Usage

If you do not want load information to be displayed on your screen at the same time, use lsmon -Lfile_name < /dev/null. The format of the file is described in lim.acct(5).

host_name ... Displays only load information for the specified hosts. -hPrints command usage to stderr and exits.

-VPrints LSF release version to stderr and exits.

Usage

You can use the following commands while lsmon is running:

[^L i n N E R q]

^L Refreshes the screen.

iPrompts you to input a new update interval.

nPrompts you to input a new number of hosts to display.

NToggles between displaying raw CPU run queue length load indices and normalized CPU run queue length load indices.

EToggles between displaying raw CPU run queue length load indices and effective CPU run queue length load indices.

RPrompts you to input new resource requirements.

qQuits lsmon.

Output

The following fields are displayed by default.

HOST_NAME

Name of specified hosts for which load information is displayed, or if resource requirements were specified, name of hosts that satisfied the specified resource requirement and for which load information is displayed.

status

Status of the host. A minus sign (-) may precede the status, indicating that the

Remote Execution Server (RES) on the host is not running.

Possible statuses are:

ok

The host is in normal load sharing state and can accept remote jobs.

busy

The host is overloaded because some load indices exceed configured thresholds. Load index values that caused the host to be busy are preceded by an asterisk (*). Built-in load indices include r15s, r1m, r15m, ut, pg, io, ls, it, swp, mem and tmp (see below). External load indices are configured in the file lsf.cluster.cluster_name.

lockW

264Platform LSF Command Reference