GNU/Linux |
Debian 6.0.2(Squeeze) |
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scancel(1) |
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scancel − Used to signal jobs or job steps that are under the control of Slurm.
scancel [OPTIONS...] [job_id[.step_id]] [job_id[.step_id]...]
scancel is used to signal or cancel jobs or job steps. An arbitrary number of jobs or job steps may be signaled using job specification filters or a space separated list of specific job and/or job step IDs. A job or job step can only be signaled by the owner of that job or user root. If an attempt is made by an unauthorized user to signal a job or job step, an error message will be printed and the job will not be signaled.
−A, −−account=account
Restrict the scancel operation to jobs under this charge account.
−b, −−batch
Signal the batch job shell and its child processes. This is not applicable if step_id is specified. NOTE: The shell itself may exit upon receipt of many signals. You may avoid this by explicitly trap signals within the shell script (e.g. "trap <arg> <signals>"). See the shell documentation for details.
-−ctld |
Send the job signal request to the slurmctld daemon rather than directly to the slurmd daemons. This increases overhead, but offers better fault tolerance. | ||
−−help |
Print a help message describing all scancel options. |
−i, −−interactive
Interactive mode. Confirm each job_id.step_id before performing the cancel operation.
−n, −−name=job_name
Restrict the scancel operation to jobs with this job name.
−p, −−partition=partition_name
Restrict the scancel operation to jobs in this partition.
−p, −−qos=qos
Restrict the scancel operation to jobs with this quality of service.
−Q, −−quiet
Do not report an error if the specified job is already completed. This option is incompatible with the −−verbose option.
−s, −−signal=signal_name
The name or number of the signal to send. If no signal is specified, the specified job or step will be terminated.
−t, −−state=job_state_name
Restrict the scancel operation to jobs in this state. job_state_name may have a value of either "PENDING", "RUNNING" or "SUSPENDED".
−u, −−user=user_name
Restrict the scancel operation to jobs owned by this user.
−−usage
Print a brief help message listing the scancel options.
−v, −−verbose
Print additional logging. Multiple v’s increase logging detail. This option is incompatible with the −−quiet option.
−V, −−version
Print the version number of the scancel command.
−w, −−nodelist=host1,host2,...
Cancel any jobs using any of the given hosts. The list may be specified as a comma−separated list of hosts, a range of hosts (host[1−5,7,...] for example), or a filename. The host list will be assumed to be a filename only if it contains a "/" character.
−−wckey=wckey
Restrict the scancel operation to jobs using this workload characterization key.
ARGUMENTS
job_id |
The Slurm job ID to be signaled. |
step_id
The step ID of the job step to be signaled. If not specified, the operation is performed at the level of a job.
If neither −−batch nor −−signal are used, the entire job will be terminated.
When −−batch is used, the batch shell processes will be signaled. The child processes of the shell will not be signalled by SLURM, but the shell may forward the signal.
When −−batch is not used but −−signal is used, then all job steps will be signalled, but the batch script itself will not be signalled.
Some scancel options may be set via environment variables. These environment variables, along with their corresponding options, are listed below. (Note: commandline options will always override these settings)
SCANCEL_ACCOUNT |
−A, −−account=account | ||
SCANCEL_BATCH |
−b, −−batch | ||
SCANCEL_CTLD |
−−ctld | ||
SCANCEL_INTERACTIVE |
−i, −−interactive | ||
SCANCEL_NAME |
−n, −−name=job_name | ||
SCANCEL_PARTITION |
−p, −−partition=partition_name | ||
SCANCEL_QOS |
−q, −−qos=qos | ||
SCANCEL_STATE |
−t, −−state=job_state_name | ||
SCANCEL_USER |
−u, −−user=user_name | ||
SCANCEL_VERBOSE |
−v, −−verbose | ||
SCANCEL_WCKEY |
−−wckey=wckey | ||
SLURM_CONF |
The location of the SLURM configuration file. |
If multiple filters are supplied (e.g. −−partition and −−name) only the jobs satisfying all of the filtering options will be signaled.
If a signal value of "KILL" (the default value) is to be sent to an entire job, this will result in the job’s termination and its resource allocation being released.
Specifying no −−signal option will send a SIGTERM and wait the KillWait duration as defined in the slurm.conf file before sending the SIGKILL giving time for the running job/step(s) to clean up. To immediately kill a job, you can specify −−signal=KILL which will bypass the SIGTERM.
Cancelling a job step will not result in a job being terminated. The job must be cancelled to release a resource allocation.
Send SIGTERM to steps 1 and 3 of job 1234:
scancel −−signal=TERM 1234.1 1234.3
Cancel job 1234 along with all of its steps:
scancel 1234
Send SIGKILL to all steps of
job 1235, but do not cancel the job
itself:
scancel −−signal=KILL 1235
Send SIGUSR1 to the batch shell processes of job 1236:
scancel −−signal=USR1 −−batch 1236
Cancel job all pending jobs
belonging to user "bob" in partition
"debug":
scancel −−state=PENDING −−user=bob −−partition=debug
Copyright (C) 2002-2007 The Regents of the University of California. Copyright (C) 2008-2009 Lawrence Livermore National Security. Produced at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (cf, DISCLAIMER). CODE−OCEC−09−009. All rights reserved.
This file is part of SLURM, a resource management program. For details, see <https://computing.llnl.gov/linux/slurm/>.
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.
slurm_kill_job(3), slurm_kill_job_step(3)
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scancel(1) | ![]() |