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Special Forums UNIX and Linux Applications High Performance Computing How to check performance of your HPC cluster? Post 302643627 by albertspade on Sunday 20th of May 2012 06:09:03 AM
Old 05-20-2012
Thanks for your help Otheus.
Smilie
I am new to the field of HPC. I installed HPCC and HPL. Even I am able run it and get the results. But I am not able to understand it. Also its running for my colete cluster, I also want to run them for my single machine. And now I am not able to tell whether its running on both the cores of my machine or only one process per machine, as I am having core 2 duo machines.
 

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condor_vacate(1)					      General Commands Manual						  condor_vacate(1)

Name
       condor_vacate Vacate - jobs that are running on the specified hosts

Synopsis
       condor_vacate [-help -version]

       condor_vacate[-graceful	    -fast]	[-debug]      [-pool	 centralmanagerhostname[:portnumber]]	  [-name     hostnamehostname-addr
       "<a.b.c.d:port>""<a.b.c.d:port>"-constraint expression-all]

Description
       condor_vacate causes Condor to checkpoint any running jobs on a set of machines and force the  jobs  to	vacate	the  machine.  The  job(s)
       remains in the submitting machine's job queue.

       Given  the  (default)  -gracefuloption,	a job running under the standard universe will first produce a checkpoint and then the job will be
       killed. Condor will then restart the job somewhere else, using the checkpoint to continue from where it left off. A job running	under  the
       vanilla	universe is killed, and Condor restarts the job from the beginning somewhere else. condor_vacatehas no effect on a machine with no
       Condor job currently running.

       There is generally no need for the user or administrator to explicitly run condor_vacate. Condor takes care of jobs in this  way  automati-
       cally following the policies given in configuration files.

Options
       -help

	  Display usage information

       -version

	  Display version information

       -graceful

	  Inform the job to checkpoint, then soft-kill it.

       -fast

	  Hard-kill jobs instead of checkpointing them

       -debug

	  Causes debugging information to be sent to  stderr , based on the value of the configuration variable  TOOL_DEBUG

       -pool centralmanagerhostname[:portnumber]

	  Specify a pool by giving the central manager's host name and an optional port number

       -name hostname

	  Send the command to a machine identified by hostname

       hostname

	  Send the command to a machine identified by hostname

       -addr <a.b.c.d:port>

	  Send the command to a machine's master located at "<a.b.c.d:port>"

       <a.b.c.d:port>

	  Send the command to a machine located at "<a.b.c.d:port>"

       -constraint expression

	  Apply this command only to machines matching the given ClassAd expression

       -all

	  Send the command to all machines in the pool

Exit Status
       condor_vacatewill exit with a status value of 0 (zero) upon success, and it will exit with the value 1 (one) upon failure.

Examples
       To send a condor_vacate command to two named machines:

       % condor_vacate	 robin cardinal

       To send the condor_vacatecommand to a machine within a pool of machines other than the local pool, use the -pooloption. The argument is the
       name of the central manager for the pool. Note that one or more machines within the pool must be specified as the targets for the  command.
       This  command  sends  the command to a the single machine named cae17within the pool of machines that has condor.cae.wisc.eduas its central
       manager:

       % condor_vacate	-pool condor.cae.wisc.edu -name cae17

Author
       Condor Team, University of Wisconsin-Madison

Copyright
       Copyright (C) 1990-2012 Condor Team, Computer Sciences Department, University of  Wisconsin-Madison,  Madison,  WI.  All  Rights  Reserved.
       Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0.

       See the Condor Version 7.8.2 Manualor http://www.condorproject.org/licensefor additional notices. condor-admin@cs.wisc.edu

								  September 2012						  condor_vacate(1)
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