NAME
sge_pe − Grid Engine parallel environment configuration file format
DESCRIPTION
Parallel environments are parallel programming and runtime environments supporting the execution of shared memory or distributed memory parallelized applications. Parallel environments usually require some kind of setup to be operational before starting parallel applications. Examples of common parallel environments are OpenMP on shared memory multiprocessor systems, and Message Passing Interface (MPI) on shared memory or distributed systems.
sge_pe allows for the definition of interfaces to arbitrary parallel environments. Once a parallel environment is defined or modified with the −ap or −mp options to qconf(1) and linked with one or more queues via pe_list in queue_conf(5) the environment can be requested for a job via the −pe switch to qsub(1) together with a request for a numeric range of parallel processes to be allocated by the job. Additional −l options may be used to specify more detailed job requirements.
Note, Grid Engine allows backslashes (\) be used to escape newline characters. The backslash and the newline are replaced with a space character before any interpretation.
FORMAT
The format of a sge_pe file is defined as follows:
pe_name
The name of the parallel environment in the format for
pe_name in sge_types(1). To be used in the
qsub(1) −pe switch.
slots
The total number of slots (normally one per parallel process
or thread) allowed to be filled concurrently under the
parallel environment. Type is integer, valid values are 0 to
9999999.
user_lists
xuser_lists
A comma-separated list of user access list names (see
access_list(5)).
Each user contained in at least one of the user_lists access lists has access to the parallel environment. If the user_lists parameter is set to NONE (the default) any user has access if not explicitly excluded via the xuser_lists parameter.
Each user contained in at least one of the xuser_lists access lists is not allowed to access the parallel environment. If the xuser_lists parameter is set to NONE (the default) any user has access.
If a user is contained both in an access list in xuser_lists and user_lists the user is denied access to the parallel environment.
start_proc_args
stop_proc_args
The command line respectively of a startup or shutdown
procedure (an executable command, plus possible arguments)
for the parallel environment, or "none" for no
procedure (typically for tightly integrated PEs). The
command line is started directly, not in a shell. An
optional prefix "user@" specifies
the username under which the procedure is to be started. In
that case see the SECURITY section below concerning security
issues running as a privileged user.
The startup procedure is invoked by sge_shepherd(8) on the master node of the job prior to executing the job script. Its purpose is to setup the parallel environment according to its needs. The shutdown procedure is invoked by sge_shepherd(8) after the job script has finished. Its purpose is to stop the parallel environment and to remove it from all participating systems. The standard output of the procedure is redirected to the file REQUEST.poJID in the job’s working directory (see qsub(1)), with REQUEST being the name of the job as displayed by qstat(1), and JID being the job’s identification number. Likewise, the standard error output is redirected to REQUEST.peJID. If the −e or −o options are given on job submission, the PE error and standard output is merged into the paths specified.
The following
special variables, expanded at runtime, can be used (besides
any other strings which have to be interpreted by the start
and stop procedures) to constitute a command line:
$pe_hostfile
The pathname of a file containing a detailed description of the layout of the parallel environment to be setup by the start-up procedure. Each line of the file refers to a host on which parallel processes are to be run. The first entry of each line denotes the hostname, the second entry the number of parallel processes to be run on the host, the third entry the name of the queue. The entries are separated by spaces. If −binding pe is specified on job submission, the fourth column is the core binding specification as colon-separated socket-core pairs, like "0,0:0,1", meaning the first core on the first socket and the second core on the first socket can be used for binding. Otherwise it will be "UNDEFINED". With the obsolete queue processors specification the fourth entry could be a multi-processor configuration (or "<NULL>").
$host |
The name of the host on which the startup or stop procedures are run. |
$ja_task_id
The array job task index (0 if not an array job).
$job_owner
The user name of the job owner.
$job_id
Grid Engine’s unique job identification number.
$job_name
The name of the job.
$pe |
The name of the parallel environment in use. |
$pe_slots
Number of slots granted for the job.
$processors
The processors string as contained in the queue configuration (see queue_conf(5)) of the master queue (the queue in which the startup and stop procedures are run).
$queue |
The cluster queue of the master queue instance. |
$sge_cell
The SGE_CELL environment variable (useful for locating files).
$sge_root
The SGE_ROOT environment variable (useful for locating files).
$stdin_path
The standard input path.
$stderr_path
The standard error path.
$stdout_path
The standard output path.
$merge_stderr
$fs_stdin_host
$fs_stdin_path
$fs_stdin_tmp_path
$fs_stdin_file_staging
$fs_stdout_host
$fs_stdout_path
$fs_stdout_tmp_path
$fs_stdout_file_staging
$fs_stderr_host
$fs_stderr_path
$fs_stderr_tmp_path
$fs_stderr_file_staging
The start and stop commands are run with the same environment setting as that of the job to be started afterwards (see qsub(1)).
allocation_rule
The allocation rule is interpreted by the scheduler thread
and helps the scheduler to decide how to distribute parallel
processes among the available machines. If, for instance, a
parallel environment is built for shared memory applications
only, all parallel processes have to be assigned to a single
machine, no matter how many suitable machines are available.
If, however, the parallel environment follows the
distributed memory paradigm, an even distribution of
processes among machines may be favorable, as may packing
processes onto the minimum number of machines.
The current version of the scheduler only understands the following allocation rules:
int |
An integer, fixing the number of processes per host. If it is 1, all processes have to reside on different hosts. If the special name $pe_slots is used, the full range of processes as specified with the qsub(1) −pe switch has to be allocated on a single host (no matter what value belonging to the range is finally chosen for the job to be allocated). |
$fill_up
Starting from the best suitable host/queue, all available slots are allocated. Further hosts and queues are "filled up" as long as a job still requires slots for parallel tasks.
$round_robin
From all suitable hosts, a single slot is allocated until all tasks requested by the parallel job are dispatched. If more tasks are requested than suitable hosts are found, allocation starts again from the first host. The allocation scheme walks through suitable hosts in a most-suitable-first order.
control_slaves
This parameter can be set to TRUE or FALSE (the default). It
indicates whether Grid Engine is the creator of the slave
tasks of a parallel application via sge_execd(8) and
sge_shepherd(8) and thus has full control over all
processes in a parallel application ("tight
integration"). This enables:
• |
resource limits are enforced for all tasks, even on slave hosts; | ||
• |
resource consumption is properly accounted on all hosts; | ||
• |
proper control of tasks, with no need to write a customized terminate method to ensure that whole job is finished on qdel and that tasks are properly reaped in the case of abnormal job termination; | ||
• |
all tasks are started with the appropriate nice value which was configured as priority in the queue configuration; | ||
• |
propagation of the job environment to slave hosts, e.g. so that they write into the appropriate per-job temporary directory specified by TMPDIR, which is created on each host and properly cleaned up. |
To gain control over the slave tasks of a parallel application, a sophisticated PE interface is required, which works closely together with Grid Engine facilities, typically interpreting the Grid Engine hostfile and starting remote tasks with qrsh(1) and its −inherit option. See, for instance, the $SGE_ROOT/mpi directory and the howto pages 〈 URL: http://arc.liv.ac.uk/SGE/howto/#Tight%20Integration%20of%20Parallel%20Libraries 〉 .
Please set the control_slaves parameter to false for all other PE interfaces.
job_is_first_task
The job_is_first_task parameter can be set to TRUE or
FALSE. A value of TRUE indicates that the Grid Engine job
script already contains one of the tasks of the parallel
application (and the number of slots reserved for the job is
the number of slots requested with the −pe switch).
FALSE indicates that the job script (and its child
processes) is not part of the parallel program, just being
used to kick off the tasks that do the work; then the number
of slots reserved for the job in the master queue is
increased by 1, as indicated by
qstat/qhost.
This should be TRUE for the common modern MPI implementations with tight integration. Consider if the allocation rule is $fill_up, and a job is allocated only a single slot on the master host; then one of the MPI processes actually runs in that slot, and should be accounted as such, so the job is the first task.
If wallclock
accounting is used (execd_params ACCT_RESERVED_USAGE
and/or SHARETREE_RESERVED_USAGE Is TRUE) and
control_slaves is set to FALSE, the
job_is_first_task parameter influences the accounting
for the job: A value of TRUE means that accounting for CPU
and requested memory gets multiplied by the number of slots
requested with the −pe switch. FALSE means the
accounting information gets multiplied by number of slots +
1. Otherwise, the only significant effect of the parameter
is on the display of the job.
urgency_slots
For pending jobs with a slot range PE request with different
minimum and maximum, the number of slots they will actually
use is not determined. This setting specifies the method to
be used by Grid Engine to assess the number of slots such
jobs might finally get.
The assumed slot allocation has a meaning when determining the resource-request-based priority contribution for numeric resources as described in sge_priority(5) and is displayed when qstat(1) is run without −g t option.
The following methods are supported:
int |
The specified integer number is directly used as prospective slot amount. | ||
min |
The slot range minimum is used as prospective slot amount. If no lower bound is specified with the range, 1 is assumed. | ||
max |
The slot range maximum is used as prospective slot amount. If no upper bound is specified with the range, the absolute maximum possible due to the PE’s slots setting is assumed. | ||
avg |
The average of all numbers occurring within the job’s PE range request is assumed. |
accounting_summary
This parameter is only checked if control_slaves (see
above) is set to TRUE and thus Grid Engine is the creator of
the slave tasks of a parallel application via
sge_execd(8) and sge_shepherd(8). In this
case, accounting information is available for every single
slave task started by Grid Engine.
The accounting_summary parameter can be set to TRUE or FALSE. A value of TRUE indicates that only a single accounting record is written to the accounting(5) file, containing the accounting summary of the whole job, including all slave tasks, while a value of FALSE indicates an individual accounting(5) record is written for every slave task, as well as for the master task.
Note: When running tightly integrated jobs with SHARETREE_RESERVED_USAGE set, and accounting_summary enabled in the parallel environment, reserved usage will only be reported by the master task of the parallel job. No per-parallel task usage records will be sent from execd to qmaster, which can significantly reduce load on the qmaster when running large, tightly integrated parallel jobs. However, this removes the only post-hoc information about which hosts a job used.
qsort_args
library qsort-function [arg1 ...]
Specifies a method for specifying the queues/hosts and order
that should be used to schedule a parallel job. For details,
and the API, consult the header file
$SGE_ROOT/include/sge_pqs_api.h. library is
the path to the qsort dynamic library, qsort-function
is the name of the qsort function implemented by the
library, and the args are arguments passed to
qsort. Substitutions from the hard requested resource
list for the job are made for any strings of the form
$resource, where resource is the full name of
the resource as defined in the complex(5) list. If
resource is not requested in the job, a null string
is substituted.
RESTRICTIONS
Note that the functionality of the start and stop procedures remains the full responsibility of the administrator configuring the parallel environment. Grid Engine will invoke these procedures and evaluate their exit status. A non-zero exit status will put the queue into an error state. If the start procedure has a non-zero exit status, the job will be re-queued.
SECURITY
If start_proc_args, or stop_proc_args is specified with a user@ prefix, the same considerations apply as for the prolog and epilog, as described in the SECURITY section of sge_conf(5).
SEE ALSO
sge_intro(1), sge__types(1), qconf(1), qdel(1), qmod(1), qrsh(1), qsub(1), access_list(5), sge_conf(5), sge_qmaster(8), sge_shepherd(8).
FILES
$SGE_ROOT/include/sge_pqs_api.h
COPYRIGHT
See sge_intro(1) for a full statement of rights and permissions.