Yeah, I was contemplating doing that so I didn't have a dependency on the scheduler being up or down or busy.

What I was more curious about is if any one had an prebaked scripts for that.

-Paul Edmon-

On 8/9/2024 12:04 PM, Jeffrey T Frey wrote:
You'd have to do this within e.g. the system's bashrc infrastructure.  The 
simplest idea would be to add to e.g. /etc/profile.d/zzz-slurmstats.sh and have 
some canned commands/scripts running.  That does introduce load to the system 
and Slurm on every login, though, and slows the startup of login shells based 
on how responsive slurmctld/slurmdbd are at that moment.

Another option would be to run the commands/scripts for all users on some timed 
schedule — e.g. produce per-user stats every 30 minutes.  So long as the stats 
are publicly-visible anyway, put those summaries in a shared file system with 
open read access.  Name the files by uid number.  Now your /etc/profile.d 
script just cat's ${STATS_DIR}/$(id -u).




On Aug 9, 2024, at 11:11, Paul Edmon via slurm-users 
<slurm-users@lists.schedmd.com> wrote:

We are working to make our users more aware of their usage. One of the ideas we 
came up with was to having some basic usage stats printed at login (usage over 
past day, fairshare, job efficiency, etc). Does anyone have any scripts or 
methods that they use to do this? Before baking my own I was curious what other 
sites do and if they would be willing to share their scripts and methodology.

-Paul Edmon-


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