DOKK / manpages / debian 10 / slurm-client / scontrol.1.en
scontrol(1) Slurm Commands scontrol(1)

scontrol - Used view and modify Slurm configuration and state.

scontrol [OPTIONS...] [COMMAND...]

scontrol is used to view or modify Slurm configuration including: job, job step, node, partition, reservation, and overall system configuration. Most of the commands can only be executed by user root or an Administrator. If an attempt to view or modify configuration information is made by an unauthorized user, an error message will be printed and the requested action will not occur. If no command is entered on the execute line, scontrol will operate in an interactive mode and prompt for input. It will continue prompting for input and executing commands until explicitly terminated. If a command is entered on the execute line, scontrol will execute that command and terminate. All commands and options are case-insensitive, although node names, partition names, and reservation names are case-sensitive (node names "LX" and "lx" are distinct). All commands and options can be abbreviated to the extent that the specification is unique. A modified Slurm configuration can be written to a file using the scontrol write config command. The resulting file will be named using the convention "slurm.conf.<datetime>" and located in the same directory as the original "slurm.conf" file. The directory containing the original slurm.conf must be writable for this to occur.

When the show command is used, then display all partitions, their jobs and jobs steps. This causes information to be displayed about partitions that are configured as hidden and partitions that are unavailable to user's group.
Causes the show command to provide additional details where available.
Report jobs from from federation if a member of one.
Report nodes in FUTURE state.
Print a help message describing the usage of scontrol.
Do not display information about hidden partitions, their jobs and job steps. By default, neither partitions that are configured as hidden nor those partitions unavailable to user's group will be displayed (i.e. this is the default behavior).
Show only information local to this cluster. Ignore other clusters in the federated if a member of one. Overrides --federation.
The cluster to issue commands to. Only one cluster name may be specified. Note that the SlurmDBD must be up for this option to work properly. This option implicitly sets the --local option.

Print information one line per record.
Print no warning or informational messages, only fatal error messages.
Show all sibling jobs on a federated cluster. Implies --federation.
Attempt to update a job as user <uid> instead of the invoking user id.
Print detailed event logging. Multiple -v's will further increase the verbosity of logging. By default only errors will be displayed.

Print version information and exit.

Instruct the Slurm controller to terminate immediately and generate a core file. See "man slurmctld" for information about where the core file will be written.

Cancel pending reboots on nodes.

Perform a checkpoint activity on the job step(s) with the specified identification. ID can be used to identify a specific job (e.g. "<job_id>", which applies to all of its existing steps) or a specific job step (e.g. "<job_id>.<step_id>"). Acceptable values for CKPT_OP include:
Test if presently not disabled, report start time if checkpoint in progress
Create a checkpoint and continue the job or job step
Disable future checkpoints
Enable future checkpoints
Report the result for the last checkpoint request, error code and message
Restart execution of the previously checkpointed job or job step
Create a checkpoint and requeue the batch job, combines vacate and restart operations
Create a checkpoint and terminate the job or job step

Acceptable values for CKPT_OP include:

Maximum time for checkpoint to be written. Default value is 10 seconds. Valid with create and vacate options only.
Location of checkpoint file. Valid with create, vacate and restart options only. This value takes precedent over any --checkpoint-dir value specified at job submission time.
If set, resume job on the same nodes are previously used. Valid with the restart option only.

The cluster to issue commands to. Only one cluster name may be specified.

Create a new partition or reservation. See the full list of parameters below. Include the tag "res" to create a reservation without specifying a reservation name.

Display all jobs in a COMPLETING state along with associated nodes in either a COMPLETING or DOWN state.

Delete the entry with the specified SPECIFICATION. The two SPECIFICATION choices are PartitionName=<name> and Reservation=<name>. Reservations and partitions should have no associated jobs at the time of their deletion (modify the jobs first). If the specified partition is in use, the request is denied.

Given a Slurm error number, return a descriptive string.

Set the FairShareDampeningFactor in slurmctld.

Display a description of scontrol options and commands.

Prevent a pending job from being started (sets it's priority to 0). Use the release command to permit the job to be scheduled. The job_list argument is a comma separated list of job IDs OR "jobname=" with the job's name, which will attempt to hold all jobs having that name. Note that when a job is held by a system administrator using the hold command, only a system administrator may release the job for execution (also see the uhold command). When the job is held by its owner, it may also be released by the job's owner. Additionally, attempting to hold a running job will have not suspend or cancel it. But, it will set the job priority to 0 and update the job reason field, which would hold the job if it was requeued at a later time.

Send a message to standard error of the salloc or srun command or batch job associated with the specified job_id.

Print the Slurm job id and scheduled termination time corresponding to the supplied process id, proc_id, on the current node. This will work only with processes on node on which scontrol is run, and only for those processes spawned by Slurm and their descendants.

Print a listing of the process IDs in a job step (if JOBID.STEPID is provided), or all of the job steps in a job (if job_id is provided), or all of the job steps in all of the jobs on the local node (if job_id is not provided or job_id is "*"). This will work only with processes on the node on which scontrol is run, and only for those processes spawned by Slurm and their descendants. Note that some Slurm configurations (ProctrackType value of pgid) are unable to identify all processes associated with a job or job step.

Note that the NodeName option is only really useful when you have multiple slurmd daemons running on the same host machine. Multiple slurmd daemons on one host are, in general, only used by Slurm developers.

Ping the primary and secondary slurmctld daemon and report if they are responding.

Reboot all nodes in the system when they become idle using the RebootProgram as configured in Slurm's slurm.conf file. The option "ASAP" prevents initiation of additional jobs so the node can be rebooted and returned to service "As Soon As Possible" (i.e. ASAP). A user defined message can be added to the nodes by using the "reason" option. The message will be cleared when the node is resumed. If "nextstate" is specified as "DOWN", then the node(s) will remain in a down state after rebooting. If the "nextstate" is specified as "RESUME", then the node(s) will resume as normal when the node registers. "Resuming" nodes will be considered as available in backfill future scheduling and won't be replaced by idle nodes in a reservation. When using the "nextstate" and "reason" options together the reason will be appended with "reboot issused" when the reboot is issued and "reboot complete" when the node registers with a "nextstate" of "DOWN". An optional list of nodes to reboot may be specified. By default all nodes are rebooted. NOTE: This command does not prevent additional jobs from being scheduled on these nodes, so many jobs can be executed on the nodes prior to them being rebooted. You can explicitly drain the nodes in order to reboot nodes as soon as possible, but the nodes must also explicitly be returned to service after being rebooted. You can alternately create an advanced reservation to prevent additional jobs from being initiated on nodes to be rebooted. NOTE: Nodes will be placed in a state of "REBOOT" until rebooted and returned to service with a normal state. Alternately the node's state "REBOOT" may be cleared by using the scontrol command to set the node state to "RESUME", which clears the "REBOOT" flag. A node will be marked DOWN if it doesn't reboot within ResumeTimeout.

Instruct all Slurm daemons to re-read the configuration file. This command does not restart the daemons. This mechanism would be used to modify configuration parameters (Epilog, Prolog, SlurmctldLogFile, SlurmdLogFile, etc.). The Slurm controller (slurmctld) forwards the request all other daemons (slurmd daemon on each compute node). Running jobs continue execution. Most configuration parameters can be changed by just running this command, however, Slurm daemons should be shutdown and restarted if any of these parameters are to be changed: AuthType, BackupAddr, BackupController, ControlAddr, ControlMach, PluginDir, StateSaveLocation, SlurmctldPort or SlurmdPort. The slurmctld daemon and all slurmd daemons must be restarted if nodes are added to or removed from the cluster.

Release a previously held job to begin execution. The job_list argument is a comma separated list of job IDs OR "jobname=" with the job's name, which will attempt to hold all jobs having that name. Also see hold.

Requeue a running, suspended or finished Slurm batch job into pending state. The job_list argument is a comma separated list of job IDs.

Requeue a running, suspended or finished Slurm batch job into pending state, moreover the job is put in held state (priority zero). The job_list argument is a comma separated list of job IDs. A held job can be released using scontrol to reset its priority (e.g. "scontrol release <job_id>"). The command accepts the following option:
The "SpecialExit" keyword specifies that the job has to be put in a special state JOB_SPECIAL_EXIT. The "scontrol show job" command will display the JobState as SPECIAL_EXIT, while the "squeue" command as SE.

Resume a previously suspended job. The job_list argument is a comma separated list of job IDs. Also see suspend.

NOTE: A suspended job releases its CPUs for allocation to other jobs. Resuming a previously suspended job may result in multiple jobs being allocated the same CPUs, which could trigger gang scheduling with some configurations or severe degradation in performance with other configurations. Use of the scancel command to send SIGSTOP and SIGCONT signals would stop a job without releasing its CPUs for allocation to other jobs and would be a preferable mechanism in many cases. Use with caution.

Enable or disable scheduler logging. LEVEL may be "0", "1", "disable" or "enable". "0" has the same effect as "disable". "1" has the same effect as "enable". This value is temporary and will be overwritten when the slurmctld daemon reads the slurm.conf configuration file (e.g. when the daemon is restarted or scontrol reconfigure is executed) if the SlurmSchedLogLevel parameter is present.

Change the debug level of the slurmctld daemon. LEVEL may be an integer value between zero and nine (using the same values as SlurmctldDebug in the slurm.conf file) or the name of the most detailed message type to be printed: "quiet", "fatal", "error", "info", "verbose", "debug", "debug2", "debug3", "debug4", or "debug5". This value is temporary and will be overwritten whenever the slurmctld daemon reads the slurm.conf configuration file (e.g. when the daemon is restarted or scontrol reconfigure is executed).

Add or remove DebugFlags of the slurmctld daemon. See "man slurm.conf" for a list of supported DebugFlags. NOTE: Changing the value of some DebugFlags will have no effect without restarting the slurmctld daemon, which would set DebugFlags based upon the contents of the slurm.conf configuration file.

or
Display the state of the specified entity with the specified identification. ENTITY may be aliases, assoc_mgr, bbstat, burstbuffer, config, daemons, dwstat, federation, frontend, job, node, partition, powercap, reservation, slurmd, step, topology, hostlist, hostlistsorted or hostnames ID can be used to identify a specific element of the identified entity: job ID, node name, partition name, reservation name, or job step ID for job, node, partition, or step respectively. For an ENTITY of bbstat or dwstat (they are equivalent) optional arguments are the options of the local status command. The status commands will be executed by the slurmctld daemon and its response returned to the user. For an ENTITY of topology, the ID may be a node or switch name. If one node name is specified, all switches connected to that node (and their parent switches) will be shown. If more than one node name is specified, only switches that connect to all named nodes will be shown. aliases will return all NodeName values associated to a given NodeHostname (useful to get the list of virtual nodes associated with a real node in a configuration where multiple slurmd daemons execute on a single compute node). assoc_mgr displays the current contents of the slurmctld's internal cache for users, associations and/or qos. The ID may be users=<user1>,[...,<userN>], accounts=<acct1>,[...,<acctN>], qos=<qos1>,[...,<qosN>] and/or flags=<users,assoc,qos>, used to filter the desired section to be displayed. If no flags are specified, all sections are displayed. burstbuffer displays the current status of the BurstBuffer plugin. config displays parameter names from the configuration files in mixed case (e.g. SlurmdPort=7003) while derived parameters names are in upper case only (e.g. SLURM_VERSION). hostnames takes an optional hostlist expression as input and writes a list of individual host names to standard output (one per line). If no hostlist expression is supplied, the contents of the SLURM_JOB_NODELIST environment variable is used. For example "tux[1-3]" is mapped to "tux1","tux2" and "tux3" (one hostname per line). hostlist takes a list of host names and prints the hostlist expression for them (the inverse of hostnames). hostlist can also take the absolute pathname of a file (beginning with the character '/') containing a list of hostnames. Multiple node names may be specified using simple node range expressions (e.g. "lx[10-20]"). All other ID values must identify a single element. The job step ID is of the form "job_id.step_id", (e.g. "1234.1"). slurmd reports the current status of the slurmd daemon executing on the same node from which the scontrol command is executed (the local host). It can be useful to diagnose problems. By default hostlist does not sort the node list or make it unique (e.g. tux2,tux1,tux2 = tux[2,1-2]). If you wanted a sorted list use hostlistsorted (e.g. tux2,tux1,tux2 = tux[1-2,2]). By default, all elements of the entity type specified are printed. For an ENTITY of job, if the job does not specify socket-per-node, cores-per-socket or threads-per-core then it will display '*' in ReqS:C:T=*:*:* field. For an ENTITY of federation, the federation name that the controller is part of and the sibling clusters part of the federation will be listed.

Instruct Slurm daemons to save current state and terminate. By default, the Slurm controller (slurmctld) forwards the request all other daemons (slurmd daemon on each compute node). An OPTION of slurmctld or controller results in only the slurmctld daemon being shutdown and the slurmd daemons remaining active.

Suspend a running job. The job_list argument is a comma separated list of job IDs. Use the resume command to resume its execution. User processes must stop on receipt of SIGSTOP signal and resume upon receipt of SIGCONT for this operation to be effective. Not all architectures and configurations support job suspension. If a suspended job is requeued, it will be placed in a held state.

Instruct Slurm's backup controller (slurmctld) to take over system control. Slurm's backup controller requests control from the primary and waits for its termination. After that, it switches from backup mode to controller mode. If primary controller can not be contacted, it directly switches to controller mode. This can be used to speed up the Slurm controller fail-over mechanism when the primary node is down. This can be used to minimize disruption if the computer executing the primary Slurm controller is scheduled down. (Note: Slurm's primary controller will take the control back at startup.)

Move the specified job IDs to the top of the queue of jobs belonging to the identical user ID, partition name, account, and QOS. The job_list argument is a comma separated ordered list of job IDs. Any job not matching all of those fields will not be effected. Only jobs submitted to a single partition will be effected. This operation changes the order of jobs by adjusting job nice values. The net effect on that user's throughput will be negligible to slightly negative. This operation is disabled by default for non-privileged (non-operator, admin, SlurmUser, or root) users. This operation may be enabled for non-privileged users by the system administrator by including the option "enable_user_top" in the SchedulerParameters configuration parameter.

Prevent a pending job from being started (sets it's priority to 0). The job_list argument is a space separated list of job IDs or job names. Use the release command to permit the job to be scheduled. This command is designed for a system administrator to hold a job so that the job owner may release it rather than requiring the intervention of a system administrator (also see the hold command).

Update job, step, node, partition, powercapping or reservation configuration per the supplied specification. SPECIFICATION is in the same format as the Slurm configuration file and the output of the show command described above. It may be desirable to execute the show command (described above) on the specific entity you want to update, then use cut-and-paste tools to enter updated configuration values to the update. Note that while most configuration values can be changed using this command, not all can be changed using this mechanism. In particular, the hardware configuration of a node or the physical addition or removal of nodes from the cluster may only be accomplished through editing the Slurm configuration file and executing the reconfigure command (described above).

Display the version number of scontrol being executed.

Wait until a job and all of its nodes are ready for use or the job has entered some termination state. This option is particularly useful in the Slurm Prolog or in the batch script itself if nodes are powered down and restarted automatically as needed.

Write the batch script for a given job_id to a file or to stdout. The file will default to slurm-<job_id>.sh if the optional filename argument is not given. The script will be written to stdout if - is given instead of a filename. The batch script can only be retrieved by an admin or operator, or by the owner of the job.

Write the current configuration to a file with the naming convention of "slurm.conf.<datetime>" in the same directory as the original slurm.conf file.

NOTE: All commands listed below can be used in the interactive mode, but NOT on the initial command line.

Show all partitions, their jobs and jobs steps. This causes information to be displayed about partitions that are configured as hidden and partitions that are unavailable to user's group.

Causes the show command to provide additional details where available. Job information will include CPUs and NUMA memory allocated on each node. Note that on computers with hyperthreading enabled and Slurm configured to allocate cores, each listed CPU represents one physical core. Each hyperthread on that core can be allocated a separate task, so a job's CPU count and task count may differ. See the --cpu-bind and --mem-bind option descriptions in srun man pages for more information. The details option is currently only supported for the show job command.

Terminate scontrol interactive session.

Do not display partition, job or jobs step information for partitions that are configured as hidden or partitions that are unavailable to the user's group. This is the default behavior.

Print information one line per record.

Print no warning or informational messages, only fatal error messages.

Terminate the execution of scontrol.

Print detailed event logging. This includes time-stamps on data structures, record counts, etc.

!!
Repeat the last command executed.

Note that update requests done by either root, SlurmUser or Administrators are not subject to certain restrictions. For instance, if an Administrator changes the QOS on a pending job, certain limits such as the TimeLimit will not be changed automatically as changes made by the Administrators are allowed to violate these restrictions.

Account name to be changed for this job's resource use. Value may be cleared with blank data value, "Account=".
Arbitrary descriptive string. Can only be set by a Slurm administrator.
Specify the maximum number of tasks in a job array that can execute at the same time. Set the count to zero in order to eliminate any limit. The task throttle count for a job array is reported as part of its ArrayTaskId field, preceded with a percent sign. For example "ArrayTaskId=1-10%2" indicates the maximum number of running tasks is limited to 2.
Burst buffer specification to be changed for this job's resource use. Value may be cleared with blank data value, "BurstBuffer=". Format is burst buffer plugin specific.
Specifies the clusters that the federated job can run on.
Specifies features that a federated cluster must have to have a sibling job submitted to it. Slurm will attempt to submit a sibling job to a cluster if it has at least one of the specified features.
Arbitrary descriptive string.
Set the job's requirement for contiguous (consecutive) nodes to be allocated. Possible values are "YES" and "NO". Only the Slurm administrator or root can change this parameter.
Number of cores to reserve per node for system use. The job will be charged for these cores, but be unable to use them. Will be reported as "*" if not constrained.
Change the CPUsPerTask job's value.
It accepts times of the form HH:MM:SS to specify a deadline to a job at a specific time of day (seconds are optional). You may also specify midnight, noon, fika (3 PM) or teatime (4 PM) and you can have a time-of-day suffixed with AM or PM for a deadline in the morning or the evening. You can specify a deadline for the job with a date of the form MMDDYY or MM/DD/YY or MM.DD.YY, or a date and time as YYYY-MM-DD[THH:MM[:SS]]. You can also give times like now + count time-units, where the time-units can be minutes, hours, days, or weeks and you can tell Slurm to put a deadline for tomorrow with the keyword tomorrow. The specified deadline must be later than the current time. Only pending jobs can have the deadline updated. Only the Slurm administrator or root can change this parameter.
Change the time to decide whether to reboot nodes in order to satisfy job's feature specification if the job has been eligible to run for less than this time period. See salloc/sbatch man pages option --delay-boot.
Defer job's initiation until specified job dependency specification is satisfied. Cancel dependency with an empty dependency_list (e.g. "Dependency="). <dependency_list> is of the form <type:job_id[:job_id][,type:job_id[:job_id]]>. Many jobs can share the same dependency and these jobs may even belong to different users.
This job can begin execution after the specified jobs have begun execution.
This job can begin execution after the specified jobs have terminated.
This job can begin execution after the specified jobs have terminated in some failed state (non-zero exit code, node failure, timed out, etc).
This job can begin execution after the specified jobs have successfully executed (ran to completion with an exit code of zero).
This job can begin execution after any previously launched jobs sharing the same job name and user have terminated. In other words, only one job by that name and owned by that user can be running or suspended at any point in time.
See StartTime.
The time the job is expected to terminate based on the job's time limit. When the job ends sooner, this field will be updated with the actual end time.
Set the job's list of excluded node. Multiple node names may be specified using simple node range expressions (e.g. "lx[10-20]"). Value may be cleared with blank data value, "ExcNodeList=".
Set the job's required node features. The list of features may include multiple feature names separated by ampersand (AND) and/or vertical bar (OR) operators. For example: Features="opteron&video" or Features="fast|faster". In the first example, only nodes having both the feature "opteron" AND the feature "video" will be used. There is no mechanism to specify that you want one node with feature "opteron" and another node with feature "video" in case no node has both features. If only one of a set of possible options should be used for all allocated nodes, then use the OR operator and enclose the options within square brackets. For example: "Features=[rack1|rack2|rack3|rack4]" might be used to specify that all nodes must be allocated on a single rack of the cluster, but any of those four racks can be used. A request can also specify the number of nodes needed with some feature by appending an asterisk and count after the feature name. For example "Features=graphics*4" indicates that at least four allocated nodes must have the feature "graphics." Parenthesis are also supported for features to be ANDed together. For example "Features=[(knl&a2a&flat)*4&haswell*2]" indicates the resource allocation should include 4 nodes with ALL of the features "knl", "a2a", and "flat" plus 2 nodes with the feature "haswell". Constraints with node counts may only be combined with AND operators. Value may be cleared with blank data value, for example "Features=".

Specifies a comma delimited list of generic consumable resources. The format of each entry on the list is "name[:count[*cpu]]". The name is that of the consumable resource. The count is the number of those resources with a default value of 1. The specified resources will be allocated to the job on each node allocated unless "*cpu" is appended, in which case the resources will be allocated on a per cpu basis. The available generic consumable resources is configurable by the system administrator. A list of available generic consumable resources will be printed and the command will exit if the option argument is "help". Examples of use include "Gres=gpus:2*cpu,disk=40G" and "Gres=help".

Identify the job(s) to be updated. The job_list may be a comma separated list of job IDs. Either JobId or JobName is required.
Specification of licenses (or other resources available on all nodes of the cluster) as described in salloc/sbatch/srun man pages.
Set the job's minimum number of CPUs per node to the specified value.
Set the job's minimum real memory required per allocated CPU to the specified value. Either MinMemoryCPU or MinMemoryNode may be set, but not both.
Set the job's minimum real memory required per node to the specified value. Either MinMemoryCPU or MinMemoryNode may be set, but not both.
Set the job's minimum temporary disk space required per node to the specified value. Only the Slurm administrator or root can change this parameter.
imeMin=<timespec>
Change TimeMin value which specifies the minimum time limit minutes of the job.
Identify the name of jobs to be modified or set the job's name to the specified value. When used to identify jobs to be modified, all jobs belonging to all users are modified unless the UserID option is used to identify a specific user. Either JobId or JobName is required.
See JobName.
Update the job with an adjusted scheduling priority within Slurm. With no adjustment value the scheduling priority is decreased by 100. A negative nice value increases the priority, otherwise decreases it. The adjustment range is +/- 2147483645. Only privileged users can specify a negative adjustment.
Change the nodes allocated to a running job to shrink it's size. The specified list of nodes must be a subset of the nodes currently allocated to the job. Multiple node names may be specified using simple node range expressions (e.g. "lx[10-20]"). After a job's allocation is reduced, subsequent srun commands must explicitly specify node and task counts which are valid for the new allocation.
Set the job's minimum and optionally maximum count of CPUs to be allocated.
Set the job's minimum and optionally maximum count of nodes to be allocated. If the job is already running, use this to specify a node count less than currently allocated and resources previously allocated to the job will be relinquished. After a job's allocation is reduced, subsequent srun commands must explicitly specify node and task counts which are valid for the new allocation. Also see the NodeList parameter above. This is the same than ReqNodes.
Set the job's count of required tasks to the specified value. This is the same than ReqProcs.
Set the job's ability to share compute resources (i.e. individual CPUs) with other jobs. Possible values are "YES" and "NO". This option can only be changed for pending jobs.
Set the job's partition to the specified value.
Set the job's priority to the specified value. Note that a job priority of zero prevents the job from ever being scheduled. By setting a job's priority to zero it is held. Set the priority to a non-zero value to permit it to run. Explicitly setting a job's priority clears any previously set nice value and removes the priority/multifactor plugin's ability to manage a job's priority. In order to restore the priority/multifactor plugin's ability to manage a job's priority, hold and then release the job. Only the Slurm administrator or root can increase job's priority.
Set the job's QOS (Quality Of Service) to the specified value. Value may be cleared with blank data value, "QOS=".
Set the job's flag that specifies whether to force the allocated nodes to reboot before starting the job. This is only supported with some system configurations and therefore it could be silently ignored.
Change the job's requested Cores count.
Set the job's list of required node. Multiple node names may be specified using simple node range expressions (e.g. "lx[10-20]"). Value may be cleared with blank data value, "ReqNodeList=".
See NumNodes.
See NumTasks.
Change the job's requested socket count.
Change the job's requested threads count.
Stipulates whether a job should be requeued after a node failure: 0 for no, 1 for yes.
Set the job's reservation to the specified value. Value may be cleared with blank data value, "ReservationName=".
Reset the job's accrue time value to 0 meaning it will loose any time previously accrued for priority. Helpful if you have a large queue of jobs already in the queue and want to start limiting how many jobs can accrue time without waiting for the queue to flush out.
Set the batch job's stdout file path.
See OverSubscribe option above.
Set the job's earliest initiation time. It accepts times of the form HH:MM:SS to run a job at a specific time of day (seconds are optional). (If that time is already past, the next day is assumed.) You may also specify midnight, noon, fika (3 PM) or teatime (4 PM) and you can have a time-of-day suffixed with AM or PM for running in the morning or the evening. You can also say what day the job will be run, by specifying a date of the form MMDDYY or MM/DD/YY or MM.DD.YY, or a date and time as YYYY-MM-DD[THH:MM[:SS]]. You can also give times like now + count time-units, where the time-units can be minutes, hours, days, or weeks and you can tell Slurm to run the job today with the keyword today and to run the job tomorrow with the keyword tomorrow.

Notes on date/time specifications:
- although the 'seconds' field of the HH:MM:SS time specification is allowed by the code, note that the poll time of the Slurm scheduler is not precise enough to guarantee dispatch of the job on the exact second. The job will be eligible to start on the next poll following the specified time. The exact poll interval depends on the Slurm scheduler (e.g., 60 seconds with the default sched/builtin).
- if no time (HH:MM:SS) is specified, the default is (00:00:00).
- if a date is specified without a year (e.g., MM/DD) then the current year is assumed, unless the combination of MM/DD and HH:MM:SS has already passed for that year, in which case the next year is used.

When a tree topology is used, this defines the maximum count of switches desired for the job allocation. If Slurm finds an allocation containing more switches than the count specified, the job remain pending until it either finds an allocation with desired switch count or the time limit expires. By default there is no switch count limit and no time limit delay. Set the count to zero in order to clean any previously set count (disabling the limit). The job's maximum time delay may be limited by the system administrator using the SchedulerParameters configuration parameter with the max_switch_wait parameter option. Also see wait-for-switch.

Change max time to wait for a switch <seconds> secs.

Change the job's requested TasksPerNode.

Number of threads to reserve per node for system use. The job will be charged for these threads, but be unable to use them. Will be reported as "*" if not constrained.

The job's time limit. Output format is [days-]hours:minutes:seconds or "UNLIMITED". Input format (for update command) set is minutes, minutes:seconds, hours:minutes:seconds, days-hours, days-hours:minutes or days-hours:minutes:seconds. Time resolution is one minute and second values are rounded up to the next minute. If changing the time limit of a job, either specify a new time limit value or precede the time and equal sign with a "+" or "-" to increment or decrement the current time limit (e.g. "TimeLimit+=30"). In order to increment or decrement the current time limit, the JobId specification must precede the TimeLimit specification. Only the Slurm administrator or root can increase job's TimeLimit.

Used with the JobName option to identify jobs to be modified. Either a user name or numeric ID (UID), may be specified.

Set the job's workload characterization key to the specified value.

The "show" command, when used with the "job" or "job <jobid>" entity displays detailed information about a job or jobs. Much of this information may be modified using the "update job" command as described above. However, the following fields displayed by the show job command are read-only and cannot be modified:

Local node and system id making the resource allocation.
Jobs submitted using the sbatch command have BatchFlag set to 1. Jobs submitted using other commands have BatchFlag set to 0.
Exit status reported for the job by the wait() function. The first number is the exit code, typically as set by the exit() function. The second number of the signal that caused the process to terminate if it was terminated by a signal.
The group under which the job was submitted.
The current state of the job.
The NodeIndices expose the internal indices into the node table associated with the node(s) allocated to the job.
<tasks_per_node>:<tasks_per_baseboard>:<tasks_per_socket>:<tasks_per_core> Specifies the number of tasks to be started per hardware component (node, baseboard, socket and core). Unconstrained values may be shown as "0" or "*".
Time at which job was signaled that it was selected for preemption. (Meaningful only for PreemptMode=CANCEL and the partition or QOS with which the job is associated has a GraceTime value designated.)
Time the job ran prior to last suspend.
The reason job is not running: e.g., waiting "Resources".
<baseboard_count>:<socket_per_baseboard_count>:<core_per_socket_count>:<thread_per_core_count> Specifies the count of various hardware components requested by the job. Unconstrained values may be shown as "0" or "*".
If the job is suspended, this is the run time accumulated by the job (in seconds) prior to being suspended.
Count of desired sockets per node
The time and date stamp (in localtime) the job was submitted. The format of the output is identical to that of the EndTime field.

NOTE: If a job is requeued, the submit time is reset. To obtain the original submit time it is necessary to use the "sacct -j <job_id[.<step_id>]" command also designating the -D or --duplicate option to display all duplicate entries for a job.

Time the job was last suspended or resumed.
When you submit a request for the "show job" function the scontrol process makes an RPC request call to slurmctld with a REQUEST_JOB_INFO message type. If the state of the job is PENDING, then it returns some detail information such as: min_nodes, min_procs, cpus_per_task, etc. If the state is other than PENDING the code assumes that it is in a further state such as RUNNING, COMPLETE, etc. In these cases the code explicitly returns zero for these values. These values are meaningless once the job resources have been allocated and the job has started.

Identify the step to be updated. If the job_id is given, but no step_id is specified then all steps of the identified job will be modified. This specification is required.
Update a step with information about a steps completion. Can be useful if step statistics aren't directly available through a jobacct_gather plugin. The file is a space-delimited file with format for Version 1 is as follows

1 34461 0 2 0 3 1361906011 1361906015 1 1 3368 13357 /bin/sleep
A B C D E F G H I J K L M

Field Descriptions:

A file version
B ALPS apid
C inblocks
D outblocks
E exit status
F number of allocated CPUs
G start time
H end time
I utime
J stime
K maxrss
L uid
M command name

The job's time limit. Output format is [days-]hours:minutes:seconds or "UNLIMITED". Input format (for update command) set is minutes, minutes:seconds, hours:minutes:seconds, days-hours, days-hours:minutes or days-hours:minutes:seconds. Time resolution is one minute and second values are rounded up to the next minute. If changing the time limit of a step, either specify a new time limit value or precede the time with a "+" or "-" to increment or decrement the current time limit (e.g. "TimeLimit=+30"). In order to increment or decrement the current time limit, the StepId specification must precede the TimeLimit specification.

Identify the node(s) to be updated. Multiple node names may be specified using simple node range expressions (e.g. "lx[10-20]"). This specification is required.

Identify the feature(s) currently active on the specified node. Any previously active feature specification will be overwritten with the new value. Also see AvailableFeatures. Typically ActiveFeatures will be identical to AvailableFeatures; however ActiveFeatures may be configured as a subset of the AvailableFeatures. For example, a node may be booted in multiple configurations. In that case, all possible configurations may be identified as AvailableFeatures, while ActiveFeatures would identify the current node configuration.

Identify the feature(s) available on the specified node. Any previously defined available feature specification will be overwritten with the new value. AvailableFeatures assigned via scontrol will only persist across the restart of the slurmctld daemon with the -R option and state files preserved or slurmctld's receipt of a SIGHUP. Update slurm.conf with any changes meant to be persistent across normal restarts of slurmctld or the execution of scontrol reconfig. Also see ActiveFeatures.

Specify the task binding mode to be used by default for this node. Supported options include: "none", "board", "socket", "ldom" (NUMA), "core", "thread" and "off" (remove previous binding mode).

Identify generic resources to be associated with the specified node. Any previously defined generic resources will be overwritten with the new value. Specifications for multiple generic resources should be comma separated. Each resource specification consists of a name followed by an optional colon with a numeric value (default value is one) (e.g. "Gres=bandwidth:10000,gpus"). Generic resources assigned via scontrol will only persist across the restart of the slurmctld daemon with the -R option and state files preserved or slurmctld's receipt of a SIGHUP. Update slurm.conf with any changes meant to be persistent across normal restarts of slurmctld or the execution of scontrol reconfig.

Identify the reason the node is in a "DOWN", "DRAINED", "DRAINING", "FAILING" or "FAIL" state. Use quotes to enclose a reason having more than one word.

Identify the state to be assigned to the node. Possible node states are "NoResp", "ALLOC", "ALLOCATED", "COMPLETING", "DOWN", "DRAIN", "FAIL", "FAILING", "FUTURE" "IDLE", "MAINT", "MIXED", "PERFCTRS/NPC", "RESERVED", "POWER_DOWN", "POWER_UP", "RESUME" or "UNDRAIN". Not all of those states can be set using the scontrol command only the following can: "CANCEL_REBOOT", "DOWN", "DRAIN", "FAIL", "FUTURE", "RESUME", "NoResp", "POWER_DOWN", "POWER_UP" and "UNDRAIN". If a node is in a "MIXED" state it usually means the node is in multiple states. For instance if only part of the node is "ALLOCATED" and the rest of the node is "IDLE" the state will be "MIXED". If you want to remove a node from service, you typically want to set it's state to "DRAIN". "CANCEL_REBOOT" cancels a pending reboot on the node (same as "scontrol cancel_reboot <node>"). "FAILING" is similar to "DRAIN" except that some applications will seek to relinquish those nodes before the job completes. "PERFCTRS/NPC" indicates that Network Performance Counters associated with this node are in use, rendering this node as not usable for any other jobs. "RESERVED" indicates the node is in an advanced reservation and not generally available. "RESUME" is not an actual node state, but will change a node state from "DRAINED", "DRAINING", "DOWN" or "REBOOT" to either "IDLE" or "ALLOCATED" state as appropriate. "UNDRAIN" clears the node from being drained (like "RESUME"), but will not change the node's base state (e.g. "DOWN"). Setting a node "DOWN" will cause all running and suspended jobs on that node to be terminated. "POWER_DOWN" and "POWER_UP" will use the configured SuspendProg and ResumeProg programs to explicitly place a node in or out of a power saving mode. If a node is already in the process of being powered up or down, the command will only change the state of the node but won't have any effect until the configured ResumeTimeout or SuspendTimeout is reached. Use of this command can be useful in situations where a ResumeProg like capmc in Cray machines is stalled and one wants to restore the node to "IDLE" manually, in this case rebooting the node and setting the state to "POWER_DOWN" will cancel the previous "POWER_UP" state and the node will become "IDLE". The "NoResp" state will only set the "NoResp" flag for a node without changing its underlying state. While all of the above states are valid, some of them are not valid new node states given their prior state. If the node state code printed is followed by "~", this indicates the node is presently in a power saving mode (typically running at reduced frequency). If the node state code is followed by "#", this indicates the node is presently being powered up or configured. If the node state code is followed by "$", this indicates the node is currently in a reservation with a flag value of "maintenance". If the node state code is followed by "@", this indicates the node is currently scheduled to be rebooted. Generally only "DRAIN", "FAIL" and "RESUME" should be used. NOTE: The scontrol command should not be used to change node state on Cray systems. Use Cray tools such as xtprocadmin instead.

Identify weight to be associated with specified nodes. This allows dynamic changes to weight associated with nodes, which will be used for the subsequent node allocation decisions. Weight assigned via scontrol will only persist across the restart of the slurmctld daemon with the -R option and state files preserved or slurmctld's receipt of a SIGHUP. Update slurm.conf with any changes meant to be persistent across normal restarts of slurmctld or the execution of scontrol reconfig.

The instantaneous power consumption of the node at the time of the last node energy accounting sample, in watts.

The energy consumed by the node between the last time it was powered on and the last time it was registered by slurmd, in joules.

The energy consumed by the node between the last time it was registered by the slurmd daemon and the last node energy accounting sample, in joules.

If the reported value is "n/s" (not supported), the node does not support the configured AcctGatherEnergyType plugin. If the reported value is zero, energy accounting for nodes is disabled.

The energy consumed by the node between the last time it was powered on and the last external sensors plugin node sample, in joules.

The instantaneous power consumption of the node at the time of the last external sensors plugin node sample, in watts.

The temperature of the node at the time of the last external sensors plugin node sample, in celsius.

If the reported value is "n/s" (not supported), the node does not support the configured ExtSensorsType plugin.

The list of Slurm abstract CPU IDs on this node reserved for exclusive use by the Slurm compute node daemons (slurmd, slurmstepd).

The combined memory limit, in megabytes, on this node for the Slurm compute node daemons (slurmd, slurmstepd).

The total memory, in MB, on the node.

The total memory, in MB, currently allocated by jobs on the node.

The total memory, in MB, currently free on the node as reported by the OS.

Identify the front end node to be updated. This specification is required.

Identify the reason the node is in a "DOWN" or "DRAIN" state. Use quotes to enclose a reason having more than one word.

Identify the state to be assigned to the front end node. Possible values are "DOWN", "DRAIN" or "RESUME". If you want to remove a front end node from service, you typically want to set it's state to "DRAIN". "RESUME" is not an actual node state, but will return a "DRAINED", "DRAINING", or "DOWN" front end node to service, either "IDLE" or "ALLOCATED" state as appropriate. Setting a front end node "DOWN" will cause all running and suspended jobs on that node to be terminated.

Identify the user groups which may use this partition. Multiple groups may be specified in a comma separated list. To permit all groups to use the partition specify "AllowGroups=ALL".

Comma separated list of nodes from which users can execute jobs in the partition. Node names may be specified using the node range expression syntax described above. The default value is "ALL".

Alternate partition to be used if the state of this partition is "DRAIN" or "INACTIVE." The value "NONE" will clear a previously set alternate partition.

Specify the task binding mode to be used by default for this partition. Supported options include: "none", "board", "socket", "ldom" (NUMA), "core", "thread" and "off" (remove previous binding mode).

Specify if this partition is to be used by jobs which do not explicitly identify a partition to use. Possible output values are "YES" and "NO". In order to change the default partition of a running system, use the scontrol update command and set Default=yes for the partition that you want to become the new default.

Run time limit used for jobs that don't specify a value. If not set then MaxTime will be used. Format is the same as for MaxTime.

Set the default memory to be allocated per CPU for jobs in this partition. The memory size is specified in megabytes.
Set the default memory to be allocated per node for jobs in this partition. The memory size is specified in megabytes.

Specify if jobs can be executed as user root. Possible values are "YES" and "NO".

Specifies, in units of seconds, the preemption grace time to be extended to a job which has been selected for preemption. The default value is zero, no preemption grace time is allowed on this partition or qos. (Meaningful only for PreemptMode=CANCEL)

Specify if the partition and its jobs should be hidden from view. Hidden partitions will by default not be reported by Slurm APIs or commands. Possible values are "YES" and "NO".

Set the maximum memory to be allocated per CPU for jobs in this partition. The memory size is specified in megabytes.
Set the maximum memory to be allocated per node for jobs in this partition. The memory size is specified in megabytes.

Set the maximum number of nodes which will be allocated to any single job in the partition. Specify a number, "INFINITE" or "UNLIMITED". Changing the MaxNodes of a partition has no effect upon jobs that have already begun execution.

The maximum run time for jobs. Output format is [days-]hours:minutes:seconds or "UNLIMITED". Input format (for update command) is minutes, minutes:seconds, hours:minutes:seconds, days-hours, days-hours:minutes or days-hours:minutes:seconds. Time resolution is one minute and second values are rounded up to the next minute. Changing the MaxTime of a partition has no effect upon jobs that have already begun execution.

Set the minimum number of nodes which will be allocated to any single job in the partition. Changing the MinNodes of a partition has no effect upon jobs that have already begun execution.

Identify the node(s) to be associated with this partition. Multiple node names may be specified using simple node range expressions (e.g. "lx[10-20]"). Note that jobs may only be associated with one partition at any time. Specify a blank data value to remove all nodes from a partition: "Nodes=". Changing the Nodes in a partition has no effect upon jobs that have already begun execution.

Number of minutes by which a job can exceed its time limit before being canceled. The configured job time limit is treated as a soft limit. Adding OverTimeLimit to the soft limit provides a hard limit, at which point the job is canceled. This is particularly useful for backfill scheduling, which bases upon each job's soft time limit. A partition-specific OverTimeLimit will override any global OverTimeLimit value. If not specified, the global OverTimeLimit value will take precedence. May not exceed exceed 65533 minutes. An input value of "UNLIMITED" will clear any previously configured partition-specific OverTimeLimit value.

Specify if compute resources (i.e. individual CPUs) in this partition can be shared by multiple jobs. Possible values are "YES", "NO", "EXCLUSIVE" and "FORCE". An optional job count specifies how many jobs can be allocated to use each resource.

Identify the partition to be updated. This specification is required.

Reset the mechanism used to preempt jobs in this partition if PreemptType is configured to preempt/partition_prio. The default preemption mechanism is specified by the cluster-wide PreemptMode configuration parameter. Possible values are "OFF", "CANCEL", "CHECKPOINT", "REQUEUE" and "SUSPEND".

Jobs submitted to a higher priority partition will be dispatched before pending jobs in lower priority partitions and if possible they will preempt running jobs from lower priority partitions. Note that a partition's priority takes precedence over a job's priority. The value may not exceed 65533.

Partition factor used by priority/multifactor plugin in calculating job priority. The value may not exceed 65533. Also see PriorityTier.

Jobs submitted to a partition with a higher priority tier value will be dispatched before pending jobs in partition with lower priority tier value and, if possible, they will preempt running jobs from partitions with lower priority tier values. Note that a partition's priority tier takes precedence over a job's priority. The value may not exceed 65533. Also see PriorityJobFactor.

Set the partition QOS with a QOS name or to remove the Partition QOS leave the option blank.

Specify if only allocation requests initiated by user root will be satisfied. This can be used to restrict control of the partition to some meta-scheduler. Possible values are "YES" and "NO".

Specify if only allocation requests designating a reservation will be satisfied. This is used to restrict partition usage to be allowed only within a reservation. Possible values are "YES" and "NO".

Renamed to OverSubscribe, see option descriptions above.

Specify if jobs can be allocated nodes or queued in this partition. Possible values are "UP", "DOWN", "DRAIN" and "INACTIVE".
Designates that new jobs may queued on the partition, and that jobs may be allocated nodes and run from the partition.
Designates that new jobs may be queued on the partition, but queued jobs may not be allocated nodes and run from the partition. Jobs already running on the partition continue to run. The jobs must be explicitly canceled to force their termination.
Designates that no new jobs may be queued on the partition (job submission requests will be denied with an error message), but jobs already queued on the partition may be allocated nodes and run. See also the "Alternate" partition specification.
Designates that no new jobs may be queued on the partition, and jobs already queued may not be allocated nodes and run. See also the "Alternate" partition specification.

TRESBillingWeights is used to define the billing weights of each TRES type that will be used in calculating the usage of a job. The calculated usage is used when calculating fairshare and when enforcing the TRES billing limit on jobs. Updates affect new jobs and not existing jobs. See the slurm.conf man page for more information.

Set the amount of watts the cluster is limited to. Specify a number, "INFINITE" to enable the power capping logic without power restriction or "0" to disable the power capping logic. Update slurm.conf with any changes meant to be persistent across normal restarts of slurmctld or the execution of scontrol reconfig.

Identify the name of the reservation to be created, updated, or deleted. This parameter is required for update and is the only parameter for delete. For create, if you do not want to give a reservation name, use "scontrol create res ..." and a name will be created automatically.

List of accounts permitted to use the reserved nodes, for example "Accounts=physcode1,physcode2". A user in any of the accounts may use the reserved nodes. A new reservation must specify Users and/or Accounts. If both Users and Accounts are specified, a job must match both in order to use the reservation. Accounts can also be denied access to reservations by preceding all of the account names with '-'. Alternately precede the equal sign with '-'. For example, "Accounts=-physcode1,-physcode2" or "Accounts-=physcode1,physcode2" will permit any account except physcode1 and physcode2 to use the reservation. You can add or remove individual accounts from an existing reservation by using the update command and adding a '+' or '-' sign before the '=' sign. If accounts are denied access to a reservation (account name preceded by a '-'), then all other accounts are implicitly allowed to use the reservation and it is not possible to also explicitly specify allowed accounts.

Specification of burst buffer resources which are to be reserved. "buffer_spec" consists of four elements: [plugin:][type:]#[units] "plugin" is the burst buffer plugin name, currently either "cray" or "generic". If no plugin is specified, the reservation applies to all configured burst buffer plugins. "type" specifies a Cray generic burst buffer resource, for example "nodes". if "type" is not specified, the number is a measure of storage space. The "units" may be "N" (nodes), "K|KiB", "M|MiB", "G|GiB", "T|TiB", "P|PiB" (for powers of 1024) and "KB", "MB", "GB", "TB", "PB" (for powers of 1000). The default units are bytes for reservations of storage space. For example "BurstBuffer=cray:2TB" (reserve 2TB of storage plus 3 nodes from the Cray plugin) or "BurstBuffer=100GB" (reserve 100 GB of storage from all configured burst buffer plugins). Jobs using this reservation are not restricted to these burst buffer resources, but may use these reserved resources plus any which are generally available. NOTE: Usually Slurm interprets KB, MB, GB, TB, PB, TB units as powers of 1024, but for Burst Buffers size specifications Slurm supports both IEC/SI formats. This is because the CRAY API for managing DataWarps supports both formats.

This option is only supported when SelectType=select/cons_res. Identify number of cores to be reserved. If NodeCnt is used without the FIRST_CORES flag, this is the total number of cores to reserve where cores per node is CoreCnt/NodeCnt. If a nodelist is used, or if NodeCnt is used with the FIRST_CORES flag, this should be an array of core numbers by node: Nodes=node[1-5] CoreCnt=2,2,3,3,4 or flags=FIRST_CORES NodeCnt=5 CoreCnt=1,2,1,3,2.

Specification of licenses (or other resources available on all nodes of the cluster) which are to be reserved. License names can be followed by a colon and count (the default count is one). Multiple license names should be comma separated (e.g. "Licenses=foo:4,bar"). A new reservation must specify one or more resource to be included: NodeCnt, Nodes and/or Licenses. If a reservation includes Licenses, but no NodeCnt or Nodes, then the option Flags=LICENSE_ONLY must also be specified. Jobs using this reservation are not restricted to these licenses, but may use these reserved licenses plus any which are generally available.

Identify number of nodes to be reserved. The number can include a suffix of "k" or "K", in which case the number specified is multiplied by 1024. A new reservation must specify one or more resource to be included: NodeCnt, Nodes and/or Licenses.

Identify the node(s) to be reserved. Multiple node names may be specified using simple node range expressions (e.g. "Nodes=lx[10-20]"). Specify a blank data value to remove all nodes from a reservation: "Nodes=". A new reservation must specify one or more resource to be included: NodeCnt, Nodes and/or Licenses. A specification of "ALL" will reserve all nodes. Set Flags=PART_NODES and PartitionName= in order for changes in the nodes associated with a partition to also be reflected in the nodes associated with a reservation.

The start time for the reservation. A new reservation must specify a start time. It accepts times of the form HH:MM:SS for a specific time of day (seconds are optional). (If that time is already past, the next day is assumed.) You may also specify midnight, noon, fika (3 PM) or teatime (4 PM) and you can have a time-of-day suffixed with AM or PM for running in the morning or the evening. You can also say what day the job will be run, by specifying a date of the form MMDDYY or MM/DD/YY or MM.DD.YY, or a date and time as YYYY-MM-DD[THH:MM[:SS]]. You can also give times like now + count time-units, where the time-units can be minutes, hours, days, or weeks and you can tell Slurm to run the job today with the keyword today and to run the job tomorrow with the keyword tomorrow. You cannot update the StartTime of a reservation in ACTIVE state.

The end time for the reservation. A new reservation must specify an end time or a duration. Valid formats are the same as for StartTime.

The length of a reservation. A new reservation must specify an end time or a duration. Valid formats are minutes, minutes:seconds, hours:minutes:seconds, days-hours, days-hours:minutes, days-hours:minutes:seconds, or UNLIMITED. Time resolution is one minute and second values are rounded up to the next minute. Output format is always [days-]hours:minutes:seconds.

Identify the partition to be reserved.

Flags associated with the reservation. You can add or remove individual flags from an existing reservation by adding a '+' or '-' sign before the '=' sign. For example: Flags-=DAILY (NOTE: this shortcut is not supported for all flags). Currently supported flags include:
This is a reservation for burst buffers and/or licenses only and not compute nodes. If this flag is set, a job using this reservation may use the associated burst buffers and/or licenses plus any compute nodes. If this flag is not set, a job using this reservation may use only the nodes and licenses associated with the reservation.
Repeat the reservation at the same time every day.
Permit jobs requesting the reservation to begin prior to the reservation's start time, end after the reservation's end time, and use any resources inside and/or outside of the reservation regardless of any constraints possibly set in the reservation. A typical use case is to prevent jobs not explicitly requesting the reservation from using those reserved resources rather than forcing jobs requesting the reservation to use those resources in the time frame reserved. Another use case could be to always have a particular number of nodes with a specific feature reserved for a specific account so users in this account may use this nodes plus possibly other nodes without this feature.
Use the lowest numbered cores on a node only.
Ignore currently running jobs when creating the reservation. This can be especially useful when reserving all nodes in the system for maintenance.
See ANY_NODES.
Maintenance mode, receives special accounting treatment. This partition is permitted to use resources that are already in another reservation.
By default, when a reservation ends the reservation request will be removed from any pending jobs submitted to the reservation and will be put into a held state. Use this flag to let jobs run outside of the reservation after the reservation is gone.
This reservation can be allocated resources that are already in another reservation.
This flag can be used to reserve all nodes within the specified partition. PartitionName and Nodes=ALL must be specified or this option is ignored.
Purge the reservation once the last associated job has completed. Once the reservation has been created, it must be populated within 5 minutes of its start time or it will be purged before any jobs have been run.
Nodes which are DOWN, DRAINED, or allocated to jobs are automatically replenished using idle resources. This option can be used to maintain a constant number of idle resources available for pending jobs (subject to availability of idle resources). This should be used with the NodeCnt reservation option; do not identify specific nodes to be included in the reservation.
Nodes which are DOWN or DRAINED are automatically replenished using idle resources. This option can be used to maintain a constant sized pool of resources available for pending jobs (subject to availability of idle resources). This should be used with the NodeCnt reservation option; do not identify specific nodes to be included in the reservation.
Reservation is for specific nodes (output only)
Make it so after the nodes are selected for a reservation they don't change. Without this option when nodes are selected for a reservation and one goes down the reservation will select a new node to fill the spot.
The reservation start time is relative to the current time and moves forward through time (e.g. a StartTime=now+10minutes will always be 10 minutes in the future).
Repeat the reservation at the same time on every weekday (Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday and Friday).
Repeat the reservation at the same time on every weekend day (Saturday and Sunday).
Repeat the reservation at the same time every week.

Set the reservation's required node features. Multiple values may be "&" separated if all features are required (AND operation) or separated by "|" if any of the specified features are required (OR operation). Parenthesis are also supported for features to be ANDed together with counts of nodes having the specified features. For example "Features=[(knl&a2a&flat)*4&haswell*2]" indicates the advanced reservation should include 4 nodes with ALL of the features "knl", "a2a", and "flat" plus 2 nodes with the feature "haswell".

Value may be cleared with blank data value, "Features=".

List of users permitted to use the reserved nodes, for example "User=jones1,smith2". A new reservation must specify Users and/or Accounts. If both Users and Accounts are specified, a job must match both in order to use the reservation. Users can also be denied access to reservations by preceding all of the user names with '-'. Alternately precede the equal sign with '-'. For example, "User=-jones1,-smith2" or "User-=jones1,smith2" will permit any user except jones1 and smith2 to use the reservation. You can add or remove individual users from an existing reservation by using the update command and adding a '+' or '-' sign before the '=' sign. If users are denied access to a reservation (user name preceded by a '-'), then all other users are implicitly allowed to use the reservation and it is not possible to also explicitly specify allowed users.

Comma-separated list of TRES required for the reservation. Current supported TRES types with reservations are: CPU, Node, License and BB. CPU and Node follow the same format as CoreCnt and NodeCnt parameters respectively. License names can be followed by an equal '=' and a count:

License/<name1>=<count1>[,License/<name2>=<count2>,...]

BurstBuffer can be specified in a similar way as BurstBuffer parameter. The only difference is that colon symbol ':' should be replaced by an equal '=' in order to follow the TRES format.

Some examples of TRES valid specifications:

TRES=cpu=5,bb/cray=4,license/iop1=1,license/iop2=3

TRES=node=5k,license/iop1=2

As specified in CoreCnt, if a nodelist is specified, cpu can be an array of core numbers by node: nodes=compute[1-3] TRES=cpu=2,2,1,bb/cray=4,license/iop1=2

Please note that CPU, Node, License and BB can override CoreCnt, NodeCnt, Licenses and BurstBuffer parameters respectively. Also CPU represents CoreCnt, in a reservation and will be adjusted if you have threads per core on your nodes.

Without options, lists all configured layouts. With a layout specified, shows entities with following options:

Keys/Values to update for the entities. The format must respect the layout.d configuration files. Key=Type cannot be updated. One Key/Value is required, several can be set.
Entities to show, default is not used. Can be set to "*".
Type of entities to show, default is not used.
If not used, only entities with defining the tree are shown. With the option, only leaves are shown.

Some scontrol options may be set via environment variables. These environment variables, along with their corresponding options, are listed below. (Note: Commandline options will always override these settings.)

-a, --all
--federation
-F, --future
--local
--sibling
Specifies the string length to be used for holding a job array's task ID expression. The default value is 64 bytes. A value of 0 will print the full expression with any length required. Larger values may adversely impact the application performance.
Same as --clusters
The location of the Slurm configuration file.
Specify the format used to report time stamps. A value of standard, the default value, generates output in the form "year-month-dateThour:minute:second". A value of relative returns only "hour:minute:second" if the current day. For other dates in the current year it prints the "hour:minute" preceded by "Tomorr" (tomorrow), "Ystday" (yesterday), the name of the day for the coming week (e.g. "Mon", "Tue", etc.), otherwise the date (e.g. "25 Apr"). For other years it returns a date month and year without a time (e.g. "6 Jun 2012"). All of the time stamps use a 24 hour format.

A valid strftime() format can also be specified. For example, a value of "%a %T" will report the day of the week and a time stamp (e.g. "Mon 12:34:56").

Specify the maximum size of the line when printing Topology. If not set, the default value "512" will be used.

When using the Slurm db, users who have AdminLevel's defined (Operator or Admin) and users who are account coordinators are given the authority to view and modify jobs, reservations, nodes, etc., as defined in the following table - regardless of whether a PrivateData restriction has been defined in the slurm.conf file.

scontrol show job(s): Admin, Operator, Coordinator
scontrol update job: Admin, Operator, Coordinator
scontrol requeue: Admin, Operator, Coordinator
scontrol show step(s): Admin, Operator, Coordinator
scontrol update step: Admin, Operator, Coordinator

scontrol show node: Admin, Operator
scontrol update node: Admin

scontrol create partition: Admin
scontrol show partition: Admin, Operator
scontrol update partition: Admin
scontrol delete partition: Admin

scontrol create reservation: Admin, Operator
scontrol show reservation: Admin, Operator
scontrol update reservation: Admin, Operator
scontrol delete reservation: Admin, Operator

scontrol reconfig: Admin
scontrol shutdown: Admin
scontrol takeover: Admin

# scontrol
scontrol: show part debug
PartitionName=debug
AllocNodes=ALL AllowGroups=ALL Default=YES
DefaultTime=NONE DisableRootJobs=NO Hidden=NO
MaxNodes=UNLIMITED MaxTime=UNLIMITED MinNodes=1
Nodes=snowflake[0-48]
Priority=1 RootOnly=NO OverSubscribe=YES:4
State=UP TotalCPUs=694 TotalNodes=49
scontrol: update PartitionName=debug MaxTime=60:00 MaxNodes=4
scontrol: show job 71701
JobId=71701 Name=hostname
UserId=da(1000) GroupId=da(1000)
Priority=66264 Account=none QOS=normal WCKey=*123
JobState=COMPLETED Reason=None Dependency=(null)
TimeLimit=UNLIMITED Requeue=1 Restarts=0 BatchFlag=0 ExitCode=0:0
SubmitTime=2010-01-05T10:58:40 EligibleTime=2010-01-05T10:58:40
StartTime=2010-01-05T10:58:40 EndTime=2010-01-05T10:58:40
SuspendTime=None SecsPreSuspend=0
Partition=debug AllocNode:Sid=snowflake:4702
ReqNodeList=(null) ExcNodeList=(null)
NodeList=snowflake0
NumNodes=1 NumCPUs=10 CPUs/Task=2 ReqS:C:T=1:1:1
MinCPUsNode=2 MinMemoryNode=0 MinTmpDiskNode=0
Features=(null) Reservation=(null)
OverSubscribe=OK Contiguous=0 Licenses=(null) Network=(null)
scontrol: update JobId=71701 TimeLimit=30:00 Priority=500
scontrol: show hostnames tux[1-3]
tux1
tux2
tux3
scontrol: create res StartTime=2009-04-01T08:00:00 Duration=5:00:00 Users=dbremer NodeCnt=10
Reservation created: dbremer_1
scontrol: update Reservation=dbremer_1 Flags=Maint NodeCnt=20
scontrol: delete Reservation=dbremer_1
scontrol: quit

Copyright (C) 2002-2007 The Regents of the University of California. Produced at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (cf, DISCLAIMER).
Copyright (C) 2008-2010 Lawrence Livermore National Security.
Copyright (C) 2010-2018 SchedMD LLC.

This file is part of Slurm, a resource management program. For details, see <https://slurm.schedmd.com/>.

Slurm is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.

Slurm is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details.

/etc/slurm.conf

scancel(1), sinfo(1), squeue(1), slurm_checkpoint (3), slurm_create_partition (3), slurm_delete_partition (3), slurm_load_ctl_conf (3), slurm_load_jobs (3), slurm_load_node (3), slurm_load_partitions (3), slurm_reconfigure (3), slurm_requeue (3), slurm_resume (3), slurm_shutdown (3), slurm_suspend (3), slurm_takeover (3), slurm_update_job (3), slurm_update_node (3), slurm_update_partition (3), slurm.conf(5), slurmctld(8)

Slurm Commands June 2018