He's talking about recent versions of Slurm which now have this option:
https://slurm.schedmd.com/slurm.conf.html#OPT_use_interactive_step
-Paul Edmon-
On 2/28/2024 10:46 AM, Paul Raines wrote:
What do you mean "operate via the normal command line"? When
you salloc, you are still on the login node.
$ salloc -p rtx6000 -A sysadm -N 1 --ntasks-per-node=1 --mem=20G
--time=1-10:00:00 --gpus=2 --cpus-per-task=2 /bin/bash
salloc: Pending job allocation 3798364
salloc: job 3798364 queued and waiting for resources
salloc: job 3798364 has been allocated resources
salloc: Granted job allocation 3798364
salloc: Waiting for resource configuration
salloc: Nodes rtx-02 are ready for job
mesg: cannot open /dev/pts/91: Permission denied
mlsc-login[0]:~$ hostname
mlsc-login.nmr.mgh.harvard.edu
mlsc-login[0]:~$ printenv | grep SLURM_JOB_NODELIST
SLURM_JOB_NODELIST=rtx-02
Seems you MUST use srun
-- Paul Raines (http://help.nmr.mgh.harvard.edu)
On Wed, 28 Feb 2024 10:25am, Paul Edmon via slurm-users wrote:
External Email - Use Caution salloc is the currently
recommended way for interactive sessions. srun is now intended for
launching steps or MPI applications. So properly you would salloc and
then srun inside the salloc.
As you've noticed with srun you tend lose control of your shell as it
takes over so you have background the process unless it is the main
process. We've hit this before when people use srun to subschedule in
a salloc.
You can also just launch the salloc and then operate via the normal
command line reserving srun for things like launching MPI.
The reason they changed from srun to salloc is that you can't srun
inside a srun. So if you were a user who started a srun interactive
session and then you tried to invoke MPI it would get weird as you
would be invoking another srun. By using salloc you avoid this issue.
We used to use srun for interactive sessions as well but swapped to
salloc a few years back and haven't had any issues.
-Paul Edmon-
On 2/28/2024 10:17 AM, wdennis--- via slurm-users wrote:
Hi list,
In our institution, our instructions to users who want to spawn an
interactive job (for us, a bash shell) have always been to do "srun
..."
from the login node, which has always been working well for us. But
when
we had a recent Slurm training, the SchedMD folks advised us to use
"salloc" and then "srun" to do interactive jobs. I tried this today,
"salloc" gave me a shell on a server, the same as srun does, but
then when
I tried to "srun [programname]" it hung there with no output. Of
course
when I tried "srun [programname] &" it spawned the background job, and
gave me back a prompt. Either time I had to Ctrl-C the running srun
job,
and got no output other than the srun/slurmstepd termination output.
I think I read somewhere that directly invoking srun creates an
allocation; why then would I want to do an initial salloc, and then
srun?
(i the case that I want a foreground program, such as a bash shell)
I have surveyed some other institution's Slurm interactive jobs
documentation for users, I see both examples of advice to run srun
directly, or salloc and then srun.
Please help me to understand how this is intended to work, and if
we are
"doing it wrong" :)
Thanks,
Will
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