Using the IRIDIA Cluster
Cluster composition
Currently the IRIDIA cluster is composed by 2 servers (majorana and polyphemus) and 32 rack units (computational nodes). Each rack unit has 2 CPUs AMD Opteron244 working at 1,75GHz and 1GB of RAM. In total the cluster is composed of 64 CPUs dedicated to computations and 3 CPU for administrative purposes.
COMPLEX_NAME: opteron244
- AMD Opteron244 (2 CPU @ 1,75GHz)
nodes: r02, r03, r04, r05, r06, r07, r08, r09, r10, r11, r12, r13, r14, r15, r16, r17, r18, r19, r20, r21, r22, r23, r24, r25, r26, r27, r28, r29, r30, r31, r32, r33
Queues
Each computational node has the following 4 queues:
- <machine>.short: max 5 jobs concurrently can run in this queue and they run at nice-level 2. Each job can only run for maximum 24h of CPU time (so real execution of the program, without the time needed by the system for multitasking, etc). If a job reaches the 24th hour it will receive a signal SIGUSR1 and after some more time a SIGKILL that will terminate it. If a j
- <machine>.medium: max 3 jobs concurrently can run in this queue, but they run at nice-level 5 (lower priority than the short ones). Each job can only run for maximum 72h of CPU time (so real execution of the program, without the time needed by the system for multitasking, etc). When it reaches the 72nd hour it will receive a signal SIGUSR1 and after some more time a SIGKILL that will terminate it.
- <machine>.long: only 1 job at a time can run in this queue, but it runs at nice-level 7 (lower priority than the short and the medium ones). The job can only run for maximum 168h of CPU time (so real execution of the program, without the time needed by the system for multitasking, etc). If a job reaches the 168th hour it will receive a signal SIGUSR1 and after some more time a SIGKILL that will terminate it.
- <machine>.par: max 3 jobs concurrently can run in this queue, but they run at nice-level 7 (lower priority than the short and the medium ones, same priority as the long ones).
Summarizing: each node can run concurrently up to 12 jobs (running on 1 CPU in the diskless PCs, running on 2 CPUs in the rack units) .
YOU HAVE TO DESIGN YOUR COMPUTATIONS IN SUCH A WAY THAT EACH SINGLE JOB DOESN'T RUN FOR MORE THAN 7 DAYS (of CPU time).
How to submit a job
To submit a job that lasts up to 1 day you have to specify -l COMPLEX_NAME -l shorttime in the shell script passed at the qsub command, like in this example:
#!/bin/bash #$ -N name_of_the_short_job #$ -l complex_name #$ -l shorttime #$ -cwd
To submit a job that lasts up to 3 days you have to specify -l COMPLEX_NAME -l mediumtime in the shell script passed at the qsub command, like in this example:
#!/bin/bash #$ -N name_of_the_medium_job #$ -l complex_name #$ -l mediumtime #$ -cwd
To submit a job that lasts up to 7 days you have to specify -l COMPLEX_NAME -l longtime in the shell script passed at the qsub command, like in this example:
#!/bin/bash #$ -N name_of_the_long_job #$ -l complex_name #$ -l longtime #$ -cwd
To submit a job that runs in the parallel environment you have to specify -l COMPLEX_NAME -l parallel in the shell script passed at the qsub command, like in this example:
#!/bin/bash #$ -N name_of_the_long_job #$ -l complex_name #$ -l parallel #$ -cwd
THE SCHEDULER CANNOT PUT IN EXECUTION MORE THAN 64 JOBS OF THE SAME USER AT THE SAME TIME. IF YOU SUBMIT MORE THAN 64 JOBS, MAXIMUM 64 WILL BE RUNNING AT THE SAME TIME.