Provided by: slurm-client_21.08.5-2ubuntu2_amd64 bug

NAME

       sdiag - Scheduling diagnostic tool for Slurm

SYNOPSIS

       sdiag

DESCRIPTION

       sdiag  shows  information related to slurmctld execution about: threads, agents, jobs, and
       scheduling algorithms. The goal is to obtain data  from  slurmctld  behaviour  helping  to
       adjust  configuration  parameters  or  queues  policies. The main reason behind is to know
       Slurm behaviour under systems with a high throughput.

       It has two execution modes. The default mode --all shows several counters  and  statistics
       explained later, and there is another execution option --reset for resetting those values.

       Values are reset at midnight UTC time by default.

       The first block of information is related to global slurmctld execution:

       Server thread count
              The  number  of  current  active slurmctld threads. A high number would mean a high
              load processing events like job submissions,  jobs  dispatching,  jobs  completing,
              etc.  If  this  is  often close to MAX_SERVER_THREADS it could point to a potential
              bottleneck.

       Agent queue size
              Slurm design has scalability in mind and sending messages to thousands of nodes  is
              not  a  trivial  task.  The  agent mechanism helps to control communication between
              slurmctld and the slurmd daemons for a best effort. This value denotes the count of
              enqueued outgoing RPC requests in an internal retry list.

       Agent count
              Number  of agent threads. Each of these agent threads can create in turn a group of
              up to 2 + AGENT_THREAD_COUNT active threads at a time.

       Agent thread count
              Total count of active threads created by all the agent threads.

       DBD Agent queue size
              Slurm queues up the messages intended for the SlurmDBD  and  processes  them  in  a
              separate  thread.  If  the  SlurmDBD,  or  database,  is down then this number will
              increase.

              The max queue size is configured in the slurm.conf with MaxDBDMsgs. If this  number
              begins  to grow more than half of the max queue size, the slurmdbd and the database
              should be investigated immediately.

       Jobs submitted
              Number of jobs submitted since last reset

       Jobs started
              Number of jobs started since last reset. This includes backfilled jobs.

       Jobs completed
              Number of jobs completed since last reset.

       Jobs canceled
              Number of jobs canceled since last reset.

       Jobs failed
              Number of jobs failed due to slurmd or other internal issues since last reset.

       Job states ts:
              Lists the timestamp of when the following job state counts were gathered.

       Jobs pending:
              Number of jobs pending at the given time of the time stamp above.

       Jobs running:
              Number of jobs running at the given time of the time stamp above.

       Jobs running ts:
              Time stamp of when the running job count was taken.

       The next block of information is related  to  main  scheduling  algorithm  based  on  jobs
       priorities.  A scheduling cycle implies to get the job_write_lock lock, then trying to get
       resources for jobs pending, starting from the most priority one and  going  in  descendent
       order.  Once  a  job  can  not  get  the  resources the loop keeps going but just for jobs
       requesting other partitions. Jobs with dependencies or affected  by  accounts  limits  are
       not processed.

       Last cycle
              Time in microseconds for last scheduling cycle.

       Max cycle
              Maximum time in microseconds for any scheduling cycle since last reset.

       Total cycles
              Total  run  time  in  microseconds  for  all  scheduling  cycles  since last reset.
              Scheduling is performed periodically and (depending upon configuration) when a  job
              is submitted or a job is completed.

       Mean cycle
              Mean time in microseconds for all scheduling cycles since last reset.

       Mean depth cycle
              Mean of cycle depth. Depth means number of jobs processed in a scheduling cycle.

       Cycles per minute
              Counter of scheduling executions per minute.

       Last queue length
              Length of jobs pending queue.

       The  next  block  of  information  is  related  to  backfilling  scheduling  algorithm.  A
       backfilling scheduling cycle implies to get locks for jobs, nodes and  partitions  objects
       then  trying to get resources for jobs pending. Jobs are processed based on priorities. If
       a job can not get resources the algorithm calculates when it could get  them  obtaining  a
       future  start time for the job.  Then next job is processed and the algorithm tries to get
       resources for that job but avoiding to affect the previous ones, and again  it  calculates
       the  future start time if not current resources available. The backfilling algorithm takes
       more time for each new job to process since more priority jobs can not  be  affected.  The
       algorithm itself takes measures for avoiding a long execution cycle and for taking all the
       locks for too long.

       Total backfilled jobs (since last slurm start)
              Number of jobs started thanks to backfilling since last slurm start.

       Total backfilled jobs (since last stats cycle start)
              Number of jobs started thanks to backfilling since last time stats where reset.  By
              default these values are reset at midnight UTC time.

       Total backfilled heterogeneous job components
              Number  of  heterogeneous  job  components started thanks to backfilling since last
              Slurm start.

       Total cycles
              Number of backfill scheduling cycles since last reset

       Last cycle when
              Time when last backfill scheduling cycle happened  in  the  format  "weekday  Month
              MonthDay hour:minute.seconds year"

       Last cycle
              Time  in  microseconds of last backfill scheduling cycle.  It counts only execution
              time, removing sleep time inside  a  scheduling  cycle  when  it  executes  for  an
              extended  period  time.  Note that locks are released during the sleep time so that
              other work can proceed.

       Max cycle
              Time in microseconds of maximum backfill  scheduling  cycle  execution  since  last
              reset.   It  counts  only  execution  time, removing sleep time inside a scheduling
              cycle when it executes for an extended period time.  Note that locks  are  released
              during the sleep time so that other work can proceed.

       Mean cycle
              Mean time in microseconds of backfilling scheduling cycles since last reset.

       Last depth cycle
              Number  of processed jobs during last backfilling scheduling cycle. It counts every
              job even if that job can not be started due to dependencies or limits.

       Last depth cycle (try sched)
              Number of processed jobs during last backfilling scheduling cycle. It  counts  only
              jobs  with  a  chance  to  start using available resources. These jobs consume more
              scheduling time than jobs which are found can not be started due to dependencies or
              limits.

       Depth Mean
              Mean  count  of  jobs processed during all backfilling scheduling cycles since last
              reset.  Jobs which are found to be ineligible to run when examined by the  backfill
              scheduler  are  not counted (e.g. jobs submitted to multiple partitions and already
              started, jobs which have reached a QOS or account limit  such  as  maximum  running
              jobs for an account, etc).

       Depth Mean (try sched)
              The subset of Depth Mean that the backfill scheduler attempted to schedule.

       Last queue length
              Number  of jobs pending to be processed by backfilling algorithm.  A job is counted
              once for each partition it is queued to use.  A pending job array will normally  be
              counted  as  one job (tasks of a job array which have already been started/requeued
              or individually modified will already have individual  job  records  and  are  each
              counted as a separate job).

       Queue length Mean
              Mean  count  of  jobs  pending  to be processed by backfilling algorithm.  A job is
              counted once for each partition it requested.  A pending job array will normally be
              counted  as  one job (tasks of a job array which have already been started/requeued
              or individually modified will already have individual  job  records  and  are  each
              counted as a separate job).

       Last table size
              Count  of  different  time  slots  tested  by  the  backfill  scheduler in its last
              iteration.

       Mean table size
              Mean count of different time slots tested by the backfill scheduler.  Larger counts
              increase  the  time  required  for  the  backfill  operation.   The  table  size is
              influenced   by   many   schuling   parameters,   including:    bf_min_age_reserve,
              bf_min_prio_reserve, bf_resolution, and bf_window.

       Latency for 1000 calls to gettimeofday()
              Latency of 1000 calls to the gettimeofday() syscall in microseconds, as measured at
              controller startup.

       The next blocks of information report the most frequently issued  remote  procedure  calls
       (RPCs),  calls  made  for  the  Slurmctld daemon to perform some action.  The fourth block
       reports the RPCs issued by message type.  You will need to look up those RPC codes in  the
       Slurm  source  code  by looking them up in the file src/common/slurm_protocol_defs.h.  The
       report includes the number of times each RPC is invoked, the total time consumed by all of
       those  RPCs  plus  the average time consumed by each RPC in microseconds.  The fifth block
       reports the RPCs issued by user ID, the total number of RPCs they have issued,  the  total
       time  consumed  by  all  of  those  RPCs  plus  the  average  time consumed by each RPC in
       microseconds.  RPCs statistics are collected for the life of the slurmctld process  unless
       explicitly --reset.

       The  sixth  block  of information, labeled Pending RPC Statistics, shows information about
       pending outgoing RPCs on the slurmctld agent queue.  The first section of this block shows
       types of RPCs on the queue and the count of each. The second section shows up to the first
       25 individual RPCs pending on the agent queue, including the type and the destination host
       list.  This information is cached and only refreshed on 30 second intervals.

OPTIONS

       -a, --all
              Get and report information. This is the default mode of operation.

       -M, --cluster=<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.

       -h, --help
              Print description of options and exit.

       -r, --reset
              Reset scheduler and RPC counters to 0.  Only  supported  for  Slurm  operators  and
              administrators.

       -i, --sort-by-id
              Sort Remote Procedure Call (RPC) data by message type ID and user ID.

       -t, --sort-by-time
              Sort Remote Procedure Call (RPC) data by total run time.

       -T, --sort-by-time2
              Sort Remote Procedure Call (RPC) data by average run time.

       --usage
              Print list of options and exit.

       -V, --version
              Print current version number and exit.

PERFORMANCE

       Executing  sdiag sends a remote procedure call to slurmctld. If enough calls from sdiag 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 sdiag 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 sdiag to the minimum necessary for the information you are trying to gather.

ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES

       Some sdiag 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.)

       SLURM_CLUSTERS      Same as --cluster

       SLURM_CONF          The location of the Slurm configuration file.

COPYING

       Copyright (C) 2010-2011 Barcelona Supercomputing Center.
       Copyright (C) 2010-2021 SchedMD LLC.

       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

       sinfo(1), squeue(1), scontrol(1), slurm.conf(5),