind by mapping CPU IDs to tasks as specified where <list> is
<cpuid1>,<cpuid2>,...<cpuidN>. The mapping is specified for a node
and identical mapping is applied to the tasks on every node (i.e. the
lowest task ID on each node is mapped to the first CPU ID specified
in the list, etc.). CPU IDs are interpreted as decimal values unless
they are preceded with '0x' in which case they are interpreted as
hexadecimal values. Not supported unless the entire node is
allocated to the job.

mask_cpu:<list>
Bind by setting CPU masks on tasks as specified where <list> is
<mask1>,<mask2>,...<maskN>. The mapping is specified for a node and
identical mapping is applied to the tasks on every node (i.e. the
lowest task ID on each node is mapped to the first mask specified in
the list, etc.). CPU masks are always interpreted as hexadecimal
values but can be preceded with an optional '0x'. Not supported
unless the entire node is allocated to the job.

rank_ldom
Bind to a NUMA locality domain by rank. Not supported unless the
entire node is allocated to the job.

map_ldom:<list>
Bind by mapping NUMA locality domain IDs to tasks as specified where
<list> is <ldom1>,<ldom2>,...<ldomN>. The locality domain IDs are
interpreted as decimal values unless they are preceded with '0x' in
which case they are interpreted as hexadecimal values. Not supported
unless the entire node is allocated to the job.

mask_ldom:<list>
Bind by setting NUMA locality domain masks on tasks as specified
where <list> is <mask1>,<mask2>,...<maskN>. NUMA locality domain
masks are always interpreted as hexadecimal values but can be
preceded with an optional '0x'. Not supported unless the entire node
is allocated to the job.

sockets
Automatically generate masks binding tasks to sockets. Only the CPUs
on the socket which have been allocated to the job will be used. If
the number of tasks differs from the number of allocated sockets this
can result in sub-optimal binding.

cores Automatically generate masks binding tasks to cores. If the number
of tasks differs from the number of allocated cores this can result
in sub-optimal binding.

threads
Automatically generate masks binding tasks to threads. If the number
of tasks differs from the number of allocated threads this can result
in sub-optimal binding.

ldoms Automatically generate masks binding tasks to NUMA locality domains.
If the number of tasks differs from the number of allocated locality
domains this can result in sub-optimal binding.

boards Automatically generate masks binding tasks to boards. If the number
of tasks differs from the number of allocated boards this can result
in sub-optimal binding. This option is supported by the task/cgroup
plugin only.

help Show help message for cpu_bind

--cpu-freq =<p1[-p2[:p3]]>

Request that the job step initiated by this srun command be run at some requested
frequency if possible, on the CPUs selected for the step on the compute node(s).

p1 can be [#### | low | medium | high | highm1] which will set the frequency
scaling_speed to the corresponding value, and set the frequency scaling_governor to
UserSpace. See below for definition of the values.

p1 can be [Conservative | OnDemand | Performance | PowerSave] which will set the
scaling_governor to the corresponding value. The governor has to be in the list set
by the slurm.conf option CpuFreqGovernors.

When p2 is present, p1 will be the minimum scaling frequency and p2 will be the
maximum scaling frequency.

p2 can be [#### | medium | high | highm1] p2 must be greater than p1.

p3 can be [Conservative | OnDemand | Performance | PowerSave | UserSpace] which
will set the governor to the corresponding value.

If p3 is UserSpace, the frequency scaling_speed will be set by a power or energy
aware scheduling strategy to a value between p1 and p2 that lets the job run within
the site's power goal. The job may be delayed if p1 is higher than a frequency that
allows the job to run withing the goal.

If the current frequency is < min, it will be set to min. Likewise, if the current
frequency is > max, it will be set to max.

Acceptable values at present include:

#### frequency in kilohertz

Low the lowest available frequency

High the highest available frequency

HighM1 (high minus one) will select the next highest available frequency

Medium attempts to set a frequency in the middle of the available range

Conservative attempts to use the Conservative CPU governor

OnDemand attempts to use the OnDemand CPU governor (the default value)

Performance attempts to use the Performance CPU governor

PowerSave attempts to use the PowerSave CPU governor

UserSpace attempts to use the UserSpace CPU governor

The following informational environment variable is set in the job
step when --cpu-freq option is requested.
SLURM_CPU_FREQ_REQ

This environment variable can also be used to supply the value for the CPU
frequency request if it is set when the 'srun' command is issued. The --cpu-freq
on the command line will override the environment variable value. The form on the
environment variable is the same as the command line. See the ENVIRONMENT
VARIABLES section for a description of the SLURM_CPU_FREQ_REQ variable.

NOTE: This parameter is treated as a request, not a requirement. If the job step's
node does not support setting the CPU frequency, or the requested value is outside
the bounds of the legal frequencies, an error is logged, but the job step is
allowed to continue.

NOTE: Setting the frequency for just the CPUs of the job step implies that the
tasks are confined to those CPUs. If task confinement (i.e.,
TaskPlugin=task/affinity or TaskPlugin=task/cgroup with the "ConstrainCores"
option) is not configured, this parameter is ignored.

NOTE: When the step completes, the frequency and governor of each selected CPU is
reset to the configured CpuFreqDef value with a default value of the OnDemand CPU
governor.

NOTE: When submitting jobs with the --cpu-freq option with linuxproc as the
ProctrackType can cause jobs to run too quickly before Accounting is able to poll
for job information. As a result not all of accounting information will be present.

-c, --cpus-per-task=<ncpus>
Request that ncpus be allocated per process. This may be useful if the job is
multithreaded and requires more than one CPU per task for optimal performance. The
default is one CPU per process. If -c is specified without -n, as many tasks will
be allocated per node as possible while satisfying the -c restriction. For instance
on a cluster with 8 CPUs per node, a job request for 4 nodes and 3 CPUs per task
may be allocated 3 or 6 CPUs per node (1 or 2 tasks per node) depending upon
resource consumption by other jobs. Such a job may be unable to execute more than a
total of 4 tasks. This option may also be useful to spawn tasks without allocating
resources to the job step from the job's allocation when running multiple job steps
with the --exclusive option.

WARNING: There are configurations and options interpreted differently by job and
job step requests which can result in inconsistencies for this option. For example
srun -c2 --threads-per-core=1 prog may allocate two cores for the job, but if each
of those cores contains two threads, the job allocation will include four CPUs. The
job step allocation will then launch two threads per CPU for a total of two tasks.

WARNING: When srun is executed from within salloc or sbatch, there are
configurations and options which can result in inconsistent allocations when -c has
a value greater than -c on salloc or sbatch.

-d, --dependency=<dependency_list>
Defer the start of this job until the specified dependencies have been satisfied
completed. This option does not apply to job steps (executions of srun within an
existing salloc or sbatch allocation) only to job allocations. <dependency_list>
is of the form <type:job_id[:job_id][,type:job_id[:job_id]]> or
<type:job_id[:job_id][?type:job_id[:job_id]]>. All dependencies must be satisfied
if the "," separator is used. Any dependency may be satisfied if the "?" separator
is used. Many jobs can share the same dependency and these jobs may even belong to
different users. The value may be changed after job submission using the scontrol
command. Once a job dependency fails due to the termination state of a preceding
job, the dependent job will never be run, even if the preceding job is requeued and
has a different termination state in a subsequent execution.

after:job_id[:jobid...]
This job can begin execution after the specified jobs have begun execution.

afterany:job_id[:jobid...]
This job can begin execution after the specified jobs have terminated.

afternotok:job_id[:jobid...]
This job can begin execution after the specified jobs have terminated in
some failed state (non-zero exit code, node failure, timed out, etc).

afterok:job_id[:jobid...]
This job can begin execution after the specified jobs have successfully
executed (ran to completion with an exit code of zero).

expand:job_id
Resources allocated to this job should be used to expand the specified job.
The job to expand must share the same QOS (Quality of Service) and
partition. Gang scheduling of resources in the partition is also not
supported.

singleton
This job can begin execution after any previously launched jobs sharing the
same job name and user have terminated.

-D, --chdir=<path>
Have the remote processes do a chdir to path before beginning execution. The
default is to chdir to the current working directory of the srun process. The path
can be specified as full path or relative path to the directory where the command
is executed.

-e, --error=<mode>
Specify how stderr is to be redirected. By default in interactive mode, srun
redirects stderr to the same file as stdout, if one is specified. The --error
option is provided to allow stdout and stderr to be redirected to different
locations. See IO Redirection below for more options. If the specified file
already exists, it will be overwritten.

-E, --preserve-env
Pass the current values of environment variables SLURM_NNODES and SLURM_NTASKS
through to the executable, rather than computing them from commandline parameters.

--epilog=<executable>
srun will run executable just after the job step completes. The command line
arguments for executable will be the command and arguments of the job step. If
executable is "none", then no srun epilog will be run. This parameter overrides the
SrunEpilog parameter in slurm.conf. This parameter is completely independent from
the Epilog parameter in slurm.conf.

--exclusive[=user]
This option has two slightly different meanings for job and job step allocations.
When used to initiate a job, the job allocation cannot share nodes with other
running jobs (or just other users with the "=user" option). The default
shared/exclusive behavior depends on system configuration and the partition's
Shared option takes precedence over the job's option.

This option can also be used when initiating more than one job step within an
existing resource allocation, where you want separate processors to be dedicated to
each job step. If sufficient processors are not available to initiate the job step,
it will be deferred. This can be thought of as providing a mechanism for resource
management to the job within it's allocation.

The exclusive allocation of CPUs only applies to job steps explicitly invoked with
the --exclusive option. For example, a job might be allocated one node with four
CPUs and a remote shell invoked on the allocated node. If that shell is not invoked
with the --exclusive option, then it may create a job step with four tasks using
the --exclusive option and not conflict with the remote shell's resource
allocation. Use the --exclusive option to invoke every job step to insure distinct
resources for each step.

Note that all CPUs allocated to a job are available to each job step unless the
--exclusive option is used plus task affinity is configured. Since resource
management is provided by processor, the --ntasks option must be specified, but the
following options should NOT be specified --relative, --distribution=arbitrary.
See EXAMPLE below.

--export=<environment variables | NONE>
Identify which environment variables are propagated to the launched application.
Multiple environment variable names should be comma separated. Environment
variable names may be specified to propagate the current value of those variables
(e.g. "--export=EDITOR") or specific values for the variables may be exported
(e.g.. "--export=EDITOR=/bin/vi") in addition to the environment variables that
would otherwise be set. By default all environment variables are propagated.

--gid=<group>
If srun is run as root, and the --gid option is used, submit the job with group's
group access permissions. group may be the group name or the numerical group ID.

--gres=<list>
Specifies a comma delimited list of generic consumable resources. The format of
each entry on the list is "name[[:type]:count]". The name is that of the
consumable resource. The count is the number of those resources with a default
value of 1. The specified resources will be allocated to the job on each node.
The available generic consumable resources is configurable by the system
administrator. A list of available generic consumable resources will be printed
and the command will exit if the option argument is "help". Examples of use
include "--gres=gpu:2,mic=1", "--gres=gpu:kepler:2", and "--gres=help". NOTE: By
default, a job step is allocated all of the generic resources that have allocated
to the job. To change the behavior so that each job step is allocated no generic
resources, explicitly set the value of --gres to specify zero counts for each
generic resource OR set "--gres=none" OR set the SLURM_STEP_GRES environment
variable to "none".

-H, --hold
Specify the job is to be submitted in a held state (priority of zero). A held job
can now be released using scontrol to reset its priority (e.g. "scontrol release
<job_id>").

-h, --help
Display help information and exit.

--hint=<type>
Bind tasks according to application hints.

compute_bound
Select settings for compute bound applications: use all cores in each
socket, one thread per core.

memory_bound
Select settings for memory bound applications: use only one core in each
socket, one thread per core.

[no]multithread
[don't] use extra threads with in-core multi-threading which can benefit
communication intensive applications. Only supported with the task/affinity
plugin.

help show this help message

-I, --immediate[=<seconds>]
exit if resources are not available within the time period specified. If no
argument is given, resources must be available immediately for the request to
succeed. By default, --immediate is off, and the command will block until
resources become available. Since this option's argument is optional, for proper
parsing the single letter option must be followed immediately with the value and
not include a space between them. For example "-I60" and not "-I 60".

-i, --input=<mode>
Specify how stdin is to redirected. By default, srun redirects stdin from the
terminal all tasks. See IO Redirection below for more options. For OS X, the
poll() function does not support stdin, so input from a terminal is not possible.

-J, --job-name=<jobname>
Specify a name for the job. The specified name will appear along with the job id
number when querying running jobs on the system. The default is the supplied
executable program's name. NOTE: This information may be written to the
slurm_jobacct.log file. This file is space delimited so if a space is used in the
jobname name it will cause problems in properly displaying the contents of the
slurm_jobacct.log file when the sacct command is used.

--jobid=<jobid>
Initiate a job step under an already allocated job with job id id. Using this
option will cause srun to behave exactly as if the SLURM_JOB_ID environment
variable was set.

-K, --kill-on-bad-exit[=0|1]
Controls whether or not to terminate a job if any task exits with a non-zero exit
code. If this option is not specified, the default action will be based upon the
Slurm configuration parameter of KillOnBadExit. If this option is specified, it
will take precedence over KillOnBadExit. An option argument of zero will not
terminate the job. A non-zero argument or no argument will terminate the job.
Note: This option takes precedence over the -W, --wait option to terminate the job
immediately if a task exits with a non-zero exit code. Since this option's
argument is optional, for proper parsing the single letter option must be followed
immediately with the value and not include a space between them. For example "-K1"
and not "-K 1".

-k, --no-kill
Do not automatically terminate a job if one of the nodes it has been allocated
fails. This option is only recognized on a job allocation, not for the submission
of individual job steps. The job will assume all responsibilities for
fault-tolerance. Tasks launch using this option will not be considered terminated
(e.g. -K, --kill-on-bad-exit and -W, --wait options will have no effect upon the
job step). The active job step (MPI job) will likely suffer a fatal error, but
subsequent job steps may be run if this option is specified. The default action is
to terminate the job upon node failure.

--launch-cmd
Print external launch command instead of running job normally through Slurm. This
option is only valid if using something other than the launch/slurm plugin.

--launcher-opts=<options>
Options for the external launcher if using something other than the launch/slurm
plugin.

-l, --label
Prepend task number to lines of stdout/err. The --label option will prepend lines
of output with the remote task id.

-L, --licenses=<license>
Specification of licenses (or other resources available on all nodes of the
cluster) which must be allocated to this job. License names can be followed by a
colon and count (the default count is one). Multiple license names should be comma
separated (e.g. "--licenses=foo:4,bar").

-m, --distribution=
*|block|cyclic|arbitrary|plane=<options> [:*|block|cyclic|fcyclic[:*|block|
cyclic|fcyclic]][,Pack|NoPack]

Specify alternate distribution methods for remote processes. This option controls
the distribution of tasks to the nodes on which resources have been allocated, and
the distribution of those resources to tasks for binding (task affinity). The first
distribution method (before the first ":") controls the distribution of tasks to
nodes. The second distribution method (after the first ":") controls the
distribution of allocated CPUs across sockets for binding to tasks. The third
distribution method (after the second ":") controls the distribution of allocated
CPUs across cores for binding to tasks. The second and third distributions apply
only if task affinity is enabled. The third distribution is supported only if the
task/cgroup plugin is configured. The default value for each distribution type is
specified by *.

Note that with select/cons_res, the number of CPUs allocated on each socket and
node may be different. Refer to http://slurm.schedmd.com/mc_support.html for more
information on resource allocation, distribution of tasks to nodes, and binding of
tasks to CPUs.
First distribution method (distribution of tasks across nodes):

* Use the default method for distributing tasks to nodes (block).

block The block distribution method will distribute tasks to a node such that
consecutive tasks share a node. For example, consider an allocation of three
nodes each with two cpus. A four-task block distribution request will
distribute those tasks to the nodes with tasks one and two on the first
node, task three on the second node, and task four on the third node. Block
distribution is the default behavior if the number of tasks exceeds the
number of allocated nodes.

cyclic The cyclic distribution method will distribute tasks to a node such that
consecutive tasks are distributed over consecutive nodes (in a round-robin
fashion). For example, consider an allocation of three nodes each with two
cpus. A four-task cyclic distribution request will distribute those tasks to
the nodes with tasks one and four on the first node, task two on the second
node, and task three on the third node. Note that when SelectType is
select/cons_res, the same number of CPUs may not be allocated on each node.
Task distribution will be round-robin among all the nodes with CPUs yet to
be assigned to tasks. Cyclic distribution is the default behavior if the
number of tasks is no larger than the number of allocated nodes.

plane The tasks are distributed in blocks of a specified size. The options
include a number representing the size of the task block. This is followed
by an optional specification of the task distribution scheme within a block
of tasks and between the blocks of tasks. The number of tasks distributed
to each node is the same as for cyclic distribution, but the taskids
assigned to each node depend on the plane size. For more details (including
examples and diagrams), please see
http://slurm.schedmd.com/mc_support.html
and
http://slurm.schedmd.com/dist_plane.html

arbitrary
The arbitrary method of distribution will allocate processes in-order as
listed in file designated by the environment variable SLURM_HOSTFILE. If
this variable is listed it will over ride any other method specified. If
not set the method will default to block. Inside the hostfile must contain
at minimum the number of hosts requested and be one per line or comma
separated. If specifying a task count (-n, --ntasks=<number>), your tasks
will be laid out on the nodes in the order of the file.
NOTE: The arbitrary distribution option on a job allocation only controls
the nodes to be allocated to the job and not the allocation of CPUs on those
nodes. This option is meant primarily to control a job step's task layout in
an existing job allocation for the srun command.

Second distribution method (distribution of CPUs across sockets for binding):

* Use the default method for distributing CPUs across sockets (cyclic).

block The block distribution method will distribute allocated CPUs consecutively
from the same socket for binding to tasks, before using the next consecutive
socket.

cyclic The cyclic distribution method will distribute allocated CPUs for binding to
a given task consecutively from the same socket, and from the next
consecutive socket for the next task, in a round-robin fashion across
sockets.

fcyclic
The fcyclic distribution method will distribute allocated CPUs for binding
to tasks from consecutive sockets in a round-robin fashion across the
sockets.

Third distribution method (distribution of CPUs across cores for binding):

* Use the default method for distributing CPUs across cores (inherited from
second distribution method).

block The block distribution method will distribute allocated CPUs consecutively
from the same core for binding to tasks, before using the next consecutive
core.

cyclic The cyclic distribution method will distribute allocated CPUs for binding to
a given task consecutively from the same core, and from the next consecutive
core for the next task, in a round-robin fashion across cores.

fcyclic
The fcyclic distribution method will distribute allocated CPUs for binding
to tasks from consecutive cores in a round-robin fashion across the cores.

Optional control for task distribution over nodes:

Pack Rather than evenly distributing a job step's tasks evenly across it's
allocated nodes, pack them as tightly as possible on the nodes.

NoPack Rather than packing a job step's tasks as tightly as possible on the nodes,
distribute them evenly. This user option will supersede the
SelectTypeParameters CR_Pack_Nodes configuration parameter.

--mail-type=<type>
Notify user by email when certain event types occur. Valid type values are NONE,
BEGIN, END, FAIL, REQUEUE, ALL (equivalent to BEGIN, END, FAIL, REQUEUE, and
STAGE_OUT), STAGE_OUT (burst buffer stage out completed), TIME_LIMIT, TIME_LIMIT_90
(reached 90 percent of time limit), TIME_LIMIT_80 (reached 80 percent of time
limit), and TIME_LIMIT_50 (reached 50 percent of time limit). Multiple type values
may be specified in a comma separated list. The user to be notified is indicated
with --mail-user.

--mail-user=<user>
User to receive email notification of state changes as defined by --mail-type. The
default value is the submitting user.

--mem=<MB>
Specify the real memory required per node in MegaBytes. Default value is
DefMemPerNode and the maximum value is MaxMemPerNode. If configured, both of
parameters can be seen using the scontrol show config command. This parameter
would generally be used if whole nodes are allocated to jobs
(SelectType=select/linear). Specifying a memory limit of zero for a job step will
restrict the job step to the amount of memory allocated to the job, but not remove
any of the job's memory allocation from being available to other job steps. Also
see --mem-per-cpu. --mem and --mem-per-cpu are mutually exclusive. NOTE: A memory
size specification is treated as a special case and grants the job access to all of
the memory on each node. NOTE: Enforcement of memory limits currently relies upon
the task/cgroup plugin or enabling of accounting, which samples memory use on a
periodic basis (data need not be stored, just collected). In both cases memory use
is based upon the job's Resident Set Size (RSS). A task may exceed the memory limit
until the next periodic accounting sample.

--mem-per-cpu=<MB>
Minimum memory required per allocated CPU in MegaBytes. Default value is
DefMemPerCPU and the maximum value is MaxMemPerCPU (see exception below). If
configured, both of parameters can be seen using the scontrol show config command.
Note that if the job's --mem-per-cpu value exceeds the configured MaxMemPerCPU,
then the user's limit will be treated as a memory limit per task; --mem-per-cpu
will be reduced to a value no larger than MaxMemPerCPU; --cpus-per-task will be set
and the value of --cpus-per-task multiplied by the new --mem-per-cpu value will
equal the original --mem-per-cpu value specified by the user. This parameter would
generally be used if individual processors are allocated to jobs
(SelectType=select/cons_res). If resources are allocated by the core, socket or
whole nodes; the number of CPUs allocated to a job may be higher than the task
count and the value of --mem-per-cpu should be adjusted accordingly. Specifying a
memory limit of zero for a job step will restrict the job step to the amount of
memory allocated to the job, but not remove any of the job's memory allocation from
being available to other job steps. Also see --mem. --mem and --mem-per-cpu are
mutually exclusive.

--mem_bind=[{quiet,verbose},]type
Bind tasks to memory. Used only when the task/affinity plugin is enabled and the
NUMA memory functions are available. Note that the resolution of CPU and memory
binding may differ on some architectures. For example, CPU binding may be performed
at the level of the cores within a processor while memory binding will be performed
at the level of nodes, where the definition of "nodes" may differ from system to
system. The use of any type other than "none" or "local" is not recommended. If
you want greater control, try running a simple test code with the options
"--cpu_bind=verbose,none --mem_bind=verbose,none" to determine the specific
configuration.

NOTE: To have Slurm always report on the selected memory binding for all commands
executed in a shell, you can enable verbose mode by setting the SLURM_MEM_BIND
environment variable value to "verbose".

The following informational environment variables are set when --mem_bind is in
use:

SLURM_MEM_BIND_VERBOSE
SLURM_MEM_BIND_TYPE
SLURM_MEM_BIND_LIST

See the ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES section for a more detailed description of the
individual SLURM_MEM_BIND* variables.

Supported options include:

q[uiet]
quietly bind before task runs (default)

v[erbose]
verbosely report binding before task runs

no[ne] don't bind tasks to memory (default)

rank bind by task rank (not recommended)

local Use memory local to the processor in use

map_mem:<list>
bind by mapping a node's memory to tasks as specified where <list> is
<cpuid1>,<cpuid2>,...<cpuidN>. CPU IDs are interpreted as decimal values
unless they are preceded with '0x' in which case they interpreted as
hexadecimal values (not recommended)

mask_mem:<list>
bind by setting memory masks on tasks as specified where <list> is
<mask1>,<mask2>,...<maskN>. memory masks are always interpreted as
hexadecimal values. Note that masks must be preceded with a '0x' if they
don't begin with [0-9] so they are seen as numerical values by srun.

help show this help message

--mincpus=<n>
Specify a minimum number of logical cpus/processors per node.

--msg-timeout=<seconds>
Modify the job launch message timeout. The default value is MessageTimeout in the
Slurm configuration file slurm.conf. Changes to this are typically not
recommended, but could be useful to diagnose problems.

--mpi=<mpi_type>
Identify the type of MPI to be used. May result in unique initiation procedures.

list Lists available mpi types to choose from.

lam Initiates one 'lamd' process per node and establishes necessary environment
variables for LAM/MPI.

mpich1_shmem
Initiates one process per node and establishes necessary environment
variables for mpich1 shared memory model. This also works for mvapich built
for shared memory.

mpichgm
For use with Myrinet.

mvapich
For use with Infiniband.

openmpi
For use with OpenMPI.

pmi2 To enable PMI2 support. The PMI2 support in Slurm works only if the MPI
implementation supports it, in other words if the MPI has the PMI2 interface
implemented. The --mpi=pmi2 will load the library lib/slurm/mpi_pmi2.so
which provides the server side functionality but the client side must
implement PMI2_Init() and the other interface calls.

none No special MPI processing. This is the default and works with many other
versions of MPI.

--multi-prog
Run a job with different programs and different arguments for each task. In this
case, the executable program specified is actually a configuration file specifying
the executable and arguments for each task. See MULTIPLE PROGRAM CONFIGURATION
below for details on the configuration file contents.

-N, --nodes=<minnodes[-maxnodes]>
Request that a minimum of minnodes nodes be allocated to this job. A maximum node
count may also be specified with maxnodes. If only one number is specified, this
is used as both the minimum and maximum node count. The partition's node limits
supersede those of the job. If a job's node limits are outside of the range
permitted for its associated partition, the job will be left in a PENDING state.
This permits possible execution at a later time, when the partition limit is
changed. If a job node limit exceeds the number of nodes configured in the
partition, the job will be rejected. Note that the environment variable
SLURM_JOB_NUM_NODES (and SLURM_NNODES for backwards compatibility) will be set to
the count of nodes actually allocated to the job. See the ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
section for more information. If -N is not specified, the default behavior is to
allocate enough nodes to satisfy the requirements of the -n and -c options. The
job will be allocated as many nodes as possible within the range specified and
without delaying the initiation of the job. The node count specification may
include a numeric value followed by a suffix of "k" (multiplies numeric value by
1,024) or "m" (multiplies numeric value by 1,048,576).

-n, --ntasks=<number>
Specify the number of tasks to run. Request that srun allocate resources for ntasks
tasks. The default is one task per node, but note that the --cpus-per-task option
will change this default.

--network=<type>
Specify information pertaining to the switch or network. The interpretation of
type is system dependent. This option is supported when running Slurm on a Cray
natively. It is used to request using Network Performace Counters. Only one value
per request is valid. All options are case in-sensitive. In this configuration
supported values include:

system
Use the system-wide network performance counters. Only nodes requested will
be marked in use for the job allocation. If the job does not fill up the
entire system the rest of the nodes are not able to be used by other jobs
using NPC, if idle their state will appear as PerfCnts. These nodes are
still available for other jobs not using NPC.

blade Use the blade network performance counters. Only nodes requested will be
marked in use for the job allocation. If the job does not fill up the entire
blade(s) allocated to the job those blade(s) are not able to be used by other
jobs using NPC, if idle their state will appear as PerfCnts. These nodes are
still available for other jobs not using NPC.

In all cases the job or step allocation request must specify the
--exclusive option. Otherwise the request will be denied.

Also with any of these options steps are not allowed to share blades, so resources
would remain idle inside an allocation if the step running on a blade does not take
up all the nodes on the blade.

The network option is also supported on systems with IBM's Parallel Environment
(PE). See IBM's LoadLeveler job command keyword documentation about the keyword
"network" for more information. Multiple values may be specified in a comma
separated list. All options are case in-sensitive. Supported values include:

BULK_XFER[=<resources>]
Enable bulk transfer of data using Remote Direct-Memory Access (RDMA).
The optional resources specification is a numeric value which can have
a suffix of "k", "K", "m", "M", "g" or "G" for kilobytes, megabytes or
gigabytes. NOTE: The resources specification is not supported by the
underlying IBM infrastructure as of Parallel Environment version 2.2
and no value should be specified at this time. The devices allocated
to a job must all be of the same type. The default value depends upon
depends upon what hardware is available and in order of preferences is
IPONLY (which is not considered in User Space mode), HFI, IB, HPCE, and
KMUX.

CAU=<count> Number of Collective Acceleration Units (CAU) required. Applies only
to IBM Power7-IH processors. Default value is zero. Independent CAU
will be allocated for each programming interface (MPI, LAPI, etc.)

DEVNAME=<name>
Specify the device name to use for communications (e.g. "eth0" or
"mlx4_0").

DEVTYPE=<type>
Specify the device type to use for communications. The supported
values of type are: "IB" (InfiniBand), "HFI" (P7 Host Fabric
Interface), "IPONLY" (IP-Only interfaces), "HPCE" (HPC Ethernet), and
"KMUX" (Kernel Emulation of HPCE). The devices allocated to a job must
all be of the same type. The default value depends upon depends upon
what hardware is available and in order of preferences is IPONLY (which
is not considered in User Space mode), HFI, IB, HPCE, and KMUX.

IMMED =<count>
Number of immediate send slots per window required. Applies only to
IBM Power7-IH processors. Default value is zero.

INSTANCES =<count>
Specify number of network connections for each task on each network
connection. The default instance count is 1.

IPV4 Use Internet Protocol (IP) version 4 communications (default).

IPV6 Use Internet Protocol (IP) version 6 communications.

LAPI Use the LAPI programming interface.

MPI Use the MPI programming interface. MPI is the default interface.

PAMI Use the PAMI programming interface.

SHMEM Use the OpenSHMEM programming interface.

SN_ALL Use all available switch networks (default).

SN_SINGLE Use one available switch network.

UPC Use the UPC programming interface.

US Use User Space communications.

Some examples of network specifications:

Instances=2,US,MPI,SN_ALL
Create two user space connections for MPI communications on every
switch network for each task.

US,MPI,Instances=3,Devtype=IB
Create three user space connections for MPI communications on every
InfiniBand network for each task.

IPV4,LAPI,SN_Single
Create a IP version 4 connection for LAPI communications on one switch
network for each task.

Instances=2,US,LAPI,MPI
Create two user space connections each for LAPI and MPI communications
on every switch network for each task. Note that SN_ALL is the default
option so every switch network is used. Also note that Instances=2
specifies that two connections are established for each protocol (LAPI
and MPI) and each task. If there are two networks and four tasks on
the node then a total of 32 connections are established (2 instances x
2 protocols x 2 networks x 4 tasks).

--nice[=adjustment]
Run the job with an adjusted scheduling priority within Slurm. With no adjustment
value the scheduling priority is decreased by 100. The adjustment range is from
-10000 (highest priority) to 10000 (lowest priority). Only privileged users can
specify a negative adjustment. NOTE: This option is presently ignored if
SchedulerType=sched/wiki or SchedulerType=sched/wiki2.

--ntasks-per-core=<ntasks>
Request the maximum ntasks be invoked on each core. This option applies to the job
allocation, but not to step allocations. Meant to be used with the --ntasks
option. Related to --ntasks-per-node except at the core level instead of the node
level. Masks will automatically be generated to bind the tasks to specific core
unless --cpu_bind=none is specified. NOTE: This option is not supported unless
SelectTypeParameters=CR_Core or SelectTypeParameters=CR_Core_Memory is configured.

--ntasks-per-node=<ntasks>
Request that ntasks be invoked on each node. If used with the --ntasks option, the
--ntasks option will take precedence and the --ntasks-per-node will be treated as a
maximum count of tasks per node. Meant to be used with the --nodes option. This
is related to --cpus-per-task=ncpus, but does not require knowledge of the actual
number of cpus on each node. In some cases, it is more convenient to be able to
request that no more than a specific number of tasks be invoked on each node.
Examples of this include submitting a hybrid MPI/OpenMP app where only one MPI
"task/rank" should be assigned to each node while allowing the OpenMP portion to
utilize all of the parallelism present in the node, or submitting a single
setup/cleanup/monitoring job to each node of a pre-existing allocation as one step
in a larger job script.

--ntasks-per-socket=<ntasks>
Request the maximum ntasks be invoked on each socket. This option applies to the
job allocation, but not to step allocations. Meant to be used with the --ntasks
option. Related to --ntasks-per-node except at the socket level instead of the
node level. Masks will automatically be generated to bind the tasks to specific
sockets unless --cpu_bind=none is specified. NOTE: This option is not supported
unless SelectTypeParameters=CR_Socket or SelectTypeParameters=CR_Socket_Memory is
configured.

-O, --overcommit
Overcommit resources. When applied to job allocation, only one CPU is allocated to
the job per node and options used to specify the number of tasks per node, socket,
core, etc. are ignored. When applied to job step allocations (the srun command
when executed within an existing job allocation), this option can be used to launch
more than one task per CPU. Normally, srun will not allocate more than one process
per CPU. By specifying --overcommit you are explicitly allowing more than one
process per CPU. However no more than MAX_TASKS_PER_NODE tasks are permitted to
execute per node. NOTE: MAX_TASKS_PER_NODE is defined in the file slurm.h and is
not a variable, it is set at Slurm build time.

-o, --output=<mode>
Specify the mode for stdout redirection. By default in interactive mode, srun
collects stdout from all tasks and sends this output via TCP/IP to the attached
terminal. With --output stdout may be redirected to a file, to one file per task,
or to /dev/null. See section IO Redirection below for the various forms of mode.
If the specified file already exists, it will be overwritten.

If --error is not also specified on the command line, both stdout and stderr will
directed to the file specified by --output.

--open-mode=<append|truncate>
Open the output and error files using append or truncate mode as specified. The
default value is specified by the system configuration parameter JobFileAppend.

-p, --partition=<partition_names>
Request a specific partition for the resource allocation. If not specified, the
default behavior is to allow the slurm controller to select the default partition
as designated by the system administrator. If the job can use more than one
partition, specify their names in a comma separate list and the one offering
earliest initiation will be used with no regard given to the partition name
ordering (although higher priority partitions will be considered first). When the
job is initiated, the name of the partition used will be placed first in the job
record partition string.

--power=<flags>
Comma separated list of power management plugin options. Currently available flags
include: level (all nodes allocated to the job should have identical power caps,
may be disabled by the Slurm configuration option PowerParameters=job_no_level).

--priority=<value>
Request a specific job priority. May be subject to configuration specific
constraints. Only Slurm operators and administrators can set the priority of a
job.

--profile=<all|none|[energy[,|task[,|filesystem[,|network]]]]>
enables detailed data collection by the acct_gather_profile plugin. Detailed data
are typically time-series that are stored in an HDF5 file for the job.

All All data types are collected. (Cannot be combined with other values.)

None No data types are collected. This is the default.
(Cannot be combined with other values.)

Energy Energy data is collected.

Task Task (I/O, Memory, ...) data is collected.

Filesystem
Filesystem data is collected.

Network Network (InfiniBand) data is collected.

--prolog=<executable>
srun will run executable just before launching the job step. The command line
arguments for executable will be the command and arguments of the job step. If
executable is "none", then no srun prolog will be run. This parameter overrides the
SrunProlog parameter in slurm.conf. This parameter is completely independent from
the Prolog parameter in slurm.conf.

--propagate[=rlimits]
Allows users to specify which of the modifiable (soft) resource limits to propagate
to the compute nodes and apply to their jobs. If rlimits is not specified, then
all resource limits will be propagated. The following rlimit names are supported
by Slurm (although some options may not be supported on some systems):

ALL All limits listed below

AS The maximum address space for a process

CORE The maximum size of core file

CPU The maximum amount of CPU time

DATA The maximum size of a process's data segment

FSIZE The maximum size of files created. Note that if the user sets FSIZE to
less than the current size of the slurmd.log, job launches will fail with
a 'File size limit exceeded' error.

MEMLOCK The maximum size that may be locked into memory

NOFILE The maximum number of open files

NPROC The maximum number of processes available

RSS The maximum resident set size

STACK The maximum stack size

--pty Execute task zero in pseudo terminal mode. Implicitly sets --unbuffered.
Implicitly sets --error and --output to /dev/null for all tasks except task zero,
which may cause those tasks to exit immediately (e.g. shells will typically exit
immediately in that situation). Not currently supported on AIX platforms.

-Q, --quiet
Suppress informational messages from srun. Errors will still be displayed.

-q, --quit-on-interrupt
Quit immediately on single SIGINT (Ctrl-C). Use of this option disables the status
feature normally available when srun receives a single Ctrl-C and causes srun to
instead immediately terminate the running job.

--qos=<qos>
Request a quality of service for the job. QOS values can be defined for each
user/cluster/account association in the Slurm database. Users will be limited to
their association's defined set of qos's when the Slurm configuration parameter,
AccountingStorageEnforce, includes "qos" in it's definition.

-r, --relative=<n>
Run a job step relative to node n of the current allocation. This option may be
used to spread several job steps out among the nodes of the current job. If -r is
used, the current job step will begin at node n of the allocated nodelist, where
the first node is considered node 0. The -r option is not permitted with -w or -x
option and will result in a fatal error when not running within a prior allocation
(i.e. when SLURM_JOB_ID is not set). The default for n is 0. If the value of
--nodes exceeds the number of nodes identified with the --relative option, a
warning message will be printed and the --relative option will take precedence.

--reboot
Force the allocated nodes to reboot before starting the job. This is only
supported with some system configurations and will otherwise be silently ignored.

--resv-ports
Reserve communication ports for this job. Users can specify the number of port they
want to reserve. The parameter MpiParams=ports=12000-12999 must be specified in
slurm.conf. If not specified the default reserve number of ports equal to the
number of tasks. If the number of reserved ports is zero no ports is reserved.
Used for OpenMPI.

--reservation=<name>
Allocate resources for the job from the named reservation.

--restart-dir=<directory>
Specifies the directory from which the job or job step's checkpoint should be read
(used by the checkpoint/blcrm and checkpoint/xlch plugins only).

-s, --share
The job allocation can share resources with other running jobs. The resources to
be shared can be nodes, sockets, cores, or hyperthreads depending upon
configuration. The default shared behavior depends on system configuration and the
partition's Shared option takes precedence over the job's option. This option may
result in the allocation being granted sooner than if the --share option was not
set and allow higher system utilization, but application performance will likely
suffer due to competition for resources. Also see the --exclusive option.

-S, --core-spec=<num>
Count of specialized cores per node reserved by the job for system operations and
not used by the application. The application will not use these cores, but will be
charged for their allocation. Default value is dependent upon the node's
configured CoreSpecCount value. If a value of zero is designated and the Slurm
configuration option AllowSpecResourcesUsage is enabled, the job will be allowed to
override CoreSpecCount and use the specialized resources on nodes it is allocated.
This option can not be used with the --thread-spec option.

--sicp Identify a job as one which jobs submitted to other clusters can be dependent upon.

--signal=<sig_num>[@<sig_time>]
When a job is within sig_time seconds of its end time, send it the signal sig_num.
Due to the resolution of event handling by Slurm, the signal may be sent up to 60
seconds earlier than specified. sig_num may either be a signal number or name
(e.g. "10" or "USR1"). sig_time must have an integer value between 0 and 65535.
By default, no signal is sent before the job's end time. If a sig_num is specified
without any sig_time, the default time will be 60 seconds.

--slurmd-debug=<level>
Specify a debug level for slurmd(8). The level may be specified either an integer
value between 0 [quiet, only errors are displayed] and 4 [verbose operation] or the
SlurmdDebug tags.

quiet Log nothing

fatal Log only fatal errors

error Log only errors

info Log errors and general informational messages

verbose Log errors and verbose informational messages

The slurmd debug information is copied onto the stderr of
the job. By default only errors are displayed.

--sockets-per-node=<sockets>
Restrict node selection to nodes with at least the specified number of sockets.
See additional information under -B option above when task/affinity plugin is
enabled.

--switches=<count>[@<max-time>]
When a tree topology is used, this defines the maximum count of switches desired
for the job allocation and optionally the maximum time to wait for that number of
switches. If Slurm finds an allocation containing more switches than the count
specified, the job remains pending until it either finds an allocation with desired
switch count or the time limit expires. It there is no switch count limit, there
is no delay in starting the job. Acceptable time formats include "minutes",
"minutes:seconds", "hours:minutes:seconds", "days-hours", "days-hours:minutes" and
"days-hours:minutes:seconds". The job's maximum time delay may be limited by the
system administrator using the SchedulerParameters configuration parameter with the
max_switch_wait parameter option. The default max-time is the max_switch_wait
SchedulerParameters.

-T, --threads=<nthreads>
Allows limiting the number of concurrent threads used to send the job request from
the srun process to the slurmd processes on the allocated nodes. Default is to use
one thread per allocated node up to a maximum of 60 concurrent threads. Specifying
this option limits the number of concurrent threads to nthreads (less than or equal
to 60). This should only be used to set a low thread count for testing on very
small memory computers.

-t, --time=<time>
Set a limit on the total run time of the job allocation. If the requested time
limit exceeds the partition's time limit, the job will be left in a PENDING state
(possibly indefinitely). The default time limit is the partition's default time
limit. When the time limit is reached, each task in each job step is sent SIGTERM
followed by SIGKILL. The interval between signals is specified by the Slurm
configuration parameter KillWait. The OverTimeLimit configuration parameter may
permit the job to run longer than scheduled. Time resolution is one minute and
second values are rounded up to the next minute.

A time limit of zero requests that no time limit be imposed. Acceptable time
formats include "minutes", "minutes:seconds", "hours:minutes:seconds",
"days-hours", "days-hours:minutes" and "days-hours:minutes:seconds".

--task-epilog=<executable>
The slurmstepd daemon will run executable just after each task terminates. This
will be executed before any TaskEpilog parameter in slurm.conf is executed. This is
meant to be a very short-lived program. If it fails to terminate within a few
seconds, it will be killed along with any descendant processes.

--task-prolog=<executable>
The slurmstepd daemon will run executable just before launching each task. This
will be executed after any TaskProlog parameter in slurm.conf is executed. Besides
the normal environment variables, this has SLURM_TASK_PID available to identify the
process ID of the task being started. Standard output from this program of the
form "export NAME=value" will be used to set environment variables for the task
being spawned.

--test-only
Returns an estimate of when a job would be scheduled to run given the current job
queue and all the other srun arguments specifying the job. This limits srun's
behavior to just return information; no job is actually submitted. EXCEPTION: On
Bluegene/Q systems on when running within an existing job allocation, this disables
the use of "runjob" to launch tasks. The program will be executed directly by the
slurmd daemon.

--thread-spec=<num>
Count of specialized threads per node reserved by the job for system operations and
not used by the application. The application will not use these threads, but will
be charged for their allocation. This option can not be used with the --core-spec
option.

--threads-per-core=<threads>
Restrict node selection to nodes with at least the specified number of threads per
core. NOTE: "Threads" refers to the number of processing units on each core rather
than the number of application tasks to be launched per core. See additional
information under -B option above when task/affinity plugin is enabled.

--time-min=<time>
Set a minimum time limit on the job allocation. If specified, the job may have
it's --time limit lowered to a value no lower than --time-min if doing so permits
the job to begin execution earlier than otherwise possible. The job's time limit
will not be changed after the job is allocated resources. This is performed by a
backfill scheduling algorithm to allocate resources otherwise reserved for higher
priority jobs. Acceptable time formats include "minutes", "minutes:seconds",
"hours:minutes:seconds", "days-hours", "days-hours:minutes" and
"days-hours:minutes:seconds".

--tmp=<MB>
Specify a minimum amount of temporary disk space.

-u, --unbuffered
By default the connection between slurmstepd and the user launched application is
over a pipe. The stdio output written by the application is buffered by the glibc
until it is flushed or the output is set as unbuffered. See setbuf(3). If this
option is specified the tasks are executed with a pseudo terminal so that the
application output is unbuffered.

--usage
Display brief help message and exit.

--uid=<user>
Attempt to submit and/or run a job as user instead of the invoking user id. The
invoking user's credentials will be used to check access permissions for the target
partition. User root may use this option to run jobs as a normal user in a RootOnly
partition for example. If run as root, srun will drop its permissions to the uid
specified after node allocation is successful. user may be the user name or
numerical user ID.

-V, --version
Display version information and exit.

-v, --verbose
Increase the verbosity of srun's informational messages. Multiple -v's will
further increase srun's verbosity. By default only errors will be displayed.

-W, --wait=<seconds>
Specify how long to wait after the first task terminates before terminating all
remaining tasks. A value of 0 indicates an unlimited wait (a warning will be issued
after 60 seconds). The default value is set by the WaitTime parameter in the slurm
configuration file (see slurm.conf(5)). This option can be useful to insure that a
job is terminated in a timely fashion in the event that one or more tasks terminate
prematurely. Note: The -K, --kill-on-bad-exit option takes precedence over -W,
--wait to terminate the job immediately if a task exits with a non-zero exit code.

-w, --nodelist=<host1,host2,... or filename>
Request a specific list of hosts. The job will contain all of these hosts and
possibly additional hosts as needed to satisfy resource requirements. The list may
be specified as a comma-separated list of hosts, a range of hosts (host[1-5,7,...]
for example), or a filename. The host list will be assumed to be a filename if it
contains a "/" character. If you specify a minimum node or processor count larger
than can be satisfied by the supplied host list, additional resources will be
allocated on other nodes as needed. Rather than repeating a host name multiple
times, an asterisk and a repetition count may be appended to a host name. For
example "host1,host1" and "host1*2" are equivalent.

--wckey=<wckey>
Specify wckey to be used with job. If TrackWCKey=no (default) in the slurm.conf
this value is ignored.

-X, --disable-status
Disable the display of task status when srun receives a single SIGINT (Ctrl-C).
Instead immediately forward the SIGINT to the running job. Without this option a
second Ctrl-C in one second is required to forcibly terminate the job and srun will
immediately exit. May also be set via the environment variable
SLURM_DISABLE_STATUS.

-x, --exclude=<host1,host2,... or filename>
Request that a specific list of hosts not be included in the resources allocated to
this job. The host list will be assumed to be a filename if it contains a
"/"character.

-Z, --no-allocate
Run the specified tasks on a set of nodes without creating a Slurm "job" in the
Slurm queue structure, bypassing the normal resource allocation step. The list of
nodes must be specified with the -w, --nodelist option. This is a privileged
option only available for the users "SlurmUser" and "root".

The following options support Blue Gene systems, but may be applicable to other systems as
well.

--blrts-image=<path>
Path to blrts image for bluegene block. BGL only. Default from blugene.conf if
not set.

--cnload-image=<path>
Path to compute node image for bluegene block. BGP only. Default from
blugene.conf if not set.

--conn-type=<type>
Require the block connection type to be of a certain type. On Blue Gene the
acceptable of type are MESH, TORUS and NAV. If NAV, or if not set, then Slurm will
try to fit a what the DefaultConnType is set to in the bluegene.conf if that isn't
set the default is TORUS. You should not normally set this option. If running on
a BGP system and wanting to run in HTC mode (only for 1 midplane and below). You
can use HTC_S for SMP, HTC_D for Dual, HTC_V for virtual node mode, and HTC_L for
Linux mode. For systems that allow a different connection type per dimension you
can supply a comma separated list of connection types may be specified, one for
each dimension (i.e. M,T,T,T will give you a torus connection is all dimensions
expect the first).

-g, --geometry=<XxYxZ> | <AxXxYxZ>
Specify the geometry requirements for the job. On BlueGene/L and BlueGene/P systems
there are three numbers giving dimensions in the X, Y and Z directions, while on
BlueGene/Q systems there are four numbers giving dimensions in the A, X, Y and Z
directions and can not be used to allocate sub-blocks. For example
"--geometry=1x2x3x4", specifies a block of nodes having 1 x 2 x 3 x 4 = 24 nodes
(actually midplanes on BlueGene).

--ioload-image=<path>
Path to io image for bluegene block. BGP only. Default from blugene.conf if not
set.

--linux-image=<path>
Path to linux image for bluegene block. BGL only. Default from blugene.conf if
not set.

--mloader-image=<path>
Path to mloader image for bluegene block. Default from blugene.conf if not set.

-R, --no-rotate
Disables rotation of the job's requested geometry in order to fit an appropriate
block. By default the specified geometry can rotate in three dimensions.

--ramdisk-image=<path>
Path to ramdisk image for bluegene block. BGL only. Default from blugene.conf if
not set.

srun will submit the job request to the slurm job controller, then initiate all processes
on the remote nodes. If the request cannot be met immediately, srun will block until the
resources are free to run the job. If the -I (--immediate) option is specified srun will
terminate if resources are not immediately available.

When initiating remote processes srun will propagate the current working directory, unless
--chdir=<path> is specified, in which case path will become the working directory for the
remote processes.

The -n, -c, and -N options control how CPUs and nodes will be allocated to the job. When
specifying only the number of processes to run with -n, a default of one CPU per process
is allocated. By specifying the number of CPUs required per task (-c), more than one CPU
may be allocated per process. If the number of nodes is specified with -N, srun will
attempt to allocate at least the number of nodes specified.

Combinations of the above three options may be used to change how processes are
distributed across nodes and cpus. For instance, by specifying both the number of
processes and number of nodes on which to run, the number of processes per node is
implied. However, if the number of CPUs per process is more important then number of
processes (-n) and the number of CPUs per process (-c) should be specified.

srun will refuse to allocate more than one process per CPU unless --overcommit (-O) is
also specified.

srun will attempt to meet the above specifications "at a minimum." That is, if 16 nodes
are requested for 32 processes, and some nodes do not have 2 CPUs, the allocation of nodes
will be increased in order to meet the demand for CPUs. In other words, a minimum of 16
nodes are being requested. However, if 16 nodes are requested for 15 processes, srun will
consider this an error, as 15 processes cannot run across 16 nodes.

IO Redirection

By default, stdout and stderr will be redirected from all tasks to the stdout and stderr
of srun, and stdin will be redirected from the standard input of srun to all remote tasks.
If stdin is only to be read by a subset of the spawned tasks, specifying a file to read
from rather than forwarding stdin from the srun command may be preferable as it avoids
moving and storing data that will never be read.

For OS X, the poll() function does not support stdin, so input from a terminal is not
possible.

For BGQ srun only supports stdin to 1 task running on the system. By default it is taskid
0 but can be changed with the -i<taskid> as described below, or
--launcher-opts="--stdinrank=<taskid>".

This behavior may be changed with the --output, --error, and --input (-o, -e, -i) options.
Valid format specifications for these options are

all stdout stderr is redirected from all tasks to srun. stdin is broadcast to all
remote tasks. (This is the default behavior)

none stdout and stderr is not received from any task. stdin is not sent to any task
(stdin is closed).

taskid stdout and/or stderr are redirected from only the task with relative id equal to
taskid, where 0 <= taskid <= ntasks, where ntasks is the total number of tasks
in the current job step. stdin is redirected from the stdin of srun to this
same task. This file will be written on the node executing the task.

filename srun will redirect stdout and/or stderr to the named file from all tasks. stdin
will be redirected from the named file and broadcast to all tasks in the job.
filename refers to a path on the host that runs srun. Depending on the
cluster's file system layout, this may result in the output appearing in
different places depending on whether the job is run in batch mode.

format string
srun allows for a format string to be used to generate the named IO file
described above. The following list of format specifiers may be used in the
format string to generate a filename that will be unique to a given jobid,
stepid, node, or task. In each case, the appropriate number of files are opened
and associated with the corresponding tasks. Note that any format string
containing %t, %n, and/or %N will be written on the node executing the task
rather than the node where srun executes, these format specifiers are not
supported on a BGQ system.

%A Job array's master job allocation number.

%a Job array ID (index) number.

%J jobid.stepid of the running job. (e.g. "128.0")

%j jobid of the running job.

%s stepid of the running job.

%N short hostname. This will create a separate IO file per node.

%n Node identifier relative to current job (e.g. "0" is the first node of
the running job) This will create a separate IO file per node.

%t task identifier (rank) relative to current job. This will create a
separate IO file per task.

%u User name.

A number placed between the percent character and format specifier may be used
to zero-pad the result in the IO filename. This number is ignored if the format
specifier corresponds to non-numeric data (%N for example).

Some examples of how the format string may be used for a 4 task job step with a
Job ID of 128 and step id of 0 are included below:

job%J.out job128.0.out

job%4j.out job0128.out

job%j-%2t.out job128-00.out, job128-01.out, ...

INPUT ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES


Some srun options may be set via environment variables. These environment variables,
along with their corresponding options, are listed below. Note: Command line options will
always override these settings.

PMI_FANOUT This is used exclusively with PMI (MPICH2 and MVAPICH2) and controls
the fanout of data communications. The srun command sends messages
to application programs (via the PMI library) and those applications
may be called upon to forward that data to up to this number of
additional tasks. Higher values offload work from the srun command
to the applications and likely increase the vulnerability to
failures. The default value is 32.

PMI_FANOUT_OFF_HOST This is used exclusively with PMI (MPICH2 and MVAPICH2) and controls
the fanout of data communications. The srun command sends messages
to application programs (via the PMI library) and those applications
may be called upon to forward that data to additional tasks. By
default, srun sends one message per host and one task on that host
forwards the data to other tasks on that host up to PMI_FANOUT. If
PMI_FANOUT_OFF_HOST is defined, the user task may be required to
forward the data to tasks on other hosts. Setting
PMI_FANOUT_OFF_HOST may increase performance. Since more work is
performed by the PMI library loaded by the user application,
failures also can be more common and more difficult to diagnose.

PMI_TIME This is used exclusively with PMI (MPICH2 and MVAPICH2) and controls
how much the communications from the tasks to the srun are spread
out in time in order to avoid overwhelming the srun command with
work. The default value is 500 (microseconds) per task. On
relatively slow processors or systems with very large processor
counts (and large PMI data sets), higher values may be required.

SLURM_CONF The location of the Slurm configuration file.

SLURM_ACCOUNT Same as -A, --account

SLURM_ACCTG_FREQ Same as --acctg-freq

SLURM_BCAST Same as --bcast

SLURM_BLRTS_IMAGE Same as --blrts-image

SLURM_BURST_BUFFER Same as --bb

SLURM_CHECKPOINT Same as --checkpoint

SLURM_CHECKPOINT_DIR Same as --checkpoint-dir

SLURM_CNLOAD_IMAGE Same as --cnload-image

SLURM_CONN_TYPE Same as --conn-type

SLURM_CORE_SPEC Same as --core-spec

SLURM_CPU_BIND Same as --cpu_bind

SLURM_CPU_FREQ_REQ Same as --cpu-freq.

SLURM_CPUS_PER_TASK Same as -c, --cpus-per-task

SLURM_DEBUG Same as -v, --verbose

SlurmD_DEBUG Same as -d, --slurmd-debug

SLURM_DEPENDENCY -P, --dependency=<jobid>

SLURM_DISABLE_STATUS Same as -X, --disable-status

SLURM_DIST_PLANESIZE Same as -m plane

SLURM_DISTRIBUTION Same as -m, --distribution

SLURM_EPILOG Same as --epilog

SLURM_EXCLUSIVE Same as --exclusive

SLURM_EXIT_ERROR Specifies the exit code generated when a Slurm error occurs (e.g.
invalid options). This can be used by a script to distinguish
application exit codes from various Slurm error conditions. Also
see SLURM_EXIT_IMMEDIATE.

SLURM_EXIT_IMMEDIATE Specifies the exit code generated when the --immediate option is
used and resources are not currently available. This can be used by
a script to distinguish application exit codes from various Slurm
error conditions. Also see SLURM_EXIT_ERROR.

SLURM_GEOMETRY Same as -g, --geometry

SLURM_HINT Same as --hint

SLURM_GRES Same as --gres. Also see SLURM_STEP_GRES

SLURM_IMMEDIATE Same as -I, --immediate

SLURM_IOLOAD_IMAGE Same as --ioload-image

SLURM_JOB_ID (and SLURM_JOBID for backwards compatibility)
Same as --jobid

SLURM_JOB_NAME Same as -J, --job-name except within an existing allocation, in
which case it is ignored to avoid using the batch job's name as the
name of each job step.

SLURM_JOB_NUM_NODES (and SLURM_NNODES for backwards compatibility)
Total number of nodes in the job’s resource allocation.

SLURM_KILL_BAD_EXIT Same as -K, --kill-on-bad-exit

SLURM_LABELIO Same as -l, --label

SLURM_LINUX_IMAGE Same as --linux-image

SLURM_MEM_BIND Same as --mem_bind

SLURM_MEM_PER_CPU Same as --mem-per-cpu

SLURM_MEM_PER_NODE Same as --mem

SLURM_MLOADER_IMAGE Same as --mloader-image

SLURM_MPI_TYPE Same as --mpi

SLURM_NETWORK Same as --network

SLURM_NNODES Same as -N, --nodes

SLURM_NO_ROTATE Same as -R, --no-rotate

SLURM_NTASKS (and SLURM_NPROCS for backwards compatibility)
Same as -n, --ntasks

SLURM_NTASKS_PER_CORE Same as --ntasks-per-core

SLURM_NTASKS_PER_NODE Same as --ntasks-per-node

SLURM_NTASKS_PER_SOCKET
Same as --ntasks-per-socket

SLURM_OPEN_MODE Same as --open-mode

SLURM_OVERCOMMIT Same as -O, --overcommit

SLURM_PARTITION Same as -p, --partition

SLURM_PMI_KVS_NO_DUP_KEYS
If set, then PMI key-pairs will contain no duplicate keys. MPI can
use this variable to inform the PMI library that it will not use
duplicate keys so PMI can skip the check for duplicate keys. This
is the case for MPICH2 and reduces overhead in testing for
duplicates for improved performance

SLURM_POWER Same as --power

SLURM_PROFILE Same as --profile

SLURM_PROLOG Same as --prolog

SLURM_QOS Same as --qos

SLURM_RAMDISK_IMAGE Same as --ramdisk-image

SLURM_REMOTE_CWD Same as -D, --chdir=

SLURM_REQ_SWITCH When a tree topology is used, this defines the maximum count of
switches desired for the job allocation and optionally the maximum
time to wait for that number of switches. See --switches

SLURM_RESERVATION Same as --reservation

SLURM_RESTART_DIR Same as --restart-dir

SLURM_RESV_PORTS Same as --resv-ports

SLURM_SICP Same as --sicp

SLURM_SIGNAL Same as --signal

SLURM_STDERRMODE Same as -e, --error

SLURM_STDINMODE Same as -i, --input

SLURM_SRUN_REDUCE_TASK_EXIT_MSG
if set and non-zero, successive task exit messages with the same
exit code will be printed only once.

SLURM_STEP_GRES Same as --gres (only applies to job steps, not to job allocations).
Also see SLURM_GRES

SLURM_STEP_KILLED_MSG_NODE_ID=ID
If set, only the specified node will log when the job or step are
killed by a signal.

SLURM_STDOUTMODE Same as -o, --output

SLURM_TASK_EPILOG Same as --task-epilog

SLURM_TASK_PROLOG Same as --task-prolog

SLURM_TEST_EXEC if defined, then verify existence of the executable program on the
local computer before attempting to launch it on compute nodes.

SLURM_THREAD_SPEC Same as --thread-spec

SLURM_THREADS Same as -T, --threads

SLURM_TIMELIMIT Same as -t, --time

SLURM_UNBUFFEREDIO Same as -u, --unbuffered

SLURM_WAIT Same as -W, --wait

SLURM_WAIT4SWITCH Max time waiting for requested switches. See --switches

SLURM_WCKEY Same as -W, --wckey

SLURM_WORKING_DIR -D, --chdir

OUTPUT ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES


srun will set some environment variables in the environment of the executing tasks on the
remote compute nodes. These environment variables are:

SLURM_CHECKPOINT_IMAGE_DIR
Directory into which checkpoint images should be written if
specified on the execute line.

SLURM_CLUSTER_NAME Name of the cluster on which the job is executing.

SLURM_CPU_BIND_VERBOSE
--cpu_bind verbosity (quiet,verbose).

SLURM_CPU_BIND_TYPE --cpu_bind type (none,rank,map_cpu:,mask_cpu:).

SLURM_CPU_BIND_LIST --cpu_bind map or mask list (list of Slurm CPU IDs or masks for this
node, CPU_ID = Board_ID x threads_per_board + Socket_ID x
threads_per_socket + Core_ID x threads_per_core + Thread_ID).

SLURM_CPU_FREQ_REQ Contains the value requested for cpu frequency on the srun command
as a numerical frequency in kilohertz, or a coded value for a
request of low, medium,highm1 or high for the frequency. See the
description of the --cpu-freq option or the SLURM_CPU_FREQ_REQ input
environment variable.

SLURM_CPUS_ON_NODE Count of processors available to the job on this node. Note the
select/linear plugin allocates entire nodes to jobs, so the value
indicates the total count of CPUs on the node. For the
select/cons_res plugin, this number indicates the number of cores on
this node allocated to the job.

SLURM_CPUS_PER_TASK Number of cpus requested per task. Only set if the --cpus-per-task
option is specified.

SLURM_DISTRIBUTION Distribution type for the allocated jobs. Set the distribution with
-m, --distribution.

SLURM_GTIDS Global task IDs running on this node. Zero origin and comma
separated.

SLURM_JOB_CPUS_PER_NODE
Number of CPUS per node.

SLURM_JOB_DEPENDENCY Set to value of the --dependency option.

SLURM_JOB_ID (and SLURM_JOBID for backwards compatibility)
Job id of the executing job.

SLURM_JOB_NAME Set to the value of the --job-name option or the command name when
srun is used to create a new job allocation. Not set when srun is
used only to create a job step (i.e. within an existing job
allocation).

SLURM_JOB_PARTITION Name of the partition in which the job is running.

SLURM_LAUNCH_NODE_IPADDR
IP address of the node from which the task launch was initiated
(where the srun command ran from).

SLURM_LOCALID Node local task ID for the process within a job.

SLURM_MEM_BIND_VERBOSE
--mem_bind verbosity (quiet,verbose).

SLURM_MEM_BIND_TYPE --mem_bind type (none,rank,map_mem:,mask_mem:).

SLURM_MEM_BIND_LIST --mem_bind map or mask list (<list of IDs or masks for this node>).

SLURM_NNODES Total number of nodes in the job's resource allocation.

SLURM_NODE_ALIASES Sets of node name, communication address and hostname for nodes
allocated to the job from the cloud. Each element in the set if
colon separated and each set is comma separated. For example:
SLURM_NODE_ALIASES=ec0:1.2.3.4:foo,ec1:1.2.3.5:bar

SLURM_NODEID The relative node ID of the current node.

SLURM_NODELIST List of nodes allocated to the job.

SLURM_NTASKS (and SLURM_NPROCS for backwards compatibility)
Total number of processes in the current job.

SLURM_PRIO_PROCESS The scheduling priority (nice value) at the time of job submission.
This value is propagated to the spawned processes.

SLURM_PROCID The MPI rank (or relative process ID) of the current process.

SLURM_SRUN_COMM_HOST IP address of srun communication host.

SLURM_SRUN_COMM_PORT srun communication port.

SLURM_STEP_LAUNCHER_PORT
Step launcher port.

SLURM_STEP_NODELIST List of nodes allocated to the step.

SLURM_STEP_NUM_NODES Number of nodes allocated to the step.

SLURM_STEP_NUM_TASKS Number of processes in the step.

SLURM_STEP_TASKS_PER_NODE
Number of processes per node within the step.

SLURM_STEP_ID (and SLURM_STEPID for backwards compatibility)
The step ID of the current job.

SLURM_SUBMIT_DIR The directory from which srun was invoked.

SLURM_SUBMIT_HOST The hostname of the computer from which salloc was invoked.

SLURM_TASK_PID The process ID of the task being started.

SLURM_TASKS_PER_NODE Number of tasks to be initiated on each node. Values are comma
separated and in the same order as SLURM_NODELIST. If two or more
consecutive nodes are to have the same task count, that count is
followed by "(x#)" where "#" is the repetition count. For example,
"SLURM_TASKS_PER_NODE=2(x3),1" indicates that the first three nodes
will each execute three tasks and the fourth node will execute one
task.

SLURM_TOPOLOGY_ADDR This is set only if the system has the topology/tree plugin
configured. The value will be set to the names network switches
which may be involved in the job's communications from the system's
top level switch down to the leaf switch and ending with node name.
A period is used to separate each hardware component name.

SLURM_TOPOLOGY_ADDR_PATTERN
This is set only if the system has the topology/tree plugin
configured. The value will be set component types listed in
SLURM_TOPOLOGY_ADDR. Each component will be identified as either
"switch" or "node". A period is used to separate each hardware
component type.

SRUN_DEBUG Set to the logging level of the srun command. Default value is 3
(info level). The value is incremented or decremented based upon
the --verbose and --quiet options.

MPIRUN_NOALLOCATE Do not allocate a block on Blue Gene systems only.

MPIRUN_NOFREE Do not free a block on Blue Gene systems only.

MPIRUN_PARTITION The block name on Blue Gene systems only.

SIGNALS AND ESCAPE SEQUENCES


Signals sent to the srun command are automatically forwarded to the tasks it is
controlling with a few exceptions. The escape sequence <control-c> will report the state
of all tasks associated with the srun command. If <control-c> is entered twice within one
second, then the associated SIGINT signal will be sent to all tasks and a termination
sequence will be entered sending SIGCONT, SIGTERM, and SIGKILL to all spawned tasks. If a
third <control-c> is received, the srun program will be terminated without waiting for
remote tasks to exit or their I/O to complete.

The escape sequence <control-z> is presently ignored. Our intent is for this put the srun
command into a mode where various special actions may be invoked.

MPI SUPPORT


MPI use depends upon the type of MPI being used. There are three fundamentally different
modes of operation used by these various MPI implementation.

1. Slurm directly launches the tasks and performs initialization of communications
(Quadrics MPI, MPICH2, MPICH-GM, MVAPICH, MVAPICH2 and some MPICH1 modes). For example:
"srun -n16 a.out".

2. Slurm creates a resource allocation for the job and then mpirun launches tasks using
Slurm's infrastructure (OpenMPI, LAM/MPI, HP-MPI and some MPICH1 modes).

3. Slurm creates a resource allocation for the job and then mpirun launches tasks using
some mechanism other than Slurm, such as SSH or RSH (BlueGene MPI and some MPICH1 modes).
These tasks initiated outside of Slurm's monitoring or control. Slurm's epilog should be
configured to purge these tasks when the job's allocation is relinquished.

See http://slurm.schedmd.com/mpi_guide.html for more information on use of these various
MPI implementation with Slurm.

MULTIPLE PROGRAM CONFIGURATION


Comments in the configuration file must have a "#" in column one. The configuration file
contains the following fields separated by white space:

Task rank
One or more task ranks to use this configuration. Multiple values may be comma
separated. Ranges may be indicated with two numbers separated with a '-' with the
smaller number first (e.g. "0-4" and not "4-0"). To indicate all tasks not
otherwise specified, specify a rank of '*' as the last line of the file. If an
attempt is made to initiate a task for which no executable program is defined, the
following error message will be produced "No executable program specified for this
task".

Executable
The name of the program to execute. May be fully qualified pathname if desired.

Arguments
Program arguments. The expression "%t" will be replaced with the task's number.
The expression "%o" will be replaced with the task's offset within this range (e.g.
a configured task rank value of "1-5" would have offset values of "0-4"). Single
quotes may be used to avoid having the enclosed values interpreted. This field is
optional. Any arguments for the program entered on the command line will be added
to the arguments specified in the configuration file.

For example:
###################################################################
# srun multiple program configuration file
#
# srun -n8 -l --multi-prog silly.conf
###################################################################
4-6 hostname
1,7 echo task:%t
0,2-3 echo offset:%o

> srun -n8 -l --multi-prog silly.conf
0: offset:0
1: task:1
2: offset:1
3: offset:2
4: linux15.llnl.gov
5: linux16.llnl.gov
6: linux17.llnl.gov
7: task:7

EXAMPLES


This simple example demonstrates the execution of the command hostname in eight tasks. At
least eight processors will be allocated to the job (the same as the task count) on
however many nodes are required to satisfy the request. The output of each task will be
proceeded with its task number. (The machine "dev" in the example below has a total of
two CPUs per node)

> srun -n8 -l hostname
0: dev0
1: dev0
2: dev1
3: dev1
4: dev2
5: dev2
6: dev3
7: dev3

The srun -r option is used within a job script to run two job steps on disjoint nodes in
the following example. The script is run using allocate mode instead of as a batch job in
this case.

> cat test.sh
#!/bin/sh
echo $SLURM_NODELIST
srun -lN2 -r2 hostname
srun -lN2 hostname

> salloc -N4 test.sh
dev[7-10]
0: dev9
1: dev10
0: dev7
1: dev8

The following script runs two job steps in parallel within an allocated set of nodes.

> cat test.sh
#!/bin/bash
srun -lN2 -n4 -r 2 sleep 60 &
srun -lN2 -r 0 sleep 60 &
sleep 1
squeue
squeue -s
wait

> salloc -N4 test.sh
JOBID PARTITION NAME USER ST TIME NODES NODELIST
65641 batch test.sh grondo R 0:01 4 dev[7-10]

STEPID PARTITION USER TIME NODELIST
65641.0 batch grondo 0:01 dev[7-8]
65641.1 batch grondo 0:01 dev[9-10]

This example demonstrates how one executes a simple MPICH job. We use srun to build a
list of machines (nodes) to be used by mpirun in its required format. A sample command
line and the script to be executed follow.

> cat test.sh
#!/bin/sh
MACHINEFILE="nodes.$SLURM_JOB_ID"

# Generate Machinefile for mpich such that hosts are in the same
# order as if run via srun
#
srun -l /bin/hostname | sort -n | awk '{print $2}' > $MACHINEFILE

# Run using generated Machine file:
mpirun -np $SLURM_NTASKS -machinefile $MACHINEFILE mpi-app

rm $MACHINEFILE

> salloc -N2 -n4 test.sh

This simple example demonstrates the execution of different jobs on different nodes in the
same srun. You can do this for any number of nodes or any number of jobs. The
executables are placed on the nodes sited by the SLURM_NODEID env var. Starting at 0 and
going to the number specified on the srun commandline.

> cat test.sh
case $SLURM_NODEID in
0) echo "I am running on "
hostname ;;
1) hostname
echo "is where I am running" ;;
esac

> srun -N2 test.sh
dev0
is where I am running
I am running on
dev1

This example demonstrates use of multi-core options to control layout of tasks. We
request that four sockets per node and two cores per socket be dedicated to the job.

> srun -N2 -B 4-4:2-2 a.out

This example shows a script in which Slurm is used to provide resource management for a
job by executing the various job steps as processors become available for their dedicated
use.

> cat my.script
#!/bin/bash
srun --exclusive -n4 prog1 &
srun --exclusive -n3 prog2 &
srun --exclusive -n1 prog3 &
srun --exclusive -n1 prog4 &
wait

COPYING


Copyright (C) 2006-2007 The Regents of the University of California. Produced at Lawrence
Livermore National Laboratory (cf, DISCLAIMER).
Copyright (C) 2008-2010 Lawrence Livermore National Security.
Copyright (C) 2010-2015 SchedMD LLC.

This file is part of Slurm, a resource management program. For details, see
<http://slurm.schedmd.com/>.

Slurm is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the
GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2
of the License, or (at your option) any later version.

Slurm is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without
even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
GNU General Public License for more details.

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