DOKK / manpages / debian 10 / coop-computing-tools / work_queue_factory.1.en
work_queue_factory(1) Cooperative Computing Tools work_queue_factory(1)

work_queue_factory - maintain a pool of Work Queue workers on a batch system.

work_queue_factory -M <project-name> -T <batch-type> [options]

work_queue_factory submits and maintains a number of work_queue_worker(1) processes on various batch systems, such as Condor and SGE. All the workers managed by a work_queue_factory process will be directed to work for a specific master, or any set of masters matching a given project name. work_queue_factory will automatically determine the correct number of workers to have running, based on criteria set on the command line. The decision on how many workers to run is reconsidered once per minute.

By default, work_queue_factory will run as many workers as the indicated masters have tasks ready to run. If there are multiple masters, then enough workers will be started to satisfy their collective needs. For example, if there are two masters with the same project name, each with 10 tasks to run, then work_queue_factory will start a total of 20 workers.

If the number of needed workers increases, work_queue_factory will submit more workers to meet the desired need. However, it will not run more than a fixed maximum number of workers, given by the -W option.

If the need for workers drops, work_queue_factory does not remove them immediately, but waits to them to exit on their own. (This happens when the worker has been idle for a certain time.) A minimum number of workers will be maintained, given by the -w option.

If given the -c option, then work_queue_factory will consider the capacity reported by each master. The capacity is the estimated number of workers that the master thinks it can handle, based on the task execution and data transfer times currently observed at the master. With the -c option on, work_queue_factory will consider the master's capacity to be the maximum number of workers to run.

If work_queue_factory receives a terminating signal, it will attempt to remove all running workers before exiting.

Name of a preferred project. A worker can have multiple preferred projects.
Batch system type: local, condor, sge, pbs, torque, blue_waters, slurm, moab, cluster, amazon, mesos. (default is local)
 --catalog <catalog>
Set catalog server to <catalog>. Format: HOSTNAME:PORT
Add these options to all batch submit files.

Minimum workers running. (default=5)

Maximum workers running. (default=100)
 --workers-per-cycle <workers>

Maximum number of new workers per 30 seconds. ( less than 1 disables limit, default=5)
 --autosize
Automatically size a worker to an available slot (Condor and Mesos).
 -c --capacity

Use worker capacity reported by masters.

Password file for workers to authenticate to master.
Abort after this amount of idle time.
Use the configuration file <file>.
Extra options that should be added to the worker.
 --condor-requirements <str>
Manually set requirements for the workers as condor jobs. May be specified several times, with the expresions and-ed together (Condor only).
Scratch directory. (default is /tmp/${USER}-workers)
 --factory-timeout <n>
Exit after no master has been seen in <n> seconds.
Enable debugging for this subsystem.
Write debugging output to this file. By default, debugging is sent to stderr (":stderr"). You may specify logs be sent to stdout (":stdout"), to the system syslog (":syslog"), or to the systemd journal (":journal").
 --factory-timeout <#>
Set factory timeout to <#> seconds. (off by default) This will cause work queue to exit when their are no masters present after the given number of seconds.
 --wrapper <Wrapallcommandswiththisprefix.>

 --wrapper-input <Addthisfileneededbythewrapper.>

 --mesos-master <hostname>

Specify the host name to mesos master node (for use with -T mesos)
 --mesos-path <filepath>

Specify path to mesos python library (for use with -T mesos)
 --mesos-preload <library>

Specify the linking libraries for running mesos(for use with -T mesos)
 -h, --help
Show this screen.

On success, returns zero. On failure, returns non-zero.

Suppose you have a Work Queue master with a project name of "barney". To maintain workers for barney, do this:

work_queue_factory -T condor -M barney

To maintain a maximum of 100 workers on an SGE batch system, do this:

work_queue_factory -T sge -M barney -W 100

To start workers such that the workers exit after 5 minutes (300s) of idleness:

work_queue_factory -T condor -M barney -t 300

If you want to start workers that match any project that begins with barney, use a regular expression:

work_queue_factory -T condor -M barney.-t 300

If running on condor, you may manually specify condor requirements:

work_queue_factory -T condor -M barney --condor-requirements 'MachineGroup == "disc"' --condor-requirements 'has_matlab == true'

Repeated uses of condor-requirements are and-ed together. The previous example will produce a statement equivalent to:

requirements = ((MachineGroup == "disc") && (has_matlab == true))

Use the configuration file my_conf:

work_queue_factory -Cmy_conf

my_conf should be a proper JSON document, as:

{

"master-name": "my_master.*",
"max-workers": 100,
"min-workers": 0 }

Valid configuration fields are:

master-name
foremen-name
min-workers
max-workers
workers-per-cycle
task-per-worker
timeout
worker-extra-options
condor-requirements
cores
memory
disk

The capacity measurement currently assumes single-core tasks running on single-core workers, and behaves unexpectedly with multi-core tasks or multi-core workers.

The Cooperative Computing Tools are Copyright (C) 2003-2004 Douglas Thain and Copyright (C) 2005-2015 The University of Notre Dame. This software is distributed under the GNU General Public License. See the file COPYING for details.

CCTools 7.0.9 FINAL