DOKK / manpages / debian 11 / slurmctld / slurmctld-wlm.8.en
slurmctld(8) Slurm Daemon slurmctld(8)

slurmctld - The central management daemon of Slurm.

slurmctld [OPTIONS...]

slurmctld is the central management daemon of Slurm. It monitors all other Slurm daemons and resources, accepts work (jobs), and allocates resources to those jobs. Given the critical functionality of slurmctld, there may be a backup server to assume these functions in the event that the primary server fails.

Clear all previous slurmctld state from its last checkpoint. With this option, all jobs, including both running and queued, and all node states, will be deleted. Without this option, previously running jobs will be preserved along with node State of DOWN, DRAINED and DRAINING nodes and the associated Reason field for those nodes. NOTE: It is rare you would ever want to use this in production as all jobs will be killed.

Run slurmctld in the background.
Run slurmctld in the foreground with logging copied to stdout.
Read configuration from the specified file. See NOTES below.
Help; print a brief summary of command options.
Ignore errors found while reading in state files on startup. Warning: Use of this option will mean losing the data that wasn't recovered from the state files.
Write log messages to the specified file.

Set the daemon's nice value to the specified value, typically a negative number.

Recover partial state from last checkpoint: jobs and node DOWN/DRAIN state and reason information state. No partition state is recovered. This is the default action.

Recover full state from last checkpoint: jobs, node, and partition state. Without this option, previously running jobs will be preserved along with node State of DOWN, DRAINED and DRAINING nodes and the associated Reason field for those nodes. No other node or partition state will be preserved.

Verbose operation. Multiple -v's increase verbosity.
Print version information and exit.

The following environment variables can be used to override settings compiled into slurmctld.

The location of the Slurm configuration file. This is overridden by explicitly naming a configuration file on the command line.

If slurmctld is started with the -D option then the core file will be written to the current working directory. Otherwise if SlurmctldLogFile is a fully qualified path name (starting with a slash), the core file will be written to the same directory as the log file, provided SlurmUser has write permission on the directory. Otherwise the core file will be written to the StateSaveLocation, or "/var/tmp/" as a last resort. If none of the above directories have write permission for SlurmUser, no core file will be produced. The command "scontrol abort" can be used to abort the slurmctld daemon and generate a core file.

slurmctld will shutdown cleanly, saving its current state to the state save directory.
slurmctld will shutdown cleanly, saving its current state, and perform a core dump.
Reloads the slurm configuration files, similar to 'scontrol reconfigure'.
Reread the log level from the configs, and then reopen the log file. This should be used when setting up logrotate(8).
These signals are explicitly ignored.

It may be useful to experiment with different slurmctld specific configuration parameters using a distinct configuration file (e.g. timeouts). However, this special configuration file will not be used by the slurmd daemon or the Slurm programs, unless you specifically tell each of them to use it. If you desire changing communication ports, the location of the temporary file system, or other parameters used by other Slurm components, change the common configuration file, slurm.conf.

Copyright (C) 2002-2007 The Regents of the University of California. Copyright (C) 2008-2010 Lawrence Livermore National Security. Produced at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (cf, DISCLAIMER). CODE-OCEC-09-009. All rights reserved.

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.conf(5), slurmd(8)

Slurm Daemon March 2020