Slurm
Slurm (also referred as Slurm Workload Manager or slurm-llnl) is an open-source workload manager designed for Linux clusters of all sizes, used by many of the world's supercomputers and computer clusters. It provides three key functions. First it allocates exclusive and/or non-exclusive access to resources (computer nodes) to users for some duration of time so they can perform work. Second, it provides a framework for starting, executing, and monitoring work (typically a parallel job) on a set of allocated nodes. Finally, it arbitrates contention for resources by managing a queue of pending work.
Contents
Installation
Install the slurm-llnlAUR package found in the AUR. It pulls in mungeAUR, an authentication service, as a dependency. It is started as a requirement through slurmd's systemd service and encrypts the connection between the various hosts. Therefore make sure that all nodes in your cluster have the same key in /etc/munge/munge.key
.
The package slurm itself has many more optional dependencies, though slurm has to be recompiled to make use of them, after they have been installed.
Setup
The configuration files for slurm-llnl reside under /etc/slurm-llnl
. Prior to starting any slurm-services, it has to be configure properly by creating a config file /etc/slurm-llnl/slurm.conf
. Client and server may use the same configuration file, which can either be generated at https://computing.llnl.gov/linux/slurm/configurator.html or by copying /etc/slurm-llnl/slurm.conf.example
to /etc/slurm-llnl/slurm.conf
and adapting it to ones liking.
By default the slurm user, which was introduced to your system in the installation process, has 64030 as UID and GID, this simplicifes the setup on multiple systems. UID and GID matches the one used in Debian, therefore they may be used side-by-side, but remember that binaries are not in the same directories on each and every distribution.
Client (compute node) configuration
On the client-side one may now safely start slurmd.service
(enable the service to make it start at bootup).
To validate that slurmd is up and running, use
systemctl status slurmd
Server (head node) configuration
Start/enable slurmctld.service
.
To complete an entrerprise like solution you may want to start/enable slurmdbd.service
, which handles a mysql database for easier management thereby logging somewhat essential process information.
See also
- slurm tutorials - Introduction to the Slurm Workload Manager for users and system administrators, plus some material for Slurm programmers.
- Quick Start Administrator Guide - More or less deatailed setup guide.
- SLURM to manage jobs - Convenient SLURM Commands.
- Running Jobs - How slurm is used at harvard university.