Getting Started

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Welcome to UF Research Computing! This page is intended to help new users understand and use UFRC resources. Be sure to check out our training schedule if you'd like help getting started in person!

Getting onto HiPerGator

a.k.a From Zero to HiPerGator There are many approaches and resources a researcher can use to analyze their data. Some analyses can be performed on a laptop or a desktop in the lab. Some analyses that rely on proprietary technologies can be done at least partially with resources and applications provided by the vendor. Some researchers are able to 'game' the cloud spot instance market to find relatively cheap resources to perform their analyses on commercial computational resources and are able to install, manage, and use all applications and workflows they need on their own. However, study after study shows that local HPC resources subsidized by the institution still provide the best cost and level of service to academic researchers. Our own cloud vs. HPC cost comparison supports this notion. At the University of Florida researchers arguably have access to the best of both worlds - low cost resources and top-notch systems, application, and research facilitation support.

Once analyses move beyond what an individual computer can handle and a UF research group decides to seek additional computational resources the process usually starts from the following steps:

Note: a computational allocation is mandatory! No analyses can be run on HiPerGator without a computational allocation.

Creating an Account

To be able to do anything on HiPerGator you need a UF Research Computing account. To create an account with UF Research Computing, you must read the UFRC Account Policy. After you have reviewed the policy, go to our website to submit an account request. You will have to tell us the name of the Principal Investigator (PI) who sponsors the access of the group. Once the PI approves your access to their allocation your account will be created; the username and password will be the same as your GatorLink username and password.

If you are a new Principal Investigator you will need to indicate this on the request form, so that we can create a new group for you. Please note that to do useful work, your group will have to invest into computational resources, or you will have to join a departmental group with a shared allocation.

Once you have an account, see the Quick Start Guide for hints on going quickly and avoiding common pitfalls.

Introduction to HiPerGator Usage

Connecting to HiPerGator

To work on HiPerGator you will have to connect to it from your local computer either via SSH (terminal session) or via one of the web/application interfaces we provide such as Galaxy or Matlab (for Matlab distributed computing toolbox pilot project we are testing).

Note about using this guide: for any given command, <username> should be replaced with the UFRC username (same as your GatorLink username).

For example, if you are referencing the command ssh <username>@hpg.rc.ufl.edu and your Gatorlink username is smith, you would use the command:

ssh smith@hpg.rc.ufl.edu

Connecting from Windows

Expand this section to view instructions for logging in with Windows.

Since Microsoft Windows does not come with a built-in SSH client, you must download a client from the web.

For University-managed computers PuTTY, Tabby, and Git Bash are approved for 'fast track' installations.

PuTTY

  • Download PuTTY to your local machine and start the program.
  • Connect to hpg.rc.ufl.edu.
  • At the login prompt, enter your username (this should be the same as your GatorLink username)
  • Enter your password when prompted. You are now connected and ready to work!

Tabby

  • Download Tabby to your local machine: tabby-version#-setup.exe or tabby-version#-portable.zip for a portable version.
  • Star the program and click Settings > Profiles > +New profile > SSH connection
 Name: HiPerGator
 Host: hpg.rc.ufl.edu
 Username: <username>
 Password: "Set password" or "Add a private key"
  • Click "Save"
  • Click on the window icon "New tab with profile" and select "HiPerGator hpg.rc.ufl.edu"
  • You are now connected and ready to work!

Connecting from Linux

Expand this section to view instructions for logging in with Linux/Unix.

Open a terminal and run

ssh <username>@hpg.rc.ufl.edu

Enter your password when the prompt appears. You are now connected and ready to work!

Connecting from MacOS X

Expand this section to view instructions for logging in with OS X.

For OS X users, connection instructions are very similar to those for Linux users.

Terminal, the terminal emulation application for OS X, is located in the folder Applications/Utilities.

Start the Terminal application and run

ssh <username>@hpg.rc.ufl.edu

Enter your password when the prompt appears. You are now connected and ready to work!

Transferring Data

If you need to transfer datasets to or from HiPerGator and your local computer or another external location you have to pick the appropriate transfer mechanism.

Samba

Samba service, also known as a 'network share' or 'mapped drive' provides you with an ability to connect to some HiPerGator filesystems as locally mapped drives (or mount points on Linux or MacOS X). Once you connected to a share this mechanism provides you with a file transfer option that allows you to use your client computer's native file manager to access and manage your files. Samba works best for moving smaller files, like job scripts, to and from the system. You must be connected to the UF network (either on-campus or through the VPN) to connect to Samba shares.

SFTP

SFTP, or secure file transfer, works well for small to mediaum data transfers and is appropriate for both small and large data files.

If you would like to use a Graphical User Interface ecure file transfer client we recommend:

After you have chosen and downloaded a client, configure the client to connect to hpg.rc.ufl.edu, specifying port number 22. Use your username and password to log in.

Rsync

If you prefer to use the command-line or to get maximum efficiency from your data transfers Rsync, which is an incremental file transfer utility that minimizes network usage, is a good choice. It does so by transmitting only the differences between local and remote files rather than transmitting complete files every time a sync is run as SFTP does. Rsync is best used for tasks like synchronizing files stored across multiple subdirectories, or updating large data sets. It works well both for small and large files. See the Rsync page for instructions on using rsync.

Globus

Globus is a high-performance mechanism for file transfer. Globus works especially well for transferring large files or data sets

Automounted Paths

Note: NFS-based storage on our systems are typically automounted, which means they are dynamically mounted only when users are actually accessing them. For example if you have an invested folder as /orange/smith, to access it you will have to specifically type in the full path of "/orange/smith" to be able to see the contents and access them. Directly browsing /orange will not show the smith sub-folder unless someone else is using it coincidentally. Automounted folders are pretty common on the systems, they include /orange, /bio, /rlts and even /home etc.

Editing your files

Several methods exist for editing your files on the cluster.

Native Editors

  • vi - The visual editor (vi) is the traditional Unix editor; however, it is not necessarily the most intuitive editor. View a tutorial for using vi
  • emacs - Emacs is a much heavier duty editor, but again has the problem of having commands that are non-intuitive. View a tutorial for using emacs
  • pico - While pico is not installed on the system, nano is installed, and is a pico work-a-like.
  • nano - Nano has a good bit of on-screen help to make it easier to use.

External Editors

You can also use your favorite file editor on your local machine, and then transfer the files to the cluster afterward. A caveat to this is that files created on Windows machines usually contain unprintable characters, which may be misinterpreted by Linux command interpreters (shells). If this happens, there is a utility called dos2unix that you can use to convert the text file from DOS/Windows formatting to Linux formatting.

Using installed software

The full list of software available for use can be viewed on the Installed Software page. Access to installed software is provided through Environment Modules.

The following command can be used to browse the full list of available modules, along with short descriptions of the applications they make available:

module spider

To load a module, use the following command:

module load <module_name>

For more information on loading modules to access software, view the page on the basic usage of environment modules.

There are some useful commands and utilities in a 'ufrc' environment module in addition to installed applications.

Doing Interactive Testing or Development

You don't always have to use the SLURM scheduler. When all you need is a quick shell session to run a command or two, write and/or test a job script, or compile some code use SLURM Dev Sessions.

Running Graphical Programs

It is possible to run programs that use a graphical user interface (GUI) on the system. However, doing so requires an installation of and configuration of additional software on the client computer.

Please see the GUI Programs page for information on running graphical user interface applications at UFRC.

Scheduling jobs using SLURM

UFRC uses the Simple Linux Utility for Resource Management, or SLURM, to allocate resources and schedule jobs. Users can create SLURM job scripts to submit jobs to the system. These scripts can, and should, be modified in order to control several aspects of your job, like resource allocation, email notifications, or an output destination.


To submit a job script from one of the login nodes accessed via hpg.rc.ufl.edu, use the following command:

$ sbatch <your_job_script>

To check the status of submitted jobs, use the following command:

$ squeue -u <username>

View SLURM_Commands for more useful SLURM commands.

Managing Cores and Memory

The amount of resources within an investment is calculated in NCU (Normalized Computing Units), which correspond to 1 CPU core and about 3.5GB of memory for each NCU purchased. CPUs (cores) and RAM are allocated to jobs independently as requested by your job script.

Your group's investment can run out of **cores** (SLURM may show QOSGrpCpuLimit in the reason a job is pending) OR **memory** (SLURM may show QOSGrpMemLimit in the reason a job is pending) depending on current use by running jobs. The majority of HiPerGator nodes have the same ratio of about 4 GB of RAM per core, which, after accounting for the operating system and system services, leaves about 3.5 GB usable for jobs; hence the ratio of 1 core and 3.5GB RAM per NCU.

Most HiPerGator nodes have 32 cores and 128 GB RAM (~30,000 cores in the newer part of the cluster) or 64 cores and 256 GB RAM (~16,000 cores in the older part of the cluster). The bigmem nodes and the newer Skylake nodes have a higher ratio of 16 GB/core and 6 GB/core, respectively. See Available_Node_Features for the exact data on resources available on all types of nodes on HiPerGator.

You must specify both the number of cores and the amount of RAM needed in the job script for SLURM with the --mem (total job memory) or --mem-per-cpu (per-core memory) options. Otherwise, the job will be assigned the default 600mb of memory.

If you need more than 128 GB of RAM, you can only run on the older nodes, which have 256 GB of RAM, or on the bigmem nodes, which have up to 1.5 TB of RAM.

See Account and QOS limits under SLURM for an extensive explanation of QOS and SLURM account use.

Getting help

If you are having problems using the UFRC system, please let our staff know by submitting a support request.

Visual Overview

The diagram below shown a high-level overview of HiPerGator use. We will go over each part in sections below HiPerGator.png