scancel - Used to signal jobs or job steps that are under the
control of Slurm.
scancel [OPTIONS...]
[job_id[_array_id][.step_id]]
[job_id[_array_id][.step_id]...]
scancel is used to signal or cancel jobs, job arrays or job
steps. An arbitrary number of jobs or job steps may be signaled using job
specification filters or a space separated list of specific job and/or job
step IDs. If the job ID of a job array is specified with an array ID value
then only that job array element will be cancelled. If the job ID of a job
array is specified without an array ID value then all job array elements
will be cancelled. While a heterogeneous job is in pending state, only the
entire job can be cancelled rather than its individual components. A request
to cancel an individual component of a heterogeneous job not in pending
state will return an error. After the job has begun execution, the
individual component can be cancelled. A job or job step can only be
signaled by the owner of that job or user root. If an attempt is made by an
unauthorized user to signal a job or job step, an error message will be
printed and the job will not be signaled.
- -A,
--account=account
- Restrict the scancel operation to jobs under this charge account.
- -b, --batch
- By default, signals other than SIGKILL are not sent to the batch step (the
shell script). With this option scancel signals only the batch
step, but not any other steps. This is useful when the shell script has to
trap the signal and take some application defined action. Note that most
shells cannot handle signals while a command is running (child process of
the batch step), the shell use to wait until the command ends to then
handle the signal. Children of the batch step are not signaled with this
option, use -f, --full instead. NOTE: If used with
-f, --full, this option ignored. NOTE: This option is not
applicable if step_id is specified. NOTE: The shell itself may exit
upon receipt of many signals. You may avoid this by explicitly trap
signals within the shell script (e.g. "trap <arg>
<signals>"). See the shell documentation for details.
- --ctld
- Send the job signal request to the slurmctld daemon rather than directly
to the slurmd daemons. This increases overhead, but offers better fault
tolerance. This is the default behavior on architectures using front end
nodes (e.g. Cray ALPS computers) or when the --clusters option is
used.
- -f, --full
- By default, signals other than SIGKILL are not sent to the batch step (the
shell script). With this option scancel signals also the batch
script and its children processes. Most shells cannot handle signals while
a command is running (child process of the batch step), the shell use to
wait until the command ends to then handle the signal. Unlike -b,
--batch, children of the batch step are also signaled with this
option. NOTE: srun steps are also children of the batch step, so steps are
also signaled with this option.
- --help
- Print a help message describing all scancel options.
- -H, --hurry
- Do not stage out any burst buffer data.
- -i,
--interactive
- Interactive mode. Confirm each job_id.step_id before performing the cancel
operation.
- -M,
--clusters=<string>
- Cluster to issue commands to. Implies --ctld. Note that the
SlurmDBD must be up for this option to work properly.
- -n,
--jobname=job_name, --name=job_name
- Restrict the scancel operation to jobs with this job name.
- -p,
--partition=partition_name
- Restrict the scancel operation to jobs in this partition.
- -q,
--qos=qos
- Restrict the scancel operation to jobs with this quality of service.
- -Q, --quiet
- Do not report an error if the specified job is already completed. This
option is incompatible with the --verbose option.
- -R,
--reservation=reservation_name
- Restrict the scancel operation to jobs with this reservation name.
- --sibling=cluster_name
- Remove an active sibling job from a federated job.
- -s,
--signal=signal_name
- The name or number of the signal to send. If this option is not used the
specified job or step will be terminated. Note. If this option is
used the signal is sent directly to the slurmd where the job is running
bypassing the slurmctld thus the job state will not change even if the
signal is delivered to it. Use the scontrol command if you want the
job state change be known to slurmctld.
- -t,
--state=job_state_name
- Restrict the scancel operation to jobs in this state.
job_state_name may have a value of either "PENDING",
"RUNNING" or "SUSPENDED".
- -u,
--user=user_name
- Restrict the scancel operation to jobs owned by this user.
- --usage
- Print a brief help message listing the scancel options.
- -v, --verbose
- Print additional logging. Multiple v's increase logging detail. This
option is incompatible with the --quiet option.
- -V, --version
- Print the version number of the scancel command.
- -w,
--nodelist=host1,host2,...
- Cancel any jobs using any of the given hosts. The list may be specified as
a comma-separated list of hosts, a range of hosts (host[1-5,7,...] for
example), or a filename. The host list will be assumed to be a filename
only if it contains a "/" character.
- --wckey=wckey
- Restrict the scancel operation to jobs using this workload
characterization key.
- ARGUMENTS
-
- job_id
- The Slurm job ID to be signaled.
- step_id
- The step ID of the job step to be signaled. If not specified, the
operation is performed at the level of a job.
If neither --batch nor --signal are used, the
entire job will be terminated.
When --batch is used, the batch shell processes will be
signaled. The child processes of the shell will not be signaled by
Slurm, but the shell may forward the signal.
When --batch is not used but --signal is used,
then all job steps will be signaled, but the batch script itself will
not be signaled.
Executing scancel sends a remote procedure call to
slurmctld. If enough calls from scancel or other Slurm client
commands that send remote procedure calls to the slurmctld daemon
come in at once, it can result in a degradation of performance of the
slurmctld daemon, possibly resulting in a denial of service.
Do not run scancel or other Slurm client commands that send
remote procedure calls to slurmctld from loops in shell scripts or
other programs. Ensure that programs limit calls to scancel to the
minimum necessary for the information you are trying to gather.
Some scancel 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)
- SCANCEL_ACCOUNT
- -A, --account=account
- SCANCEL_BATCH
- -b, --batch
- SCANCEL_CTLD
- --ctld
- SCANCEL_FULL
- -f, --full
- SCANCEL_HURRY
- -H, --hurry
- SCANCEL_INTERACTIVE
- -i, --interactive
- SCANCEL_NAME
- -n, --name=job_name
- SCANCEL_PARTITION
- -p, --partition=partition_name
- SCANCEL_QOS
- -q, --qos=qos
- SCANCEL_STATE
- -t, --state=job_state_name
- SCANCEL_USER
- -u, --user=user_name
- SCANCEL_VERBOSE
- -v, --verbose
- SCANCEL_WCKEY
- --wckey=wckey
- SLURM_CONF
- The location of the Slurm configuration file.
- SLURM_CLUSTERS
- -M, --clusters
If multiple filters are supplied (e.g. --partition and
--name) only the jobs satisfying all of the filtering options will be
signaled.
Cancelling a job step will not result in the job being terminated.
The job must be cancelled to release a resource allocation.
To cancel a job, invoke scancel without --signal option.
This will send first a SIGCONT to all steps to eventually wake them up
followed by a SIGTERM, then wait the KillWait duration defined in the
slurm.conf file and finally if they have not terminated send a SIGKILL. This
gives time for the running job/step(s) to clean up.
If a signal value of "KILL" is sent to an entire job,
this will cancel the active job steps but not cancel the job itself.
On Cray systems, all signals except SIGCHLD, SIGCONT,
SIGSTOP, SIGTSTP, SIGTTIN, SIGTTOU, SIGURG, or SIGWINCH cause the ALPS
reservation to be released. The job however will not be terminated except in
the case of SIGKILL and may then be used for post processing.
When using SlurmDBD, users who have an AdminLevel defined
(Operator or Admin) and users who are account coordinators are given the
authority to invoke scancel on other users jobs.
Copyright (C) 2002-2007 The Regents of the University of
California. Produced at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (cf,
DISCLAIMER).
Copyright (C) 2008-2011 Lawrence Livermore National Security.
Copyright (C) 2010-2015 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.
slurm_kill_job (3), slurm_kill_job_step (3)