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The backend job scheduler is Gridengine, which functions similarly to the PBS Pro/OpenPBS

Resource Requests

The table below summarises the major resources attributes which are commonly used in most of the jobs. There are also other attributes which are very helping for fine tuning how a job should be scheduled, whose details are provided in the sub sections.

Resources

Attribute

Description

Default Value

Parallel Environments (-pe)

smp

Allocate X number of CPUs on the SAME compute node

Optional, if not specified, a job defaults to use 1 CPU

mpi

Allocate X number of CPUs from multiple compute node, this is mainly used by a job that implements under Open MPI framework.

Resource request list (-l)

mem

The amount of memory limit can be used by a job

Default 1024M

jobfs

The amount of disk space limit can be used by a job

Default 1G

walltime

The run time limit (elapsed time) before a job gets killed by the job scheduler

Default 0:30:0

ngpus

The number of GPGPUs

N/A

project_name (-P)

project_name

Request a job to consume resource quota defined via Project. Check Project sub section for details.

Optional, if not specified, default per user quota is consumed instead.

GPGPU

Two attributes gpu_model and gpu_code allow jobs to request to run on a particular GPGPU card model or chip. To find out what are available:

# qhost -F | grep gpu_model | sort -u
   hf:gpu_model=A2
   hf:gpu_model=L4
   hf:gpu_model=T1000_8GB

Local Scratch

TODO

Walltime Limit

TODO

Projects

TODO

Rack Awareness

TODO

Submit a Batch Job

A batch job can be submitted by using command qsub, in the following pattern:

# submit a job which calls a script (bash, shell, python scripts etc)
qsub -N JOB_NAME -pe smp NUMBER_OF_CPU -l ATTR1=VAL1,ATTR2=VAL2 SCRIPT

# submit a job which calls a BINARY (anything which are not script, such as sleep, dd etc)
qsub -N JOB_NAME -pe smp NUMBER_OF_CPU -l ATTR1=VAL1,ATTR2=VAL2 -b y BINARY

Examples

# a very big sleep job that needs 16 x CPUs, 2 x GPGPUs, 64GB memory, 10G disk space
qsub -b y -N generic_gpgpu -pe smp 16 -l ngpus=2,mem=65G,jobfs=10G sleep 1m

# a smaller sleep job that requires the specific A2 GPGPU...
qsub -b y -N t1000_gpgpu -pe smp 8 -l ngpus=2,gpgpu_model=A2,mem=16G,jobfs=10G sleep 1m

# a big job runs on multiple H100 nodes inside the same physical rack/cabinet F (rack awareness)
qsub -b y -N h100_gpgpu -pe mpi 256 -l ngpus=2,gpgpu_model=H100,rack=f,mem=128G,jobfs=100G sleep 1m

Submission Script

For larger and more complex analyses, the qsub submission script can be very useful. A submission script contains pre-populated qsub parameters, can be reused, distributed and version controlled easily. It looks like:

#!/bin/bash
#
# It prints the actual path of the job scratch directory.
#$ -pe smp 8
#$ -j y
#$ -e logs/$JOB_ID_$JOB_NAME.out
#$ -o logs/$JOB_ID_$JOB_NAME.out
#$ -cwd
#$ -N dd_smp
#$ -l mem=1G,jobfs=110G,tmpfree=150G,walltime=00:30:00
#

echo "$HOST $tmp_requested $TMPDIR"

# about 107GB
dd if=/dev/zero of=$TMPDIR/dd.test bs=512M count=200

To submit

z1234567@login01:~$ qsub sge_dd_smp.sh
Your job 31 ("dd_smp") has been submitted
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