How to make cpuset.cpu_exclusive function of cpuset work correctly - linux-kernel

I'm trying to use the kernel's cpuset to isolate my process. To obtain this, I follow the instructions(2.1 Basic Usage) from kernel doc cpusets, however, it didn't work in my environment.
I have tried in both my centos7 server and my ubuntu16.04 work pc, but neither did work.
centos kernel version:
[root#node ~]# uname -r
3.10.0-327.el7.x86_64
ubuntu kernel version:
4.15.0-46-generic
What I have tried is as follows.
root#Latitude:/sys/fs/cgroup/cpuset# pwd
/sys/fs/cgroup/cpuset
root#Latitude:/sys/fs/cgroup/cpuset# cat cpuset.cpus
0-3
root#Latitude:/sys/fs/cgroup/cpuset# cat cpuset.mems
0
root#Latitude:/sys/fs/cgroup/cpuset# cat cpuset.cpu_exclusive
1
root#Latitude:/sys/fs/cgroup/cpuset# cat cpuset.mem_exclusive
1
root#Latitude:/sys/fs/cgroup/cpuset# find . -name cpuset.cpu_excl
usive | xargs cat
0
0
0
0
0
1
root#Latitude:/sys/fs/cgroup/cpuset# mkdir my_cpuset
root#Latitude:/sys/fs/cgroup/cpuset# echo 1 > my_cpuset/cpuset.cpus
root#Latitude:/sys/fs/cgroup/cpuset# echo 0 > my_cpuset/cpuset.mems
root#Latitude:/sys/fs/cgroup/cpuset# echo 1 > my_cpuset/cpuset.cpu_exclusive
bash: echo: write error: Invalid argument
root#Latitude:/sys/fs/cgroup/cpuset#
It just printed the error bash: echo: write error: Invalid argument.
Google it, however, I can't get the correct answers.
As I pasted above, before my operation, I confirmed that the cpuset root path have enabled the cpu_exclusive function and all the cpus are not been excluded by other sub-cpuset.
By using ps -o pid,psr,comm -p $PID, I can confirm that the cpus can be assigned to some process if I don't care cpu_exclusive. But I have also proved that if cpu_exclusive is not set, the same cpus can also be assigned to another processes.
I don't know if it is because some pre-setting are missed.
What I expected is "using cpuset to obtain exclusive use of cpus". Can anyboy give any clues?
Thanks very much.

i believe it is a mis-understanding of cpu_exclusive flag, as i did. Here is the doc https://www.kernel.org/doc/Documentation/cgroup-v1/cpusets.txt, quoting:
If a cpuset is cpu or mem exclusive, no other cpuset, other than
a direct ancestor or descendant, may share any of the same CPUs or
Memory Nodes.
so one possible reason you have bash: echo: write error: Invalid argument, is that you have some other cgroup cpuset enabled, and it conflicts with your operations of echo 1 > my_cpuset/cpuset.cpu_exclusive
please run find . -name cpuset.cpus | xargs cat to list all your cgroup's target cpus.
assume you have 12 cpus, if you want to set cpu_exclusive of my_cpuset, you need to carefully modify all the other cgroups to use cpus, eg. 0-7, then set cpus of my_cpuset to be 8-11. After all these cpus configurations , you can set cpu_exclusive to be 1.
But still, other process can still use cpu 8-11. Only the tasks that belongs to the other cgroups will not use cpu 8-11
for me, i had some docker container running, which prevents me from setting my cpuset cpu_exclusive
with kernel doc, i do not think it is possible to use cpus exclusively by cgroup itself. One approach (i know this approach is running on production) is that we isolate cpus, and manage the cpu affinity/cpuset by ourselves

Related

Problems with Orca and OpenMPI for parallel jobs

Hello to the community:
I recently started to use ORCA software for some quantum calculation but I have been having a lot of problems to lunch a parallel calculation in the cluster of my University.
To install Orca I used the static version:
orca_4_2_1_linux_x86-64_openmpi314.tar.xz.
In a shared direction of the cluster (/data/shared/opt/ORCA/).
And putted in my ~/.bash_profile:
export PATH="/data/shared/opt/ORCA/orca_4_2_1_linux_x86-64_openmpi314:$PATH"
export LD_LIBRARY_PATH="/data/shared/opt/ORCA/orca_4_2_1_linux_x86-64_openmpi314:$LD_LIBRARY_PATH"
For the installation of the corresponding OpenMPI version (3.1.4)
tar -xvf openmpi-3.1.4.tar.gz
cd openmpi-3.1.4
./configure --prefix="/data/shared/opt/ORCA/openmpi314/"
make -j 10
make install
When I use the frontend server all is wonderful:
With a .sh like this:
#! /bin/bash
export PATH="/data/shared/opt/ORCA/openmpi314/bin:$PATH"
export LD_LIBRARY_PATH="$LD_LIBRARY_PATH:/data/shared/opt/ORCA/openmpi314/lib"
$(which orca) test.inp > test.out
and an input like this:
# Computation of myjob at b3lyp/6-31+G(d,p)
%pal nprocs 10 end
%maxcore 8192
! RKS B3LYP 6-31+G(d,p)
! TightSCF Grid5 NoFinalGrid
! Opt
! Freq
%cpcm
smd true
SMDsolvent "water"
end
* xyz 0 1
C 0 0 0
O 0 0 1.5
*
The problem appears when I use the nodes:
.inp file:
#! Computation at RKS B3LYP/6-31+G(d,p) for cis1_bh267_m_Cell_152
%pal nprocs 12 end
%maxcore 8192
! RKS B3LYP 6-31+G(d,p)
! TightSCF Grid5 NoFinalGrid
! Opt
! Freq
%cpcm
smd true
SMDsolvent "water"
end
* xyz 0 1
C -4.38728130 0.21799058 0.17853303
C -3.02072869 0.82609890 -0.29733316
F -2.96869122 2.10937041 0.07179384
F -3.01136328 0.87651596 -1.63230798
C -1.82118365 0.05327804 0.23420220
O -2.26240947 -0.92805650 1.01540713
C -0.53557484 0.33394113 -0.05236121
C 0.54692198 -0.46942807 0.50027196
O 0.31128292 -1.43114232 1.22440290
C 1.93990391 -0.12927675 0.16510948
C 2.87355011 -1.15536140 -0.00858832
C 4.18738231 -0.82592189 -0.32880964
C 4.53045856 0.52514329 -0.45102225
N 3.63662927 1.52101319 -0.26705841
C 2.36381718 1.20228695 0.03146190
F -4.51788749 0.24084604 1.49796862
F -4.53935644 -1.04617745 -0.19111502
F -5.43718443 0.87033190 -0.30564680
H -1.46980819 -1.48461498 1.39034280
H -0.26291843 1.15748249 -0.71875720
H 2.57132559 -2.20300864 0.10283592
H 4.93858460 -1.60267627 -0.48060140
H 5.55483009 0.83859415 -0.70271364
H 1.67507560 2.05019549 0.17738396
*
.sh file (Slurm job):
#!/bin/bash
#SBATCH -p deflt #which partition I want
#SBATCH -o cis1_bh267_m_Cell_152_myjob.out #path for the slurm output
#SBATCH -e cis1_bh267_m_Cell_152_myjob.err #path for the slurm error output
#SBATCH -c 12 #number of cpu(logical cores)/task (task is normally an MPI process, default is one and the option to change it is -n)
#SBATCH -t 2-00:00 #how many time I want the resources (this impacts the job priority as well)
#SBATCH --job-name=cis1_bh267_m_Cell_152 #(to recognize your jobs when checking them with "squeue -u USERID")
#SBATCH -N 1 #number of node, usually 1 when no parallelization over nodes
#SBATCH --nice=0 #lowering your priority if >0
#SBATCH --gpus=0 #number of gpu you want
# This block is echoing some SLURM variables
echo "Jobid = $SLURM_JOBID"
echo "Host = $SLURM_JOB_NODELIST"
echo "Jobname = $SLURM_JOB_NAME"
echo "Subcwd = $SLURM_SUBMIT_DIR"
echo "SLURM_CPUS_PER_TASK = $SLURM_CPUS_PER_TASK"
# This block is for the execution of the program
export PATH="/data/shared/opt/ORCA/openmpi314/bin:$PATH"
export LD_LIBRARY_PATH="$LD_LIBRARY_PATH:/data/shared/opt/ORCA/openmpi314/lib"
$(which orca) ${SLURM_JOB_NAME}.inp > ${SLURM_JOB_NAME}.log --use-hwthread-cpus
I used the --use-hwthread-cpus flag as a recommendation but the same problem appears with and without this flag.
All the error is:
There are not enough slots available in the system to satisfy the 12 slots that were requested by the application: /data/shared/opt/ORCA/orca_4_2_1_linux_x86-64_openmpi314/orca_gtoint_mpi
Either request fewer slots for your application, or make more slots available for use. A "slot" is the Open MPI term for an allocatable unit where we can launch a process. The number of slots available are defined by the environment in which Open MPI processes are run:
1. Hostfile, via "slots=N" clauses (N defaults to number of processor cores if not provided)
2. The --host command line parameter, via a ":N" suffix on the hostname (N defaults to 1 if not provided)
3. Resource manager (e.g., SLURM, PBS/Torque, LSF, etc.)
4. If none of a hostfile, the --host command line parameter, or an RM is present, Open MPI defaults to the number of processor cores In all the above cases, if you want Open MPI to default to the number
of hardware threads instead of the number of processor cores, use the --use-hwthread-cpus option.
Alternatively, you can use the --oversubscribe option to ignore the number of available slots when deciding the number of processes to launch.
*[file orca_tools/qcmsg.cpp, line 458]:
.... aborting the run*
When I go to the output of the calculation, it looks like start to run but when launch the parallel jobs fail and give:
ORCA finished by error termination in GTOInt
Calling Command: mpirun -np 12 --use-hwthread-cpus /data/shared/opt/ORCA/orca_4_2_1_linux_x86-64_openmpi314/orca_gtoint_mpi cis1_bh267_m_Cell_448.int.tmp cis1_bh267_m_Cell_448
[file orca_tools/qcmsg.cpp, line 458]:
.... aborting the run
We have two kind of nodes on the cluster:
A punch of them are:
Xeon 6-core E-2136 # 3.30GHz (12 logical cores) and Nvidia GTX 1070Ti
And the other ones:
AMD Epyc 24-core (24 logical cores) and 4x Nvidia RTX 2080Ti
Using the command scontrol show node the details of one node of each group are:
First Group:
NodeName=fang1 Arch=x86_64 CoresPerSocket=6
CPUAlloc=12 CPUTot=12 CPULoad=12.00
AvailableFeatures=(null)
ActiveFeatures=(null)
Gres=gpu:gtx1070ti:1
NodeAddr=fang1 NodeHostName=fang1 Version=19.05.5
OS=Linux 5.7.12-arch1-1 #1 SMP PREEMPT Fri, 31 Jul 2020 17:38:22 +0000
RealMemory=15923 AllocMem=0 FreeMem=171 Sockets=1 Boards=1
State=ALLOCATED ThreadsPerCore=2 TmpDisk=7961 Weight=1 Owner=N/A MCS_label=N/A
Partitions=deflt,debug,long
BootTime=2020-10-27T09:56:18 SlurmdStartTime=2020-10-27T15:33:51
CfgTRES=cpu=12,mem=15923M,billing=12,gres/gpu=1,gres/gpu:gtx1070ti=1
AllocTRES=cpu=12,gres/gpu=1,gres/gpu:gtx1070ti=1
CapWatts=n/a
CurrentWatts=0 AveWatts=0
ExtSensorsJoules=n/s ExtSensorsWatts=0 ExtSensorsTemp=n/s
Second Group
NodeName=fang50 Arch=x86_64 CoresPerSocket=24
CPUAlloc=48 CPUTot=48 CPULoad=48.00
AvailableFeatures=(null)
ActiveFeatures=(null)
Gres=gpu:rtx2080ti:4
NodeAddr=fang50 NodeHostName=fang50 Version=19.05.5
OS=Linux 5.7.12-arch1-1 #1 SMP PREEMPT Fri, 31 Jul 2020 17:38:22 +0000
RealMemory=64245 AllocMem=0 FreeMem=807 Sockets=1 Boards=1
State=ALLOCATED ThreadsPerCore=2 TmpDisk=32122 Weight=1 Owner=N/A MCS_label=N/A
Partitions=deflt,long
BootTime=2020-12-15T10:09:43 SlurmdStartTime=2020-12-15T10:14:17
CfgTRES=cpu=48,mem=64245M,billing=48,gres/gpu=4,gres/gpu:rtx2080ti=4
AllocTRES=cpu=48,gres/gpu=4,gres/gpu:rtx2080ti=4
CapWatts=n/a
CurrentWatts=0 AveWatts=0
ExtSensorsJoules=n/s ExtSensorsWatts=0 ExtSensorsTemp=n/s
I use in the script of Slurm the flag -c, --cpus-per-task = integer; and in the input for Orca the command %pal nprocs integer end. I tested different combinations of this two parameters in order to see if I am using more CPU than the available:
-c, --cpus-per-task = integer
%pal nprocs integer end
None
6
None
3
None
2
1
2
1
12
2
6
3
4
12
12
With different amount of memories: 8000 MBi and 2000 MBi (my total memory is around 15 GBi). And in all the cases the same error appears. I am not an expert user neither in ORCA non in informatic (but maybe you guess this for the extension of the question), so maybe the solution is simple but I really don’t have it, Idon't know what's going on!
A lot of thanks in advance,
Alejandro.
Faced the same issue.
Explicit declaration --prefix ${OMPI_HOME} directly as ORCA parameter and using of static linked ORCA version helps me:
export RSH_COMMAND="/usr/bin/ssh"
export PARAMS="--mca routed direct --oversubscribe -machinefile ${HOSTS_FILE} --prefix ${OMPI_HOME}"
$ORCA_DIR/orca $WORKDIR/$JOBFILE.inp "$PARAMS" > $WORKDIR/$JOBFILE.out
Also, It's better to build OpenMPI 3.1.x with --disable-builtin-atomics flag.
Thank you #Alexey for your answer. And sorry for the wrong Tag, like I said, I am pretty rookie on this stuff.
The problem was not in the Orca or OpenMPI configuration but in the bash script used for scheduled the Slurm job.
I thought that the entire Orca job itself was what Slurm call a "task". For that reason I declared the flag --cpus-per-task equal to the number of parallel jobs that I want to do with Orca. But the problem is that each parallel Orca job (that is launch using OpenMPI) is a task for Slurm. Therefore with my Slurm script I was reserving a node with at least 12 CPU, but when Orca launch their parallel jobs, each one ask for 12 CPU, so: "There are not enough slots available ..." because I needed 144 CPU.
The rest of the cases in the table of my Question fails for another reason. I was launching at the same time 5 different Orca calculation. Now, because --cpus-per-task could be None, 1, 2 or 3; the five calculation might enter in the same node or in another node with this amount of free CPU, but when Orca ask for the parallel jobs, fail again because there are not this amount of CPU on the node.
The solution that I found is pretty simple. On the .sh script for Slurm I putted this:
#SBATCH --mincpus=n*m
#SBATCH --ntasks=n
#SBATCH --cpus-per-task m
Instead of only:
#SBATCH --cpus-per-task m
Where n will be equal to the number of parallel jobs specified on the Orca input (%pal nprocs n end) and m the number of CPU that you want to use for each parallel Orca job.
In my case I used n = 12, m = 1. With the flag --mincpus I ensured to take a node with at least 12 CPU and allocated them. With the --cpus-per-task is pretty evident what this flag do (even for me :-) ), which, by the way, has a default value of 1 and I don't know if more than 1 CPU for each OpenMPI Orca job improve the velocity of the calculation. And --ntasks gives the information to Slurm of how many task you will do.
Of course if you know the number of task and the CPU per task is easy to know how many CPU you need to reserve, but I don't know if this is easy to Slurm too :-). So, to be sure that I allocate the correct number of CPU i used --mincpus flag, but maybe is not needed. The thing is that it works now ^_^.
It is also important to take into account the amount of memory that you declare in the input of Orca in order of do not exceed the available memory. For example, if you have 12 task and a RAM of 15000 MBi, the right amount of memory to declared should be no more than 15000/12 = 1250 MBi
I had a similar problem with parallel jobs before. The slurm also output not enough slots error.
My solution is to change parallel threads into parallel processes. For my system is to change
#SBATCH -c 24
into
#SBATCH -n 24
and everything works just fine.

Bash: Find the disk a certain partition is on and put result into a variable

What are some (reliable) tests to find the disk a certain partition is on and put that result into a variable?
For example, output of lsblk:
...
sda 8:0 0 9.1T 0 disk
└─sda1 8:1 0 9.1T 0 part /foopath
...
mmcblk0 179:0 0 29.7G 0 disk
├─mmcblk0p1 179:1 0 256M 0 part /barpath
└─mmcblk0p2 179:2 0 29.5G 0 part /foobarpath
If partition="/dev/mmcblk0p2", how can I put mmcblk0 as the disk it is a part of into a variable? Or similarly, if partition="/dev/sda1", how to put sda as the disk it is a part of into a variable?
disk=${partition::-1} seemed to be a hack until I encountered partitions such as mmcblk0p1, hence the request for a more reliable test...
The purpose of isolating the disk and using variable is to pass it to smartctl -n standby /dev/sda to find if disk is currently spinning, etc.
Operating environment is Linux Mint 19.3 and Ubuntu 20.
Any ideas?
Thanks to #KamilCuk and #don_crissti ;)
"Print just the parent device" using lsblk
#!/bin/bash
partition="/dev/sda1"
disk="$(lsblk -no pkname "${partition}")"

Enhanced docker stats command with total amount of RAM and CPU

I just want to share a small script that I made to enhance the docker stats command.
I am not sure about the exactitude of this method.
Can I assume that the total amount of memory consumed by the complete Docker deployment is the sum of each container consumed memory ?
Please share your modifications and or corrections. This command is documented here: https://docs.docker.com/engine/reference/commandline/stats/
When running a docker stats The output looks like this:
$ docker stats --all --format "table {{.MemPerc}}\t{{.CPUPerc}}\t{{.MemUsage}}\t{{.Name}}"
MEM % CPU % MEM USAGE / LIMIT NAME
0.50% 1.00% 77.85MiB / 15.57GiB ecstatic_noether
1.50% 3.50% 233.55MiB / 15.57GiB stoic_goodall
0.25% 0.50% 38.92MiB / 15.57GiB drunk_visvesvaraya
My script will add the following line at the end:
2.25% 5.00% 350.32MiB / 15.57GiB TOTAL
docker_stats.sh
#!/bin/bash
# This script is used to complete the output of the docker stats command.
# The docker stats command does not compute the total amount of resources (RAM or CPU)
# Get the total amount of RAM, assumes there are at least 1024*1024 KiB, therefore > 1 GiB
HOST_MEM_TOTAL=$(grep MemTotal /proc/meminfo | awk '{print $2/1024/1024}')
# Get the output of the docker stat command. Will be displayed at the end
# Without modifying the special variable IFS the ouput of the docker stats command won't have
# the new lines thus resulting in a failure when using awk to process each line
IFS=;
DOCKER_STATS_CMD=`docker stats --no-stream --format "table {{.MemPerc}}\t{{.CPUPerc}}\t{{.MemUsage}}\t{{.Name}}"`
SUM_RAM=`echo $DOCKER_STATS_CMD | tail -n +2 | sed "s/%//g" | awk '{s+=$1} END {print s}'`
SUM_CPU=`echo $DOCKER_STATS_CMD | tail -n +2 | sed "s/%//g" | awk '{s+=$2} END {print s}'`
SUM_RAM_QUANTITY=`LC_NUMERIC=C printf %.2f $(echo "$SUM_RAM*$HOST_MEM_TOTAL*0.01" | bc)`
# Output the result
echo $DOCKER_STATS_CMD
echo -e "${SUM_RAM}%\t\t\t${SUM_CPU}%\t\t${SUM_RAM_QUANTITY}GiB / ${HOST_MEM_TOTAL}GiB\tTOTAL"
From the documentation that you have linked above,
The docker stats command returns a live data stream for running containers.
To limit data to one or more specific containers, specify a list of container names or ids separated by a space.
You can specify a stopped container but stopped containers do not return any data.
and then furthermore,
Note: On Linux, the Docker CLI reports memory usage by subtracting page cache usage from the total memory usage.
The API does not perform such a calculation but rather provides the total memory usage and the amount from the page cache so that clients can use the data as needed.
According to your question, it looks like you can assume so, but also do not forget it also factors in containers that exist but are not running.
Your docker_stats.sh does the job for me, thanks!
I had to add unset LC_ALL somewhere before LC_NUMERIC is used though as the former overrides the latter and otherwise I get this error:
"Zeile 19: printf: 1.7989: Ungültige Zahl." This is probably due to my using a German locale.
There is also a discussion to add this feature to the "docker stats" command itself.
Thanks for sharing the script! I've updated it in a way it depends on DOCKER_MEM_TOTAL instead of HOST_MEM_TOTAL as docker has it's own memory limit which could differ from host total memory count.

How to share memory in cluster machine (qsub openmpi)

dear all!
I have a question about sharing memory in cluster. I am a new to cluster, and fail to solve my problem after trying about several weeks, so I look for help here, any suggestion would be grateful!
I want to use soapdenovo, a software that was used to assemble human genome to assemble my data. However, it failed in one step because shortage of memory (the memory is 512G in my machine). So I turned to cluster machine (which have three big nodes, each node have 512 memory too), and started to learn submit job with qsub. Considering that one node couldn't solve my problem, I googled and found that openmpi may help, but when I running openmpi with demo data, it seemed it only run the command several times. Then I found to use openmpi, the software must include library of openmpi, and I didn't know whether soapdenovo is support openmpi, I had asked the question but the author didn't give me answer yet. Suppose soapdenovo support the openmpi, how should I solve my problem. If it didn't support openmpi, can I use memory in different nodes to run the software?
The problem had tortured my so much, thanks for any help. Following is what had I do and some information about the cluster machine:
Install openmpi and submit the job
1) The script of job:
#!/bin/bash
#
#$ -cwd
#$ -j y
#$ -S /bin/bash
#
export PATH=/tools/openmpi/bin:$PATH
export LD_LIBRARY_PATH=/tools/openmpi/lib:$LD_LIBRARY_PATH
soapPath="/tools/SOAPdenovo2/SOAPdenovo-63mer"
workPath="/NGS"
outputPath="assembly/soap/demo"
/tools/openmpi/bin/mpirun $soapPath all -s $workPath/$outputPath/config_file -K 23 -R -F -p 60 -V -o $workPath/$outputPath/graph_prefix > $workPath/$outputPath/ass.log 2> $workPath/$outputPath/ass.err
2) Submit the job:
qsub -pe orte 60 mpi.qsub
3) The log in ass.err
a) It seemed it run soapdenovo several times according to the log
cat ass.err | grep "Pregraph" | wc -l
60
b) detail information
less ass.err (it seemed it only run soapdenov several times, because when I run it in my machine, it would only output one Pregraph):
Version 2.04: released on July 13th, 2012
Compile Apr 27 2016 15:50:02
********************
Pregraph
********************
Parameters: pregraph -s /NGS/assembly/soap/demo/config_file -K 23 -p 16 -R -o /NGS/assembly/soap/demo/graph_prefix
In /NGS/assembly/soap/demo/config_file, 1 lib(s), maximum read length 35, maximum name length 256.
Version 2.04: released on July 13th, 2012
Compile Apr 27 2016 15:50:02
********************
Pregraph
********************
and so on
c) information of stdin
cat ass.log:
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
WARNING: A process refused to die despite all the efforts!
This process may still be running and/or consuming resources.
Host: smp03
PID: 75035
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
mpirun noticed that process rank 58 with PID 0 on node c0214.local exited on signal 11 (Segmentation fault).
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
Information about cluster:
1) qconf -sql
all.q
smp.q
2) qconf -spl
mpi
mpich
orte
zhongxm
3) qconf -sp zhongxm
pe_name zhongxm
slots 999
user_lists NONE
xuser_lists NONE
start_proc_args /bin/true
stop_proc_args /bin/true
allocation_rule $fill_up
control_slaves TRUE
job_is_first_task FALSE
urgency_slots min
accounting_summary FALSE
4) qconf -sq smp.q
qname smp.q
hostlist #smp.q
seq_no 0
load_thresholds np_load_avg=1.75
suspend_thresholds NONE
nsuspend 1
suspend_interval 00:05:00
priority 0
min_cpu_interval 00:05:00
processors UNDEFINED
qtype BATCH INTERACTIVE
ckpt_list NONE
pe_list make zhongxm
rerun FALSE
slots 1
tmpdir /tmp
shell /bin/csh
prolog NONE
epilog NONE
shell_start_mode posix_compliant
starter_method NONE
suspend_method NONE
resume_method NONE
terminate_method NONE
notify 00:00:60
owner_list NONE
user_lists NONE
xuser_lists NONE
subordinate_list NONE
complex_values NONE
projects NONE
xprojects NONE
calendar NONE
initial_state default
s_rt INFINITY
h_rt INFINITY
s_cpu INFINITY
h_cpu INFINITY
s_fsize INFINITY
h_fsize INFINITY
s_data INFINITY
h_data INFINITY
s_stack INFINITY
h_stack INFINITY
s_core INFINITY
h_core INFINITY
s_rss INFINITY
h_rss INFINITY
s_vmem INFINITY
h_vmem INFINITY
5) qconf -sq all.q
qname all.q
hostlist #allhosts
seq_no 0
load_thresholds np_load_avg=1.75
suspend_thresholds NONE
nsuspend 1
suspend_interval 00:05:00
priority 0
min_cpu_interval 00:05:00
processors UNDEFINED
qtype BATCH INTERACTIVE
ckpt_list NONE
pe_list make zhongxm
rerun FALSE
slots 16,[c0219.local=32]
tmpdir /tmp
shell /bin/csh
prolog NONE
epilog NONE
shell_start_mode posix_compliant
starter_method NONE
suspend_method NONE
resume_method NONE
terminate_method NONE
notify 00:00:60
owner_list NONE
user_lists mobile
xuser_lists NONE
subordinate_list NONE
complex_values NONE
projects NONE
xprojects NONE
calendar NONE
initial_state default
s_rt INFINITY
h_rt INFINITY
s_cpu INFINITY
h_cpu INFINITY
s_fsize INFINITY
h_fsize INFINITY
s_data INFINITY
h_data INFINITY
s_stack INFINITY
h_stack INFINITY
s_core INFINITY
h_core INFINITY
s_rss INFINITY
h_rss INFINITY
s_vmem INFINITY
h_vmem INFINITY
According to https://hpc.unt.edu/soapdenovo the software doesn't support MPI:
This code is NOT compiled with MPI, and should only be used in parallel on a SINGLE node, via a threaded model.
So, you can't just start the software with mpiexec on cluster to have access to more memory. Cluster machines are connected with non-coherent networks (Ethernet, Infiniband) which are slower than memory bus, and PCs in cluster do not share their memory. Clusters use MPI libraries (OpenMPI or MPICH) to work with network, and all requests between nodes is explicit: program calls MPI_Send in one process and MPI_Recv in other. There are also one-way calls like MPI_Put/MPI_Get to access remote memory (RDMA - remote direct memory access), but this is not the same as local memory.
osgx, thank you for your reply very much and sorry for the delay of this message.
Since I don't major in computer, I think I can't understand some glossary very well, like ELF. So there are some new questions and I list my question as follow, thanks for help advace:
1) When I "ldd SOAPdenovo-63mer", it outputed "not a dynamic executable", did this mean "the code is not complied with MPI" that you mentioned?
2) In short, I can't solve the problem with the cluster, and I have to look for a machine with more than 512G memory?
3) Also, I used another software called ALLPATHS-LG (http://www.broadinstitute.org/software/allpaths-lg/blog/) that was also failed for shortage of memory, and according to FAQ C1 (http://www.broadinstitute.org/software/allpaths-lg/blog/?page_id=336), what "it uses share memory parallelization" mean, did it means it can use memory in cluster, or only memory in a node, and I have to find a machine with enough memory?
C1. Can I run ALLPATHS-LG on a cluster?
You can, but it will only use one machine, not the entire cluster. That machine would need to have enough memory to fit the entire assembly. ALLPATHS-LG does not support distributed computing using MPI, instead it uses Shared Memory Parallelization.
By the way, this is first time I posted here, I think I should use commit to reply, considering so many words, I use "Answer Your Question".

echo $$ > tasks gives "no space left on device" when trying to use cpuset

I tried the example from the cpuset(7) manual and created a cpuset Charlie. On both Ubuntu 14.4 LTS and SLES 12 I get the following error when trying to put the current process into the cpuset:
/dev/cpuset/Charlie# echo $$ > tasks
bash: echo: write error: No space left on device
Any help?
This usually means that you don't have any memory nodes assigned to the cpuset.
$ cat /dev/cpuset/Charlie/cpuset.mems
would return an empty line. So you can't assign a new task to this cgroup as it will not have any memory to work with.
Assign one or all memory nodes to this cgroup should fix it.
$ echo 0 > /dev/cpuset/Charlie/cpuset.mems
You also need to assign a cpu node as that will also likely be empty.
$ echo 0 > /dev/cpuset/Charlie/cpuset.cpus
Setting cgroup.clone_children to 1 can help in automatically inheriting memory and node setting from parent cgroup when a child cgroup is created.

Resources