I know I asked the same question earlier from this link:
Setting SGE for running an executable with different input files on different nodes
Like I said in that thread, I worked with this kind of thing on SLURM system before without any issues, because everything is wrapped into one submission script. However, adapting from the previous question in the link above, here is my approach on SGE (I know this is a bad practice, but I really couldn't think of any better ways...)
The job is chained through 4+N scripts: run.sh
, submitSerial.sh
, wrap.sh
, temp.sh
, and job{1-N}.sh
run.sh
: The main job script
#!/bin/bash
...some stuffs...
...create N directories to run N input files in parallel (like last problems)
...generate wrap.sh and job{1-N}.sh...
...parameters definition...
for (( i=0; i<=M; i++ ))
do
...generate submitSerial.sh...
sh submitSerial.sh
...initialize boolean flag...
while flag
do
sh wrap.sh
...run an executable to determine the flag status...
done
done
...some cleanup...
submitSerial.sh
andtemp.sh
: I need to execute this executable in serial first, and want the cluster to wait until this is done to proceed to the next line of procedures inrun.sh
. Sincerun.sh
is not in the cluster environment (i.e. no Grid Engine parameters), but rather exists only in a login node, this will generatetemp.sh
and run a serial script through qsub right away. Since I don't know how to check whether a qsub job is done, so I had to do it the foolish way. Wonder if there's a better way to check?
#!/bin/bash
echo "#!/bin/bash" >> $workDir/temp.sh
echo >> $workDir/temp.sh
echo "#$ -N serialForce" >> $workDir/temp.sh
echo "#$ -q batch.q" >> $workDir/temp.sh
echo "#$ -l h_rt=0:10:00" >> $workDir/temp.sh
echo "#$ -pe orte 120" >> $workDir/temp.sh
echo "#$ -wd /path/to/working/dir/" >> $workDir/temp.sh
echo "#$ -j y" >> $workDir/temp.sh
echo "#$ -S /bin/bash" >> $workDir/temp.sh
echo "#$ -V" >> $workDir/temp.sh
echo >> $workDir/temp.sh
echo "mpirun -np 120 nwchem-6.5 $workDir/step0_1.nw" >> $workDir/temp.sh
qsub $workDir/temp.sh
while true
do
qstat > $workDir/temp
if [ -s $workDir/temp ]
then
sleep 1
else
rm $workDir/temp
break
fi
done
rm $workDir/temp.sh
wrap.sh
andjob{1-N}.sh
: This was generated earlier at the beginning of the script. This is the part that was my question last time, and I also used sleep to check the qsub status as well
#!/bin/bash
for i in {1..10}
do
qsub $workDir/wd$i/job$i.sh
done
while true
do
qstat > $workDir/temp
if [ -s $workDir/temp ]
then
sleep 1
else
rm $workDir/temp
break
fi
done
for j in {1..10}
do
rm $workDir/wd$j/*
done
The problem with this approach is once I run run.sh
, I can't do it in the background and with having to do separate qsub
's there is a potential problem if the cluster is full. I wonder if there is a solution with only one qsub
like the SLURM approach? I just want to submit the job and just wait until it's done rather than having the script submitting multiple qsub jobs without knowing if any unknown jobs die in the middle (and I never have an idea where it dies).
Please help me with this! Your help is highly appreciated! Thank you very much in advance!