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Appendix a examples, Building and running a serial application, A examples – HP XC System 3.x Software User Manual

Page 99: Examine the lsf execution host information, Examine the partition information

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Appendix A Examples

This appendix provides examples that illustrate how to build and run applications on the HP XC system. The
examples in this section show you how to take advantage of some of the many methods available, and
demonstrate a variety of other user commands to monitor, control, or kill jobs.

The examples in this section assume that you have read the information in previous chapters describing how
to use the HP XC commands to build and run parallel applications. Only examples of building and running
applications are provided in this section — detailed information about the commands is not provided.

Building and Running a Serial Application

This example show how to build a simple application, called hello world, and launch it with the SLURM
srun

command.

The following is the source code for the hello world program, located in file hw_hostname.c.

#include
#include

int main()
{
char name[100];
gethostname(name, sizeof(name));
printf("%s says Hello!\n", name);
return 0;
}

The hello world program is compiled in the usual way:

$ cc hw_hostname.c -o hw_hostname

When run on the login node, it shows the name of the login node; n16 in this case:

$ ./hw_hostname
n16 says Hello!

srun

can be used to run it on one of the compute nodes. This time it lands on n13:

$ srun ./hw_hostname
n13 says Hello!

srun

can also be used to replicate it on several compute nodes. This is not generally useful, but is included

for illustrative purposes.

$ srun -n4 ./hw_hostname
n13 says Hello!
n13 says Hello!
n14 says Hello!
n14 says Hello!

Launching a Serial Interactive Shell Through LSF-HPC

This section provides an example that shows how to launch a serial interactive shell through LSF-HPC. The
bsub -Is

command is used to launch an interactive shell through LSF-HPC. This example steps through a

series of commands that illustrate what occurs when you launch an interactive shell.

Examine the LSF execution host information:

$ bhosts
HOST_NAME STATUS JL/U MAX NJOBS RUN SSUSP USUSP RSV
lsfhost.localdomain ok - 12 0 0 0 0 0

Examine the partition information:

$ sinfo
PARTITION AVAIL TIMELIMIT NODES STATE NODELIST
lsf up infinite 6 idle n[5-10]

Building and Running a Serial Application

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