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NAME

       cgroup.conf - Slurm configuration file for the cgroup support

DESCRIPTION

       cgroup.conf  is an ASCII file which defines parameters used by Slurm's Linux cgroup related plugins.  The
       file location can be modified at system build time using the DEFAULT_SLURM_CONF parameter or at execution
       time by setting the SLURM_CONF environment variable.  The  file  will  always  be  located  in  the  same
       directory as the slurm.conf file.

       Parameter names are case insensitive.  Any text following a "#" in the configuration file is treated as a
       comment  through  the  end  of  that line.  Changes to the configuration file take effect upon restart of
       Slurm daemons, daemon receipt of the SIGHUP signal, or execution of the  command  "scontrol  reconfigure"
       unless otherwise noted.

       For general Slurm Cgroups information, see the Cgroups Guide at <https://slurm.schedmd.com/cgroups.html>.

       The following cgroup.conf parameters are defined to control the general behavior of Slurm cgroup plugins.

       CgroupAutomount=<yes|no>
              Slurm  cgroup  plugins  require  valid  and  functional  cgroup  subsystem  to  be  mounted  under
              /sys/fs/cgroup/<subsystem_name>.  When launched, plugins check their  subsystem  availability.  If
              not  available,  the  plugin  launch fails unless CgroupAutomount is set to yes. In that case, the
              plugin will first try to mount the required subsystems.

       CgroupMountpoint=PATH
              Specify the PATH under which cgroups should be mounted. This should be a writable directory  which
              will contain cgroups mounted one per subsystem. The default PATH is /sys/fs/cgroup.

TASK/CGROUP PLUGIN

       The following cgroup.conf parameters are defined to control the behavior of this particular plugin:

       AllowedKmemSpace=<number>
              Constrain the job cgroup kernel memory to this amount of the allocated memory, specified in bytes.
              The   AllowedKmemSpace   must  be  between  the  upper  and  lower  memory  limits,  specified  by
              MaxKmemPercent and MinKmemSpace, respectively. If AllowedKmemSpace goes beyond the upper or  lower
              limit, it will be reset to that upper or lower limit, whichever has been exceeded.

       AllowedRAMSpace=<number>
              Constrain  the  job/step  cgroup  RAM  to this percentage of the allocated memory.  The percentage
              supplied may be expressed as floating point number, e.g. 101.5.  Sets the cgroup soft memory limit
              at  the  allocated  memory  size  and  then  sets  the  job/step  hard   memory   limit   at   the
              (AllowedRAMSpace/100)  *  allocated  memory. If the job/step exceeds the hard limit, then it might
              trigger Out Of Memory (OOM) events (including  oom-kill)  which  will  be  logged  to  kernel  log
              ringbuffer  (dmesg  in  Linux).  Setting  AllowedRAMSpace above 100 may cause system Out of Memory
              (OOM) events as it allows job/step to allocate more memory than configured to the nodes.  Reducing
              configured node available memory to avoid system OOM events is suggested.  Setting AllowedRAMSpace
              below 100 will result in jobs receiving less memory than allocated and soft memory limit will  set
              to the same value as the hard limit.  Also see ConstrainRAMSpace.  The default value is 100.

       AllowedSwapSpace=<number>
              Constrain the job cgroup swap space to this percentage of the allocated memory.  The default value
              is 0, which means that RAM+Swap will be limited to AllowedRAMSpace. The supplied percentage may be
              expressed  as a floating point number, e.g. 50.5.  If the limit is exceeded, the job steps will be
              killed and a warning message will be written to  standard  error.   Also  see  ConstrainSwapSpace.
              NOTE:  Setting  AllowedSwapSpace to 0 does not restrict the Linux kernel from using swap space. To
              control how the kernel uses swap space, see MemorySwappiness.

       ConstrainCores=<yes|no>
              If configured to "yes" then constrain allowed cores to the subset  of  allocated  resources.  This
              functionality  makes  use of the cpuset subsystem.  Due to a bug fixed in version 1.11.5 of HWLOC,
              the task/affinity plugin may be required in addition to task/cgroup for this to function properly.
              The default value is "no".

       ConstrainDevices=<yes|no>
              If configured to "yes" then constrain the job's allowed devices based on GRES allocated resources.
              It uses the devices subsystem for that.  The default value is "no".

       ConstrainKmemSpace=<yes|no>
              If configured to "yes" then constrain the job's Kmem RAM usage in  addition  to  RAM  usage.  Only
              takes  effect  if ConstrainRAMSpace is set to "yes". The default value is "no". If set to yes, the
              job's Kmem limit will be set to AllowedKmemSpace if set; otherwise, the job's Kmem limit  will  be
              set to its RAM limit.  Also see AllowedKmemSpace.

       ConstrainRAMSpace=<yes|no>
              If  configured to "yes" then constrain the job's RAM usage by setting the memory soft limit to the
              allocated memory and the hard limit to the allocated memory * AllowedRAMSpace.  The default  value
              is  "no",  in  which  case  the  job's  RAM  limit  will  be  set  to  its  swap  space  limit  if
              ConstrainSwapSpace  is  set  to   "yes".    Also   see   AllowedSwapSpace,   AllowedRAMSpace   and
              ConstrainSwapSpace.   NOTE:  When  enabled,  ConstrainRAMSpace can lead to a noticeable decline in
              per-node job throughout. Sites  with  high-throughput  requirements  should  carefully  weigh  the
              tradeoff  between per-node throughput, versus potential problems that can arise from unconstrained
              memory  usage  on  the  node.  See  <https://slurm.schedmd.com/high_throughput.html>  for  further
              discussion.

       ConstrainSwapSpace=<yes|no>
              If configured to "yes" then constrain the job's swap space usage.  The default value is "no". Note
              that  when set to "yes" and ConstrainRAMSpace is set to "no", AllowedRAMSpace is automatically set
              to 100% in order to limit the RAM+Swap amount to 100% of job's requirement  plus  the  percent  of
              allowed  swap  space.  This amount is thus set to both RAM and RAM+Swap limits. This means that in
              that particular case, ConstrainRAMSpace is automatically enabled with the same limit than the  one
              used to constrain swap space.  Also see AllowedSwapSpace.

       MaxRAMPercent=PERCENT
              Set  an  upper  bound  in  percent of total RAM on the RAM constraint for a job.  This will be the
              memory constraint applied to jobs that are not explicitly allocated memory by Slurm (i.e.  Slurm's
              select  plugin  is  not  configured to manage memory allocations). The PERCENT may be an arbitrary
              floating point number. The default value is 100.

       MaxSwapPercent=PERCENT
              Set an upper bound (in percent of total RAM) on the amount of RAM+Swap that may be used for a job.
              This will be the swap limit applied to jobs on  systems  where  memory  is  not  being  explicitly
              allocated  to  job.  The PERCENT may be an arbitrary floating point number between 0 and 100.  The
              default value is 100.

       MaxKmemPercent=PERCENT
              Set an upper bound in percent of total Kmem for a job. The PERCENT may be  an  arbitrary  floating
              point number. The default value is 100.

       MemorySwappiness=<number>
              Configure  the  kernel's  priority  for swapping out anonymous pages (such as program data) verses
              file cache pages for the job cgroup. Valid values are between 0 and 100, inclusive. A value  of  0
              prevents  the  kernel  from  swapping  out  program  data. A value of 100 gives equal priorioty to
              swapping out file cache or anonymous pages. If not set, then the kernel's default swappiness value
              will be used. Either ConstrainRAMSpace or ConstrainSwapSpace must be set to yes in order for  this
              parameter to be applied.

       MinKmemSpace=<number>
              Set  a  lower bound (in MB) on the memory limits defined by AllowedKmemSpace. The default limit is
              30M.

       MinRAMSpace=<number>
              Set a lower bound (in MB) on the memory limits defined by  AllowedRAMSpace  and  AllowedSwapSpace.
              This  prevents  accidentally  creating  a  memory  cgroup with such a low limit that slurmstepd is
              immediately killed due to lack of RAM. The default limit is 30M.

       TaskAffinity=<yes|no>
              If configured to "yes" then set a default task affinity to bind each step task to a subset of  the
              allocated  cores using sched_setaffinity.  The default value is "no".  Note: This feature requires
              the Portable Hardware Locality (hwloc) library to be installed.

DISTRIBUTION-SPECIFIC NOTES

       Debian and derivatives (e.g. Ubuntu) usually exclude the memory and memsw (swap) cgroups by  default.  To
       include them, add the following parameters to the kernel command line: cgroup_enable=memory swapaccount=1

       This can usually be placed in /etc/default/grub inside the GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX variable. A command such as
       update-grub must be run after updating the file.

EXAMPLE

       ###
       # Slurm cgroup support configuration file
       ###
       CgroupAutomount=yes
       ConstrainCores=yes
       #

COPYING

       Copyright  (C)  2010-2012  Lawrence Livermore National Security.  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

       slurm.conf(5)

December 2016                               Slurm Configuration File                              cgroup.conf(5)