Provided by: slurm-client_15.08.7-1build1_amd64 bug

NAME

       strigger - Used set, get or clear Slurm trigger information.

SYNOPSIS

       strigger --set   [OPTIONS...]
       strigger --get   [OPTIONS...]
       strigger --clear [OPTIONS...]

DESCRIPTION

       strigger  is used to set, get or clear Slurm trigger information.  Triggers include events
       such as a node failing, a job reaching its time limit or a job terminating.  These  events
       can  cause  actions  such  as  the execution of an arbitrary script.  Typical uses include
       notifying system administrators of node failures and gracefully  terminating  a  job  when
       it's  time  limit  is  approaching.   A  hostlist expression for the nodelist or job ID is
       passed as an argument to the program.

       Trigger events are not processed instantly, but a check is performed for trigger events on
       a periodic basis (currently every 15 seconds).  Any trigger events which occur within that
       interval will be compared against the  trigger  programs  set  at  the  end  of  the  time
       interval.   The  trigger  program  will  be  executed once for any event occurring in that
       interval.  The record of those events (e.g. nodes which  went  DOWN  in  the  previous  15
       seconds)  will then be cleared.  The trigger program must set a new trigger before the end
       of the next interval to insure that no trigger events are missed OR the  trigger  must  be
       created  with an argument of "--flags=PERM".  If desired, multiple trigger programs can be
       set for the same event.

       IMPORTANT NOTE: This command can only set triggers if run by  the  user  SlurmUser  unless
       SlurmUser  is  configured  as user root.  This is required for the slurmctld daemon to set
       the appropriate user and group IDs for the executed program.  Also note that  the  trigger
       program  is  executed  on  the  same  node that the slurmctld daemon uses rather than some
       allocated compute node.  To check the value of SlurmUser, run the command:

       scontrol show config | grep SlurmUser

ARGUMENTS

       -a, --primary_slurmctld_failure
              Trigger an event when the primary slurmctld fails.

       -A, --primary_slurmctld_resumed_operation
              Trigger an event when the primary slurmctld resuming operation after failure.

       -b, --primary_slurmctld_resumed_control
              Trigger an event when primary slurmctld resumes control.

       --block_err
              Trigger an event when a BlueGene block enters an ERROR state.

       -B, --backup_slurmctld_failure
              Trigger an event when the backup slurmctld fails.

       -c, --backup_slurmctld_resumed_operation
              Trigger an event when the backup slurmctld resumes operation after failure.

       -C, --backup_slurmctld_assumed_control
              Trigger event when backup slurmctld assumes control.

       --clear
              Clear or delete a previously defined event trigger.  The --id,  --jobid  or  --user
              option  must be specified to identify the trigger(s) to be cleared.  Only user root
              or the trigger's creator can delete a trigger.

       -d, --down
              Trigger an event if the specified node goes into a DOWN state.

       -D, --drained
              Trigger an event if the specified node goes into a DRAINED state.

       -e, --primary_slurmctld_acct_buffer_full
              Trigger an event when primary slurmctld accounting buffer is full.

       -F, --fail
              Trigger an event if the specified node goes into a FAILING state.

       -f, --fini
              Trigger an event when the specified job completes execution.

       --flags=type
              Associate flags with the reservation. Multiple flags  should  be  comma  separated.
              Valid flags include:

              PERM   Make the trigger permanent. Do not purge it after the event occurs.

       --front_end
              Trigger  events  based upon changes in state of front end nodes rather than compute
              nodes. Applies to BlueGene and Cray architectures only,  where  the  slurmd  daemon
              executes  on  front  end nodes rather than the compute nodes.  Use this option with
              either the --up or --down option.

       -g, --primary_slurmdbd_failure
              Trigger an event when the primary slurmdbd fails.

       -G, --primary_slurmdbd_resumed_operation
              Trigger an event when the primary slurmdbd resumes operation after failure.

       --get  Show registered event triggers.  Options can be used for filtering purposes.

       -h, --primary_database_failure
              Trigger an event when the primary database fails.

       -H, --primary_database_resumed_operation
              Trigger an event when the primary database resumes operation after failure.

       -i, --id=id
              Trigger ID number.

       -I, --idle
              Trigger an event if the specified node remains in an IDLE state for  at  least  the
              time  period  specified  by  the --offset option. This can be useful to hibernate a
              node that remains idle, thus reducing power consumption.

       -j, --jobid=id
              Job ID of interest.  NOTE: The --jobid option can not be used in  conjunction  with
              the  --node option. When the --jobid option is used in conjunction with the --up or
              --down option, all nodes allocated to that job will considered the nodes used as  a
              trigger event.

       -M, --clusters=<string>
              Clusters to issue commands to.

       -n, --node[=host]
              Host  name(s)  of  interest.   By  default,  all  nodes associated with the job (if
              --jobid is specified) or on the system are considered for  event  triggers.   NOTE:
              The  --node option can not be used in conjunction with the --jobid option. When the
              --jobid option is used in conjunction with the --up, --down  or  --drained  option,
              all  nodes allocated to that job will considered the nodes used as a trigger event.
              Since this option's argument is optional, for  proper  parsing  the  single  letter
              option  must be followed immediately with the value and not include a space between
              them. For example "-ntux" and not "-n tux".

       -N, --noheader
              Do not print the header when displaying a list of triggers.

       -o, --offset=seconds
              The specified action should follow the event by  this  time  interval.   Specify  a
              negative  value  if action should preceded the event.  The default value is zero if
              no --offset option is specified.  The resolution of this time is about 20  seconds,
              so  to execute a script not less than five minutes prior to a job reaching its time
              limit, specify --offset=320 (5 minutes plus 20 seconds).

       -p, --program=path
              Execute the program at the  specified  fully  qualified  pathname  when  the  event
              occurs.   You  may  quote  the path and include extra program arguments if desired.
              The program will be executed as the user who sets  the  trigger.   If  the  program
              fails  to  terminate  within  5  minutes,  it will be killed along with any spawned
              processes.

       -Q, --quiet
              Do not report non-fatal errors.  This can be useful to  clear  triggers  which  may
              have already been purged.

       -r, --reconfig
              Trigger an event when the system configuration changes.  This is triggered when the
              slurmctld daemon reads its configuration file or when a node state changes.

       --set  Register an event trigger based upon the supplied options.  NOTE: An event is  only
              triggered  once.  A  new event trigger must be set established for future events of
              the same type to be processed.  Triggers can only be set if the command is  run  by
              the user SlurmUser unless SlurmUser is configured as user root.

       -t, --time
              Trigger an event when the specified job's time limit is reached.  This must be used
              in conjunction with the --jobid option.

       -u, --up
              Trigger an event if the specified node is returned to service from a DOWN state.

       --user=user_name_or_id
              Clear or get triggers created by  the  specified  user.   For  example,  a  trigger
              created by user root for a job created by user adam could be cleared with an option
              --user=root.  Specify either a user name or user ID.

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

       -V , --version
              Print version information and exit.

OUTPUT FIELD DESCRIPTIONS

       TRIG_ID
              Trigger ID number.

       RES_TYPE
              Resource type: job or node

       RES_ID Resource ID: job ID or host names or "*" for any host

       TYPE   Trigger  type:  time  or  fini  (for jobs only), down or up (for jobs or nodes), or
              drained, idle or reconfig (for nodes only)

       OFFSET Time offset in seconds. Negative numbers indicated the action should  occur  before
              the event (if possible)

       USER   Name of the user requesting the action

       PROGRAM
              Pathname of the program to execute when the event occurs

ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES

       Some  strigger  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)

       SLURM_CONF          The location of the Slurm configuration file.

EXAMPLES

       Execute  the  program "/usr/sbin/primary_slurmctld_failure" whenever the primary slurmctld
       fails.

       > cat /usr/sbin/primary_slurmctld_failure
       #!/bin/bash
       # Submit trigger for next primary slurmctld failure event
       strigger --set --primary_slurmctld_failure \
                --program=/usr/sbin/primary_slurmctld_failure
       # Notify the administrator of the failure using by e-mail
       /usr/bin/mail slurm_admin@site.com -s Primary_SLURMCTLD_FAILURE

       > strigger --set --primary_slurmctld_failure \
                  --program=/usr/sbin/primary_slurmctld_failure

       Execute the program "/usr/sbin/slurm_admin_notify" whenever any node in the  cluster  goes
       down.  The  subject  line  will  include  the node names which have entered the down state
       (passed as an argument to the script by Slurm).

       > cat /usr/sbin/slurm_admin_notify
       #!/bin/bash
       # Submit trigger for next event
       strigger --set --node --down \
                --program=/usr/sbin/slurm_admin_notify
       # Notify administrator using by e-mail
       /usr/bin/mail slurm_admin@site.com -s NodesDown:$*

       > strigger --set --node --down \
                  --program=/usr/sbin/slurm_admin_notify

       Execute the program  "/usr/sbin/slurm_suspend_node"  whenever  any  node  in  the  cluster
       remains in the idle state for at least 600 seconds.

       > strigger --set --node --idle --offset=600 \
                  --program=/usr/sbin/slurm_suspend_node

       Execute  the  program  "/home/joe/clean_up" when job 1234 is within 10 minutes of reaching
       its time limit.

       > strigger --set --jobid=1234 --time --offset=-600 \
                  --program=/home/joe/clean_up

       Execute the program "/home/joe/node_died" when any node allocated to job 1234  enters  the
       DOWN state.

       > strigger --set --jobid=1234 --down \
                  --program=/home/joe/node_died

       Show all triggers associated with job 1235.

       > strigger --get --jobid=1235
       TRIG_ID RES_TYPE RES_ID TYPE OFFSET USER PROGRAM
           123      job   1235 time   -600  joe /home/bob/clean_up
           125      job   1235 down      0  joe /home/bob/node_died

       Delete event trigger 125.

       > strigger --clear --id=125

       Execute /home/joe/job_fini upon completion of job 1237.

       > strigger --set --jobid=1237 --fini --program=/home/joe/job_fini

COPYING

       Copyright  (C)  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) 2010-2013 SchedMD LLC.

       This  file  is  part  of  Slurm,  a  resource  management  program.   For   details,   see
       <http://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.

SEE ALSO

       scontrol(1), sinfo(1), squeue(1)