Provided by: slurm-client_19.05.5-1_amd64 bug

NAME

       sprio - view the factors that comprise a job's scheduling priority

SYNOPSIS

       sprio [OPTIONS...]

DESCRIPTION

       sprio is used to view the components of a job's scheduling priority when the multi-factor priority plugin
       is  installed.   sprio  is  a  read-only utility that extracts information from the multi-factor priority
       plugin.  By default, sprio returns information for all pending jobs.  Options exist to  display  specific
       jobs by job ID and user name.

OPTIONS

       --federation
              Show jobs in federation if a member of one.

       -h, --noheader
              Do not print a header on the output.

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

       -j <job_id_list>, --jobs=<job_id_list>
              Requests  a comma separated list of job ids to display.  Defaults to all jobs. 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 "-j1008,1009" and not "-j
              1008,1009".

       --local
              Show only jobs local to this cluster. Ignore other clusters in this federation (if any). Overrides
              --federation.

       -l, --long
              Report more of the available information for the selected jobs.

       -M, --clusters=<string>
              The cluster to issue commands to. Only one cluster name may be specified.  Note that the  SlurmDBD
              must be up for this option to work properly.  This option implicitly sets the --local option.

       -n, --norm
              Display the normalized priority factors for the selected jobs.

       -o <output_format>, --format=<output_format>
              Specify  the  information  to  be displayed, its size and position (right or left justified).  The
              default formats when all factors have been assigned non-zero weights are

              default        "%.15i %9r %.10Y %.10S %.10A %.10B %.10F %.10J %.10P %.10Q %20T"

              -l, --long     "%.15i %9r %.8u %.10Y %.10S %.10A %.10B %.10F %.10J %.10P %.10Q %.11N %.20T";

              The format of each field is "%[.][size]type".

              size    is the minimum field size.  If no size is specified,  whatever  is  needed  to  print  the
                      information will be used.

               .      indicates the output should be left justified.  By default, output is right justified.

              Valid type specifications include:

              %a  Normalized age priority

              %A  Weighted age priority

              %b  Normalized association priority

              %B  Weighted association priority

              %c  Cluster name. Only applicable for federated clusters

              %f  Normalized fair-share priority

              %F  Weighted fair-share priority

              %i  Job ID

              %j  Normalized job size priority

              %J  Weighted job size priority

              %N  Nice adjustment

              %p  Normalized partition priority

              %P  Weighted partition priority

              %q  Normalized quality of service priority

              %Q  Weighted quality of service priority

              %r  Partition name

              %S  Weighted admin priority.

              %t  Normalized TRES priorities

              %T  Weighted TRES priorities

              %u  User name for a job

              %Y  Job priority

              %y  Normalized job priority

       -S <sort_list>, --sort=<sort_list>
              Specification  of  the  order  in  which  jobs  should  be  reported.  This  uses  the  same field
              specification as <output_format>. Multiple sorts may be performed by listing multiple sort  fields
              separated  by  commas.  The  field  specifications  may  be  preceded  by "+" or "-" for ascending
              (default) or descending respectively.  For example, a <sort_list> of "u,r,-y" will  sort  the  job
              priority  reports  by  username,  partition  name, and descending job priority, in that order. The
              default <sort_list> is "i" (ascending job id).

       -p <partition_list>, --partition=<partition_list>
              Requests a comma separated list of partitions to display.  Defaults to all partitions.

       --sibling
              Show all sibling jobs on a federated cluster. Without this option in a federated cluster, each job
              in each partition will have its priority and its components reported for only  one  cluster.  Each
              sibling  job on the various clusters in the federation may have different priority, which will not
              be reported without using this option. Implicitly adds "%c" (cluster name) to the output format.

       -u <user_list>, --user=<user_list>
              Request jobs from a comma separated list of users.  The list can consist of user names or user  id
              numbers.

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

       -v, --verbose
              Report details of sprios actions.

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

       -w , --weights Display the configured weights for each
              factor.  This is for information purposes only.  Actual job data is suppressed.

ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES

       If  no  corresponding  commandline  option  is  specified,  sprio  will  use  the  value of the following
       environment variables.

       SLURM_CLUSTERS      Same as --clusters

       SLURM_CONF          The location of the Slurm configuration file.

       SPRIO_FEDERATION    Same as --federation

       SPRIO_FORMAT        Same as -o <output_format>, --format=<output_format>

       SPRIO_LOCAL         Same as --local

       SPRIO_SIBLING       Same as --sibling

EXAMPLES

       Print the list of all pending jobs with their weighted priorities
       > sprio
       \h'\n[lss]u'JOBID   PRIORITY        AGE  FAIRSHARE    JOBSIZE  PARTITION        QOS
       \h'\n[lss]u'65539      62664          0      51664       1000      10000          0
       \h'\n[lss]u'65540      62663          0      51663       1000      10000          0
       \h'\n[lss]u'65541      62662          0      51662       1000      10000          0

       Print the list of all pending jobs with their normalized priorities
       > sprio -n
       \h'\n[lss]u'JOBID PRIORITY   AGE        FAIRSHARE  JOBSIZE    PARTITION  QOS
       \h'\n[lss]u'65539 0.00001459 0.0007180  0.5166470  1.0000000  1.0000000  0.0000000
       \h'\n[lss]u'65540 0.00001459 0.0007180  0.5166370  1.0000000  1.0000000  0.0000000
       \h'\n[lss]u'65541 0.00001458 0.0007180  0.5166270  1.0000000  1.0000000  0.0000000

       Print the job priorities for specific jobs
       > sprio --jobs=65548,65547
       \h'\n[lss]u'JOBID   PRIORITY        AGE  FAIRSHARE    JOBSIZE  PARTITION        QOS
       \h'\n[lss]u'65547      62078          0      51078       1000      10000          0
       \h'\n[lss]u'65548      62077          0      51077       1000      10000          0

       Print the job priorities for jobs of specific users
       > sprio --users=fred,sally
       \h'\n[lss]u'JOBID     USER  PRIORITY       AGE  FAIRSHARE   JOBSIZE  PARTITION     QOS
       \h'\n[lss]u'65548     fred     62079         1      51077      1000      10000       0
       \h'\n[lss]u'65549    sally     62080         1      51078      1000      10000       0

       Print the configured weights for each priority component
       > sprio -w
       \h'\n[lss]u'JOBID   PRIORITY        AGE  FAIRSHARE    JOBSIZE  PARTITION        QOS
       \h'\n[lss]u'Weights                1000     100000       1000      10000          1

COPYING

       Copyright (C) 2009 Lawrence  Livermore  National  Security.   Produced  at  Lawrence  Livermore  National
       Laboratory (cf, DISCLAIMER).
       Copyright (C) 2010-2017 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

       squeue(1), sshare(1)

September 2018                                   Slurm Commands                                         sprio(1)