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<div class="slurm-title__version">Version 17.11</div>
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<h1>Download Slurm</h1>
<p>Slurm source can be downloaded from
<a href="https://www.schedmd.com/downloads.php">
https://www.schedmd.com/downloads.php</a>.<br>
Slurm has also been packaged for
<a href="https://packages.debian.org/search?keywords=slurm-wlm">Debian</a> and
<a href="http://packages.ubuntu.com/search?keywords=slurm-wlm">Ubuntu</a>
(named <i>slurm-wlm</i> or <i>slurm-llnl</i> depending upon the version) and
<a href="http://www.pkgsrc.org">NetBSD</a> (in pkgsrc) and
<a href="http://www.freshports.org/sysutils/slurm-wlm/">FreeBSD</a>.</p>
<!--
Slurm interface to PHP
https://github.com/jcftang/slurm/commits/php-slurm
http://thammuz.tchpc.tcd.ie/mirrors/php-slurm/1.0/
Development by Peter Vermeulen with help from staff of
Trinity Centre for High Performance Computing,
Trinity College Dublin, Ireland.
-->
<h2>Download Related Software</h2>
<ul>
<li><b>Authentication</b> plugins identifies the user originating
a message.</li>
<ul>
<li><b>MUNGE</b> (recommended)<br>
In order to compile the "auth/munge" authentication plugin for Slurm,
you will need to build and install MUNGE, available from
<a href="https://dun.github.io/munge/">https://dun.github.io/munge/</a> and
<a href="http://packages.debian.org/src:munge">Debian</a> and
<a href="http://fedoraproject.org/">Fedora</a> and
<a href="http://packages.ubuntu.com/src:munge">Ubuntu</a>.</li>
</ul><br>
<li><b>Authentication</b> tools for users that work with Slurm.</li>
<ul>
<li><a href="http://sourceforge.net/projects/auks/">AUKS</a><br>
AUKS is an utility designed to ease Kerberos V credential support addition
to non-interactive applications, like batch systems (Slurm, LSF, Torque, etc.).
It includes a plugin for the Slurm workload manager. AUKS is not used as
an authentication plugin by the Slurm code itself, but provides a mechanism
for the application to manage Kerberos V credentials.</li>
</ul><br>
<li><b>Checkpoint/Restart</b></li>
<ul>
<li><a href="https://upc-bugs.lbl.gov/blcr/doc/html/">
<b> BLCR (Berkeley Lab Checkpoint/Restart)</a></b>
<li><a href="http://dmtcp.sourceforge.net/">
<b>DMTCP (Distributed MultiThreaded CheckPointing)</a></b>
<li><a href="https://computation.llnl.gov/project/scr/">
<b>Scalable Checkpoint/Restart (SCR) for MPI</a></b>
</ul><br>
<li><b>Databases</b> can be used to store accounting information.
See our <a href="accounting.html">Accounting</a> web page for more information.
<ul>
<li><a href="http://www.mysql.com/">MySQL</a></li>
<li><a href="https://mariadb.org/">MariaDB</a></li>
</ul><br>
In addition, job completion data can be written to an
<a href="http://www.elasticsearch.org/">elasticsearch</a> server using the
"job_comp/elasticsearch" plugin.
The plugin is currently available from
<a href="https://github.com/asanchez1987/jobcomp-elasticsearch.git">
https://github.com/asanchez1987/jobcomp-elasticsearch.git</a>
and merged with the Slurm distribution.
It may be included directly in a future release of Slurm.</li><br>
<li><b>Debuggers</b> and debugging tools</li>
<ul>
<li><a href="http://www.roguewave.com/products-services/totalview"><b>TotalView</b></a>
is a GUI-based source code debugger well suited for parallel applications.</li>
<li><a href="http://padb.pittman.org.uk/"><b>Padb</b></a>
is a job inspection tool for examining and debugging parallel programs, primarily it simplifies the process of gathering stack traces but also supports a wide range of other functions.
It's an open source, non-interactive, command line, scriptable tool intended for use by programmers and system administrators alike.</li>
</ul><br>
<li><b>Digital signatures</b> (Cypto plugin) are used to ensure message are not altered.</li>
<ul>
<li><b>MUNGE</b> (recommended)<br>
MUNGE can be used at an alternative to OpenSSL.
MUNGE is available under the Gnu General Public License.
See MUNGE download information above.</li>
<li><b>OpenSSL</b><br>
OpenSSL may be used as an alternative to MUNGE for generation of digital signatures.
Download it from <a href="http://www.openssl.org/">http://www.openssl.org/</a>.</li>
</ul><br>
<li><b>DRMAA (Distributed Resource Management Application API)</b><br>
<a href="http://apps.man.poznan.pl/trac/slurm-drmaa">PSNC DRMAA</a> for Slurm
is an implementation of <a href="http://www.gridforum.org/">Open Grid Forum</a>
<a href="http://www.drmaa.org/">DRMAA 1.0</a> (Distributed Resource Management Application API)
<a href="http://www.ogf.org/documents/GFD.133.pdf">specification</a> for submission
and control of jobs to <href="https://slurm.schedmd.com">Slurm</a>.
Using DRMAA, grid applications builders, portal developers and ISVs can use
the same high-level API to link their software with different cluster/resource
management systems.<br><br>
There is a variant of PSNC DRMAA providing support for Slurm's --cluster option
avaiable from
<a href="https://github.com/natefoo/slurm-drmaa">https://github.com/natefoo/slurm-drmaa</a>.<br><br>
Perl 6 DRMAA bindings are available from
<a href="https://github.com/scovit/Scheduler-DRMAA">https://github.com/scovit/Scheduler-DRMAA</a>.
</li><br>
<li><b>Hostlist</b><br>
A Python program used for manipulation of Slurm hostlists including
functions such as intersection and difference. Download the code from:<br>
<a href="http://www.nsc.liu.se/~kent/python-hostlist">
http://www.nsc.liu.se/~kent/python-hostlist</a><br><br>
Lua bindings for hostlist functions are also available here:<br>
<a href="https://github.com/grondo/lua-hostlist">
https://github.com/grondo/lua-hostlist</a><br>
<b>NOTE:</b> The Lua hostlist functions do not support the
IBM Bluegene naming convention or bracketed numeric ranges
anywhere except at the end of the name (i.e. "bgq[0000x1333]"
and "rack[0-3]_blade[0-63]" are not supported).</li><br>
<li><b>Interactive Script</b><br>
A wrapper script that makes it very simple to get an interactive shell on a
cluster. Download the code from:<br>
<a href="https://github.com/alanorth/hpc_infrastructure_scripts/blob/master/slurm/interactive">
https://github.com/alanorth/hpc_infrastructure_scripts/blob/master/slurm/interactive</a></li><br>
<li><b>Interconnect</b> plugins (Switch plugin)</li>
<ul>
<li><b>Infiniband</b><br>
The <b>topology.conf</b> file for an Infiniband switch can be
automatically generated using the <b>slurmibtopology</b> tool found here:<br>
<a href="https://ftp.fysik.dtu.dk/Slurm/slurmibtopology.sh">
https://ftp.fysik.dtu.dk/Slurm/slurmibtopology.sh</a>.
</ul><br>
<li><b>I/O Watchdog</b><br>
A facility for monitoring user applications, most notably parallel jobs,
for <i>hangs</i> which typically have a side-effect of ceasing all write
activity. This facility attempts to monitor all write activity of an
application and trigger a set of user-defined actions when write activity
as ceased for a configurable period of time. A SPANK plugin is provided
for use with Slurm. See the README and man page in the package for more
details.
<a href="https://github.com/grondo/io-watchdog">
https://github.com/grondo/io-watchdog</a></li><br>
<li><b>MPI</b> versions supported</li>
<ul>
<li><a href="https://software.intel.com/en-us/intel-mpi-library">Intel MPI</a></li>
<li><a href="https://www.mpich.org/">MPICH (a.k.a. MPICH2 / MPICH2)</a></li>
<li><a href="http://mvapich.cse.ohio-state.edu/">MVAPICH (a.k.a MVAPICH2)</a></li>
<li><a href="https://www.open-mpi.org">Open MPI</a></li>
</ul><br>
<li><b>Workload Simulator</b><br>
A <a href="http://www.bsc.es/marenostrum-support-services/services/slurm-simulator">Slurm simulator</a>
is available to assess various scheduling policies using historic workload data.
Under simulation, jobs are not actually executed. Instead, a job execution trace
from a real system, or a synthetic trace, are used.<br>
<b>NOTE:</b> This sofware is currently not maintained.</li><br>
<li><b>PAM Module (pam_slurm)</b><br>
Pluggable Authentication Module (PAM) for restricting access to compute nodes
where Slurm performs workload management. Access to the node is restricted to
user root and users who have been allocated resources on that node.
NOTE: pam_slurm is included within the Slurm distribution.
For earlier Slurm versions, pam_slurm is available for download
<a href="https://www.schedmd.com/downloads/extras/pam_slurm-1.6.tar.bz2">here</a>.
<br>
Slurm's PAM module has also been packaged for
<a href="http://packages.debian.org/src:libpam-slurm">Debian</a> and
<a href="http://packages.ubuntu.com/src:libpam-slurm">Ubuntu</a>
(both named <i>libpam-slurm</i>).</li><br>
<li><b>Command wrappers</b><br>
There is a wrapper for Maui/Moab's showq command
<a href="https://github.com/pedmon/slurm_showq">here</a>.<br><br>
<li><b>Job Script Generator</b><br>
Brigham Young University has developed a Javascript tool to generate
batch job scripts for Slurm which is available
<a href="https://github.com/BYUHPC/BYUJobScriptGenerator">here</a>.<br><br>
<li><b>Scripting interfaces</b>
<ul>
<li>A <b>Perl</b> interface is included in the Slurm distribution in the
<i>contribs/perlapi</i> directory and packaged in the <i>perapi</i> RPM.</li>
<li><a href="http://www.gingergeeks.co.uk/pyslurm/">PySlurm</a> is a
Python/Pyrex module to interface with Slurm.
There is also a Python module to expand and collect hostlist expressions
available <a href="http://www.nsc.liu.se/~kent/python-hostlist/">
here</a>.</li>
<!--
This directly communicates with the database, so it is something that we
probably do not want to recommend.
<li><a href="http://pypi.python.org/pypi/slurchemy">slurchemy</a> provides
SQL Alchemy bindings for your slurmdbd database.</li>
-->
<li><a href="http://www.lua.org/">Lua</a> may be used to implement a
Slurm process tracking plugin.
The Lua script available in <i>contribs/lua/protrack.lua</i>
implements containers using CPUSETs.
</ul><br>
<li><b>SPANK Plugins</b><br>
SPANK provides a very generic interface for stackable plug-ins which
may be used to dynamically modify the job launch code in Slurm. SPANK
plugins may be built without access to Slurm source code. They need
only be compiled against Slurm‘s spank.h header file, added to the
SPANK config file plugstack.conf, and they will be loaded at runtime
during the next job launch. Thus, the SPANK infrastructure provides
administrators and other developers a low cost, low effort ability to
dynamically modify the runtime behavior of Slurm job launch.
As assortment of SPANK plugins are available from<br>
<a href="https://github.com/grondo/slurm-spank-plugins">
https://github.com/grondo/slurm-spank-plugins</a>.<br>
A SPANK plugin called "spunnel" to support ssh port forwarding is available
from Harvard University.
It can be downloaded from the
<a href="https://github.com/harvardinformatics/spunnel">spunnel repository</a>.</li><br>
<li><b>Sqlog</b><br>
A set of scripts that leverages Slurm's job completion logging facility
in provide information about what jobs were running at any point in the
past as well as what resources they used. Download the code from:<br>
<a href="https://github.com/grondo/sqlog">
https://github.com/grondo/sqlog</a></li><br>
<li><b>Task Affinity</b> plugins</li>
<ul>
<li><a href="http://www.open-mpi.org/projects/hwloc/">
Portable Hardware Locality (HWLOC)</a></li>
</ul><br>
<li><b>Node Health Check</b><br>
Probably the most comprehensive and lightweight health check tool out
there is
<a href="https://github.com/mej/nhc">LBNL Node Health Check</a>.
It has integration with Slurm as well as Torque resource managers.</li><br>
<li><b>Accounting Tools</b><br>
<ul>
<li><b>UBMoD</b> is a web based tool for displaying accounting data from various
resource managers. It aggregates the accounting data from sacct into a MySQL
data warehouse and provide a front end web interface for browsing the data.
For more information, see the
<a href="http://ubmod.sourceforge.net/resource-manager-slurm.html">UDMod home page</a> and
<a href="https://github.com/ubccr/ubmod">source code</a>.<br></li>
<li><a href="http://xdmod.sourceforge.net"><b>XDMoD</b></a> (XD Metrics on Demand)
is an NSF-funded open source tool designed to audit and facilitate the utilization
of the XSEDE cyberinfrastructure by providing a wide range of metrics on XSEDE
resources, including resource utilization, resource performance, and impact on
scholarship and research.</li>
</ul></li><br>
<li><b>STUBL (Slurm Tools and UBiLities)</b><br>
STUBL is a collection of supplemental tools and utility scripts for Slurm.<br>
<a href="https://github.com/ubccr/stubl">STUBL home page</a>.<br><br>
<dl>
<dt>pbs2sbatch</dt>
<dd>Converts PBS directives to equivalent Slurm sbatch directives. Accommodates
old UB CCR-specific PBS tags like IB1, IB2, etc.</dd>
<dt>pbs2slurm</dt>
<dd>A script that attempts to convert PBS scripts into corresponding sbatch
scripts. It will convert PBS directives as well as PBS environment variables
and will insert bash code to create a SLURM_NODEFILE that is consistent with
the PBS_NODEFILE.</dd>
<dt>slurmbf</dt>
<dd>Analogous to the PBS "showbf -S" command.</dd>
<dt>snodes</dt>
<dd>A customized version of sinfo. Displays node information in an
easy-to-interpet format. Filters can be applied to view (1) specific nodes,
(2) nodes in a specific partition, or (3) nodes in a specifc state.</dd>
<dt>sqstat</dt>
<dd>A customized version of squeue that produces output analogous to the PBS
qstat and xqstat commands (requires clush).</dd>
<dt>fisbatch</dt>
<dd>Friendly Interactive sbatch. A customized version of sbatch that provides a
user-friendly interface to an interactive job with X11 forwarding enabled.
It is analogous to the PBS "qsub -I -X" command. This code was adopted from
srun.x11 (requires clush).</dd>
<dt>sranks</dt>
<dd>A command that lists the overall priorities and associated priority
components of queued jobs in ascending order. Top-ranked jobs will be given
priority by the scheduler but lower ranked jobs may get slotted in first if
they fit into the scheduler's backfill window.</dd>
<dt>sqelp</dt>
<dd>A customized version of squeue that only prints a double-quote if the
information in a column is the same from row to row. Some users find this
type of formatting easier to visually digest.</dd>
<dt>sjeff</dt>
<dd>Determines the efficiency of one or more running jobs. Inefficient jobs are
high-lighted in red text (requires clush).</dd>
<dt>sueff</dt>
<dd>Determines the overall efficiency of the running jobs of one or more users.
Users that are inefficient are highlighted in red text (requires clush).</dd>
<dt>yasqr</dt>
<dd>Yet Another Squeue Replacement. Fixes squeue bugs in earlier versions of
Slurm.</dd>
<dt>sgetscr</dt>
<dd>Retrieves the Slurm/sbatch script and environment files for a job that is
queued or running.</dd>
<dt>snacct</dt>
<dd>Retrieves Slurm accounting information for a given node and for a given
period of time.</dd>
<dt>suacct</dt>
<dd>Retrieves Slurm accounting information for a given user's jobs for a given
period of time.</dd>
<dt>slist</dt>
<dd>Retrieves Slurm accounting and node information for a running or completed
job (requires clush).</dd>
<dt>slogs</dt>
<dd>Retrieves resource usage and accounting information for a user or list of
users. For each job that was run after the given start date, the following
information is gathered from the Slurm accounting logs: Number of CPUs,
Start Time, Elapsed Time, Amount of RAM Requested, Average RAM Used, and
Max RAM Used.</dd>
</dl></li><br>
<li><b>pestat</b><br>
Prints a consolidated compute node status line, with one line per node including a list of jobs.<br>
<a href="https://github.com/OleHolmNielsen/Slurm_tools/tree/master/pestat">Home page</a></li><br>
<!-- It would be nice to provide our own perl-based version of pestat -->
<li><b>Slurmmon</b><br>
Slurmmon is a system for gathering and plotting data about Slurm scheduling and
job characteristics. It currently simply sends the data to ganglia, but it
includes some custom reports and a web page for an organized summary.
It collects all the data from sdiag as well as total counts of running and
pending jobs in the system and the maximum such values for any single user.
It can also submit probe jobs to various partitions in order to trend the
times spent pending in them, which is often a good bellwether of scheduling
problems.<br>
<a href="https://github.com/fasrc/slurmmon">Slurmmon code</a></li><br>
<li><b>Graphical Sdiag</b><br>
The sdiag utility is a diagnostic tool that maintains statistics on Slurm's
scheduling performance. You can run sdiag periodically or as you modify
Slurm's configuration. However if you want a historical view of these
statistics, you could save them in a time-series database and graph them over
time as performed with this tool:
<ul>
<li><a href="http://giovannitorres.me/graphing-sdiag-with-graphite.html">Graphing sdiag with Graphite</a></li>
<li><a href="https://github.com/fasrc/slurm-diamond-collector">
A collection of custom diamond collectors to gather various Slurm statistics</a></li>
<li><a href="https://github.com/collectd/collectd/pull/1198">Collectd</a>
(for use with <a href="https://github.com/edf-hpc/jobmetrics">jobmetrics</a>)</li>
</ul></li><br>
<li><b>MSlurm</b><br>
Such a superstructure for the management of multiple Slurm environments is done
with MSlurm. Thereby several Slurm clusters - even across multiple Slurm
databases - can run parallel on a Slurm master and can be administered in an
easy and elegantly manner.
<ul>
<li><a href="mslurm/mslurm_overview.pdf">Overview</a></li>
<li><a href="mslurm/mslurm_install_instructions.pdf">Installation Instructions</a></li>
<li><a href="mslurm/mslurm.tgz">Code</a></li>
</ul></li><br>
<li><a name="json"><b>JSON</b></a><br>
Some Slurm plugins (burst_buffer/cray and power/cray) plugins
parse JSON format data.
These plugins are designed to make use of the JSON-C library for this purpose.
Instructions for the build are as follows:
<ol>
<li>Download json-c version 0.12 (or higher) from<br>
<a href="https://github.com/json-c/json-c/wiki">
https://github.com/json-c/json-c/wiki</a></li>
<li>Unpackage json-c<br>
gunzip json-c-0.12.tar.gz<br>
tar -xf json-c-0.12.tar</li>
<li>Built and install json-c
<ul>
<li>If you have current build tools<br>
cd json-c-0.12<br>
export CFLAGS=-Wno-error=unused-but-set-variable<br>
./configure --prefix=DESIRED_PATH<br>
make<br>
make install</li>
<li>If you have old build tools<br>
cd json-c-0.12<br>
mv aclocal.m4 aclocal.m4.orig<br>
mv ltmain.sh ltmain.sh.orig<br>
./autogen.sh<br>
export CFLAGS=-Wno-error=unused-but-set-variable<br>
./configure --prefix=DESIRED_JSON_PATH<br>
make<br>
make install</li>
</ul>
<li>Build and install Slurm<br>
./configure --with-json=DESIRED_JSON_PATH ...<br>
make -j</li>
</ol><br>
<li><b>Slurm-web</b><br>
Slurm-web is a free software, distributed under the GPL version 2 license,
that provides both a HTTP REST API (based on JSON format) and a web GUI
with dashboards and graphical views of the current state of your
Slurm-based HPC supercomputers. The website of Slurm-web, with screenshots:<br>
<a href="http://edf-hpc.github.io/slurm-web">http://edf-hpc.github.io/slurm-web</a></li>
</ul>
<p style="text-align:center;">Last modified 16 October 2017</p>
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