HPC/Submitting and Managing Jobs
Environment configuration
Home dir
The users' home directories are hosted on lustre and are backed up nightly. The home directory can be reached, in standard Unix fashion using either of the two following symbols:
~ $HOME
lustre sandbox
For files that need to be shared among the nodes, and are possibly large and change often, use a "sandbox" directory. The environment variable
$SANDBOX
points to such a user-specific directory, which is shared by lustre, but not backed up. lustre is a parallel file system that allows concurrent and coherent file access at high data rates.
Applications
In the final configuration, we will use the environment-modules package to manage user applications. This will be similar to places like NERSC or PNNL. In early access mode, the CNM-specific user environment is configured automatically in /etc/profile.d/cnm.{sh,csh}
.
For now the only applications are the Development tools.
Admin note: The master copy of these files resides in mgmt{01,02}:/opt/teamhpc/node-skel/etc/profile.d
and is distributed by ~root/bin/skeldistrib
.
Submitting jobs to Moab/Torque
qsub [-A accountname] [options] jobfile
For details on options:
man qsub qsub --help # sorry, not much)
We currently have only the default
queue configured.
More details at the Torque Wiki, in particular the full qsub documentation for all supported PBS options.
Querying jobs
Use the command qstat (from PBS) or showq (from Moab):
- qstat [-u $USER]
- showq [-u $USER]
- regular output
- qstat -a
- showq -n
- alternate format (showing names)
- qstat -f [jobnum]
- full information
- checkjob [-v] jobnum
- get extended jobs status information – useful to diagnose problems with "stuck" jobs.
Removing jobs
qdel jobnumber
Example job file
- sample job file for Infiniband interconnect (recommended):
#!/bin/bash ## Basics: Number of nodes, processors per node (ppn), and walltime (hhh:mm:ss) #PBS -l nodes=5:ppn=8 #PBS -l walltime=0:10:00 #PBS -N job_name #PBS -A account ## redirect stdout and stderr #PBS -o job.out #PBS -e job.err ## send mail at begin, end, abort, or never (b, e, a, n) #PBS -m ea # change directory cd $PBS_O_WORKDIR # set $NPROCS to the count of allocated cores NPROCS=`wc -l < $PBS_NODEFILE` # Verbose info, may be removed cat << END_INFO master node: `hostname` working directory: `pwd` nodes file: $PBS_NODEFILE number of processes: $NPROCS process list: `cat $PBS_NODEFILE` END_INFO # start MPI job over Infiniband transport mpirun -machinefile $PBS_NODEFILE -np $NPROCS \ programname
OpenIB is the default (and fast) interconnect mechanism. This is done using the environment variable $OMPI_MCA_btl
.
- To select ethernet transport (e.g. for embarrasingly parallel jobs), specify an
-mca
option:
mpirun -machinefile $PBS_NODEFILE -np $NPROCS \
-mca btl self,tcp \
programname
The account parameter
The parameter for option -A account
is in most cases the CNM proposal, specified as follows:
cnm123
- (3 digits) for proposals below 1000
cnm01234
- (5 digits, 0-padded) for proposals from 1000 onwards.
user
- for a limited personal startup allocation
staff
- for discretionary access by staff.
You can check your account balance in hours as follows:
mybalance -h
gbalance -u $USER -h
Using OpenMP
For hybrid MPI/OpenMP operation under PBS (which is what happens when linking the MKL with OpenMP), two adjustments are necessary:
- The environment variable
OMP_NUM_THREADS
needs to be set to the number of available cores per node, i.e., the ppn parameter. By default, this variable is set to 1 to select single-threading of OpenMP-compiled applications.
- The machinefile needs to be thinned out in the job file, to have each node listed only once.
Example
#!/bin/bash
#PBS -l nodes=nnn:ppn=8
...
MACHINEFILE=$PBS_NODEFILE
...
if [ multithreaded ] # insert specific condition
then
sort -u $MACHINEFILE > machinefile
MACHINEFILE=machinefile
export OMP_NUM_THREADS=8
fi
...
NPROC=`wc -l < $MACHINEFILE`
...
Hybrid MPI+OpenMP is currently unsupported and may well be less efficient than compiling and running with MPI-only communication.
Policies
- Direct user access to nodes is only possible while a job is running for that user. This is governed by the torque-pam package.