Provided by: slurm-client_21.08.5-2ubuntu1_amd64
NAME
sinfo - View information about Slurm nodes and partitions.
SYNOPSIS
sinfo [OPTIONS...]
DESCRIPTION
sinfo is used to view partition and node information for a system running Slurm.
OPTIONS
-a, --all Display information about all partitions. This causes information to be displayed about partitions that are configured as hidden and partitions that are unavailable to the user's group. -M, --clusters=<string> Clusters to issue commands to. Multiple cluster names may be comma separated. A value of 'all' will query all clusters. Note that the SlurmDBD must be up for this option to work properly. This option implicitly sets the --local option. -d, --dead If set, only report state information for non-responding (dead) nodes. -e, --exact If set, do not group node information on multiple nodes unless their configurations to be reported are identical. Otherwise cpu count, memory size, and disk space for nodes will be listed with the minimum value followed by a "+" for nodes with the same partition and state (e.g. "250+"). --federation Show all partitions from the federation if a member of one. -o, --format=<output_format> Specify the information to be displayed using an sinfo format string. If the command is executed in a federated cluster environment and information about more than one cluster is to be displayed and the -h, --noheader option is used, then the cluster name will be displayed before the default output formats shown below. Format strings transparently used by sinfo when running with various options are: default "%#P %.5a %.10l %.6D %.6t %N" --summarize "%#P %.5a %.10l %.16F %N" --long "%#P %.5a %.10l %.10s %.4r %.8h %.10g %.6D %.11T %N" --Node "%#N %.6D %#P %6t" --long --Node "%#N %.6D %#P %.11T %.4c %.8z %.6m %.8d %.6w %.8f %20E" --list-reasons "%20E %9u %19H %N" --long --list-reasons "%20E %12U %19H %6t %N" In the above format strings, the use of "#" represents the maximum length of any partition name or node list to be printed. A pass is made over the records to be printed to establish the size in order to align the sinfo output, then a second pass is made over the records to print them. Note that the literal character "#" itself is not a valid field length specification, but is only used to document this behaviour. The format of each field is "%[[.]size]type[suffix]" size Minimum field size. If no size is specified, whatever is needed to print the information will be used. . Indicates the output should be right justified and size must be specified. By default output is left justified. suffix Arbitrary string to append to the end of the field. Valid type specifications include: %all Print all fields available for this data type with a vertical bar separating each field. %a State/availability of a partition. %A Number of nodes by state in the format "allocated/idle". Do not use this with a node state option ("%t" or "%T") or the different node states will be placed on separate lines. %b Features currently active on the nodes, also see %f. %B The max number of CPUs per node available to jobs in the partition. %c Number of CPUs per node. %C Number of CPUs by state in the format "allocated/idle/other/total". Do not use this with a node state option ("%t" or "%T") or the different node states will be placed on separate lines. %d Size of temporary disk space per node in megabytes. %D Number of nodes. %e Free memory of a node. %E The reason a node is unavailable (down, drained, or draining states). %f Features available the nodes, also see %b. %F Number of nodes by state in the format "allocated/idle/other/total". Note the use of this format option with a node state format option ("%t" or "%T") will result in the different node states being be reported on separate lines. %g Groups which may use the nodes. %G Generic resources (gres) associated with the nodes. %h Print the OverSubscribe setting for the partition. %H Print the timestamp of the reason a node is unavailable. %I Partition job priority weighting factor. %l Maximum time for any job in the format "days-hours:minutes:seconds" %L Default time for any job in the format "days-hours:minutes:seconds" %m Size of memory per node in megabytes. %M PreemptionMode. %n List of node hostnames. %N List of node names. %o List of node communication addresses. %O CPU load of a node. %p Partition scheduling tier priority. %P Partition name followed by "*" for the default partition, also see %R. %r Only user root may initiate jobs, "yes" or "no". %R Partition name, also see %P. %s Maximum job size in nodes. %S Allowed allocating nodes. %t State of nodes, compact form. %T State of nodes, extended form. %u Print the user name of who set the reason a node is unavailable. %U Print the user name and uid of who set the reason a node is unavailable. %v Print the version of the running slurmd daemon. %V Print the cluster name if running in a federation. %w Scheduling weight of the nodes. %X Number of sockets per node. %Y Number of cores per socket. %Z Number of threads per core. %z Extended processor information: number of sockets, cores, threads (S:C:T) per node. -O, --Format=<output_format> Specify the information to be displayed. Also see the -o <output_format>, --format=<output_format> option (which supports greater flexibility in formatting, but does not support access to all fields because we ran out of letters). Requests a comma separated list of job information to be displayed. The format of each field is "type[:[.][size][suffix]]" size The minimum field size. If no size is specified, 20 characters will be allocated to print the information. . Indicates the output should be right justified and size must be specified. By default, output is left justified. suffix Arbitrary string to append to the end of the field. Valid type specifications include: All Print all fields available in the -o format for this data type with a vertical bar separating each field. AllocMem Prints the amount of allocated memory on a node. AllocNodes Allowed allocating nodes. Available State/availability of a partition. Cluster Print the cluster name if running in a federation. Comment Comment. (Arbitrary descriptive string) Cores Number of cores per socket. CPUs Number of CPUs per node. CPUsLoad CPU load of a node. CPUsState Number of CPUs by state in the format "allocated/idle/other/total". Do not use this with a node state option ("%t" or "%T") or the different node states will be placed on separate lines. DefaultTime Default time for any job in the format "days-hours:minutes:seconds". Disk Size of temporary disk space per node in megabytes. Extra Arbitrary string on the node. Features Features available on the nodes. Also see features_act. features_act Features currently active on the nodes. Also see features. FreeMem Free memory of a node. Gres Generic resources (gres) associated with the nodes. GresUsed Generic resources (gres) currently in use on the nodes. Groups Groups which may use the nodes. MaxCPUsPerNode The max number of CPUs per node available to jobs in the partition. Memory Size of memory per node in megabytes. NodeAddr List of node communication addresses. NodeAI Number of nodes by state in the format "allocated/idle". Do not use this with a node state option ("%t" or "%T") or the different node states will be placed on separate lines. NodeAIOT Number of nodes by state in the format "allocated/idle/other/total". Do not use this with a node state option ("%t" or "%T") or the different node states will be placed on separate lines. NodeHost List of node hostnames. NodeList List of node names. Nodes Number of nodes. OverSubscribe Whether jobs may oversubscribe compute resources (e.g. CPUs). Partition Partition name followed by "*" for the default partition, also see %R. PartitionName Partition name, also see %P. Port Node TCP port. PreemptMode Preemption mode. PriorityJobFactor Partition factor used by priority/multifactor plugin in calculating job priority. PriorityTier or Priority Partition scheduling tier priority. Reason The reason a node is unavailable (down, drained, or draining states). Root Only user root may initiate jobs, "yes" or "no". Size Maximum job size in nodes. SocketCoreThread Extended processor information: number of sockets, cores, threads (S:C:T) per node. Sockets Number of sockets per node. StateCompact State of nodes, compact form. StateLong State of nodes, extended form. StateComplete State of nodes, including all node state flags. eg. "idle+cloud+power" Threads Number of threads per core. Time Maximum time for any job in the format "days-hours:minutes:seconds". TimeStamp Print the timestamp of the reason a node is unavailable. User Print the user name of who set the reason a node is unavailable. UserLong Print the user name and uid of who set the reason a node is unavailable. Version Print the version of the running slurmd daemon. Weight Scheduling weight of the nodes. --help Print a message describing all sinfo options. --hide Do not display information about hidden partitions. Partitions that are configured as hidden or are not available to the user's group will not be displayed. This is the default behavior. -i, --iterate=<seconds> Print the state on a periodic basis. Sleep for the indicated number of seconds between reports. By default prints a time stamp with the header. --json Dump node information as JSON. All other formatting and filtering arguments will be ignored. -R, --list-reasons List reasons nodes are in the down, drained, fail or failing state. When nodes are in these states Slurm supports the inclusion of a "reason" string by an administrator. This option will display the first 20 characters of the reason field and list of nodes with that reason for all nodes that are, by default, down, drained, draining or failing. This option may be used with other node filtering options (e.g. -r, -d, -t, -n), however, combinations of these options that result in a list of nodes that are not down or drained or failing will not produce any output. When used with -l the output additionally includes the current node state. --local Show only jobs local to this cluster. Ignore other clusters in this federation (if any). Overrides --federation. -l, --long Print more detailed information. This is ignored if the --format option is specified. --noconvert Don't convert units from their original type (e.g. 2048M won't be converted to 2G). -N, --Node Print information in a node-oriented format with one line per node and partition. That is, if a node belongs to more than one partition, then one line for each node-partition pair will be shown. If --partition is also specified, then only one line per node in this partition is shown. The default is to print information in a partition-oriented format. This is ignored if the --format option is specified. -n, --nodes=<nodes> Print information about the specified node(s). Multiple nodes may be comma separated or expressed using a node range expression (e.g. "linux[00-17]") Limiting the query to just the relevant nodes can measurably improve the performance of the command for large clusters. -h, --noheader Do not print a header on the output. -p, --partition=<partition> Print information only about the specified partition(s). Multiple partitions are separated by commas. -T, --reservation Only display information about Slurm reservations. NOTE: This option causes sinfo to ignore most other options, which are focused on partition and node information. -r, --responding If set only report state information for responding nodes. -S, --sort=<sort_list> Specification of the order in which records should be reported. This uses the same field specification as the <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) and descending order respectively. The partition field specification, "P", may be preceded by a "#" to report partitions in the same order that they appear in Slurm's configuration file, slurm.conf. For example, a sort value of "+P,-m" requests that records be printed in order of increasing partition name and within a partition by decreasing memory size. The default value of sort is "#P,-t" (partitions ordered as configured then decreasing node state). If the --Node option is selected, the default sort value is "N" (increasing node name). -t, --states=<states> List nodes only having the given state(s). Multiple states may be comma separated and the comparison is case insensitive. If the states are separated by '&', then the nodes must be in all states. Possible values include (case insensitive): ALLOC, ALLOCATED, CLOUD, COMP, COMPLETING, DOWN, DRAIN (for node in DRAINING or DRAINED states), DRAINED, DRAINING, FAIL, FUTURE, FUTR, IDLE, MAINT, MIX, MIXED, NO_RESPOND, NPC, PERFCTRS, PLANNED, POWER_DOWN, POWERING_DOWN, POWERED_DOWN, POWERING_UP, REBOOT_ISSUED, REBOOT_REQUESTED, RESV, RESERVED, UNK, and UNKNOWN. By default nodes in the specified state are reported whether they are responding or not. The --dead and --responding options may be used to filter nodes by the corresponding flag. -s, --summarize List only a partition state summary with no node state details. This is ignored if the --format option is specified. --usage Print a brief message listing the sinfo options. -v, --verbose Provide detailed event logging through program execution. -V, --version Print version information and exit. --yaml Dump node information as YAML. All other formatting and filtering arguments will be ignored.
OUTPUT FIELD DESCRIPTIONS
AVAIL Partition state. Can be either up, down, drain, or inact (for INACTIVE). See the partition definition's State parameter in the slurm.conf(5) man page for more information. CPUS Count of CPUs (processors) on these nodes. S:C:T Count of sockets (S), cores (C), and threads (T) on these nodes. SOCKETS Count of sockets on these nodes. CORES Count of cores on these nodes. THREADS Count of threads on these nodes. GROUPS Resource allocations in this partition are restricted to the named groups. all indicates that all groups may use this partition. JOB_SIZE Minimum and maximum node count that can be allocated to any user job. A single number indicates the minimum and maximum node count are the same. infinite is used to identify partitions without a maximum node count. TIMELIMIT Maximum time limit for any user job in days-hours:minutes:seconds. infinite is used to identify partitions without a job time limit. MEMORY Size of real memory in megabytes on these nodes. NODELIST Names of nodes associated with this particular configuration. NODES Count of nodes with this particular configuration. NODES(A/I) Count of nodes with this particular configuration by node state in the form "allocated/idle". NODES(A/I/O/T) Count of nodes with this particular configuration by node state in the form "allocated/idle/other/total". PARTITION Name of a partition. Note that the suffix "*" identifies the default partition. PORT Local TCP port used by slurmd on the node. ROOT Is the ability to allocate resources in this partition restricted to user root, yes or no. OVERSUBSCRIBE Whether jobs allocated resources in this partition can/will oversubscribe those compute resources (e.g. CPUs). NO indicates resources are never oversubscribed. EXCLUSIVE indicates whole nodes are dedicated to jobs (equivalent to srun --exclusive option, may be used even with select/cons_res managing individual processors). FORCE indicates resources are always available to be oversubscribed. YES indicates resource may be oversubscribed, if requested by the job's resource allocation. NOTE: If OverSubscribe is set to FORCE or YES, the OversubScribe value will be appended to the output. STATE State of the nodes. Possible states include: allocated, completing, down, drained, draining, fail, failing, future, idle, maint, mixed, perfctrs, planned, power_down, power_up, reserved, and unknown. Their abbreviated forms are: alloc, comp, down, drain, drng, fail, failg, futr, idle, maint, mix, npc, pow_dn, pow_up, resv, and unk respectively. NOTE: The suffix "*" identifies nodes that are presently not responding. TMP_DISK Size of temporary disk space in megabytes on these nodes.
NODE STATE CODES
Node state codes are shortened as required for the field size. These node states may be followed by a special character to identify state flags associated with the node. The following node suffixes and states are used: * The node is presently not responding and will not be allocated any new work. If the node remains non-responsive, it will be placed in the DOWN state (except in the case of COMPLETING, DRAINED, DRAINING, FAIL, FAILING nodes). ~ The node is presently in powered off. # The node is presently being powered up or configured. ! The node is pending power down. % The node is presently being powered down. $ The node is currently in a reservation with a flag value of "maintenance". @ The node is pending reboot. ^ The node reboot was issued. - The node is planned by the backfill scheduler for a higher priority job. ALLOCATED The node has been allocated to one or more jobs. ALLOCATED+ The node is allocated to one or more active jobs plus one or more jobs are in the process of COMPLETING. COMPLETING All jobs associated with this node are in the process of COMPLETING. This node state will be removed when all of the job's processes have terminated and the Slurm epilog program (if any) has terminated. See the Epilog parameter description in the slurm.conf(5) man page for more information. DOWN The node is unavailable for use. Slurm can automatically place nodes in this state if some failure occurs. System administrators may also explicitly place nodes in this state. If a node resumes normal operation, Slurm can automatically return it to service. See the ReturnToService and SlurmdTimeout parameter descriptions in the slurm.conf(5) man page for more information. DRAINED The node is unavailable for use per system administrator request. See the update node command in the scontrol(1) man page or the slurm.conf(5) man page for more information. DRAINING The node is currently executing a job, but will not be allocated additional jobs. The node state will be changed to state DRAINED when the last job on it completes. Nodes enter this state per system administrator request. See the update node command in the scontrol(1) man page or the slurm.conf(5) man page for more information. FAIL The node is expected to fail soon and is unavailable for use per system administrator request. See the update node command in the scontrol(1) man page or the slurm.conf(5) man page for more information. FAILING The node is currently executing a job, but is expected to fail soon and is unavailable for use per system administrator request. See the update node command in the scontrol(1) man page or the slurm.conf(5) man page for more information. FUTURE The node is currently not fully configured, but expected to be available at some point in the indefinite future for use. IDLE The node is not allocated to any jobs and is available for use. INVAL The node registered with an invalid configuration. The node will clear from this state with a valid registration (ie. a slurmd restart is required). MAINT The node is currently in a reservation with a flag value of "maintenance". REBOOT_ISSUED A reboot request has been sent to the agent configured to handle this request. REBOOT_REQUESTED A request to reboot this node has been made, but hasn't been handled yet. MIXED The node has some of its CPUs ALLOCATED while others are IDLE. PERFCTRS (NPC) Network Performance Counters associated with this node are in use, rendering this node as not usable for any other jobs PLANNED The node is planned by the backfill scheduler for a higher priority job. POWER_DOWN The node is pending power down. POWERED_DOWN The node is currently powered down and not capable of running any jobs. POWERING_DOWN The node is in the process of powering down and not capable of running any jobs. POWERING_UP The node is in the process of being powered up. RESERVED The node is in an advanced reservation and not generally available. UNKNOWN The Slurm controller has just started and the node's state has not yet been determined.
PERFORMANCE
Executing sinfo sends a remote procedure call to slurmctld. If enough calls from sinfo or other Slurm client commands that send remote procedure calls to the slurmctld daemon come in at once, it can result in a degradation of performance of the slurmctld daemon, possibly resulting in a denial of service. Do not run sinfo or other Slurm client commands that send remote procedure calls to slurmctld from loops in shell scripts or other programs. Ensure that programs limit calls to sinfo to the minimum necessary for the information you are trying to gather.
ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
Some sinfo 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. SINFO_ALL Same as -a, --all SINFO_FEDERATION Same as --federation SINFO_FORMAT Same as -o <output_format>, --format=<output_format> SINFO_LOCAL Same as --local SINFO_PARTITION Same as -p <partition>, --partition=<partition> SINFO_SORT Same as -S <sort>, --sort=<sort> SLURM_CLUSTERS Same as --clusters SLURM_CONF The location of the Slurm configuration file. SLURM_TIME_FORMAT Specify the format used to report time stamps. A value of standard, the default value, generates output in the form "year-month-dateThour:minute:second". A value of relative returns only "hour:minute:second" if the current day. For other dates in the current year it prints the "hour:minute" preceded by "Tomorr" (tomorrow), "Ystday" (yesterday), the name of the day for the coming week (e.g. "Mon", "Tue", etc.), otherwise the date (e.g. "25 Apr"). For other years it returns a date month and year without a time (e.g. "6 Jun 2012"). All of the time stamps use a 24 hour format. A valid strftime() format can also be specified. For example, a value of "%a %T" will report the day of the week and a time stamp (e.g. "Mon 12:34:56").
EXAMPLES
Report basic node and partition configurations: $ sinfo PARTITION AVAIL TIMELIMIT NODES STATE NODELIST batch up infinite 2 alloc adev[8-9] batch up infinite 6 idle adev[10-15] debug* up 30:00 8 idle adev[0-7] Report partition summary information: $ sinfo -s PARTITION AVAIL TIMELIMIT NODES(A/I/O/T) NODELIST batch up infinite 2/6/0/8 adev[8-15] debug* up 30:00 0/8/0/8 adev[0-7] Report more complete information about the partition debug: $ sinfo --long --partition=debug PARTITION AVAIL TIMELIMIT JOB_SIZE ROOT OVERSUBS GROUPS NODES STATE NODELIST debug* up 30:00 8 no no all 8 idle dev[0-7] Report only those nodes that are in state DRAINED: $ sinfo --states=drained PARTITION AVAIL NODES TIMELIMIT STATE NODELIST debug* up 2 30:00 drain adev[6-7] Report node-oriented information with details and exact matches: $ sinfo -Nel NODELIST NODES PARTITION STATE CPUS MEMORY TMP_DISK WEIGHT FEATURES REASON adev[0-1] 2 debug* idle 2 3448 38536 16 (null) (null) adev[2,4-7] 5 debug* idle 2 3384 38536 16 (null) (null) adev3 1 debug* idle 2 3394 38536 16 (null) (null) adev[8-9] 2 batch allocated 2 246 82306 16 (null) (null) adev[10-15] 6 batch idle 2 246 82306 16 (null) (null) Report only down, drained and draining nodes and their reason field: $ sinfo -R REASON NODELIST Memory errors dev[0,5] Not Responding dev8
COPYING
Copyright (C) 2002-2007 The Regents of the University of California. Produced at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (cf, DISCLAIMER). Copyright (C) 2008-2009 Lawrence Livermore National Security. Copyright (C) 2010-2021 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
scontrol(1), squeue(1), slurm_load_ctl_conf (3), slurm_load_jobs (3), slurm_load_node (3), slurm_load_partitions (3), slurm_reconfigure (3), slurm_shutdown (3), slurm_update_job (3), slurm_update_node (3), slurm_update_partition (3), slurm.conf(5)