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Delta User Guide

Last update: April 7, 2022

Status Updates and Notices

Delta is tentatively scheduled to enter production in Q2 2022.

key: light grey font is work in progress

Items in light grey font are in progress and coming soon.  Example software or feature not yet implemented.

Introduction

Delta is a dedicated, eXtreme Science and Engineering Science Discovery Environment (XSEDE) allocated resource designed by HPE and NCSA, delivering a highly capable GPU-focused compute environment for GPU and CPU workloads.  Besides offering a mix of standard and reduced precision GPU resources, Delta also offers GPU-dense nodes with both NVIDIA and AMD GPUs.  Delta provides high performance node-local SSD scratch filesystems, as well as both standard lustre and relaxed-POSIX parallel filesystems spanning the entire resource.

Delta's CPU nodes are each powered by two 64-core AMD EPYC 7763 ("Milan") processors, with 256 GB of DDR4 memory.  The Delta GPU resource has four node types: one with 4 NVIDIA A100 GPUs (40 GB HBM2 RAM each) connected via NVLINK and 1 64-core AMD EPYC 7763 ("Milan") processor, the second with 4 NVIDIA A40 GPUs (48 GB GDDR6 RAM) connected via PCIe 4.0 and 1 64-core AMD EPYC 7763 ("Milan") processor, the third with 8 NVIDIA A100 GPUs in a dual socket AMD EPYC 7763 (128-cores per node) node with 2 TB of DDR4 RAM and NVLINK,  and the fourth with 8 AMD MI100 GPUs (32GB HBM2 RAM each) in a dual socket AMD EPYC 7763 (128-cores per node) node with 2 TB of DDR4 RAM and PCIe 4.0. 

Delta has 124 standard CPU nodes, 100 4-way A100-based GPU nodes, 100 4-way A40-based GPU nodes, 5 8-way A100-based GPU nodes, and 1 8-way MI100-based GPU node.  Every Delta node has high-performance node-local SSD storage (740 GB for CPU nodes, 1.5 TB for GPU nodes), and is connected to the 7 PB Lustre parallel filesystem via the high-speed interconnect.  The Delta resource uses the SLURM workload manager for job scheduling.  

Delta supports the XSEDE core software stack, including remote login, remote computation, data movement, science workflow support, and science gateway support toolkits.


Figure 1. Delta System

Delta is supported by the National Science Foundation under Grant No. OAC-2005572.

Any opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this material are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Science Foundation.

Delta is now accepting proposals.

Top of Page

Account Administration

  • For XSEDE projects please use the XSEDE user portal for project and account management.
  • Non-XSEDE Account and Project administration is handled by NCSA Identity and NCSA group management tools. For more information please see the NCSA Allocation and Account Management documentation page. 

Configuring Your Account

  • bash is the default shell, submit a support request to change your default shell
  • environment variables: XSEDE CUE, SLURM batch
  • using Modules 

System Architecture

Delta is designed to help applications transition from CPU-only to GPU or hybrid CPU-GPU codes. Delta has some important architectural features to facilitate new discovery and insight:

  • a single processor architecture (AMD) across all node types: CPU and GPU
  • support for NVIDIA A100 MIG GPU partitioning allowing for fractional use of the A100s if your workload isn't able to exploit an entire A100 efficiently
  • ray tracing hardware support from the NVIDIA A40 GPUs
  • 9 large memory (2 TB) nodes 
  • a low latency and high bandwidth HPE/Cray Slingshot interconnect between compute nodes
  • lustre for home, projects and scratch file systems
  • support for relaxed and non-posix IO
  • shared-node jobs and the single core and single MIG GPU slice
  • Resources for persistent services in support of Gateways, Open OnDemand, Data Transport nodes..., 
  • Unique AMD MI-100 resource  

Model Compute Nodes

The Delta compute ecosystem is composed of 5 node types: dual-socket CPU-only compute nodes, single socket 4-way NVIDIA A100 GPU compute nodes, single socket 4-way NVIDIA A40 GPU compute nodes, dual-socket 8-way NVIDIA A100 GPU compute nodes, and a single socket 8-way AMD MI100 GPU compute nodes. The CPU-only and 4-way GPU nodes have 256 GB of RAM per node while the 8-way GPU nodes have 2 TB of RAM. The CPU-only node has 0.74 TB of local storage while all GPU nodes have 1.5 TB of local storage.

Table. CPU Compute Node Specifications

SpecificationValue

Number of nodes

124

CPUAMD EPYC 7763
"Milan" (PCIe Gen4)
Sockets per node2

Cores per socket

64

Cores per node128

Hardware threads per core

1

Hardware threads per node

128

Clock rate (GHz)

~ 2.45

RAM (GB)

256

Cache (KB) L1/L2/L3

 64/512/32768

Local storage (TB)

0.74 TB

The AMD CPUs are set for 4 NUMA domains per socket (NPS=4). 

Table. 4-way NVIDIA A40 GPU Compute Node Specifications 

SpecificationValue
Number of nodes100
GPUNVIDIA A40 

(Vendor page)

GPUs per node4
GPU Memory (GB)48 DDR6 with ECC
CPUAMD Milan
CPU sockets per node1

Cores per socket

64

Cores per node64

Hardware threads per core

1

Hardware threads per node

64

Clock rate (GHz)

~ 2.45

RAM (GB)

256

Cache (KB) L1/L2/L3

 64/512/32768

Local storage (TB)

1.5 TB

The AMD CPUs are set for 4 NUMA domains per socket (NPS=4). 
The A40 GPUs are connected via PCIe Gen4 and have the following affinitization to NUMA nodes on the CPU. Note that the relationship between GPU index and NUMA domain are inverse.

Table. 4-way NVIDIA A40 Mapping and GPU-CPU Affinitization 


GPU0GPU1GPU2GPU3HSNCPU AffinityNUMA Affinity
GPU0XSYSSYSSYSSYS48-633
GPU1SYSXSYSSYSSYS32-472
GPU2SYSSYSXSYSSYS16-311
GPU3SYSSYSSYSXPHB0-150
HSNSYSSYSSYSPHB

Table Legend

X    = Self
SYS  = Connection traversing PCIe as well as the SMP interconnect between NUMA nodes (e.g., QPI/UPI)
NODE = Connection traversing PCIe as well as the interconnect between PCIe Host Bridges within a NUMA node
PHB  = Connection traversing PCIe as well as a PCIe Host Bridge (typically the CPU)
NV#  = Connection traversing a bonded set of # NVLinks

Table. 4-way NVIDIA A100 GPU Compute Node Specifications 

SpecificationValue
Number of nodes100
GPUNVIDIA A100

(Vendor page)

GPUs per node4
GPU Memory (GB)40 
CPUAMD Milan
CPU sockets per node1

Cores per socket

64

Cores per node64

Hardware threads per core

1

Hardware threads per node

64

Clock rate (GHz)

~ 2.45

RAM (GB)

256

Cache (KB) L1/L2/L3

 64/512/32768

Local storage (TB)

1.5 TB

The AMD CPUs are set for 4 NUMA domains per socket (NPS=4). 

Table. 4-way NVIDIA A100 Mapping and GPU-CPU Affinitization


GPU0GPU1GPU2GPU3HSNCPU AffinityNUMA Affinity
GPU0XNV4NV4NV4SYS48-633
GPU1NV4XNV4NV4SYS32-472
GPU2NV4NV4XNV4SYS16-311
GPU3NV4NV4NV4XPHB0-150
HSNSYSSYSSYSPHB

Table Legend

X    = Self
SYS  = Connection traversing PCIe as well as the SMP interconnect between NUMA nodes (e.g., QPI/UPI)
NODE = Connection traversing PCIe as well as the interconnect between PCIe Host Bridges within a NUMA node
PHB  = Connection traversing PCIe as well as a PCIe Host Bridge (typically the CPU)
NV#  = Connection traversing a bonded set of # NVLinks

Table. 8-way NVIDIA A100 GPU Large Memory  Compute Node Specifications 

SpecificationValue
Number of nodes5
GPUNVIDIA A100

(Vendor page)

GPUs per node8
GPU Memory (GB)40 
CPUAMD Milan
CPU sockets per node2

Cores per socket

64

Cores per node128

Hardware threads per core

1

Hardware threads per node

128

Clock rate (GHz)

~ 2.45

RAM (GB)

2,048

Cache (KB) L1/L2/L3

 64/512/32768

Local storage (TB)

1.5 TB

The AMD CPUs are set for 4 NUMA domains per socket (NPS=4). 

Table. 8-way NVIDIA A100 Mapping and GPU-CPU Affinitization 


GPU0GPU1GPU2GPU3GPU4GPU5GPU6GPU7HSNCPU AffinityNUMA Affinity
GPU0XNV12NV12NV12NV12NV12NV12NV12SYS48-633
GPU1NV12XNV12NV12NV12NV12NV12NV12SYS48-633
GPU2NV12NV12XNV12NV12NV12NV12NV12SYS16-311
GPU3NV12NV12NV12XNV12NV12NV12NV12SYS16-311
GPU0NV12NV12NV12NV12XNV12NV12NV12SYS112-1277
GPU1NV12NV12NV12NV12NV12XNV12NV12SYS112-1277
GPU2NV12NV12NV12NV12NV12NV12XNV12SYS80-955
GPU3NV12NV12NV12NV12NV12NV12NV12XSYS80-955
HSNSYSSYSSYSSYSSYSSYSSYSSYSX

Table Legend

X    = Self
SYS  = Connection traversing PCIe as well as the SMP interconnect between NUMA nodes (e.g., QPI/UPI)
NODE = Connection traversing PCIe as well as the interconnect between PCIe Host Bridges within a NUMA node
PHB  = Connection traversing PCIe as well as a PCIe Host Bridge (typically the CPU)
NV#  = Connection traversing a bonded set of # NVLinks

Table. 8-way AMD MI100 GPU Large Memory Compute Node Specifications 

SpecificationValue
Number of nodes1
GPUAMD MI100  

(Vendor page)

GPUs per node8
GPU Memory (GB)32
CPUAMD Milan
CPU sockets per node2

Cores per socket

64

Cores per node128

Hardware threads per core

1

Hardware threads per node

128

Clock rate (GHz)

~ 2.45

RAM (GB)

2,048

Cache (KB) L1/L2/L3

 64/512/32768

Local storage (TB)

1.5 TB

Login Nodes

Login nodes provide interactive support for code compilation. 

Specialized Nodes

Delta will support data transfer nodes (serving the "NCSA Delta" Globus Online collection) and nodes in support of other services.

Network

Delta is connected to the NPCF core router & exit infrastructure via two 100Gbps connections, NCSA's 400Gbps+ of WAN connectivity carry traffic to/from users on an optimal peering. 

Delta resources are inter-connected with HPE/Cray's 100Gbps/200Gbps SlingShot interconnect.  

File Systems

Note:  Users of Delta have access to 3 file systems at the time of system launch, a fourth relaxed-POSIX file system will be made available at a later date. 

Delta
The Delta storage infrastructure provides users with their $HOME and $SCRATCH areas.  These file systems are mounted across all Delta nodes and are accessible on the Delta DTN Endpoints.  The aggregate performance of this subsystem is 70GB/s and it has 6PB of usable space.  These file systems run Lustre via DDN's ExaScaler 6 stack (Lustre 2.14 based).

Hardware:
DDN SFA7990XE (Quantity: 3), each unit contains

  • One additional SS9012 enclosure
  • 168 x 16TB SAS Drives
  • 7 x 1.92TB SAS SSDs

The $HOME file system has 4 OSTs and is set with a default stripe size of 1. 

The $SCRATCH file system has 8 OSTs and has Lustre Progressive File Layout (PFL) enabled which automatically restripes a file as the file grows. The thresholds for PFL restriping for $SCRATCH are

File sizestripe count
0-32M1 OST
32M-512M4 OST
512M+8 OST
   

Future Hardware:
An additional pool of NVME flash from DDN will be installed in early Spring 2022.  This flash will initially be deployed as a tier for "hot" data in scratch.  This subsystem will have an aggregate performance of 600GB/s and will have 3PB of capacity. As noted above this subsystem will transition to a relax POSIX namespace file system, communications on that timeline will be announced as updates are available.  

Taiga
Taiga is NCSA’s global file system which provides users with their $WORK area.  This file system is mounted across all Delta systems at /taiga (also /taiga/nsf/delta is bind mounted at /projects) and is accessible on both the Delta and Taiga DTN endpoints.  For NCSA & Illinois researchers, Taiga is also mounted on HAL and Radiant.  This storage subsystem has an aggregate performance of 140GB/s and 1PB of its capacity allocated to users of the Delta system. /taiga is a Lustre file system running DDN Exascaler.  

Hardware:
DDN SFA400NVXE (Quantity: 2), each unit contains

  • 4 x SS9012 enclosures
  • NVME for metadata and small files

DDN SFA18XE (Quantity: 1), each unit contains

  • 10 x SS9012 enclosures


File System

Quota

SnapshotsPurged

Key Features

$HOME

25GB. 400,000 files per user.No/TBANoArea for software, scripts, job files, etc. NOT intended as a source/destination for I/O during jobs

$WORK

500 GB. Up to 1-25 TB  by allocation requestNo/TBANoArea for shared data for a project, common data sets, software, results, etc.

$SCRATCH

1000 GB. Up to 1-100 TB by allocation request.NoYes; files older than 30-days (access time)Area for computation, largest allocations, where I/O from jobs should occur
$LOCAL_SCR
namespace mapped to /tmp
shared or dedicated depending on node usage by job(s), no quotas in placeNoAfter each jobLocally attached disk for fast small file IO. 

Top of Page

Accessing the System

Direct Access 

Direct access to the Delta login nodes is via ssh. The login nodes provide access to the CPU and GPU resources on Delta.

login node hostnameexample usage with ssh
dt-login01.delta.ncsa.illinois.edu
ssh -Y username@dt-login01.delta.ncsa.illinois.edu  
( -Y allows X11 forwarding from linux hosts )
dt-login02.delta.ncsa.illinois.edu
ssh -l username dt-login02.delta.ncsa.illinois.edu
( -l username alt. syntax for user@host )

login.delta.ncsa.illinois.edu

(round robin DNS name for the set of login nodes)

ssh username@login.delta.ncsa.illinois.edu

If needed, XSEDE users can lookup their local username at https://portal.xsede.org/group/xup/accounts. If you need to set a NCSA password for direct access please contact help@ncsa.illinois.edu for assistance.

Use of ssh-key pairs is disabled for general use. Please contact NCSA Help at help@ncsa.illinois.edu for key-pair use by Gateway allocations.

maintaining persistent sessions: tmux

tmux is available on the login nodes to maintain persistent sessions.  See the tmux man page for more information.  Use the targeted login hostnames (dt-login01 or dt-login02) to attach to the login node where you started tmux after making note of the hostname.  Avoid the round-robin hostname when using tmux.

XSEDE Single Sign-On Hub

XSEDE users can also access Delta via the XSEDE Single Sign-On Hub.

When reporting a problem to the help desk, please execute the gsissh command with the “-vvv” option and include the verbose output in your problem description.

Once on the XSEDE SSO hub:

$ gsissh delta

or

$ gsissh -p 222 delta.ncsa.xsede.org

The XSEDE SSO with gsi-ssh uses your XSEDE username for login. If that processes is not working, please try using your NCSA username which can be looked up at https://portal.xsede.org/group/xup/accounts (requires XSEDE login). 

Citizenship

You share Delta with thousands of other users, and what you do on the system affects others. Exercise good citizenship to ensure that your activity does not adversely impact the system and the research community with whom you share it. Here are some rules of thumb:

  • Don’t run production jobs on the login nodes (very short time debug tests are fine)
  • Don’t stress filesystems with known-harmful access patterns (many thousands of small files in a single directory)
  • submit an informative help-desk ticket including loaded modules (module list) and stdout/stderr messages

Managing and Transferring Files

File Systems

Each user has a home directory, $HOME,  located at /u/$USER.

For example, a user (with username auser) who has an allocated project with a local project serial code abcd will see the following entries in their $HOME and entries in the project and scratch file systems. To determine the mapping of XSEDE project to local project please use the accounts  command or the userinfo command.

Directory access changes can be made using the facl command. Contact help@ncsa.illinois.edu if you need assistance with enabling access to specific users and projects.

$ ls -ld /u/$USER
drwxrwx---+ 12 root root 12345 Feb 21 11:54 /u/$USER

$ ls -ld /projects/abcd
drwxrws---+  45 root   delta_abcd      4096 Feb 21 11:54 /projects/abcd

$ ls -l /projects/abcd
total 0
drwxrws---+ 2 auser delta_abcd 6 Feb 21 11:54 auser
drwxrws---+ 2 buser delta_abcd 6 Feb 21 11:54 buser
...

$ ls -ld /scratch/abcd
drwxrws---+  45 root   delta_abcd      4096 Feb 21 11:54 /scratch/abcd

$ ls -l /scratch/abcd
total 0
drwxrws---+ 2 auser delta_abcd 6 Feb 21 11:54 auser
drwxrws---+ 2 buser delta_abcd 6 Feb 21 11:54 buser
...

To avoid issues when file systems become unstable or non-responsive, we  recommend not putting symbolic links from $HOME to the project and scratch spaces. 


/tmp on compute nodes (job duration)

The high performance ssd storage (740GB cpu, 1.5TB gpu)  is available in /tmp (unique to each node and job–not a shared filesystem) and may contain less than the expected free space if the node(s) are running multiple jobs.  Codes that need to perform i/o to many small files should target /tmp on each node of the job and save results to other filesystems before the job ends.

Transferring your Files

To transfer files to and from the Delta system p

Sharing Files with Collaborators

Building Software

The Delta programming environment supports the GNU, AMD (AOCC), Intel and NVIDIA HPC compilers. Support for the HPE/Cray Programming environment is forthcoming. 

Modules provide access to the compiler + MPI environment. 

The default environment includes the GCC 11.2.0 compiler + OpenMPI with support for cuda and gdrcopy. nvcc is in the cuda module and is loaded by default.

AMD recommended compiler flags for GNU, AOCC, and Intel compilers for Milan processors can be found in the AMD Compiler Options Quick Reference Guide for Epyc 7xx3 processors

Serial

To build (compile and link) a serial program in Fortran, C, and C++:

gccaoccnvhpc
gfortran myprog.f
gcc myprog.c
g++ myprog.cc
flang myprog.f
clang myprog.c
clang myprog.cc
nvfortran myprog.f
nvc myprog.c
nvc++ myprog.cc

MPI

To build (compile and link) a MPI program in Fortran, C, and C++:

MPI Implementationmodulefiles for MPI/CompilerBuild Commands


OpenMPI
(Home Page / Documentation)

aocc/3.2.0 openmpi

gcc/11.2.0 openmpi

nvhpc/22.2 openmpi
Fortran 77:mpif77 myprog.f
Fortran 90:mpif90 myprog.f90
C:mpicc myprog.c
C++:mpic++ myprog.cc

OpenMP

To build an OpenMP program, use the -fopenmp / -mp option:

gccaoccnvhpc
gfortran -fopenmp myprog.f
gcc -fopenmp myprog.c
g++ -fopenmp myprog.cc
flang -fopenmp myprog.f
clang -fopenmp myprog.c
clang -fopenmp myprog.cc
nvfortran -mp myprog.f
nvc -mp myprog.c
nvc++ -mp myprog.cc

Hybrid MPI/OpenMP

To build an MPI/OpenMP hybrid program, use the -fopenmp / -mp option with the MPI compiling commands:

GCC
PGI/NVHPC
mpif77 -fopenmp myprog.f
mpif90 -fopenmp myprog.f90
mpicc -fopenmp myprog.c

mpic++ -fopenmp myprog.cc

mpif77 -mp myprog.f
mpif90 -mp myprog.f90
mpicc -mp myprog.c

mpic++ -mp myprog.cc
Cray xthi.c sample code

Document - XC Series User Application Placement Guide CLE6..0UP01 S-2496 | HPE Support

This code can be compiled using the methods show above.  The code appears in some of the batch script examples below to demonstrate core placement options.

xthi.c
#define _GNU_SOURCE

#include <stdio.h>
#include <unistd.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <sched.h>
#include <mpi.h>
#include <omp.h>

/* Borrowed from util-linux-2.13-pre7/schedutils/taskset.c */
static char *cpuset_to_cstr(cpu_set_t *mask, char *str)
{
  char *ptr = str;
  int i, j, entry_made = 0;
  for (i = 0; i < CPU_SETSIZE; i++) {
    if (CPU_ISSET(i, mask)) {
      int run = 0;
      entry_made = 1;
      for (j = i + 1; j < CPU_SETSIZE; j++) {
        if (CPU_ISSET(j, mask)) run++;
        else break;
      }
      if (!run)
        sprintf(ptr, "%d,", i);
      else if (run == 1) {
        sprintf(ptr, "%d,%d,", i, i + 1);
        i++;
      } else {
        sprintf(ptr, "%d-%d,", i, i + run);
        i += run;
      }
      while (*ptr != 0) ptr++;
    }
  }
  ptr -= entry_made;
  *ptr = 0;
  return(str);
}

int main(int argc, char *argv[])
{
  int rank, thread;
  cpu_set_t coremask;
  char clbuf[7 * CPU_SETSIZE], hnbuf[64];

  MPI_Init(&argc, &argv);
  MPI_Comm_rank(MPI_COMM_WORLD, &rank);
  memset(clbuf, 0, sizeof(clbuf));
  memset(hnbuf, 0, sizeof(hnbuf));
  (void)gethostname(hnbuf, sizeof(hnbuf));
  #pragma omp parallel private(thread, coremask, clbuf)
  {
    thread = omp_get_thread_num();
    (void)sched_getaffinity(0, sizeof(coremask), &coremask);
    cpuset_to_cstr(&coremask, clbuf);
    #pragma omp barrier
    printf("Hello from rank %d, thread %d, on %s. (core affinity = %s)\n",
            rank, thread, hnbuf, clbuf);
  }
  MPI_Finalize();
  return(0);
}

A version of xthi is also available from ORNL

% git clone https://github.com/olcf/XC30-Training/blob/master/affinity/Xthi.c

OpenACC

To build an OpenACC program, use the -acc option and the -mp option for multi-threaded:

NON-MULTITHREADED
MULTITHREADED
nvfortran -acc myprog.f
nvc -acc myprog.c
nvc++ -acc myprog.cc

nvfortran -acc -mp myprog.f
nvc -acc -mp myprog.c
nvc++ -acc -mp myprog.cc

Software

Delta software is provisioned, when possible, using spack to produce modules for use via the lmod based module system. Select NVIDIA NGC containers are made available (see the container section below) and are periodically updated from the NVIDIA NGC site.  An automated list of available software can be found on the XSEDE website.

modules/lmod 

Delta provides two sets of modules and a variety of compilers in each set.  The default environment is modtree/gpu which loads a recent version of gnu compilers , the openmpi implementation of MPI, and cuda.  The environment with gpu support will build binaries that run on both the gpu nodes (with cuda) and cpu nodes (potentially with warning messages because those nodes lack cuda drivers).  For situations where the same version of software is to be deployed on both gpu and cpu nodes but with separate builds, the modtree/cpu environment provides the same default compiler and MPI but without cuda.  Use module spider package_name to search for software in lmod and see the steps to load it for your environment.

module (lmod) commandexample

module list

(display the currently loaded modules)

$ module list

Currently Loaded Modules:
  1) gcc/11.2.0   3) openmpi/4.1.2   5) modtree/gpu
  2) ucx/1.11.2   4) cuda/11.6.1

module load <package_name>

(loads a package or metamodule such as modtree/gpu or netcdf-c)

$ module load modtree/cpu

Due to MODULEPATH changes, the following have been reloaded:
  1) gcc/11.2.0     2) openmpi/4.1.2     3) ucx/1.11.2

The following have been reloaded with a version change:
  1) modtree/gpu => modtree/cpu

module spider <package_name>

(finds modules and displays the ways to load them)


module -r spider "regular expression"

$ module spider openblas

----------------------------------------------------------------------------
  openblas: openblas/0.3.20
----------------------------------------------------------------------------

    You will need to load all module(s) on any one of the lines below before the
 "openblas/0.3.20" module is available to load.

      aocc/3.2.0
      gcc/11.2.0
 
    Help:
      OpenBLAS: An optimized BLAS library 
$ module -r spider "^r$"

----------------------------------------------------------------------------
  r:
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
     Versions:
        r/4.1.3
...

see also: User Guide for Lmod

Please open a service request ticket by sending email to help@ncsa.illinois.edu for help with software not currently installed on the Delta system. For single user or single project use cases the preference is for the user to use the spack software package manager to install software locally against the system spack installation as documented <here>. Delta support staff are available to provide limited assistance. For general installation requests the Delta project office will review requests for broad use and installation effort.

Python

On Delta, you may install your own python software stacks as needed.  The default gcc (latest version) programming environment for either modtree/cpu or modtree/gpu contains:

Anaconda3

Use python from the anaconda3 module if you need some of the modules provided by Anaconda in your python workflow.  See the "managing environments" section of the Conda getting started guide to learn how to customize Conda for your workflow and add extra python modules to your environment.

$ module load gcc anaconda3
$ which conda
/sw/spack/delta-2022-03/apps/anaconda3/2021.05-gcc-11.2.0-ievmolz/condabin/conda
$ module list

Currently Loaded Modules:
  1) modtree/gpu   3) gcc/11.2.0    5) ucx/1.11.2      7) anaconda3/2021.05
  2) default       4) cuda/11.6.1   6) openmpi/4.1.2

List of modules in anaconda3 

The current list of modules available in anaconda3 is shown via "pip3 list", including tensorflow, pytorch, etc:

anaconda3 modules: pip3 list
Package                            Version
---------------------------------- -------------------
absl-py                            1.0.0
alabaster                          0.7.12
anaconda-client                    1.7.2
anaconda-navigator                 2.0.3
anaconda-project                   0.9.1
anyio                              2.2.0
appdirs                            1.4.4
argh                               0.26.2
argon2-cffi                        20.1.0
asn1crypto                         1.4.0
astroid                            2.5
astropy                            4.2.1
astunparse                         1.6.3
async-generator                    1.10
atomicwrites                       1.4.0
attrs                              20.3.0
autopep8                           1.5.6
Babel                              2.9.0
backcall                           0.2.0
backports.functools-lru-cache      1.6.4
backports.shutil-get-terminal-size 1.0.0
backports.tempfile                 1.0
backports.weakref                  1.0.post1
beautifulsoup4                     4.9.3
bitarray                           2.1.0
bkcharts                           0.2
black                              19.10b0
bleach                             3.3.0
bokeh                              2.3.2
boto                               2.49.0
Bottleneck                         1.3.2
brotlipy                           0.7.0
cachetools                         5.0.0
certifi                            2020.12.5
cffi                               1.14.5
chardet                            4.0.0
click                              8.1.2
cloudpickle                        1.6.0
clyent                             1.2.2
colorama                           0.4.4
conda                              4.10.1
conda-build                        3.21.4
conda-content-trust                0+unknown
conda-package-handling             1.7.3
conda-repo-cli                     1.0.4
conda-token                        0.3.0
conda-verify                       3.4.2
contextlib2                        0.6.0.post1
cryptography                       3.4.7
cycler                             0.10.0
Cython                             0.29.23
cytoolz                            0.11.0
dask                               2021.4.0
decorator                          5.0.6
defusedxml                         0.7.1
diff-match-patch                   20200713
distributed                        2021.4.1
docutils                           0.17.1
entrypoints                        0.3
et-xmlfile                         1.0.1
fastcache                          1.1.0
filelock                           3.0.12
flake8                             3.9.0
Flask                              1.1.2
flatbuffers                        2.0
fsspec                             0.9.0
future                             0.18.2
gast                               0.5.3
gevent                             21.1.2
glob2                              0.7
globus-cli                         3.4.0
globus-sdk                         3.5.0
gmpy2                              2.0.8
google-auth                        2.6.6
google-auth-oauthlib               0.4.6
google-pasta                       0.2.0
greenlet                           1.0.0
grpcio                             1.46.0
h5py                               2.10.0
HeapDict                           1.0.1
html5lib                           1.1
idna                               2.10
imageio                            2.9.0
imagesize                          1.2.0
importlib-metadata                 4.11.3
iniconfig                          1.1.1
intervaltree                       3.1.0
ipykernel                          5.3.4
ipython                            7.22.0
ipython-genutils                   0.2.0
ipywidgets                         7.6.3
isort                              5.8.0
itsdangerous                       1.1.0
jax                                0.3.9
jdcal                              1.4.1
jedi                               0.17.2
jeepney                            0.6.0
Jinja2                             2.11.3
jmespath                           0.10.0
joblib                             1.0.1
json5                              0.9.5
jsonschema                         3.2.0
jupyter                            1.0.0
jupyter-client                     6.1.12
jupyter-console                    6.4.0
jupyter-core                       4.7.1
jupyter-packaging                  0.7.12
jupyter-server                     1.4.1
jupyterlab                         3.0.14
jupyterlab-pygments                0.1.2
jupyterlab-server                  2.4.0
jupyterlab-widgets                 1.0.0
keras                              2.8.0
Keras-Preprocessing                1.1.2
keyring                            22.3.0
kiwisolver                         1.3.1
lazy-object-proxy                  1.6.0
libarchive-c                       2.9
libclang                           14.0.1
llvmlite                           0.36.0
locket                             0.2.1
lxml                               4.6.3
Markdown                           3.3.6
MarkupSafe                         1.1.1
matplotlib                         3.3.4
mccabe                             0.6.1
mistune                            0.8.4
mkl-fft                            1.3.0
mkl-random                         1.2.1
mkl-service                        2.3.0
mock                               4.0.3
more-itertools                     8.7.0
mpmath                             1.2.1
msgpack                            1.0.2
multipledispatch                   0.6.0
mypy-extensions                    0.4.3
navigator-updater                  0.2.1
nbclassic                          0.2.6
nbclient                           0.5.3
nbconvert                          6.0.7
nbformat                           5.1.3
nest-asyncio                       1.5.1
networkx                           2.5
nltk                               3.6.1
nose                               1.3.7
notebook                           6.3.0
numba                              0.53.1
numexpr                            2.7.3
numpy                              1.20.1
numpydoc                           1.1.0
oauthlib                           3.2.0
olefile                            0.46
openpyxl                           3.0.7
opt-einsum                         3.3.0
packaging                          20.9
pandas                             1.2.4
pandocfilters                      1.4.3
parso                              0.7.0
partd                              1.2.0
path                               15.1.2
pathlib2                           2.3.5
pathspec                           0.7.0
patsy                              0.5.1
pep8                               1.7.1
pexpect                            4.8.0
pickleshare                        0.7.5
Pillow                             8.2.0
pip                                21.0.1
pkginfo                            1.7.0
pluggy                             0.13.1
ply                                3.11
prometheus-client                  0.10.1
prompt-toolkit                     3.0.17
protobuf                           3.20.1
psutil                             5.8.0
ptyprocess                         0.7.0
py                                 1.10.0
pyasn1                             0.4.8
pyasn1-modules                     0.2.8
pycodestyle                        2.6.0
pycosat                            0.6.3
pycparser                          2.20
pycurl                             7.43.0.6
pydocstyle                         6.0.0
pyerfa                             1.7.3
pyflakes                           2.2.0
Pygments                           2.8.1
PyJWT                              2.3.0
pylint                             2.7.4
pyls-black                         0.4.6
pyls-spyder                        0.3.2
pyodbc                             4.0.0-unsupported
pyOpenSSL                          20.0.1
pyparsing                          2.4.7
pyrsistent                         0.17.3
PySocks                            1.7.1
pytest                             6.2.3
python-dateutil                    2.8.1
python-jsonrpc-server              0.4.0
python-language-server             0.36.2
pytz                               2021.1
PyWavelets                         1.1.1
pyxdg                              0.27
PyYAML                             5.4.1
pyzmq                              20.0.0
QDarkStyle                         2.8.1
QtAwesome                          1.0.2
qtconsole                          5.0.3
QtPy                               1.9.0
regex                              2021.4.4
requests                           2.25.1
requests-oauthlib                  1.3.1
rope                               0.18.0
rsa                                4.8
Rtree                              0.9.7
ruamel-yaml-conda                  0.15.100
scikit-image                       0.18.1
scikit-learn                       0.24.1
scipy                              1.6.2
seaborn                            0.11.1
SecretStorage                      3.3.1
Send2Trash                         1.5.0
setuptools                         52.0.0.post20210125
simplegeneric                      0.8.1
singledispatch                     0.0.0
sip                                4.19.13
six                                1.15.0
sniffio                            1.2.0
snowballstemmer                    2.1.0
sortedcollections                  2.1.0
sortedcontainers                   2.3.0
soupsieve                          2.2.1
Sphinx                             4.0.1
sphinxcontrib-applehelp            1.0.2
sphinxcontrib-devhelp              1.0.2
sphinxcontrib-htmlhelp             1.0.3
sphinxcontrib-jsmath               1.0.1
sphinxcontrib-qthelp               1.0.3
sphinxcontrib-serializinghtml      1.1.4
sphinxcontrib-websupport           1.2.4
spyder                             4.2.5
spyder-kernels                     1.10.2
SQLAlchemy                         1.4.15
statsmodels                        0.12.2
sympy                              1.8
tables                             3.6.1
tblib                              1.7.0
tensorboard                        2.8.0
tensorboard-data-server            0.6.1
tensorboard-plugin-wit             1.8.1
tensorflow                         2.8.0
tensorflow-io-gcs-filesystem       0.25.0
termcolor                          1.1.0
terminado                          0.9.4
testpath                           0.4.4
textdistance                       4.2.1
tf-estimator-nightly               2.8.0.dev2021122109
threadpoolctl                      2.1.0
three-merge                        0.1.1
tifffile                           2020.10.1
toml                               0.10.2
toolz                              0.11.1
torch                              1.11.0
tornado                            6.1
tqdm                               4.59.0
traitlets                          5.0.5
typed-ast                          1.4.2
typing-extensions                  4.1.1
ujson                              4.0.2
unicodecsv                         0.14.1
urllib3                            1.26.4
watchdog                           1.0.2
wcwidth                            0.2.5
webencodings                       0.5.1
Werkzeug                           1.0.1
wheel                              0.36.2
widgetsnbextension                 3.5.1
wrapt                              1.12.1
wurlitzer                          2.1.0
xlrd                               2.0.1
XlsxWriter                         1.3.8
xlwt                               1.3.0
xmltodict                          0.12.0
yapf                               0.31.0
zict                               2.0.0
zipp                               3.4.1
zope.event                         4.5.0
zope.interface                     5.3.0

Jupyter notebooks

The jupyter notebook executables are in your $PATH after loading the anaconda3 module.  Don't run jupyter on the shared login nodes.  Instead, follow these steps to attach a jupyter notebook running on a compute node to your local web browser:

1) Start a jupyter job via srun and note the hostname (you pick the port number for --port).

srun jupyter
$ srun --account=bbka-delta-cpu --partition=cpu \
  --time=00:30:00 \
  jupyter-notebook --no-browser \
  --port=8991 --ip=0.0.0.0
...
    Or copy and paste one of these URLs:
        http://cn093.delta.internal.ncsa.edu:8891/?token=e5b500e5aef67b1471ed1842b2676e0c0ae4b5652656feea
     or http://127.0.0.1:8991/?token=e5b500e5aef67b1471ed1842b2676e0c0ae4b5652656feea

Use the 2nd URL in step 3.  Note the internal hostname in the cluster for step 2.

2) From your local desktop or laptop create an ssh tunnel to the compute node via a login node of delta.
ssh tunnel for jupyter
$ ssh -l my_delta_username \
  -L 127.0.0.1:8991:cn093.delta.internal.ncsa.edu:8991 \
  dt-login.delta.ncsa.illinois.edu

Authenticate with your login and 2-factor as usual.

3) Paste the 2nd URL (containing 127.0.0.1 and the token string) from step 1 into your browser and you will be connected to the jupyter instance running on your compute node of Delta.

Python (a recent or latest version)

If you do not need all of the extra modules provided by Anaconda, use the basic python installation under the gcc module.  You can add modules via "pip3 install --user <modulename>",  setup virtual environments, and customize as needed for your workflow but starting from a smaller installed base of python than Anaconda.

$ module load gcc python
$ which python
/sw/spack/delta-2022-03/apps/python/3.10.4-gcc-11.2.0-3cjjp6w/bin/python
$ module list

Currently Loaded Modules:
  1) modtree/gpu   3) gcc/11.2.0    5) ucx/1.11.2      7) python/3.10.4
  2) default       4) cuda/11.6.1   6) openmpi/4.1.2

This is the list of modules available in the python from "pip3 list":

python modules: pip3 list
Package            Version
------------------ ---------
certifi            2021.10.8
cffi               1.15.0
charset-normalizer 2.0.12
click              8.1.2
cryptography       36.0.2
globus-cli         3.4.0
globus-sdk         3.5.0
idna               3.3
jmespath           0.10.0
pip                22.0.4
pycparser          2.21
PyJWT              2.3.0
requests           2.27.1
setuptools         58.1.0
urllib3            1.26.9


Launching Applications

  • Launching One Serial Application
  • Launching One Multi-Threaded Application
  • Launching One MPI Application
  • Launching One Hybrid (MPI+Threads) Application
  • More Than One Serial Application in the Same Job
  • MPI Applications One at a Time
  • More than One MPI Application Running Concurrently
  • More than One OpenMP Application Running Concurrently

Running Jobs

Job Accounting

The charge unit for Delta is the Service Unit (SU). This corresponds to the equivalent use of one compute core utilizing less than or equal to 2G of memory for one hour, or 1 GPU or fractional GPU using less than the corresponding amount of memory or cores for 1 hour (see table below). Keep in mind that your charges are based on the resources that are reserved for your job and don't necessarily reflect how the resources are used. Charges are based on either the number of cores or the fraction of the memory requested, whichever is larger. The minimum charge for any job is 1 SU.

Node Type

Service Unit Equivalence
CoresGPU FractionHost Memory
CPU Node1N/A2 GB

GPU Node

Quad A10021/7 A1008 GB
Quad A40161 A4064 GB
8-way A10021/7 A10032 GB
8-way MI100161 MI100256 GB

Please note that a weighting factor will discount the charge for the reduced-precision A40 nodes, as well as the novel AMD MI100 based node - this will be documented through the XSEDE SU converter.

Local Account Charging 

Use the accounts command to list the accounts available for charging. CPU and GPU resources will have individual charge names.  For example in the following, abcd-delta-cpu and abcd-delta-gpu  are available for user gbauer to use for the CPU and GPU resources. 

$ accounts
available Slurm accounts for user gbauer:
abcd-delta-cpu  my_prefix  my project
abcd-delta-gpu  my_prefix  my project

Job Accounting Considerations

  • A node-exclusive job that runs on a compute node for one hour will be charged 128 SUs (128 cores x 1 hour)
  • A node-exclusive job that runs on a 4-way GPU node for one hour will be charge 4 SUs (4 GPU x 1 hour)
  • A node-exclusive job that runs on a 8-way GPU node for one hour will be charge 8 SUs (8 GPU x 1 hour)
  • A shared job that runs on an A100 node will be charged for the fractional usage of the A100 (eg, using 1/7 of an A100 for one hour will be 1/7 GPU x 1 hour, or 1/7 SU per hour, except the first hour will be 1 SU (minimum job charge).

Accessing the Compute Nodes

Delta implements the Slurm batch environment to manage access to the compute nodes.  Use the Slurm commands to run batch jobs or for interactive access to compute nodes.  See: https://slurm.schedmd.com/quickstart.html for an introduction to Slurm. There are two ways to access compute nodes on Delta.

Batch jobs can be used to access compute nodes. Slurm provides a convenient direct way to submit batch jobs.  See https://slurm.schedmd.com/heterogeneous_jobs.html#submitting for details.

Sample Slurm batch job scripts are provided in the Job Scripts section below.

Direct ssh access to a compute node in a running batch job from a dt-loginNN node is enabled, once the job has started.

$ squeue --job jobid
             JOBID PARTITION     NAME     USER ST       TIME  NODES NODELIST(REASON)
             12345       cpu     bash   gbauer  R       0:17      1 cn001

Then in a terminal session:

$ ssh cn001
cn001.delta.internal.ncsa.edu (172.28.22.64)
  OS: RedHat 8.4   HW: HPE   CPU: 128x    RAM: 252 GB
  Site: mgmt  Role: compute
$ 

Scheduler

For information, consult:

https://slurm.schedmd.com/quickstart.html

slurm quick reference guide

Partitions (Queues)

Table. Delta Production Partitions/Queues

Partition/Queue

Node Type

Max Nodes per Job

Max Duration

Max Jobs in Queue*

Charge Factor

cpu

CPU

TBD

24 hr / 48 hr

TDB

1.0

cpu-interactiveCPUTBD30 minTBD2.0
gpuA100x4quad A100TBD24 hr / 48 hr

TDB

1.0

gpuA100x4-interactivequad-A100TBD30 minTBD2.0
gpuA100x8octa-A100TBD24 hr / 48 hr

TDB

1.0

gpuA100x8-interactiveocta-A100TBD30 minTBD2.0
gpuA40x4quad-A40TBD24 hr / 48 hrTBD0.6
gpuA40x4-interactivequad-A40TBD30 minTBD1.2
gpuMI100x8octa-MI100TBD24 hr / 48 hrTBD

1.0

gpuMI100x8-interactiveocta-MI100TBD30 minTBD2.0

sview view of slurm partitions

Node Policies

Node-sharing is the default for jobs. Node-exclusive mode can be obtained by specifying all the consumable resources for that node type or adding the following Slurm options:

--exclusive --mem=0

GPU NVIDIA MIG (GPU slicing) for the A100 will be supported at a future date.

Pre-emptive jobs will be supported at a future date.

Interactive Sessions

Interactive sessions can be implemented in several ways depending on what is needed.

To start up a bash shell terminal on a cpu or gpu node

  • single core with 1GB of memory, with one task on a cpu node
srun --account=account_name --partition=cpu \
  --nodes=1 --tasks=1 --tasks-per-node=1 \
  --cpus-per-task=1 --mem=1g \
  --pty bash
  • single core with 20GB of memory, with one task on a A40 gpu node
srun --account=account_name --partition=gpuA40x4 \
  --nodes=1 --gpus-per-node=1 --tasks=1 \
  --tasks-per-node=1 --cpus-per-task=1 --mem=20g \
  --pty bash

interactive jobs: a case for mpirun

Since interactive jobs are already a child process of srun, one cannot srun applications from within them.  Use mpirun to launch mpi jobs from within an interactive job.  Within standard batch jobs submitted via sbatch, use srun to launch MPI codes.

Interactive X11 Support

To run an X11 based application on a compute node in an interactive session, the use of the --x11 switch with srun is needed. For example, to run a single core job that uses 1g of memory with X11 (in this case an xterm) do the following:

srun -A abcd-delta-cpu  --partition=cpu \
  --nodes=1 --tasks=1 --tasks-per-node=1 \ 
  --cpus-per-task=1 --mem=1g \
  --x11  xterm


Sample Job Scripts

  • Serial jobs

    serial example script
    $ cat job.slurm
    #!/bin/bash
    #SBATCH --mem=16g
    #SBATCH --nodes=1
    #SBATCH --ntasks-per-node=1
    #SBATCH --cpus-per-task=1    # <- match to OMP_NUM_THREADS
    #SBATCH --partition=cpu      # <- or one of: gpuA100x4 gpuA40x4 gpuA100x8 gpuMI100x8
    #SBATCH --account=account_name
    #SBATCH --job-name=myjobtest
    #SBATCH --time=00:10:00      # hh:mm:ss for the job
    ### GPU options ###
    ##SBATCH --gpus-per-node=2
    ##SBATCH --gpu-bind=none     # <- or closest
    ##SBATCH --mail-user=you@yourinstitution.edu 
    ##SBATCH --mail-type="BEGIN,END" See sbatch or srun man pages for more email options  
    
    
    module purge # drop modules and explicitly load the ones needed
                 # (good job metadata and reproducibility)
    module load python  # ... or any appropriate modules
    module list  # job documentation and metadata
    echo "job is starting on `hostname`"
    srun python3 myprog.py
  • MPI  

    mpi example script
    #!/bin/bash
    #SBATCH --mem=16g
    #SBATCH --nodes=2
    #SBATCH --ntasks-per-node=32
    #SBATCH --cpus-per-task=1    # <- match to OMP_NUM_THREADS
    #SBATCH --partition=cpu      # <- or one of: gpuA100x4 gpuA40x4 gpuA100x8 gpuMI100x8
    #SBATCH --account=account_name
    #SBATCH --job-name=mympi
    #SBATCH --time=00:10:00      # hh:mm:ss for the job
    ### GPU options ###
    ##SBATCH --gpus-per-node=2
    ##SBATCH --gpu-bind=none     # <- or closest ##SBATCH --mail-user=you@yourinstitution.edu 
    ##SBATCH --mail-type="BEGIN,END" See sbatch or srun man pages for more email options 
    
    module purge # drop modules and explicitly load the ones needed
                 # (good job metadata and reproducibility)
    module load gcc/11.2.0 openmpi  # ... or any appropriate modules
    module list  # job documentation and metadata
    echo "job is starting on `hostname`"
    srun osu_reduce
  • OpenMP   

    openmp example script
    #!/bin/bash
    #SBATCH --mem=16g
    #SBATCH --nodes=1
    #SBATCH --ntasks-per-node=1
    #SBATCH --cpus-per-task=32   # <- match to OMP_NUM_THREADS
    #SBATCH --partition=cpu      # <- or one of: gpuA100x4 gpuA40x4 gpuA100x8 gpuMI100x8
    #SBATCH --account=account_name
    #SBATCH --job-name=myopenmp
    #SBATCH --time=00:10:00      # hh:mm:ss for the job
    ### GPU options ###
    ##SBATCH --gpus-per-node=2
    ##SBATCH --gpu-bind=none     # <- or closest
    ##SBATCH --mail-user=you@yourinstitution.edu 
    ##SBATCH --mail-type="BEGIN,END" See sbatch or srun man pages for more email options 
    
    module purge # drop modules and explicitly load the ones needed
                 # (good job metadata and reproducibility)
    module load gcc/11.2.0  # ... or any appropriate modules
    module list  # job documentation and metadata
    echo "job is starting on `hostname`"
    export OMP_NUM_THREADS=32
    srun stream_gcc
  • Hybrid (MPI + OpenMP or MPI+X)

    mpi+x example script
    #!/bin/bash
    #SBATCH --mem=16g
    #SBATCH --nodes=2
    #SBATCH --ntasks-per-node=4
    #SBATCH --cpus-per-task=4    # <- match to OMP_NUM_THREADS
    #SBATCH --partition=cpu      # <- or one of: gpuA100x4 gpuA40x4 gpuA100x8 gpuMI100x8
    #SBATCH --account=account_name
    #SBATCH --job-name=mympi+x
    #SBATCH --time=00:10:00      # hh:mm:ss for the job
    ### GPU options ###
    ##SBATCH --gpus-per-node=2
    ##SBATCH --gpu-bind=none     # <- or closest
    ##SBATCH --mail-user=you@yourinstitution.edu 
    ##SBATCH --mail-type="BEGIN,END" See sbatch or srun man pages for more email options 
    
    module purge # drop modules and explicitly load the ones needed
                 # (good job metadata and reproducibility)
    module load gcc/11.2.0 openmpi # ... or any appropriate modules
    module list  # job documentation and metadata
    echo "job is starting on `hostname`"
    export OMP_NUM_THREADS=4
    srun xthi
  • Parametric / Array / HTC jobs

Job Management 

Batch jobs are submitted through a job script  (as in the examples above) using the sbatch command. Job scripts generally start with a series of SLURM directives that describe requirements of the job such as number of nodes, wall time required, etc… to the batch system/scheduler (SLURM directives can also be specified as options on the sbatch command line; command line options take precedence over those in the script). The rest of the batch script consists of user commands.

The syntax for sbatch is:

sbatch [list of sbatch options] script_name

Refer to the sbatch man page for detailed information on the options.

squeue/scontrol/sinfo

Commands that display batch job and partition information .

SLURM EXAMPLE COMMANDDESCRIPTION
squeue -aList the status of all jobs on the system.
squeue -u $USERList the status of all your jobs in the batch system.
squeue -j JobIDList nodes allocated to a running job in addition to basic information..
scontrol show job JobIDList detailed information on a particular job.
sinfo -aList summary information on all the partition.

See the manual (man) pages for other available options.


Useful Batch Job Environment Variables

DESCRIPTION

SLURM ENVIRONMENT VARIABLE

DETAIL DESCRIPTION

JobID$SLURM_JOB_IDJob identifier assigned to the job
Job Submission Directory$SLURM_SUBMIT_DIRBy default, jobs start in the directory that the job was submitted from. So the "cd $SLURM_SUBMIT_DIR" command is not needed.
Machine(node) list$SLURM_NODELISTvariable name that contains the list of nodes assigned to the batch job
Array JobID$SLURM_ARRAY_JOB_ID
$SLURM_ARRAY_TASK_ID
each member of a job array is assigned a unique identifier

See the sbatch man page for additional environment variables available.

srun

The srun command initiates an interactive job on the compute nodes.

For example, the following command:

srun -A account_name --time=00:30:00 --nodes=1 --ntasks-per-node=64 --pty /bin/bash

will run an interactive job in the default queue with a wall clock limit of 30 minutes, using one node and 16 cores per node. You can also use other sbatch options such as those documented above.

After you enter the command, you will have to wait for SLURM to start the job. As with any job, your interactive job will wait in the queue until the specified number of nodes is available. If you specify a small number of nodes for smaller amounts of time, the wait should be shorter because your job will backfill among larger jobs. You will see something like this:

srun: job 123456 queued and waiting for resources

Once the job starts, you will see:

srun: job 123456 has been allocated resources

and will be presented with an interactive shell prompt on the launch node. At this point, you can use the appropriate command to start your program.

When you are done with your work, you can use the exit command to end the job.

scancel

The scancel command deletes a queued job or terminates a running job.

  • scancel JobID deletes/terminates a job.

Refunds

Refunds are considered, when appropriate, for jobs that failed due to circumstances beyond user control.

XSEDE users and project that wish to request a refund should see the XSEDE Refund Policy section located here.

Other allocated users and projects wishing to request a refund should email help@ncsa.illinois.edu. Please include the batch job ids and the standard error and output files produced by the job(s). 

Visualization

Delta A40 nodes support NVIDIA raytracing hardware.

  • describe visualization capabilities & software.
  • how to establish VNC/DVC/remote desktop

Containers

Singularity

Container support on Delta is provided by Singularity. 

Docker images can be converted to Singularity sif format via the singularity pull  command. Commands can be run from within a container using singularity run command.

If you encounter quota issues with Singularity caching in ~/.singularity , the environment variable SINGULARITY_CACHEDIR can be used to use a different location such as a scratch space. 

NVIDIA NGC Containers

Delta provides NVIDIA NGC Docker containers that we have pre-built with Singularity.  Look for the latest binary containers in /sw/external/NGC/ The containers are used as shown in the sample scripts below:

PyTorch example script
#!/bin/bash
#SBATCH --mem=16g
#SBATCH --nodes=1
#SBATCH --ntasks-per-node=1
#SBATCH --cpus-per-task=1     # <- match to OMP_NUM_THREADS
#SBATCH --partition=gpuA100x4 # <- one of: gpuA100x4 gpuA40x4 gpuA100x8 gpuMI100x8
##SBATCH --account=account_name
#SBATCH --job-name=pytorchNGC
### GPU options ###
#SBATCH --gpus-per-node=1
#SBATCH --gpu-bind=none     # <- or closest
 
module purge # drop modules and explicitly load the ones needed
             # (good job metadata and reproducibility)

module list  # job documentation and metadata

echo "job is starting on `hostname`"

# run the container binary with arguments: python3 <program.py>
/sw/external/NGC/pytorch:22.02-py3 python3 tensor_gpu.py
Tensorflow example script
#!/bin/bash
#SBATCH --mem=16g
#SBATCH --nodes=1
#SBATCH --ntasks-per-node=1
#SBATCH --cpus-per-task=1     # <- match to OMP_NUM_THREADS
#SBATCH --partition=gpuA100x4 # <- one of: gpuA100x4 gpuA40x4 gpuA100x8 gpuMI100x8
##SBATCH --account=account_name
#SBATCH --job-name=tfNGC
### GPU options ###
#SBATCH --gpus-per-node=2
#SBATCH --gpu-bind=none     # <- or closest
 
module purge # drop modules and explicitly load the ones needed
             # (good job metadata and reproducibility)

module list  # job documentation and metadata

echo "job is starting on `hostname`"

# run the container binary with arguments: python3 <program.py>
/sw/external/NGC/tensorflow:22.02-tf2-py3 python3 tf_gpu.py

Container list (as of March, 2022)

catalog.txt
caffe:20.03-py3
caffe2:18.08-py3
cntk:18.08-py3 , Microsoft Cognitive Toolkit
digits:21.09-tensorflow-py3
matlab:r2021b
mxnet:21.09-py3
pytorch:22.02-py3
tensorflow:22.02-tf1-py3
tensorflow:22.02-tf2-py3
tensorrt:22.02-py3
theano:18.08
torch:18.08-py2

see also: https://catalog.ngc.nvidia.com/orgs/nvidia/containers

Other Containers

Extreme-scale Scientific Software Stack (E4S)

The E4S container with GPU (cuda and rocm) support is provided for users of specific ECP packages made available by the E4S project (https://e4s-project.github.io/). The singularity image is available as :

/sw/external/E4S/e4s-gpu-x86_64.sif
To use E4S with NVIDIA GPUs
$ srun --account=account_name --partition=gpuA100-interactive \
  --nodes=1 --gpus-per-node=1 --tasks=1 --tasks-per-node=1 \ 
  --cpus-per-task=1 --mem=20g \
  --pty bash
$ singularity exec --cleanenv /sw/external/E4S/e4s-gpu-x86_64.sif \
  /bin/bash --rcfile /etc/bash.bashrc

The spack package inside of the image will interact with a local spack installation. If  ~/.spack directory exists, it might need to be renamed. 

More information can be found at https://e4s-project.github.io/download.html

Protected Data (N/A)

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Help

For assistance with the use of Delta

Acknowledge

To acknowledge the NCSA Delta system in particular, please include the following

This research is part of the Delta research computing project, which is supported by the National Science Foundation (award OCI 2005572), and the State of Illinois. Delta is a joint effort of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and its National Center for Supercomputing Applications.

To include acknowledgement of XSEDE contributions to a publication or presentation please see https://portal.xsede.org/acknowledge and https://www.xsede.org/for-users/acknowledgement.

References

Supporting documentation resources:

https://www.rcac.purdue.edu/knowledge/anvil

https://nero-docs.stanford.edu/jupyter-slurm.html


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