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I am running a very common bioinformatic tool/command bowtie2-build. It can use multi-threads on a single node (not a MPI type job). I have the following sbatch script (basically):

#!/bin/bash

#SBATCH --nodes=1
#SBATCH --ntasks-per-node=1
#SBATCH --cpus-per-task=6
#SBATCH --mem=15G
#SBATCH --time=3:00:00

bowtie2-build --threads $SLURM_CPUS_ON_NODE GRCh38.fa GRCh38

I read somewhere that whenever more than one CPUs are requested, srun must be used so that the last line above should be srun bowtie2-build ...? Is it true? I also learned that, for a MPI job, either srun or mpirun can be used to launch multiple processes. But I do need clarification on using srun in the case of single node with multi-threads. Thanks for any help!

(btw: I equated multi-threads with multi-cores in this particular context).

1 Answer 1

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For same-node computations (multithread, etc.) srun is not mandatory but using it offers better control and better feedback from Slurm.

If your program is started with srun, it will be easier for Slurm to manage it (send UNIX signals, kill it if it uses more resource than requested, etc.), and the sstat command will be able to provide you with near-real time memory usage, CPU efficiency, etc.

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  • Thanks for the explanation, helped a lot!
    – nlong
    Dec 3, 2018 at 14:26

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