Skip to content

albanie/yaspi

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

50 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

yaspi - yet another slurm python interface

The goal of yaspi is to provide an interface to submitting slurm jobs, thereby obviating the joys of sbatch files. It does so through recipes - these are collections of templates and rules for generating sbatch scripts.

yaspi-ci

Installation

Install via pip install yaspi. If you prefer to hack around with the source code, it's a single python file.

It should be considered (highly) experimental.

Implementation

yaspi makes heavy usage of slurm job arrays.

Supported recipes:

  • cpu-proc - a generic recipe for submitting CPU jobs via a job array.
  • gpu-proc - a generic recipe for submitting GPU jobs via a job array.
  • ray - job submissions for the ray scheduler.

Dependencies

  • Python >= 3.6
  • watchlogs

Requirements:

yaspi has been tested on CentOS Linux release 7.7.1908 with slurm 18.08.7 and Python 3.7. YMMV on other platforms.

Usage and outputs

yaspi can be used either from the command-line or directly from a python program. Command-line usage is shown in the following examples (the effect of each argument is documented in the implementation).

Code - scheduling a slurm job array with CPUs:

prep_command='echo \"optional preparation cmd\"'
command='echo \"I am running on a CPU node\"'
yaspi --job_name=example \
       --job_array_size=2 \
       --cpus_per_task=5 \
       --cmd="$command" \
       --prep="$prep_command" \
       --recipe=cpu-proc \
       --mem=10G

Effect: This will run the command value on two workers as part of a slurm job array. Each worker will be allocated 5 CPUs and 10G of memory by the scheduler. Each worker will also be passed two extra flags, --slurm (without options) and --worker_id (which will be given the 0-indexed value of the current worker index in the job array) which can be used to assign tasks to the worker. The --prep flag is optional, and will run a commands prior to the main job (e.g. to change into an appropriate code directory). The effect of the command will be to produce the following:

# run on CPU job array worker 0
optional preparation cmd
I am running on a CPU node --slurm --worker_id 0

# run on CPU job array worker 1
optional preparation cmd
I am running on a CPU node --slurm --worker_id 1

When launched, a slightly more verbose (and colourized) output will be produced by watchlogs (this assumes your terminal supports color sequences):

cpu-proc-output

Code - scheduling a slurm job array with GPUs:

prep_command='echo \"optional preparation cmd\"'
job_queue="\"flags for worker 0\" \"flags for worker 1\""
command='echo \"I am running on a GPU node\"'
yaspi --job_name=example \
      --job_array_size=2 \
      --cpus_per_task=5 \
      --gpus_per_task=1 \
      --prep="$prep_command" \
      --cmd="$command" \
      --recipe=gpu-proc \
      --job_queue="$job_queue" \
      --mem=10G

Effect: This command is similar to the cpu-proc recipe described above. Again, the command will be run on two workers as part of a slurm job array. Each worker will be allocated 5 CPUs and 10G of memory by the scheduler, as well as one GPU. One further difference is that gpu-proc also takes an job_queue option that can be used to pass options to each GPU worker separately.

gpu-proc-output

Extras - custom directives:

The previous example can be extended with custom directives. For example, suppose you wish to add an extra directive to your sbatch of the form #SBATCH --comment "a harmless comment goes here". You can do this as follows:

prep_command='echo \"optional preparation cmd\"'
job_queue="\"flags for worker 0\" \"flags for worker 1\""
command='echo \"I am running on a GPU node\"'
custom_directive='#SBATCH --comment "a harmless comment goes here"'
python yaspi.py --job_name=example \
      --job_array_size=2 \
      --cpus_per_task=5 \
      --gpus_per_task=1 \
      --prep="$prep_command" \
      --cmd="$command" \
      --recipe=gpu-proc \
      --job_queue="$job_queue" \
      --custom_directive="$custom_directive" \
      --mem=10G

Custom directives can also be added to json config. For example, to receive emails from slurm, add a "custom_directives" flag:

{
      ...
      "custom_directives": "#SBATCH --mail-type=END,FAIL\n#SBATCH --mail-user=your_email_address",
}

Code - scheduling a job with the ray framework:

yaspi_dir=$(yaspi --install_location)
command="python $yaspi_dir/misc/minimal_ray_example.py"
yaspi --job_name=example \
      --cmd="$command" \
      --job_array_size=3 \
      --cpus_per_task=2 \
      --gpus_per_task=1 \
      --mem=10G \
      --recipe=ray

Effect: Scheduling jobs with the ray framework operates in a slightly different manner to the previous two examples (both of which assume embarrasingly parallel processing i.e. no communication between the workers). The ray receipe similarly launches a slurm job array, but assigns the job at index 0 to be the master, and all other nodes as worker nodes. The command is run only on the master node, which then uses ray to allocate tasks to the worker nodes. The command above will launch a slurm job, with the name "example", that: (1) initialises a ray head node and a set of 2 ray workers via a SLURM array job; (2) launches $command from the head node. It will produce an output similar to the following:

started ray head node
timestamp from worker: 2020-02-17 06:40:44.861733
timestamp from worker: 2020-02-17 06:40:44.861793
timestamp from worker: 2020-02-17 06:40:45.062484
timestamp from worker: 2020-02-17 06:40:45.065494

Code - using yaspi directly from python:

An example for training multiple MNIST runs is given in train_mnist.py. Running this file should launch three jobs on SLURM, each with different hyperparameters, producing the output below:

mnist-output

Modifying your code to use Yaspi:

To run an existing piece of code with yaspi requires two things:

  1. A json file containing SLURM settings (e.g. these yaspi_settings). This file will set the options that you would normally set in an SBATCH script (e.g. number of GPUS, total job duration etc.) together with any bash commands you would usually run to set up your job environment (these are supplied via the "env_estup" option)
  2. A small block of logic somewhere in your script (visible for the MNIST example here) which sets the job name and calls the Yaspi submit() function.

Using code snapshot directories:

One downside of launching a yaspi job directly from a source code folder is that if you edit your code after submitting your jobs to slurm but the jobs haven't yet launched, the code edits will affect the jobs. Since this is (typically) undesirable behaviour, you can supply extra flags to yaspi so that it copies the source code in your current folder to a new "snapshot" directory and launches from there. As a consequence, any local code changes you make after launching with yaspi will not affect the queued jobs. The flags to pass are:

--code_snapshot_dir snapshot_dir # <snapshot_dir> is the location where the snapshot of your code will be stored
--code_snapshot_filter_patterns patterns # <patterns> are a set of glob-patterns to determine which source code is copied

About

yaspi - Yet Another Slurm Python Interface

Resources

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published