Provided by: slurm-client_23.11.4-1.2ubuntu5_amd64 bug

NAME

       squeue - view information about jobs located in the Slurm scheduling queue.

SYNOPSIS

       squeue [OPTIONS...]

DESCRIPTION

       squeue is used to view job and job step information for jobs managed by Slurm.

OPTIONS

       -A, --account=<account_list>
              Specify the accounts of the jobs to view. Accepts a comma separated list of account
              names. This has no effect when listing job steps.

       -a, --all
              Display information about jobs and  job  steps  in  all  partitions.   This  causes
              information  to  be  displayed  about  partitions  that  are  configured as hidden,
              partitions that are unavailable to a user's group, and federated jobs that are in a
              "revoked" state.

       -r, --array
              Display  one  job array element per line.  Without this option, the display will be
              optimized for use with job arrays (pending job array elements will be  combined  on
              one line of output with the array index values printed using a regular expression).

       -M, --clusters=<cluster_name>
              Clusters  to  issue commands to.  Multiple cluster names may be comma separated.  A
              value of 'all' will query to run on all clusters.  This option implicitly sets  the
              --local option.

       --federation
              Show jobs from the federation if a member of one.

       -o, --format=<output_format>
              Specify  the  information  to  be  displayed,  its size and position (right or left
              justified).  Also see  the  -O,  --Format=<output_format>  option  described  below
              (which supports less flexibility in formatting, but supports access to all fields).
              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.

              The default formats with various options are:

              default        "%.18i %.9P %.8j %.8u %.2t %.10M %.6D %R"

              -l, --long     "%.18i %.9P %.8j %.8u %.8T %.10M %.9l %.6D %R"

              -s, --steps    "%.15i %.8j %.9P %.8u %.9M %N"

       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.

       Note that many of these type specifications are valid only for jobs while others are valid
       only for job steps.  Valid type specifications include:

              %all  Print all fields available for this data type with a vertical bar  separating
                    each field.

              %a    Account associated with the job.  (Valid for jobs only)

              %A    Number  of  tasks  created by a job step.  This reports the value of the srun
                    --ntasks option.  (Valid for job steps only)

              %A    Job id.  This will have a unique  value  for  each  element  of  job  arrays.
                    (Valid for jobs only)

              %B    Executing  (batch)  host. For an allocated session, this is the host on which
                    the session is executing (i.e. the node from which the  srun  or  the  salloc
                    command  was executed). For a batch job, this is the node executing the batch
                    script. In the case of a typical Linux cluster, this  would  be  the  compute
                    node zero of the allocation.

              %c    Minimum  number  of  CPUs  (processors)  per node requested by the job.  This
                    reports the value of the srun --mincpus option with a default value of  zero.
                    (Valid for jobs only)

              %C    Number  of  CPUs  (processors)  requested  by  the  job or allocated to it if
                    already running.  As a job is completing this number will reflect the current
                    number of CPUs allocated.  (Valid for jobs only)

              %d    Minimum  size  of  temporary disk space (in MB) requested by the job.  (Valid
                    for jobs only)

              %D    Number of nodes allocated to the job or the minimum number of nodes  required
                    by  a  pending job. The actual number of nodes allocated to a pending job may
                    exceed this number if the job specified a node range count (e.g.  minimum and
                    maximum node counts) or the job specifies a processor count instead of a node
                    count. As a job is completing this number will reflect the current number  of
                    nodes allocated.  (Valid for jobs only)

              %e    Time  at  which  the  job  ended  or  is expected to end (based upon its time
                    limit).  (Valid for jobs only)

              %E    Job dependencies remaining. This job will not  begin  execution  until  these
                    dependent  jobs  complete.  In  the case of a job that can not run due to job
                    dependencies  never  being  satisfied,  the  full  original  job   dependency
                    specification  will  be  reported.  A  value  of NULL implies this job has no
                    dependencies.  (Valid for jobs only)

              %f    Features required by the job.  (Valid for jobs only)

              %F    Job array's job ID. This is the base job ID.  For non-array jobs, this is the
                    job ID.  (Valid for jobs only)

              %g    Group name of the job.  (Valid for jobs only)

              %G    Group ID of the job.  (Valid for jobs only)

              %h    Can  the  compute  resources allocated to the job be over subscribed by other
                    jobs.  The resources to be over subscribed can be nodes, sockets,  cores,  or
                    hyperthreads  depending  upon  configuration.  The value will be "YES" if the
                    job  was  submitted  with  the  oversubscribe  option  or  the  partition  is
                    configured  with OverSubscribe=Force, "NO" if the job requires exclusive node
                    access, "USER" if the allocated compute nodes are dedicated to a single user,
                    "MCS" if the allocated compute nodes are dedicated to a single security class
                    (See  MCSPlugin  and  MCSParameters   configuration   parameters   for   more
                    information), "OK" otherwise (typically allocated dedicated CPUs), (Valid for
                    jobs only)

              %H    Number of sockets per node requested by the job.  This reports the  value  of
                    the  srun  --sockets-per-node  option.   When --sockets-per-node has not been
                    set, "*" is displayed.  (Valid for jobs only)

              %i    Job or job step id.  In the case of job arrays, the job ID format will be  of
                    the form "<base_job_id>_<index>".  By default, the job array index field size
                    will be limited to 64 bytes.  Use the environment  variable  SLURM_BITSTR_LEN
                    to specify larger field sizes.  (Valid for jobs and job steps) In the case of
                    heterogeneous job allocations, the job ID format will be of  the  form  "#+#"
                    where  the  first  number  is  the  "heterogeneous job leader" and the second
                    number the zero origin offset for each component of the job.

              %I    Number of cores per socket requested by the job.  This reports the  value  of
                    the  srun  --cores-per-socket  option.   When --cores-per-socket has not been
                    set, "*" is displayed.  (Valid for jobs only)

              %j    Job or job step name.  (Valid for jobs and job steps)

              %J    Number of threads per core requested by the job.  This reports the  value  of
                    the  srun  --threads-per-core  option.   When --threads-per-core has not been
                    set, "*" is displayed.  (Valid for jobs only)

              %k    Comment associated with the job.  (Valid for jobs only)

              %K    Job array index.  By default, this field size will be limited  to  64  bytes.
                    Use  the environment variable SLURM_BITSTR_LEN to specify larger field sizes.
                    (Valid for jobs only)

              %l    Time limit of the job or job step in days-hours:minutes:seconds.   The  value
                    may  be "NOT_SET" if not yet established or "UNLIMITED" for no limit.  (Valid
                    for jobs and job steps)

              %L    Time left for the job to execute in days-hours:minutes:seconds.   This  value
                    is  calculated  by  subtracting the job's time used from its time limit.  The
                    value may be "NOT_SET" if not yet established or "UNLIMITED"  for  no  limit.
                    (Valid for jobs only)

              %m    Minimum size of memory (in MB) requested by the job.  (Valid for jobs only)

              %M    Time used by the job or job step in days-hours:minutes:seconds.  The days and
                    hours are printed only as needed.  For job steps this field shows the elapsed
                    time  since  execution  began and thus will be inaccurate for job steps which
                    have been suspended.  Clock skew between nodes in the cluster will cause  the
                    time  to  be  inaccurate.  If the time is obviously wrong (e.g. negative), it
                    displays as "INVALID".  (Valid for jobs and job steps)

              %n    List of node names explicitly requested by the job.  (Valid for jobs only)

              %N    List of nodes allocated to the job or job step. In the case of  a  COMPLETING
                    job,  the list of nodes will comprise only those nodes that have not yet been
                    returned to service.  (Valid for jobs and job steps)

              %o    The command to be executed.

              %O    Are contiguous nodes requested by the job.  (Valid for jobs only)

              %p    Priority of the job (converted to a floating point  number  between  0.0  and
                    1.0).  Also see %Q.  (Valid for jobs only)

              %P    Partition of the job or job step.  (Valid for jobs and job steps)

              %q    Quality of service associated with the job.  (Valid for jobs only)

              %Q    Priority  of the job (generally a very large unsigned integer).  Also see %p.
                    (Valid for jobs only)

              %r    The reason a job is in its current state.  See the JOB REASON  CODES  section
                    below for more information.  (Valid for jobs only)

              %R    For pending jobs: the reason a job is waiting for execution is printed within
                    parenthesis.  For terminated jobs with failure: an explanation as to why  the
                    job failed is printed within parenthesis.  For all other job states: the list
                    of allocate  nodes.   See  the  JOB  REASON  CODES  section  below  for  more
                    information.  (Valid for jobs only)

              %S    Actual  or  expected  start time of the job or job step.  (Valid for jobs and
                    job steps)

              %t    Job state in compact form.  See the JOB STATE CODES section below for a  list
                    of possible states.  (Valid for jobs only)

              %T    Job state in extended form.  See the JOB STATE CODES section below for a list
                    of possible states.  (Valid for jobs only)

              %u    User name for a job or job step.  (Valid for jobs and job steps)

              %U    User ID for a job or job step.  (Valid for jobs and job steps)

              %v    Reservation for the job.  (Valid for jobs only)

              %V    The job's submission time.

              %w    Workload Characterization Key (wckey).  (Valid for jobs only)

              %W    Licenses reserved for the job.  (Valid for jobs only)

              %x    List of node names explicitly excluded by the job.  (Valid for jobs only)

              %X    Count of cores reserved on each node for system  use  (core  specialization).
                    (Valid for jobs only)

              %y    Nice  value  (adjustment  to  a  job's scheduling priority).  (Valid for jobs
                    only)

              %Y    For pending jobs, a list of the nodes expected to be used  when  the  job  is
                    started.

              %z    Number of requested sockets, cores, and threads (S:C:T) per node for the job.
                    When (S:C:T) has not been set, "*" is displayed.  (Valid for jobs only)

              %Z    The job's working directory.

       -O, --Format=<output_format>
              Specify the information to be displayed.  Also see the -o, --format=<output_format>
              option  described above (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   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.

       Note that many of these type specifications are valid only for jobs while others are valid
       only for job steps.  Valid type specifications include:

              Account
                     Print the account associated with the job.  (Valid for jobs only)

              AccrueTime
                     Print the accrue time associated with the job.  (Valid for jobs only)

              admin_comment
                     Administrator comment associated with the job.  (Valid for jobs only)

              AllocNodes
                     Print the nodes allocated to the job.  (Valid for jobs only)

              AllocSID
                     Print the session ID used to submit the job.  (Valid for jobs only)

              ArrayJobID
                     Prints the job ID of the job array.  (Valid for jobs and job steps)

              ArrayTaskID
                     Prints the task ID of the job array.  (Valid for jobs and job steps)

              AssocID
                     Prints the ID of the job association.  (Valid for jobs only)

              BatchFlag
                     Prints whether the batch flag has been set.  (Valid for jobs only)

              BatchHost
                     Executing (batch) host. For an allocated session, this is the host on  which
                     the  session  is  executing (i.e. the node from which the srun or the salloc
                     command was executed). For a batch job, this is the node executing the batch
                     script.  In  the  case of a typical Linux cluster, this would be the compute
                     node zero of the allocation.  (Valid for jobs only)

              BoardsPerNode
                     Prints the number of boards per node allocated to the job.  (Valid for  jobs
                     only)

              BurstBuffer
                     Burst Buffer specification (Valid for jobs only)

              BurstBufferState
                     Burst Buffer state (Valid for jobs only)

              Cluster
                     Name of the cluster that is running the job or job step.

              ClusterFeature
                     Cluster features required by the job.  (Valid for jobs only)

              Command
                     The command to be executed.  (Valid for jobs only)

              Comment
                     Comment associated with the job.  (Valid for jobs only)

              Contiguous
                     Are contiguous nodes requested by the job.  (Valid for jobs only)

              Container
                     OCI container bundle path.

              ContainerID
                     OCI container assigned ID.

              Cores  Number  of cores per socket requested by the job.  This reports the value of
                     the srun --cores-per-socket option.  When --cores-per-socket  has  not  been
                     set, "*" is displayed.  (Valid for jobs only)

              CoreSpec
                     Count  of  cores reserved on each node for system use (core specialization).
                     (Valid for jobs only)

              CPUFreq
                     Prints the frequency of the allocated CPUs.  (Valid for job steps only)

              cpus-per-task
                     Prints the number of CPUs per tasks allocated to the job.  (Valid  for  jobs
                     only)

              cpus-per-tres
                     Print  the  memory  required per trackable resources allocated to the job or
                     job step.

              Deadline
                     Prints the deadline affected to the job (Valid for jobs only)

              DelayBoot
                     Delay boot time.  (Valid for jobs only)

              Dependency
                     Job dependencies remaining. This job will not begin  execution  until  these
                     dependent  jobs  complete.  In the case of a job that can not run due to job
                     dependencies  never  being  satisfied,  the  full  original  job  dependency
                     specification  will  be  reported.  A  value of NULL implies this job has no
                     dependencies.  (Valid for jobs only)

              DerivedEC
                     The highest exit code returned by the job's job  steps  (srun  invocations).
                     Following the colon is the signal that caused the process to terminate if it
                     was terminated by a signal.  (Valid for jobs only)

              EligibleTime
                     Time the job is eligible for running.  (Valid for jobs only)

              EndTime
                     The time of job termination, actual or expected.  (Valid for jobs only)

              exit_code
                     The exit code returned by the job, typically as set by the exit()  function.
                     Following the colon is the signal that caused the process to terminate if it
                     was terminated by a signal.  (Valid for jobs only)

              Feature
                     Features required by the job.  (Valid for jobs only)

              GroupID
                     Group ID of the job.  (Valid for jobs only)

              GroupName
                     Group name of the job.  (Valid for jobs only)

              HetJobID
                     Job ID of the heterogeneous job leader.

              HetJobIDSet
                     Expression identifying all components job IDs within a heterogeneous job.

              HetJobOffset
                     Zero origin offset within a collection of heterogeneous job components.

              JobArrayID
                     Job array's job ID. This is the base job ID.  For non-array  jobs,  this  is
                     the job ID.  (Valid for jobs only)

              JobID  Job  ID.   This  will have a unique value for each element of job arrays and
                     each component of heterogeneous jobs.  (Valid for jobs only)

              LastSchedEval
                     Prints the last time the job was evaluated for scheduling.  (Valid for  jobs
                     only)

              Licenses
                     Licenses reserved for the job.  (Valid for jobs only)

              MaxCPUs
                     Prints the max number of CPUs allocated to the job.  (Valid for jobs only)

              MaxNodes
                     Prints the max number of nodes allocated to the job.  (Valid for jobs only)

              MCSLabel
                     Prints the MCS_label of the job.  (Valid for jobs only)

              mem-per-tres
                     Print  the  memory (in MB) required per trackable resources allocated to the
                     job or job step.

              MinCpus
                     Minimum number of CPUs (processors) per node requested  by  the  job.   This
                     reports the value of the srun --mincpus option with a default value of zero.
                     (Valid for jobs only)

              MinMemory
                     Minimum size of memory (in MB) requested by the job.  (Valid for jobs only)

              MinTime
                     Minimum time limit of the job (Valid for jobs only)

              MinTmpDisk
                     Minimum size of temporary disk space (in MB) requested by the  job.   (Valid
                     for jobs only)

              Name   Job or job step name.  (Valid for jobs and job steps)

              Network
                     The network that the job is running on.  (Valid for jobs and job steps)

              Nice   Nice  value  (adjustment  to  a job's scheduling priority).  (Valid for jobs
                     only)

              NodeList
                     List of nodes allocated to the job or job step. In the case of a  COMPLETING
                     job, the list of nodes will comprise only those nodes that have not yet been
                     returned to service.  (Valid for jobs only)

              Nodes  List of nodes allocated to the job or job step. In the case of a  COMPLETING
                     job, the list of nodes will comprise only those nodes that have not yet been
                     returned to service.  (Valid job steps only)

              NTPerBoard
                     The number of tasks per board allocated to the job.  (Valid for jobs only)

              NTPerCore
                     The number of tasks per core allocated to the job.  (Valid for jobs only)

              NTPerNode
                     The number of tasks per node allocated to the job.  (Valid for jobs only)

              NTPerSocket
                     The number of tasks per socket allocated to the job.  (Valid for jobs only)

              NumCPUs
                     Number of CPUs (processors) requested by the  job  or  allocated  to  it  if
                     already  running.   As  a  job  is  completing, this number will reflect the
                     current number of CPUs allocated.  (Valid for jobs and job steps)

              NumNodes
                     Number of nodes allocated to the job or the minimum number of nodes required
                     by  a pending job. The actual number of nodes allocated to a pending job may
                     exceed this number if the job specified a node range  count  (e.g.   minimum
                     and maximum node counts) or the job specifies a processor count instead of a
                     node count. As a job is completing this  number  will  reflect  the  current
                     number of nodes allocated.  (Valid for jobs only)

              NumTasks
                     Number  of  tasks requested by a job or job step.  This reports the value of
                     the --ntasks option.  (Valid for jobs and job steps)

              Origin Cluster name where federated job originated from.  (Valid for federated jobs
                     only)

              OriginRaw
                     Cluster  ID  where federated job originated from.  (Valid for federated jobs
                     only)

              OverSubscribe
                     Can the compute resources allocated to the job be over subscribed  by  other
                     jobs.   The resources to be over subscribed can be nodes, sockets, cores, or
                     hyperthreads depending upon configuration.  The value will be "YES"  if  the
                     job  was  submitted  with  the  oversubscribe  option  or  the  partition is
                     configured with OverSubscribe=Force, "NO" if the job requires exclusive node
                     access,  "USER"  if  the  allocated  compute nodes are dedicated to a single
                     user, "MCS" if the  allocated  compute  nodes  are  dedicated  to  a  single
                     security class (See MCSPlugin and MCSParameters configuration parameters for
                     more information), "OK"  otherwise  (typically  allocated  dedicated  CPUs),
                     (Valid for jobs only)

              Partition
                     Partition of the job or job step.  (Valid for jobs and job steps)

              PendingTime
                     The time (in seconds) between start time and submit time of the job.  If the
                     job has not started yet, then the time (in  seconds)  between  now  and  the
                     submit time of the job.  (Valid for jobs only)

              PreemptTime
                     The preempt time for the job.  (Valid for jobs only)

              Prefer The preferred features of a pending job.  (Valid for jobs only)

              Priority
                     Priority  of  the  job (converted to a floating point number between 0.0 and
                     1.0).  Also see prioritylong.  (Valid for jobs only)

              PriorityLong
                     Priority of the job (generally a very large  unsigned  integer).   Also  see
                     priority.  (Valid for jobs only)

              Profile
                     Profile of the job.  (Valid for jobs only)

              QOS    Quality of service associated with the job.  (Valid for jobs only)

              Reason The  reason a job is in its current state.  See the JOB REASON CODES section
                     below for more information.  (Valid for jobs only)

              ReasonList
                     For pending jobs: the reason a job  is  waiting  for  execution  is  printed
                     within  parenthesis.  For terminated jobs with failure: an explanation as to
                     why the job failed is printed within parenthesis.  For all other job states:
                     the list of allocate nodes.  See the JOB REASON CODES section below for more
                     information.  (Valid for jobs only)

              Reboot Indicates if the allocated nodes should be rebooted before starting the job.
                     (Valid on jobs only)

              ReqNodes
                     List of node names explicitly requested by the job.  (Valid for jobs only)

              ReqSwitch
                     The max number of requested switches by for the job.  (Valid for jobs only)

              Requeue
                     Prints whether the job will be requeued on failure.  (Valid for jobs only)

              Reservation
                     Reservation for the job.  (Valid for jobs only)

              ResizeTime
                     The amount of time changed for the job to run.  (Valid for jobs only)

              RestartCnt
                     The number of restarts for the job.  (Valid for jobs only)

              ResvPort
                     Reserved ports of the job.  (Valid for job steps only)

              SchedNodes
                     For  pending  jobs,  a list of the nodes expected to be used when the job is
                     started.  (Valid for jobs only)

              SCT    Number of requested sockets, cores, and threads (S:C:T)  per  node  for  the
                     job.   When  (S:C:T)  has  not  been set, "*" is displayed.  (Valid for jobs
                     only)

              SiblingsActive
                     Cluster names of where federated sibling jobs exist.  (Valid  for  federated
                     jobs only)

              SiblingsActiveRaw
                     Cluster  IDs  of  where  federated sibling jobs exist.  (Valid for federated
                     jobs only)

              SiblingsViable
                     Cluster names of where federated sibling jobs are viable to run.  (Valid for
                     federated jobs only)

              SiblingsViableRaw
                     Cluster  IDs  of  where  federated  sibling  jobs viable to run.  (Valid for
                     federated jobs only)

              Sockets
                     Number of sockets per node requested by the job.  This reports the value  of
                     the  srun  --sockets-per-node  option.  When --sockets-per-node has not been
                     set, "*" is displayed.  (Valid for jobs only)

              SPerBoard
                     Number of sockets per board allocated to the job.  (Valid for jobs only)

              StartTime
                     Actual or expected start time of the job or job step.  (Valid for  jobs  and
                     job steps)

              State  Job  state  in  extended  form.  See the JOB STATE CODES section below for a
                     list of possible states.  (Valid for jobs only)

              StateCompact
                     Job state in compact form.  See the JOB STATE CODES section below for a list
                     of possible states.  (Valid for jobs only)

              STDERR The directory for standard error to output to.  (Valid for jobs only)

              STDIN  The directory for standard in.  (Valid for jobs only)

              STDOUT The directory for standard out to output to.  (Valid for jobs only)

              StepID Job or job step ID.  In the case of job arrays, the job ID format will be of
                     the form "<base_job_id>_<index>".  (Valid for job steps only)

              StepName
                     Job step name.  (Valid for job steps only)

              StepState
                     The state of the job step.  (Valid for job steps only)

              SubmitTime
                     The time that the job was submitted at.  (Valid for jobs only)

              system_comment
                     System comment associated with the job.  (Valid for jobs only)

              Threads
                     Number of threads per core requested by the job.  This reports the value  of
                     the  srun  --threads-per-core  option.  When --threads-per-core has not been
                     set, "*" is displayed.  (Valid for jobs only)

              TimeLeft
                     Time left for the job to execute in days-hours:minutes:seconds.  This  value
                     is  calculated  by subtracting the job's time used from its time limit.  The
                     value may be "NOT_SET" if not yet established or "UNLIMITED" for  no  limit.
                     (Valid for jobs only)

              TimeLimit
                     Timelimit for the job or job step.  (Valid for jobs and job steps)

              TimeUsed
                     Time  used  by  the job or job step in days-hours:minutes:seconds.  The days
                     and hours are printed only as needed.  For job steps this  field  shows  the
                     elapsed time since execution began and thus will be inaccurate for job steps
                     which have been suspended.  Clock skew between nodes  in  the  cluster  will
                     cause  the  time  to  be  inaccurate.   If the time is obviously wrong (e.g.
                     negative), it displays as "INVALID".  (Valid for jobs and job steps)

              tres-alloc
                     Print the trackable resources allocated to  the  job  if  running.   If  not
                     running, then print the trackable resources requested by the job.

              tres-bind
                     Print the trackable resources task binding requested by the job or job step.

              tres-freq
                     Print the trackable resources frequencies requested by the job or job step.

              tres-per-job
                     Print the trackable resources requested by the job.

              tres-per-node
                     Print the trackable resources per node requested by the job or job step.

              tres-per-socket
                     Print the trackable resources per socket requested by the job or job step.

              tres-per-step
                     Print the trackable resources requested by the job step.

              tres-per-task
                     Print the trackable resources per task requested by the job or job step.

              UserID User ID for a job or job step.  (Valid for jobs and job steps)

              UserName
                     User name for a job or job step.  (Valid for jobs and job steps)

              Wait4Switch
                     The  amount  of time to wait for the desired number of switches.  (Valid for
                     jobs only)

              WCKey  Workload Characterization Key (wckey).  (Valid for jobs only)

              WorkDir
                     The job's working directory.  (Valid for jobs only)

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

       --hide Do not display information about jobs and job steps in all partitions. By  default,
              information  about partitions that are configured as hidden or are not available to
              the user's group will not be displayed (i.e. this is the default behavior).

       -i, --iterate=<seconds>
              Repeatedly gather and report the requested information at  the  interval  specified
              (in seconds).  By default, prints a time stamp with the header.

       -j, --jobs[=<job_id_list>]
              Specify  a  comma  separated list of job IDs to display. Defaults to all jobs.  The
              --jobs=<job_id_list> option may be used in conjunction with the --steps  option  to
              print  step  information  about  specific  jobs.   Note:  If  a  list of job IDs is
              provided, the jobs are displayed even if they are on hidden partitions. 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"  and  not  "-j  1008".  The job ID format is "job_id[_array_id]".
              Performance of the command can  be  measurably  improved  for  systems  with  large
              numbers  of  jobs  when  a single job ID is specified.  By default, this field size
              will be limited to 64 bytes.  Use  the  environment  variable  SLURM_BITSTR_LEN  to
              specify larger field sizes.

       --json, --json=list, --json=<data_parser>
              Dump  information  as  JSON  using  the  default  data_parser  plugin  or  explicit
              data_parser with parameters. All information is dumped, even if it  would  normally
              not  be.  Sorting  and  formatting  arguments  passed to other options are ignored;
              however, filtering arguments are still used.

       -L, --licenses=<license_list>
              Request jobs requesting or using one or more of the named  licenses.   The  license
              list consists of a comma separated list of license names.

       --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  or  job  steps,
              subject to any constraints specified.

       --me   Equivalent to --user=<my username>.

       -n, --name=<name_list>
              Request  jobs or job steps having one of the specified names.  The list consists of
              a comma separated list of job names.

       --noconvert
              Don't convert units from their original type (e.g. 2048M won't be converted to 2G).

       -w, --nodelist=<hostlist>
              Report only on jobs allocated to the specified node or list  of  nodes.   This  may
              either  be  the  NodeName  or NodeHostname as defined in slurm.conf(5) in the event
              that they differ.  A node_name of localhost is mapped to the current host name.

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

       -p, --partition=<part_list>
              Specify the partitions of the jobs or steps to view. Accepts a comma separated list
              of partition names.

       -P, --priority
              For pending jobs submitted to multiple partitions, list the job once per partition.
              In addition, if jobs are sorted by priority, consider both the  partition  and  job
              priority.  This  option  can  be used to produce a list of pending jobs in the same
              order considered for scheduling by Slurm with appropriate additional options  (e.g.
              "--sort=-p,i --states=PD").

       -q, --qos=<qos_list>
              Specify  the qos(s) of the jobs or steps to view. Accepts a comma separated list of
              qos's.

       -R, --reservation=<reservation_name>
              Specify the reservation of the jobs to view.

       --sibling
              Show all sibling jobs on a federated cluster. Implies --federation.

       -S, --sort=<sort_list>
              Specification of the order in which records should be reported.  This uses the same
              field  specification  as the <output_format>.  The long format option "cluster" can
              also be used to sort jobs or job steps  by  cluster  name  (e.g.  federated  jobs).
              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.  For example, a sort value of "P,U"
              will sort the records by partition name then by user id.  The default value of sort
              for  jobs  is  "P,t,-p" (increasing partition name then within a given partition by
              increasing job state and then decreasing priority).  The default value of sort  for
              job  steps  is  "P,i"  (increasing  partition name then within a given partition by
              increasing step id).

       --start
              Report the expected start time and resources to be allocated for  pending  jobs  in
              order  of  increasing  start  time.   This  is equivalent to the following options:
              --format="%.18i  %.9P  %.8j  %.8u  %.2t   %.19S  %.6D  %20Y   %R",   --sort=S   and
              --states=PENDING.   Any  of  these  options may be explicitly changed as desired by
              combining the --start option with other option values  (e.g.  to  use  a  different
              output  format).   The expected start time of pending jobs is only available if the
              Slurm is configured to use the backfill scheduling plugin.

       -t, --states=<state_list>
              Specify the states of jobs to view.  Accepts a comma separated list of state  names
              or  "all".  If  "all"  is specified then jobs of all states will be reported. If no
              state is specified then pending, running, and completing jobs are reported. See the
              JOB STATE CODES section below for a list of valid states. Both extended and compact
              forms are valid.  Note the <state_list> supplied is case insensitive ("pd" and "PD"
              are equivalent).

       -s, --steps[=<step_list>]
              Specify  the job steps to view.  This flag indicates that a comma separated list of
              job steps to view follows without an equal  sign  (see  examples).   The  job  step
              format  is  "job_id[_array_id].step_id".  Defaults  to  all  job  steps. 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 "-s1008.0" and not "-s 1008.0".

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

       -u, --user=<user_list>
              Request jobs or job steps from a comma separated  list  of  users.   The  list  can
              consist  of  user  names  or  user  id  numbers.  Performance of the command can be
              measurably improved for systems with large numbers of jobs when a  single  user  is
              specified.

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

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

       --yaml, --yaml=list, --yaml=<data_parser>
              Dump  information  as  JSON  using  the  default  data_parser  plugin  or  explicit
              data_parser with parameters. All information is dumped, even if it  would  normally
              not  be.  Sorting  and  formatting  arguments  passed to other options are ignored;
              however, filtering arguments are still used.

JOB REASON CODES

       These codes identify the reason that a job is waiting for execution.  A job may be waiting
       for more than one reason, in which case only one of those reasons is displayed.

       The  Reasons listed below are some of the more common ones you might see.  For a full list
       of       Reason       codes       see       our        Resource        Limits        page:
       <https://slurm.schedmd.com/resource_limits.html>

       AssocGrp*Limit        The  job's  association  has  reached  an  aggregate  limit  on some
                             resource.

       AssociationJobLimit   The job's association has reached its maximum job count.

       AssocMax*Limit        The job requests a resource that violates a  per-job  limit  on  the
                             requested association.

       AssociationResourceLimit
                             The job's association has reached some resource limit.

       AssociationTimeLimit  The job's association has reached its time limit.

       BadConstraints        The job's constraints can not be satisfied.

       BeginTime             The job's earliest start time has not yet been reached.

       Cleaning              The  job  is  being requeued and still cleaning up from its previous
                             execution.

       Dependency            This job  has  a  dependency  on  another  job  that  has  not  been
                             satisfied.

       DependencyNeverSatisfied
                             This  job  has  a  dependency  on  another  job  that  will never be
                             satisfied.

       FrontEndDown          No front end node is available to execute this job.

       InactiveLimit         The job reached the system InactiveLimit.

       InvalidAccount        The job's account is invalid.

       InvalidQOS            The job's QOS is invalid.

       JobHeldAdmin          The job is held by a system administrator.

       JobHeldUser           The job is held by the user.

       JobLaunchFailure      The job could not be launched.  This may be due  to  a  file  system
                             problem, invalid program name, etc.

       Licenses              The job is waiting for a license.

       NodeDown              A node required by the job is down.

       NonZeroExitCode       The job terminated with a non-zero exit code.

       PartitionDown         The partition required by this job is in a DOWN state.

       PartitionInactive     The  partition  required by this job is in an Inactive state and not
                             able to start jobs.

       PartitionNodeLimit    The number  of  nodes  required  by  this  job  is  outside  of  its
                             partition's  current  limits.  Can also indicate that required nodes
                             are DOWN or DRAINED.

       PartitionTimeLimit    The job's time limit exceeds its partition's current time limit.

       Priority              One or more  higher  priority  jobs  exist  for  this  partition  or
                             advanced reservation.

       Prolog                Its PrologSlurmctld program is still running.

       QOSGrp*Limit          The job's QOS has reached an aggregate limit on some resource.

       QOSJobLimit           The job's QOS has reached its maximum job count.

       QOSMax*Limit          The  job  requests  a  resource that violates a per-job limit on the
                             requested QOS.

       QOSResourceLimit      The job's QOS has reached some resource limit.

       QOSTimeLimit          The job's QOS has reached its time limit.

       QOSUsageThreshold     Required QOS threshold has been breached.

       ReqNodeNotAvail       Some  node  specifically  required  by  the  job  is  not  currently
                             available.   The  node may currently be in use, reserved for another
                             job, in an advanced reservation, DOWN, DRAINED, or  not  responding.
                             Nodes  which are DOWN, DRAINED, or not responding will be identified
                             as part of the job's  "reason"  field  as  "UnavailableNodes".  Such
                             nodes   will   typically   require  the  intervention  of  a  system
                             administrator to make available.

       Reservation           The job is waiting its advanced reservation to become available.

       Resources             The job is waiting for resources to become available.

       SystemFailure         Failure of the Slurm system, a file system, the network, etc.

       TimeLimit             The job exhausted its time limit.

       WaitingForScheduling  No reason has been set for this job yet.  Waiting for the  scheduler
                             to determine the appropriate reason.

JOB STATE CODES

       Jobs  typically pass through several states in the course of their execution.  The typical
       states are PENDING, RUNNING, SUSPENDED, COMPLETING, and COMPLETED.  An explanation of each
       state follows.

       BF  BOOT_FAIL       Job  terminated  due  to  launch  failure, typically due to a hardware
                           failure (e.g. unable to boot the node or block and the job can not  be
                           requeued).

       CA  CANCELLED       Job was explicitly cancelled by the user or system administrator.  The
                           job may or may not have been initiated.

       CD  COMPLETED       Job has terminated all processes on all nodes with  an  exit  code  of
                           zero.

       CF  CONFIGURING     Job  has  been allocated resources, but are waiting for them to become
                           ready for use (e.g. booting).

       CG  COMPLETING      Job is in the process of completing. Some processes on some nodes  may
                           still be active.

       DL  DEADLINE        Job terminated on deadline.

       F   FAILED          Job terminated with non-zero exit code or other failure condition.

       NF  NODE_FAIL       Job terminated due to failure of one or more allocated nodes.

       OOM OUT_OF_MEMORY   Job experienced out of memory error.

       PD  PENDING         Job is awaiting resource allocation.

       PR  PREEMPTED       Job terminated due to preemption.

       R   RUNNING         Job currently has an allocation.

       RD  RESV_DEL_HOLD   Job is being held after requested reservation was deleted.

       RF  REQUEUE_FED     Job is being requeued by a federation.

       RH  REQUEUE_HOLD    Held job is being requeued.

       RQ  REQUEUED        Completing job is being requeued.

       RS  RESIZING        Job is about to change size.

       RV  REVOKED         Sibling  was  removed  from  cluster due to other cluster starting the
                           job.

       SI  SIGNALING       Job is being signaled.

       SE  SPECIAL_EXIT    The job was requeued in a special state. This  state  can  be  set  by
                           users,  typically in EpilogSlurmctld, if the job has terminated with a
                           particular exit value.

       SO  STAGE_OUT       Job is staging out files.

       ST  STOPPED         Job has an allocation, but execution has  been  stopped  with  SIGSTOP
                           signal.  CPUS have been retained by this job.

       S   SUSPENDED       Job  has an allocation, but execution has been suspended and CPUs have
                           been released for other jobs.

       TO  TIMEOUT         Job terminated upon reaching its time limit.

PERFORMANCE

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

ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES

       Some  squeue  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_BITSTR_LEN    Specifies  the string length to be used for holding a job array's task
                           ID expression.  The default value is 64 bytes.   A  value  of  0  will
                           print the full expression with any length required.  Larger values may
                           adversely impact the application performance.

       SLURM_CLUSTERS      Same as --clusters

       SLURM_CONF          The location of the Slurm configuration file.

       SLURM_DEBUG_FLAGS   Specify  debug  flags  for  squeue  to  use.  See  DebugFlags  in  the
                           slurm.conf(5)  man  page  for  a  full  list of flags. The environment
                           variable takes precedence over the setting in the slurm.conf.

       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").

       SQUEUE_ACCOUNT      -A <account_list>, --account=<account_list>

       SQUEUE_ALL          -a, --all

       SQUEUE_ARRAY        -r, --array

       SQUEUE_NAMES        --name=<name_list>

       SQUEUE_FEDERATION   --federation

       SQUEUE_FORMAT       -o <output_format>, --format=<output_format>

       SQUEUE_FORMAT2      -O <output_format>, --Format=<output_format>

       SQUEUE_LICENSES     -p-l <license_list>, --license=<license_list>

       SQUEUE_LOCAL        --local

       SQUEUE_PARTITION    -p <part_list>, --partition=<part_list>

       SQUEUE_PRIORITY     -P, --priority

       SQUEUE_QOS          -p <qos_list>, --qos=<qos_list>

       SQUEUE_SIBLING      --sibling

       SQUEUE_SORT         -S <sort_list>, --sort=<sort_list>

       SQUEUE_STATES       -t <state_list>, --states=<state_list>

       SQUEUE_USERS        -u <user_list>, --users=<user_list>

EXAMPLES

       Print the jobs scheduled in the debug partition and in the COMPLETED state in  the  format
       with  six right justified digits for the job id followed by the priority with an arbitrary
       fields size:

              $ squeue -p debug -t COMPLETED -o "%.6i %p"
               JOBID PRIORITY
               65543 99993
               65544 99992
               65545 99991

       Print the job steps in the debug partition sorted by user:

              $ squeue -s -p debug -S u
                STEPID        NAME PARTITION     USER      TIME NODELIST
               65552.1       test1     debug    alice      0:23 dev[1-4]
               65562.2     big_run     debug      bob      0:18 dev22
               65550.1      param1     debug  candice   1:43:21 dev[6-12]

       Print information only about jobs 12345, 12346 and 12348:

              $ squeue --jobs 12345,12346,12348
               JOBID PARTITION NAME USER ST  TIME  NODES NODELIST(REASON)
               12345     debug job1 dave  R   0:21     4 dev[9-12]
               12346     debug job2 dave PD   0:00     8 (Resources)
               12348     debug job3 ed   PD   0:00     4 (Priority)

       Print information only about job step 65552.1:

              $ squeue --steps 65552.1
                STEPID     NAME PARTITION    USER    TIME  NODELIST
               65552.1    test2     debug   alice   12:49  dev[1-4]

COPYING

       Copyright (C) 2002-2007 The Regents of the University of California.  Produced at Lawrence
       Livermore National Laboratory (cf, DISCLAIMER).
       Copyright (C) 2008-2010 Lawrence Livermore National Security.
       Copyright (C) 2010-2022 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

       scancel(1), scontrol(1), sinfo(1), srun(1), slurm_load_ctl_conf (3), slurm_load_jobs  (3),
       slurm_load_node (3), slurm_load_partitions (3)