1slurmctld(8)                     Slurm Daemon                     slurmctld(8)
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NAME

6       slurmctld - The central management daemon of Slurm.
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SYNOPSIS

9       slurmctld [OPTIONS...]
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DESCRIPTION

12       slurmctld  is  the  central management daemon of Slurm. It monitors all
13       other Slurm daemons and resources, accepts work (jobs),  and  allocates
14       resources to those jobs. Given the critical functionality of slurmctld,
15       there may be a backup server to assume these  functions  in  the  event
16       that the primary server fails.
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18

OPTIONS

20       -c     Clear  all  previous  slurmctld  state from its last checkpoint.
21              With this option, all jobs, including both running  and  queued,
22              and all node states, will be deleted.  Without this option, pre‐
23              viously running jobs will be preserved along with node State  of
24              DOWN, DRAINED and DRAINING nodes and the associated Reason field
25              for those nodes.  NOTE: It is rare you would ever  want  to  use
26              this in production as all jobs will be killed.
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28       -d     Run slurmctld in the background.
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30       -D     Run slurmctld in the foreground with logging copied to stdout.
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32       -f <file>
33              Read configuration from the specified file. See NOTES below.
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35       -h     Help; print a brief summary of command options.
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37       -i     Ignore  errors  found  while  reading in state files on startup.
38              Warning: Use of this option  will  mean  losing  the  data  that
39              wasn't recovered from the state files.
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41       -L <file>
42              Write log messages to the specified file.
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44       -n <value>
45              Set  the daemon's nice value to the specified value, typically a
46              negative number.
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48       -r     Recover partial  state  from  last  checkpoint:  jobs  and  node
49              DOWN/DRAIN  state  and  reason  information state.  No partition
50              state is recovered.  This is the default action.
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52       -R     Recover full state from last checkpoint: jobs, node, and  parti‐
53              tion  state.   Without this option, previously running jobs will
54              be preserved along with node State of DOWN, DRAINED and DRAINING
55              nodes  and the associated Reason field for those nodes. No other
56              node or partition state will be preserved.
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58       -s     Change working directory of slurmctld to  SlurmctldLogFile  path
59              if  possible, or to SlurmStateSaveLocation otherwise. If both of
60              them fail it will fallback to /var/tmp.
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62       -v     Verbose operation. Multiple -v's increase verbosity.
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64       -V     Print version information and exit.
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ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES

67       The following environment variables can be used  to  override  settings
68       compiled into slurmctld.
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71       SLURM_CONF          The  location of the Slurm configuration file. This
72                           is overridden by explicitly naming a  configuration
73                           file on the command line.
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CORE FILE LOCATION

76       If  slurmctld  is started with the -D option then the core file will be
77       written to the current working directory.  Otherwise  if  SlurmctldLog‐
78       File  is  a fully qualified path name (starting with a slash), the core
79       file will be written to the same directory as the  log  file,  provided
80       SlurmUser  has  write  permission on the directory.  Otherwise the core
81       file will be written to the StateSaveLocation, or "/var/tmp/" as a last
82       resort.  If  none  of  the  above directories have write permission for
83       SlurmUser, no core file will be produced.  The command "scontrol abort"
84       can be used to abort the slurmctld daemon and generate a core file.
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SIGNALS

88       SIGTERM SIGINT
89              slurmctld will shutdown cleanly, saving its current state to the
90              state save directory.
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92       SIGABRT
93              slurmctld will shutdown cleanly, saving its current  state,  and
94              perform a core dump.
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96       SIGHUP Reloads  the slurm configuration files, similar to 'scontrol re‐
97              configure'.
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99       SIGUSR2
100              Reread the log level from the configs, and then reopen  the  log
101              file.  This should be used when setting up logrotate(8).
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103       SIGCHLD SIGUSR1 SIGTSTP SIGXCPU SIGQUIT SIGPIPE SIGALRM
104              These signals are explicitly ignored.
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NOTES

107       It  may  be useful to experiment with different slurmctld specific con‐
108       figuration parameters using a distinct configuration file  (e.g.  time‐
109       outs).   However,  this  special configuration file will not be used by
110       the slurmd daemon or the Slurm programs, unless you  specifically  tell
111       each of them to use it. If you desire changing communication ports, the
112       location of the temporary file system,  or  other  parameters  used  by
113       other   Slurm   components,   change  the  common  configuration  file,
114       slurm.conf.
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COPYING

118       Copyright (C) 2002-2007 The Regents of the  University  of  California.
119       Copyright  (C)  2008-2010  Lawrence Livermore National Security.  Copy‐
120       right (C) 2010-2022 SchedMD LLC.  Produced at  Lawrence  Livermore  Na‐
121       tional  Laboratory  (cf, DISCLAIMER).  CODE-OCEC-09-009. All rights re‐
122       served.
123
124       This file is part of Slurm, a resource  management  program.   For  de‐
125       tails, see <https://slurm.schedmd.com/>.
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127       Slurm  is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under
128       the terms of the GNU General Public License as published  by  the  Free
129       Software  Foundation;  either version 2 of the License, or (at your op‐
130       tion) any later version.
131
132       Slurm is distributed in the hope that it will be  useful,  but  WITHOUT
133       ANY  WARRANTY;  without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or
134       FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  See the GNU General  Public  License
135       for more details.
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SEE ALSO

139       slurm.conf(5), slurmd(8)
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143March 2020                       Slurm Daemon                     slurmctld(8)
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