Intro to Job Scheduling - Archive

Introduction: This workshop will introduce users to job management using the Slurm system - demonstrating how to create interactive jobs and submit jobs to the cluster queue that follow a basic workflow. After the workshop, participants will understand:

  • How to create a script that defines their workflow (i.e. loading modules).

  • Understand how to start interactive sessions to work within, as well as how to submit and track  jobs on the cluster.

  • Participants will require an intro level of experience of using Linux, as well as the ability to use a text editor from the command line.

Course Goals:

  • What is Slurm?

  • How to start an Interactive sessions, and perform job submission

  • How to select appropriate resource allocations.

  • How to monitor your jobs.

  • What does a general workflow look like?

  • Best practices in using HPC.

  • How to be a good cluster citizen?



01: Slurm

Topics:

  • Slurm: 

    • Interactive sessions.

    • Job submission.

    • Resource selection.

    • Monitoring.


Workload Managers: 

  1. Allocates access to appropriate computer nodes specific to your requests.

  2. Framework for starting, executing, monitoring, and even canceling your jobs.

  3. Queue management and job state notification.


ARCC: Slurm: 


Exercises:


Interactive Session: salloc

  • You’re there doing the work.

  • Suitable for developing and testing over a few hours.

[]$ salloc -–help # Lots of options. # Notice short and long form options. []$ salloc –A <project-name> -t <wall-time> # Format for: --time: Acceptable time formats include "minutes", "minutes:seconds", "hours:minutes:seconds", "days-hours", "days-hours:minutes" and "days-hours:minutes:seconds".

Interactive Session: salloc: workshop

  • You’ll only use the reservation for this (and/or other) workshop.

  • Once you have an account you typically do not need it.

  • But there are use cases when we can create a specific reservation for you.

[]$ salloc –A arccanetrain –t 1:00 --reservation=<reservation-name>

Interactive Session: salloc: What’s happening?

[]$ salloc -A arccanetrain -t 1:00 --reservation=<reservation-name> salloc: Granted job allocation 13526337 salloc: Nodes m233 are ready for job # Make a note of the job id. # Notice the server/node name has changed. [arcc-t05@m233 intro_to_hpc]$ squeue -u arcc-t05 JOBID PARTITION NAME USER ST TIME NODES NODELIST(REASON) 13526337 moran interact arcc-t05 R 0:19 1 m233 # For an interactive session: Name = interact # You have the command-line interactively available to you. []$ ... []$ squeue -u arcc-t05 JOBID PARTITION NAME USER ST TIME NODES NODELIST(REASON) 13526337 moran interact arcc-t05 R 1:03 1 m233 # Session will automatically time out []$ salloc: Job 13526337 has exceeded its time limit and its allocation has been revoked. slurmstepd: error: *** STEP 13526337.interactive ON m233 CANCELLED AT 2024-03-22T09:36:53 DUE TO TIME LIMIT *** exit srun: Job step aborted: Waiting up to 32 seconds for job step to finish.

Interactive Session: salloc: Finished Early?


Submit Jobs: sbatch

  • You submit a job to the queue and walk away.

  • Monitor its progress/state using command-line and/or email notifications.

  • Once complete, come back and analyze results.


Submit Jobs: sbatch: Template:


Submit Jobs: sbatch: What’s happening?


Submit Jobs: sbatch: What’s happening?


Submit Jobs: sbatch: Cancel?


Submit Jobs: sacct: What happened?


Submit Jobs: sbatch: Options:


If you don’t ask, you don’t get: GPU Example:


If you don’t ask, you don’t get: No GPU device requested:

Just because a partition/compute node has something,

 you still need to explicitly request it.


Common Questions:

  • How do I know what number of nodes, cores, memory etc to ask for my jobs?

  • How do I find out whether a cluster/partition supports these resources?

  • How do I find out whether these resources are available on the cluster?

  • How long will I have to wait in the queue before my job starts? How busy is the cluster?

  • How do I monitor the progress of my job?


Common Questions: Suggestions:

  • How do I know what number of nodes, cores, memory etc to ask for my jobs?

    • Understand your software and application. 

      • Read the docs – look at the help for commands/options.

      • Can it run multiple threads - use multi cores (OpenMP) / nodes (MPI)?

      • Can it use a GPU? Nvidia cuda.

      • Are their suggestions on data and memory requirements?

  • How do I find out whether a cluster/partition supports these resources?

  • How do I find out whether these resources are available on the cluster?

  • How long will I have to wait in the queue before my job starts? 

    • How busy is the cluster? 

    • Current Cluster utilization: Commands sinfo / arccjobs and SouthPass status page.

  • How do I monitor the progress of my job?

    • Slurm commands: squeue


Common Issues:

  • Not defining the account and time options.

  • The account is the name of the project you are associated with. It is not your username.

  • Requesting combinations of resources that can not be satisfied: Beartooth Hardware Summary Table

    • For example, you can not request 40 cores on a teton node (max of 32).

    • Requesting too much memory, or too many GPU devices with respect to a partition.

  • My job is pending? Why? 

    • Because the resources are currently not available.

    • Have you unnecessarily defined a specific partition (restricted yourself) that is busy

    • We only have a small number of GPUs.

    • This is a shared resource - sometimes you just have to be patient…

    • Check current cluster utilization.

  • Preemption: Users of an investment get priority on their hardware.

    • We have the non-investor partition.


02: Workflows and Best Practices

Topics:

  • What does a general workflow look like?

  • Best practices in using HPC.

  • How to be a good cluster citizen?


What does a general workflow look like?

Getting Started:

  • Understand your application / programming language.

  • What are its capabilities / functionality.

  • Read the documentation, find examples, online forums – community.

Develop/Try/Test:

  • Typically use an interactive session (salloc) where you’re typing/trying/testing.

  • Are modules available? If not submit a New Software Request to get installed.

  • Develop code/scripts.

  • Understand how the command-line works – what commands/scripts to call with options.

  • Understand if parallelization is available – can you optimize your code/application?

  • Test against a subset of data. Something that runs quick – maybe a couple of minutes/hours.

  • Do the results look correct?


What does a general workflow look like?

Production:

  • Put it all together within a bash Slurm script: 

    • Request appropriate resources using #SBATCH

    • Request appropriate wall time – hours, days…

    • Load modules: module load …

    • Run scripts/command-line.

  • Finally, submit your job to the cluster (sbatch) using a complete set of data.

    • Use: sbatch <script-name.sh>

    • Monitor job(s) progress.


What does it mean for an application to be parallel? 

Read the documentation and look at the command’s help: Does it mention:

  • Threads - multiple cpus/cores: Single node, single task, multiple cores.

  • OpenMP: Single task, multiple cores. Set environment variable.

    • an application programming interface (API) that supports multi-platform shared-memory multiprocessing programming in C, C++, and Fortran.

    • Example: ImageMagick

  • MPI: Message Passing Interface: Multiple nodes, multiple tasks

  • Hybrid: MPI / OpenMP and/or threads.


What does it mean for an application to be GPU enabled? 

Read the documentation and look at the command’s help: Does it mention:

  • GPU / Nvidia / Cuda?

  • Examples:

    • Applications: AlphaFold and GPU Blast

      • Via conda based environments built with GPU libraries - and converted to Jupyter kernels:

      • Examples: TensorFlow and PyTorch 

      • Jupyter Kernels: PyTorch 1.13.1


How can I be a good cluster citizen?

  • Policies

  • Don’t run intensive applications on the login nodes.

  • Understand your software/application.

  • Shared resource - multi-tenancy.

    • Other jobs running on the same node do not affect each other.

  • Don’t ask for everything. Don’t use:

    • mem=0

    • exclusive tag.

    • Only ask for a GPU if you know it’ll be used.

  • Use /lscratch for I/O intensive tasks rather than accessing /gscratch over the network. 

    • You will need to copy files back before the job ends.

  • Track usage and job performance: seff <jobid>


Being a good Cluster Citizen: Requesting Resources: 

Good Cluster Citizen:

  • Only request what you need.

  • Unless you know your application: 

    • can utilize multiple nodes/tasks/cores, request a single node/task/core (default).

    • can utilize multiple nodes/tasks/cores, requesting them will not make your code magically run faster.

    • is GPU enabled, having a GPU will not make your code magically run faster. 

  • Within your application/code check that resources are actually being detected and utilized.

    • Look at the job efficiency: job performance: seff <jobid>

    • This is emailed out if you have Slurm email notifications turned on.

  • Slurm cheatsheet


Job Efficiency:

Note:

  • Only accurate is the job is successful.

  • If the job fails with say an OOM: Out-Of-Memory the details will be inaccurate.

  • This is emailed out if you have Slurm email notifications turned on.


03: Intermediate/Advance Next Steps


Next Steps to look at: 

Future Workshops:

  • Using SouthPass

  • Data Access and Transfers

Look at:

  • Slurm: Requesting multiple cores/nodes, memory and GPUs.

  • Software Installation.

  • Conda: Creating and using environments.

  • Convert a conda environment to a Jupyter kernel.

  • Getting data on/off the cluster.


Slurm: Requesting multiple cores/nodes, memory and GPUs: 

Understand what is a node, a task and a core:


Installing Software: 

Installing software comes in a number of forms:

  • Download an existing binary that has built to run across the cluster’s operating system i.e. a Window’s executable will not run on a Linux based platform.

  • Download source code:

    • Run using an interpret language - Python, R.

    • Configure and compile - C/C++/Fortran.

    • Are there specific scientific libraries you need to load? What dependencies does it have?

  • Create a conda environment.

  • Create and/or use an existing Singularity (docker) container image.

    • A container is a standard unit of software that packages up code and all its dependencies so the application runs quickly and reliably from one computing environment to another.

  • Request via ARCC Portal: Request New/Updated HPC Software


Conda: 

Conda:

  • is a package, dependency and environment management for any language - Python, R, Ruby, Lua, Scala, Java, JavaScript, C/ C++, Fortran, and more.

  • is an open source package management system and environment management system that runs on Windows, macOS and Linux. 

  • quickly installs, runs and updates packages and their dependencies. 

  • easily creates, saves, loads and switches between environments – which can be exported from one system and imported onto another - work on local desktop then setup on a cluster.

  • can install and manage the thousand packages at repo.anaconda.com that are built, reviewed and maintained by Anaconda®.


Create a conda environment.

Basic Process:

  1. Find and load the miniconda3 module.

  2. Create a conda environment with a specific version of python.

    1. Where are you creating this environment? 

    2. Locally within your home or within a project to share?

  3. Activate the environment.

  4. Install packages.

    1. Are you using conda install or pip install

    2. Where do you want python related packages installed? 

    3. Understand how Python, miniconda, conda and pip combine.

  5. Deactivate the conda environment.


Creating a Jupyter Kernel: (from an existing conda environment) 

Note:

  • You can not use the module system on the SouthPass Jupyter service.

  • You use/setup kernel environments.

  • Kernels are programming language specific processes that run independently and interact with the Jupyter Applications and their user interfaces.

  • The specific kernel (python version) you are using will determine where packages/libraries are installed.

  • ARCC Wiki: JupyterLab and Notebooks


Getting Data On/Off the Cluster: 


04 Summary

Summary: 

Covered:

  • Slurm: Interactive sessions, job submission, resource selection and monitoring.

  • What does a general workflow look like?

  • Best practices in using HPC.

  • How to be a good cluster citizen?

  • Intermediate/Advance next steps to consider looking at,.