Provided by: slurm-client_17.11.2-1build1_amd64 bug

NAME

       scancel - Used to signal jobs or job steps that are under the control of Slurm.

SYNOPSIS

       scancel [OPTIONS...] [job_id[_array_id][.step_id]] [job_id[_array_id][.step_id]...]

DESCRIPTION

       scancel  is  used  to signal or cancel jobs, job arrays or job steps.  An arbitrary number of jobs or job
       steps may be signaled using job specification filters or a space separated list of  specific  job  and/or
       job  step IDs.  If the job ID of a job array is specified with an array ID value then only that job array
       element will be cancelled.  If the job ID of a job array is specified without an array ID value then  all
       job array elements will be cancelled.  While a heterogeneous job is in pending state, only the entire job
       can  be cancelled rather than it's individual components.  A request to cancel an individual component of
       a heterogeneous job not in pending state will return an error.  After the job has  begun  execution,  the
       individual  component  can be cancelled.  A job or job step can only be signaled by the owner of that job
       or user root.  If an attempt is made by an unauthorized user to signal  a  job  or  job  step,  an  error
       message will be printed and the job will not be signaled.

OPTIONS

       -A, --account=account
              Restrict the scancel operation to jobs under this charge account.

       -b, --batch
              Signal  only  the  batch  step (the shell script), but not any other steps nor any children of the
              shell script. This is useful when  the  shell  script  has  to  trap  the  signal  and  take  some
              application  defined  action.   This  is  not applicable if step_id is specified.  NOTE: The shell
              itself may exit upon receipt of many signals.  You may  avoid  this  by  explicitly  trap  signals
              within  the  shell  script (e.g. "trap <arg> <signals>"). See the shell documentation for details.
              Also see the -f, --full option.

       --ctld Send the job signal request to the slurmctld daemon rather than directly to  the  slurmd  daemons.
              This  increases  overhead,  but  offers  better  fault tolerance.  This is the default behavior on
              architectures using front end nodes (e.g.  BlueGene and Cray computers)  or  when  the  --clusters
              option is used.

       -f, --full
              Signal  all  steps  associated with the job including any batch step (the shell script plus all of
              its child processes).  By default, signals other than SIGKILL are not  sent  to  the  batch  step.
              Also see the -b, --batch option.

       --help Print a help message describing all scancel options.

       -H, --hurry
              Do not stage out any burst buffer data.

       -i, --interactive
              Interactive mode. Confirm each job_id.step_id before performing the cancel operation.

       -M, --clusters=<string>
              Clusters  to  issue  commands  to.   Note  that  the  SlurmDBD  must be up for this option to work
              properly.

       -n, --jobname=job_name, --name=job_name
              Restrict the scancel operation to jobs with this job name.

       -p, --partition=partition_name
              Restrict the scancel operation to jobs in this partition.

       -q, --qos=qos
              Restrict the scancel operation to jobs with this quality of service.

       -Q, --quiet
              Do not report an error if the specified job is already completed.   This  option  is  incompatible
              with the --verbose option.

       -R, --reservation=reservation_name
              Restrict the scancel operation to jobs with this reservation name.

       --sibling=cluster_name
              Remove an active sibling job from a federated job.

       -s, --signal=signal_name
              The  name  or  number of the signal to send.  If this option is not used the specified job or step
              will be terminated. Note. If this option is used the signal is sent directly to the  slurmd  where
              the  job  is running bypassing the slurmctld thus the job state will not change even if the signal
              is delivered to it. Use the scontrol command if  you  want  the  job  state  change  be  known  to
              slurmctld.

       -t, --state=job_state_name
              Restrict  the  scancel  operation to jobs in this state. job_state_name may have a value of either
              "PENDING", "RUNNING" or "SUSPENDED".

       -u, --user=user_name
              Restrict the scancel operation to jobs owned by this user.

       --usage
              Print a brief help message listing the scancel options.

       -v, --verbose
              Print additional logging. Multiple v's increase logging detail.  This option is incompatible  with
              the --quiet option.

       -V, --version
              Print the version number of the scancel command.

       -w, --nodelist=host1,host2,...
              Cancel any jobs using any of the given hosts.  The list may be specified as a comma-separated list
              of  hosts,  a  range  of hosts (host[1-5,7,...] for example), or a filename. The host list will be
              assumed to be a filename only if it contains a "/" character.

       --wckey=wckey
              Restrict the scancel operation to jobs using this workload characterization key.

       ARGUMENTS

       job_id The Slurm job ID to be signaled.

       step_id
              The step ID of the job step to be signaled.  If not specified, the operation is performed  at  the
              level of a job.

              If neither --batch nor --signal are used, the entire job will be terminated.

              When  --batch  is  used,  the  batch shell processes will be signaled.  The child processes of the
              shell will not be signaled by Slurm, but the shell may forward the signal.

              When --batch is not used but --signal is used, then all job steps will be signaled, but the  batch
              script itself will not be signaled.

ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES

       Some  scancel 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)

       SCANCEL_ACCOUNT     -A, --account=account

       SCANCEL_BATCH       -b, --batch

       SCANCEL_CTLD        --ctld

       SCANCEL_FULL        -f, --full

       SCANCEL_HURRY       -H, --hurry

       SCANCEL_INTERACTIVE -i, --interactive

       SCANCEL_NAME        -n, --name=job_name

       SCANCEL_PARTITION   -p, --partition=partition_name

       SCANCEL_QOS         -q, --qos=qos

       SCANCEL_STATE       -t, --state=job_state_name

       SCANCEL_USER        -u, --user=user_name

       SCANCEL_VERBOSE     -v, --verbose

       SCANCEL_WCKEY       --wckey=wckey

       SLURM_CONF          The location of the Slurm configuration file.

NOTES

       If multiple filters are supplied (e.g. --partition and --name)  only  the  jobs  satisfying  all  of  the
       filtering options will be signaled.

       Cancelling  a job step will not result in the job being terminated.  The job must be cancelled to release
       a resource allocation.

       To cancel a job, invoke scancel without --signal option.  This will send first a SIGCONT to all steps  to
       eventually  wake them up followed by a SIGTERM, then wait the KillWait duration defined in the slurm.conf
       file and finally if they have not terminated send a SIGKILL.  This gives time for the running job/step(s)
       to clean up.

       If a signal value of "KILL" is sent to an entire job, this will cancel  the  active  job  steps  but  not
       cancel the job itself.

       On  Cray  systems,  all  signals  except SIGCHLD, SIGCONT, SIGSTOP, SIGTSTP, SIGTTIN, SIGTTOU, SIGURG, or
       SIGWINCH cause the ALPS reservation to be released.  The job however will not be terminated except in the
       case of SIGKILL and may then be used for post processing.

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 scancel on other user's jobs.

EXAMPLES

       Send SIGTERM to steps 1 and 3 of job 1234:
              scancel --signal=TERM 1234.1 1234.3

       Cancel job 1234 along with all of its steps:
              scancel 1234

       Send SIGKILL to all steps of job 1235, but do not cancel the job itself:
              scancel --signal=KILL 1235

       Send SIGUSR1 to the batch shell processes of job 1236:
              scancel --signal=USR1 --batch 1236

       Cancel job all pending jobs belonging to user "bob" in partition "debug":
              scancel --state=PENDING --user=bob --partition=debug

       Cancel only array ID 4 of job array 1237
              scancel 1237_4

COPYING

       Copyright  (C)  2002-2007  The  Regents  of the University of California.  Produced at Lawrence Livermore
       National Laboratory (cf, DISCLAIMER).
       Copyright (C) 2008-2011 Lawrence Livermore National Security.
       Copyright (C) 2010-2015 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

       slurm_kill_job (3), slurm_kill_job_step (3)

February 2017                                    Slurm Commands                                       scancel(1)