steps through a series of commands that illustrate what occurs when you launch an interactive shell.

Examine the LSF execution host information:

$ bhosts

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

HOST_NAME

STATUS

JL/U

MAX

NJOBS RUN SSUSP

USUSP

RSV

lsfhost.localdomain

ok

-

12

0

0

0

0

0

Examine the partition information:

$ sinfo

 

 

 

 

 

PARTITION AVAIL

TIMELIMIT

NODES

STATE

NODELIST

lsf

up

infinite

6

idle

n[5-10]

Examine the local host information:

$ hostname n2

Examine the job information:

$ bjobs

No unfinished job found

Run the LSF bsub -Iscommand to launch the interactive shell:

$ bsub -Is -n4 -ext "SLURM[nodes=4]" /bin/bash Job <124> is submitted to default queue <normal>. <<Waiting for dispatch ...>>

<<Starting on lsfhost.localdomain>>

Note the output when hostname is again issued:

$ hostname n16

Note the output when srun hostname is issued:

$ srun hostname n5

n7

n6

n8

Note the output from the bjobs command:

$ bjobs

 

 

 

 

 

 

JOBID

USER

STAT

QUEUE

FROM_HOST EXEC_HOST

JOB_NAME

SUBMIT_TIME

124

lsfad

RUN

normal

n2

4*lsfhost.loc

/bin/bash

date and time

Examine the running job's information:

$ bhist -l 124

Job <124>, User <lsfadmin>, Project <default>, Interactive pseudo-terminal shell mode, Extsched <SLURM[nodes=4]>, Command </bin/bash> date and time stamp: Submitted from host <n2>,

to Queue <normal>, CWD <$HOME>,4 Processors Requested, Requested Resources <type=any>;

date and time stamp: Dispatched to 4 Hosts/Processors <4*lsfhost.localdomain>;

date and time stamp: slurm_id=22;ncpus=8;slurm_alloc=n[5-8];

date and time stamp: Starting (Pid 4785);

118 Examples