Difference between revisions of "Development and Testing"

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[[Category:Hardware]]
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[[Category:Scheduler]]
If you need to develop code (i.e. the standard edit, build, test cycle) or test your workflows and scripts before submitting batch jobs, there are several machines on which you can do so and run short interactive tests and jobs.
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Development and Testing often require quick turnaround on using smaller amounts of resources or interactive activities. See the available option for interactive or small-scale testing work below.
  
test01 (Opteron 8435, 2.6GHz, 24 Cores, 64 GB RAM)
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==Login Nodes==
 +
Interactive work other than managing jobs and data is discouraged on the login nodes. However, short test jobs (processes) are permitted as long as they fall within the following limits.
  
test02 (Intel E5-2690, 2.90GHz, 16 cores, 64 GB RAM)
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# No more than 16 cores
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# No longer than 10 minutes (wall time)
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# No more than 64 GB of RAM.
  
test03 (Opteron 2356, 2.3GHz, 8 Cores, 16 GB RAM)
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That above resource limits essentially define what we mean by a “small, short” job or process.  These limits should allow for the testing of job submission scripts or even simple application development tests. If you need to run multiple instances of some process (gzip, make, cp, etc), you should observe the above limits and not run more than 16 simultaneous instances of any single process nor should the collection of such processes consume more than 64 GB of RAM
  
test04 (Intel E5430, 2.66GHz, 8 Cores, 16 GB RAM)
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Data management operations such as ''gzip, rsync, scp sftp'', etc. can take a long time to complete and are exempt from the 10 minute time limit.
  
test05 (Intel E5430, 2.66GHz, 8 Cores, 16 GB RAM)
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If you have development and testing requirements that exceed the above resource limits there are several options as described below.
  
test06 (Opteron 4284, 3.0GHz, 16 Cores, 64 GB RAM)
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==SLURM Interactive Session==
 +
You can request resources for an interactive session (i.e. job) and start a command shell (bash, for example).  Within that command shell you will have access to the resources you requested and can run whatever commands and processes you wish. Consider the example below. It will give you 4 GB of memory for 8 hours on a real compute host and present you, once the job starts, with an interactive command shell (bash). From that shell you can run commands and launch processes just as you would from any other host (login or otherwise).
 +
 
 +
    $ srun --mem=4gb --time=08:00:00 --pty bash -i
 +
 
 +
'''Note:''' Because the requested resources must be allocated and scheduled by the batch scheduler, it could take any where from a few seconds to a few hours for your interactive session to start.  How long it takes depends on many factors that include how busy the system is overall and what percentage of your group's allocation is already in use.
 +
 
 +
See the [https://slurm.schedmd.com/srun.html SchedMD srun documentation] for further information and details regarding the ''srun'' command.
 +
 
 +
==SLURM Development Session==
 +
 
 +
A small number of servers have been placed into a SLURM partition (collection of hosts) for the purpose of supporting just software development.  You can access the partition by specifying the "dev" partition to the appropriate SLURM command.  For example, to obtain a resources for an interactive session (job) in the dev partition you could run the following command.
 +
 
 +
          srun --partition=hpg-dev --mem=4gb --time=04:00:00 --pty bash -i
 +
 
 +
or, if you need more cores,
 +
 
 +
          srun --partition=hpg-dev --mem=4gb --ntasks=1 --cpus-per-task=8 --time=04:00:00 --pty bash -i
 +
 
 +
By loading the ''ufrc'' environment module, you can take advantage ''srundev'' and simpify the above to,
 +
 
 +
          module load ufrc
 +
          srundev --mem=4gb --ntasks=1 --cpus-per-task=8 --time=04:00:00
 +
 
 +
The ''srundev'' command is a wrapper encapsulating ''srun --partition=hpg-dev --pty bash -i''.
 +
 
 +
'''Note:''' The default time limit for the SLURM development partition is 00:10:00 (10 minutes). The maximum time limit in the development partition is 12 hours.
 +
 
 +
==Pre-Allocation of Resources==
 +
Finally, you can also use [https://slurm.schedmd.com/salloc.html salloc] to create a SLURM allocation under which you can run commands or scripts with ''srun'' for as long as the allocation is valid. Whatever you ''srun'' under the allocation will be executed within the context of the allocated resources but there will be no delay since the resources have already been allocated.
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 +
For example,
 +
 
 +
<pre>
 +
$ salloc -n 1 --cpus-per-task=2 --mem=8gb --time=10:00:00
 +
salloc: Pending job allocation 52219029
 +
salloc: job 52219029 queued and waiting for resources
 +
salloc: job 52219029 has been allocated resources
 +
salloc: Granted job allocation 52219029
 +
 
 +
[chasman@login4 slurm]$ printenv | grep SLURM
 +
SLURM_NODELIST=c6a-s26
 +
SLURM_JOB_NAME=bash
 +
SLURM_NODE_ALIASES=(null)
 +
SLURM_JOB_QOS=ufhpc
 +
SLURM_NNODES=1
 +
SLURM_JOBID=52219029
 +
SLURM_NTASKS=1
 +
SLURM_TASKS_PER_NODE=1
 +
SLURM_CPUS_PER_TASK=2
 +
SLURM_JOB_ID=52219029
 +
SLURM_SUBMIT_DIR=/home/chasman
 +
SLURM_NPROCS=1
 +
SLURM_JOB_NODELIST=c6a-s26
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SLURM_CLUSTER_NAME=hipergator
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SLURM_JOB_CPUS_PER_NODE=2
 +
SLURM_SUBMIT_HOST=login4.ufhpc
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SLURM_JOB_PARTITION=hpg-default
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SLURM_JOB_ACCOUNT=ufhpc
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SLURM_JOB_NUM_NODES=1
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SLURM_MEM_PER_NODE=8192
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</pre>
 +
 
 +
=Interactive Terminals=
 +
You can get a more familiar ''Interactive Terminal'' similar to what you could open on a local workstation via a web or GUI environment. We offer [[Open_OnDemand|Open OnDemand]] where you can select between a terminal session and a full Linux desktop (Xfce4) or a terminal in a JupyterLab session in [[JupyterHub]].

Revision as of 14:30, 29 September 2021

Development and Testing often require quick turnaround on using smaller amounts of resources or interactive activities. See the available option for interactive or small-scale testing work below.

Login Nodes

Interactive work other than managing jobs and data is discouraged on the login nodes. However, short test jobs (processes) are permitted as long as they fall within the following limits.

  1. No more than 16 cores
  2. No longer than 10 minutes (wall time)
  3. No more than 64 GB of RAM.

That above resource limits essentially define what we mean by a “small, short” job or process. These limits should allow for the testing of job submission scripts or even simple application development tests. If you need to run multiple instances of some process (gzip, make, cp, etc), you should observe the above limits and not run more than 16 simultaneous instances of any single process nor should the collection of such processes consume more than 64 GB of RAM.

Data management operations such as gzip, rsync, scp sftp, etc. can take a long time to complete and are exempt from the 10 minute time limit.

If you have development and testing requirements that exceed the above resource limits there are several options as described below.

SLURM Interactive Session

You can request resources for an interactive session (i.e. job) and start a command shell (bash, for example). Within that command shell you will have access to the resources you requested and can run whatever commands and processes you wish. Consider the example below. It will give you 4 GB of memory for 8 hours on a real compute host and present you, once the job starts, with an interactive command shell (bash). From that shell you can run commands and launch processes just as you would from any other host (login or otherwise).

   $ srun --mem=4gb --time=08:00:00 --pty bash -i

Note: Because the requested resources must be allocated and scheduled by the batch scheduler, it could take any where from a few seconds to a few hours for your interactive session to start. How long it takes depends on many factors that include how busy the system is overall and what percentage of your group's allocation is already in use.

See the SchedMD srun documentation for further information and details regarding the srun command.

SLURM Development Session

A small number of servers have been placed into a SLURM partition (collection of hosts) for the purpose of supporting just software development. You can access the partition by specifying the "dev" partition to the appropriate SLURM command. For example, to obtain a resources for an interactive session (job) in the dev partition you could run the following command.

         srun --partition=hpg-dev --mem=4gb --time=04:00:00 --pty bash -i 

or, if you need more cores,

         srun --partition=hpg-dev --mem=4gb --ntasks=1 --cpus-per-task=8 --time=04:00:00 --pty bash -i 

By loading the ufrc environment module, you can take advantage srundev and simpify the above to,

         module load ufrc
         srundev --mem=4gb --ntasks=1 --cpus-per-task=8 --time=04:00:00 

The srundev command is a wrapper encapsulating srun --partition=hpg-dev --pty bash -i.

Note: The default time limit for the SLURM development partition is 00:10:00 (10 minutes). The maximum time limit in the development partition is 12 hours.

Pre-Allocation of Resources

Finally, you can also use salloc to create a SLURM allocation under which you can run commands or scripts with srun for as long as the allocation is valid. Whatever you srun under the allocation will be executed within the context of the allocated resources but there will be no delay since the resources have already been allocated.

For example,

$ salloc -n 1 --cpus-per-task=2 --mem=8gb --time=10:00:00
salloc: Pending job allocation 52219029
salloc: job 52219029 queued and waiting for resources
salloc: job 52219029 has been allocated resources
salloc: Granted job allocation 52219029

[chasman@login4 slurm]$ printenv | grep SLURM
SLURM_NODELIST=c6a-s26
SLURM_JOB_NAME=bash
SLURM_NODE_ALIASES=(null)
SLURM_JOB_QOS=ufhpc
SLURM_NNODES=1
SLURM_JOBID=52219029
SLURM_NTASKS=1
SLURM_TASKS_PER_NODE=1
SLURM_CPUS_PER_TASK=2
SLURM_JOB_ID=52219029
SLURM_SUBMIT_DIR=/home/chasman
SLURM_NPROCS=1
SLURM_JOB_NODELIST=c6a-s26
SLURM_CLUSTER_NAME=hipergator
SLURM_JOB_CPUS_PER_NODE=2
SLURM_SUBMIT_HOST=login4.ufhpc
SLURM_JOB_PARTITION=hpg-default
SLURM_JOB_ACCOUNT=ufhpc
SLURM_JOB_NUM_NODES=1
SLURM_MEM_PER_NODE=8192

Interactive Terminals

You can get a more familiar Interactive Terminal similar to what you could open on a local workstation via a web or GUI environment. We offer Open OnDemand where you can select between a terminal session and a full Linux desktop (Xfce4) or a terminal in a JupyterLab session in JupyterHub.