Provided by: slurm-client_17.11.2-1build1_amd64
NAME
sbcast - transmit a file to the nodes allocated to a Slurm job.
SYNOPSIS
sbcast [-CfFjpstvV] SOURCE DEST
DESCRIPTION
sbcast is used to transmit a file to all nodes allocated to the currently active Slurm job. This command should only be executed from within a Slurm batch job or within the shell spawned after a Slurm job's resource allocation. SOURCE is the name of a file on the current node. DEST should be the fully qualified pathname for the file copy to be created on each node. If a fully qualified pathname is not provided, the file will be created in the directory specified in the SbcastParameters parameter in the slurm.conf file (if available) otherwise it will be created in the current working directory from which the sbcast command is invoked. DEST should be on a file system local to that node. Note that parallel file systems may provide better performance than sbcast can provide, although performance will vary by file size, degree of parallelism, and network type.
OPTIONS
-C [library], --compress[=library] Compress the file being transmitted. The optional argument specifies the data compression library to be used. Supported values are "lz4" (default), "none" and "zlib". Some compression libraries may be unavailable on some systems. The default compression library (and enabling compression itself) may be set in the slurm.conf file using the SbcastParameter option. -f, --force If the destination file already exists, replace it. -F number, --fanout=number Specify the fanout of messages used for file transfer. Maximum value is currently eight. -j jobID[.stepID], --jobid=jobID[.stepID] Specify the job ID to use with optional step ID. If run inside an allocation this is unneeded as the job ID will read from the environment. -p, --preserve Preserves modification times, access times, and modes from the original file. -s size, --size=size Specify the block size used for file broadcast. The size can have a suffix of k or m for kilobytes or megabytes respectively (defaults to bytes). This size subject to rounding and range limits to maintain good performance. The default value is the file size or 8MB, whichever is smaller. This value may need to be set on systems with very limited memory. -t seconds, fB--timeout=seconds Specify the message timeout in seconds. The default value is MessageTimeout as reported by "scontrol show config". Setting a higher value may be necessitated by relatively slow I/O performance on the compute node disks. -v, --verbose Provide detailed event logging through program execution. -V, --version Print version information and exit.
ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
Some sbcast options may be set via environment variables. These environment variables, along with their corresponding options, are listed below. (Note: Command line options will always override these settings.) SBCAST_COMPRESS -C, --compress SBCAST_FANOUT -F number, fB--fanout=number SBCAST_FORCE -f, --force SBCAST_PRESERVE -p, --preserve SBCAST_SIZE -s size, --size=size SBCAST_TIMEOUT -t seconds, fB--timeout=seconds SLURM_CONF The location of the Slurm configuration file.
AUTHORIZATION
When using the Slurm db, users who have AdminLevel's defined (Operator or Admin) and users who are account coordinators are given the authority to invoke sbcast on other user's jobs.
EXAMPLE
Using a batch script, transmit local file my.prog to /tmp/my.proc on the local nodes and then execute it. > cat my.job #!/bin/bash sbcast my.prog /tmp/my.prog srun /tmp/my.prog > sbatch --nodes=8 my.job srun: jobid 12345 submitted
COPYING
Copyright (C) 2006-2010 The Regents of the University of California. Produced at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (cf, DISCLAIMER). Copyright (C) 2010-2016 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.
SEE ALSO
srun(1)