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sinfo(1)			Slurm Commands			      sinfo(1)

NAME
       sinfo - View information	about Slurm nodes and partitions.

SYNOPSIS
       sinfo [OPTIONS...]

DESCRIPTION
       sinfo  is used to view partition	and node information for a system run-
       ning Slurm.

OPTIONS
       -a, --all
	      Display information about	all partitions.	This  causes  informa-
	      tion  to	be  displayed  about partitions	that are configured as
	      hidden and partitions that are unavailable to the	user's group.

       -M, --clusters=<string>
	      Clusters to issue	commands to. Multiple  cluster	names  may  be
	      comma  separated.	  A  value  of	'all' will query all clusters.
	      Note that	the slurmdbd must be up	for this option	to work	 prop-
	      erly, unless running in a	federation with	either FederationPara-
	      meters=fed_display  configured  or  the --federation option set.
	      This option implicitly sets the --local option.

       -d, --dead
	      Only show	nodes that have	unexpectedly stopped responding.  This
	      may  not	show  nodes in a POWERED_DOWN state since they are ex-
	      pected to	be down.

       -e, --exact
	      If set, do not group node	information on multiple	 nodes	unless
	      their configurations to be reported are identical. Otherwise cpu
	      count, memory size, and disk space for nodes will	be listed with
	      the minimum value	followed by a "+" for nodes with the same par-
	      tition and state (e.g. "250+").

       --federation
	      Show all partitions from the federation if a member of one.

       -F, --future
	      Report nodes in FUTURE state.

       -o, --format=<output_format>
	      Specify  the  information	 to be displayed using an sinfo	format
	      string.  If the command is executed in a federated cluster envi-
	      ronment and information about more than one  cluster  is	to  be
	      displayed	 and the -h, --noheader	option is used,	then the clus-
	      ter name will be displayed before	 the  default  output  formats
	      shown  below.   Format  strings transparently used by sinfo when
	      running with various options are:

	      default	     "%#P %.5a %.10l %.6D %.6t %N"

	      --summarize    "%#P %.5a %.10l %.16F  %N"

	      --long	     "%#P %.5a %.10l %.10s %.4r	%.8h %.10g %.6D	 %.11T
			     %.11i %N"

	      --Node	     "%#N %.6D %#P %6t"

	      --long --Node  "%#N %.6D %#P %.11T %.4c %.8z %.6m	%.8d %.6w %.8f
			     %20E"

	      --list-reasons "%20E %9u %19H %N"

	      --long --list-reasons
			     "%20E %12U	%19H %6t %N"

	      In the above format strings, the use of "#" represents the maxi-
	      mum  length of any partition name	or node	list to	be printed.  A
	      pass is made over	the records to be  printed  to	establish  the
	      size  in	order to align the sinfo output, then a	second pass is
	      made over	the records to print  them.   Note  that  the  literal
	      character	 "#" itself is not a valid field length	specification,
	      but is only used to document this	behavior.

	      The format of each field is "%[[.]size]type[suffix]"

		 size	Minimum	field size. If no size is specified,  whatever
			is needed to print the information will	be used.

		 .	Indicates  the	output	should	be right justified and
			size must be specified.	 By  default  output  is  left
			justified.

		 suffix	Arbitrary string to append to the end of the field.

       Valid type specifications include:

	      %all  Print  all fields available	for this data type with	a ver-
		    tical bar separating each field.

	      %a    State/availability of a partition.

	      %A    Number of nodes by state in	the  format  "allocated/idle".
		    Do not use this with a node	state option ("%t" or "%T") or
		    the	 different  node  states  will	be  placed on separate
		    lines.

	      %b    Features currently active on the nodes, also see %f.

	      %B    The	max number of CPUs per node available to jobs  in  the
		    partition.

	      %c    Number of CPUs per node.

	      %C    Number   of	  CPUs	 by   state   in   the	format	"allo-
		    cated/idle/other/total". Do	not use	this with a node state
		    option ("%t" or "%T") or the different node	states will be
		    placed on separate lines.

	      %d    Size of temporary disk space per node in mebibytes.

	      %D    Number of nodes.

	      %e    The	total memory, in MiB, currently	free on	 the  node  as
		    reported  by  the  OS. This	value is for informational use
		    only and is	not used for scheduling.

	      %E    The	reason a node is unavailable (down, drained, or	drain-
		    ing	states).

	      %f    Features available the nodes, also see %b.

	      %F    Number  of	nodes  by   state   in	 the   format	"allo-
		    cated/idle/other/total".  Note  the	use of this format op-
		    tion with a	node state format option ("%t" or  "%T")  will
		    result  in	the different node states being	be reported on
		    separate lines.

	      %g    Groups which may use the nodes.

	      %G    Generic resources (gres) associated	with the nodes.

	      %h    Print the OverSubscribe setting for	the partition.

	      %H    Print the timestamp	of the reason a	node is	unavailable.

	      %i    If a node is in an advanced	reservation print the name  of
		    that reservation.

	      %I    Partition job priority weighting factor.

	      %l    Maximum  time  for	any job	in the format "days-hours:min-
		    utes:seconds"

	      %L    Default time for any job in	 the  format  "days-hours:min-
		    utes:seconds"

	      %m    Size of memory per node in mebibytes.

	      %M    PreemptionMode.

	      %n    List of node hostnames.

	      %N    List of node names.

	      %o    List of node communication addresses.

	      %O    CPU	load of	a node as reported by the OS.

	      %p    Partition scheduling tier priority.

	      %P    Partition  name followed by	"*" for	the default partition,
		    also see %R.

	      %r    Only user root may initiate	jobs, "yes" or "no".

	      %R    Partition name, also see %P.

	      %s    Maximum job	size in	nodes.

	      %S    Allowed allocating nodes.

	      %t    State of nodes, compact form.

	      %T    State of nodes, extended form.

	      %u    Print the user name	of who set the reason a	 node  is  un-
		    available.

	      %U    Print  the	user name and uid of who set the reason	a node
		    is unavailable.

	      %v    Print the running slurmd version. If reporting on  a  node
		    list, print	the version of the first node in the list.

	      %V    Print the cluster name if running in a federation.

	      %w    Scheduling weight of the nodes.

	      %X    Number of sockets per node.

	      %Y    Number of cores per	socket.

	      %Z    Number of threads per core.

	      %z    Extended  processor	information: number of sockets,	cores,
		    threads (S:C:T) per	node.

       -O, --Format=<output_format>
	      Specify the information to be displayed.	Also see the -o	 <out-
	      put_format>,  --format=<output_format>  option  (which  supports
	      greater flexibility in formatting, but does not  support	access
	      to  all fields because we	ran out	of letters).  Requests a comma
	      separated	list of	job information	to be displayed.

	      The format of each field is "type[:[.][size][suffix]]"

		 size	The maximum field size.	 If no size is	specified,  20
			characters will	be allocated to	print the information.

		 .	Indicates  the	output	should	be right justified and
			size must be specified.	 By default,  output  is  left
			justified.

		 suffix	Arbitrary string to append to the end of the field.

       Valid type specifications include:

	      All    Print all fields available	in the -o format for this data
		     type with a vertical bar separating each field.

	      AllocMem
		     Prints the	amount of allocated memory on a	node.

	      AllocNodes
		     Allowed allocating	nodes.

	      Available
		     State/availability	of a partition.

	      Cluster
		     Print the cluster name if running in a federation.

	      Comment
		     Comment. (Arbitrary descriptive string)

	      Cores  Number of cores per socket.

	      CPUs   Number of CPUs per	node.

	      CPUsLoad
		     CPU load of a node	as reported by the OS.

	      CPUsState
		     Number   of   CPUs	  by   state   in  the	format	"allo-
		     cated/idle/other/total". Do not  use  this	 with  a  node
		     state  option ("%t" or "%T") or the different node	states
		     will be placed on separate	lines.

	      DefaultTime
		     Default time for any job in the  format  "days-hours:min-
		     utes:seconds".

	      Disk   Size of temporary disk space per node in mebibytes.

	      Extra  Arbitrary string on the node.

	      Features
		     Features available	on the nodes. Also see features_act.

	      features_act
		     Features  currently  active  on  the nodes. Also see fea-
		     tures.

	      FreeMem
		     The total memory, in MiB, currently free on the  node  as
		     reported  by  the OS. This	value is for informational use
		     only and is not used for scheduling.

	      Gres   Generic resources (gres) associated with the nodes.

	      GresUsed
		     Generic resources (gres) currently	in use on  the	nodes.
		     For      shared	  GRES	    usage     details,	   see
		     https://slurm.schedmd.com/gres.html#Shared_GRES_Usage.

	      Groups Groups which may use the nodes.

	      MaxCPUsPerNode
		     The max number of CPUs per	node available to jobs in  the
		     partition.

	      Memory Size of memory per	node in	mebibytes.

	      NodeAddr
		     List of node communication	addresses.

	      NodeAI Number  of	nodes by state in the format "allocated/idle".
		     Do	not use	this with a node state option ("%t"  or	 "%T")
		     or	 the  different	node states will be placed on separate
		     lines.

	      NodeAIOT
		     Number  of	 nodes	by  state   in	 the   format	"allo-
		     cated/idle/other/total".  Do  not	use  this  with	a node
		     state option ("%t"	or "%T") or the	different node	states
		     will be placed on separate	lines.

	      NodeHost
		     List of node hostnames.

	      NodeList
		     List of node names.

	      Nodes  Number of nodes.

	      OverSubscribe
		     Whether  jobs  may	 oversubscribe compute resources (e.g.
		     CPUs).

	      Partition
		     Partition name followed by	"*" for	the default partition,
		     also see %R.

	      PartitionName
		     Partition name, also see %P.

	      Port   Node TCP port.

	      PreemptMode
		     Preemption	mode.

	      PriorityJobFactor
		     Partition factor used by priority/multifactor  plugin  in
		     calculating job priority.

	      PriorityTier or Priority
		     Partition scheduling tier priority.

	      Reason The  reason  a  node  is  unavailable  (down, drained, or
		     draining states).

	      Root   Only user root may	initiate jobs, "yes" or	"no".

	      Size   Maximum job size in nodes.

	      SocketCoreThread
		     Extended processor	information: number of sockets,	cores,
		     threads (S:C:T) per node.

	      Sockets
		     Number of sockets per node.

	      StateCompact
		     State of nodes, compact form.

	      StateLong
		     State of nodes, extended form.

	      StateComplete
		     State of nodes, including	all  node  state  flags.  e.g.
		     "idle+cloud+power"

	      Threads
		     Number of threads per core.

	      Time   Maximum  time  for	any job	in the format "days-hours:min-
		     utes:seconds".

	      TimeStamp
		     Print the timestamp of the	reason a node is unavailable.

	      User   Print the user name of who	set the	reason a node  is  un-
		     available.

	      UserLong
		     Print  the	user name and uid of who set the reason	a node
		     is	unavailable.

	      Version
		     Print the running slurmd version. If reporting on a  node
		     list, print the version of	the first node in the list.

	      Weight Scheduling	weight of the nodes.

       --help Print a message describing all sinfo options.

       --hide Do  not  display information about hidden	partitions. Partitions
	      that are configured as hidden or are not available to the	user's
	      group will not be	displayed. This	is the default behavior.

       -i, --iterate=<seconds>
	      Print the	state on a periodic basis.  Sleep  for	the  indicated
	      number  of  seconds  between  reports.  By default prints	a time
	      stamp with the header.

       --json, --json=list, --json=<data_parser>
	      Dump information as JSON using the default data_parser plugin or
	      explicit data_parser with	parameters. All	information is dumped,
	      even if it would normally	not be.	Sorting	and  formatting	 argu-
	      ments passed to other options are	ignored; however, most filter-
	      ing arguments are	still used.

       -R, --list-reasons
	      List  reasons  nodes  are	 in the	down, drained, fail or failing
	      state.  When nodes are in	these states Slurm supports the	inclu-
	      sion of a	"reason" string	by an administrator.  This option will
	      display the first	20 characters of the reason field and list  of
	      nodes with that reason for all nodes that	are, by	default, down,
	      drained,	draining  or  failing.	 This  option may be used with
	      other node filtering options (e.g. -r,  -d,  -t,	-n),  however,
	      combinations  of	these  options	that result in a list of nodes
	      that are not down	or drained or failing  will  not  produce  any
	      output.	When used with -l the output additionally includes the
	      current node state.

       --local
	      Show only	jobs local to this cluster. Ignore other  clusters  in
	      this federation (if any).	Overrides --federation.

       -l, --long
	      Print  more detailed information.	 This is ignored if the	--for-
	      mat option is specified.

       --noconvert
	      Don't convert units from their original type (e.g.  2048M	 won't
	      be converted to 2G).

       -N, --Node
	      Print  information  in  a	node-oriented format with one line per
	      node and partition. That is, if a	node belongs to	more than  one
	      partition,  then	one  line for each node-partition pair will be
	      shown.  If --partition is	also specified,	then only one line per
	      node in this partition is	shown.	The default is to print	infor-
	      mation in	a partition-oriented format.  This is ignored  if  the
	      --format option is specified.

       -n, --nodes=<nodes>
	      Print  information  about	the specified node(s).	Multiple nodes
	      may be comma separated or	expressed using	a node	range  expres-
	      sion  (e.g. "linux[00-17]") Limiting the query to	just the rele-
	      vant nodes can measurably	improve	the performance	of the command
	      for large	clusters.

       -h, --noheader
	      Do not print a header on the output.

       -p, --partition=<partition>
	      Print information	about the  node(s)  in	the  specified	parti-
	      tion(s).	Multiple partitions are	separated by commas.

       -T, --reservation
	      Only display information about Slurm reservations.

	      NOTE:  This  option  causes  sinfo to ignore most	other options,
	      which are	focused	on partition and node information.

       -r, --responding
	      Exclude any nodes	that  have  unexpectedly  stopped  responding.
	      This is the opposite of --dead.

       -S, --sort=<sort_list>
	      Specification  of	the order in which records should be reported.
	      This uses	the same field specification as	 the  <output_format>.
	      Multiple	sorts may be performed by listing multiple sort	fields
	      separated	by commas. The field specifications may	be preceded by
	      "+" or "-" for ascending (default) and descending	order  respec-
	      tively.  The partition field specification, "P", may be preceded
	      by a "#" to report partitions in the same	order that they	appear
	      in Slurm's configuration file, slurm.conf.  For example, a  sort
	      value  of	 "+P,-m"  requests that	records	be printed in order of
	      increasing partition name	and within a partition	by  decreasing
	      memory  size.  The  default value	of sort	is "#P,-t" (partitions
	      ordered as configured then decreasing node state). If the	--Node
	      option is	selected, the default sort value  is  "N"  (increasing
	      node name).

       -t, --states=<states>
	      List  nodes  only	having the given state(s). Multiple states may
	      be comma separated and the comparison is case  insensitive.   If
	      the  states  are separated by '+', then the nodes	must be	in all
	      states.  The state can be	prefixed with '~'  which  will	invert
	      the  result  of  match.	Possible values	include	(case insensi-
	      tive): ALLOC, ALLOCATED, BLOCKED,	CLOUD, COMP, COMPLETING, DOWN,
	      DRAIN (for node in DRAINING or DRAINED states), DRAINED,	DRAIN-
	      ING,  FAIL,  FUTURE,  FUTR, IDLE,	MAINT, MIX, MIXED, NO_RESPOND,
	      NPC, PERFCTRS, PLANNED, POWER_DOWN, POWERING_DOWN, POWERED_DOWN,
	      POWERING_UP, REBOOT_ISSUED,  REBOOT_REQUESTED,  RESV,  RESERVED,
	      UNK,  and	 UNKNOWN.  By default nodes in the specified state are
	      reported whether they are	responding or  not.   The  --dead  and
	      --responding  options  may be used to filter nodes by the	corre-
	      sponding flag.

       -s, --summarize
	      List only	a partition state summary with no node state  details.
	      This is ignored if the --format option is	specified.

       --usage
	      Print a brief message listing the	sinfo options.

       -v, --verbose
	      Provide detailed event logging through program execution.

       -V, --version
	      Print version information	and exit.

       --yaml, --yaml=list, --yaml=<data_parser>
	      Dump information as YAML using the default data_parser plugin or
	      explicit data_parser with	parameters. All	information is dumped,
	      even  if	it would normally not be. Sorting and formatting argu-
	      ments passed to other options are	ignored; however, most filter-
	      ing arguments are	still used.

OUTPUT FIELD DESCRIPTIONS
       AVAIL  Partition	state. Can be either up, down, drain,  or  inact  (for
	      INACTIVE). See the partition definition's	State parameter	in the
	      slurm.conf(5) man	page for more information.

       CPUS   Count of CPUs (processors) on these nodes.

       S:C:T  Count of sockets (S), cores (C), and threads (T) on these	nodes.

       SOCKETS
	      Count of sockets on these	nodes.

       CORES  Count of cores on	these nodes.

       THREADS
	      Count of threads on these	nodes.

       GROUPS Resource	allocations  in	 this  partition are restricted	to the
	      named groups. all	indicates that all groups may use this	parti-
	      tion.

       JOB_SIZE
	      Minimum and maximum node count that can be allocated to any user
	      job.  A  single  number  indicates  the minimum and maximum node
	      count are	the same. infinite  is	used  to  identify  partitions
	      without a	maximum	node count.

       TIMELIMIT
	      Maximum  time  limit for any user	job in days-hours:minutes:sec-
	      onds. infinite is	used to	identify partitions without a job time
	      limit.

       MEMORY Size of real memory in mebibytes on these	nodes.

       NODELIST
	      Names of nodes associated	with this particular configuration.

       NODES  Count of nodes with this particular configuration.

       NODES(A/I)
	      Count of nodes with this particular configuration	by node	 state
	      in the form "allocated/idle".

       NODES(A/I/O/T)
	      Count  of	nodes with this	particular configuration by node state
	      in the form "allocated/idle/other/total".

       PARTITION
	      Name of a	partition. Note	that the suffix	"*" identifies the de-
	      fault partition.

       PORT   Local TCP	port used by slurmd on the node.

       ROOT   Is the ability to	 allocate  resources  in  this	partition  re-
	      stricted to user root, yes or no.

       OVERSUBSCRIBE
	      Whether  the partition allows more than one job at a time	on the
	      same resource (node, socket, or core per	SelectTypeParameters),
	      and the maximum share when applicable.

	      NO: no sharing, only one job per resource.

	      YES:n: sharing allowed when the job requests --oversubscribe,
		     up	to n jobs per resource.

	      FORCE:n: sharing always allowed, up to n jobs per	resource (jobs
		     cannot opt	out).

       STATE  State   of  the  nodes.	Possible  states  include:  allocated,
	      blocked, completing, down, drained, draining, fail, failing, fu-
	      ture,  idle,  maint,  mixed,  perfctrs,	planned,   power_down,
	      power_up,	 reserved,  and	unknown.  Their	abbreviated forms are:
	      alloc, block, comp, down,	drain, drng, fail, failg, futr,	 idle,
	      maint,  mix,  npc,  plnd,	 pow_dn, pow_up, resv, and unk respec-
	      tively.

	      NOTE: The	suffix "*" identifies nodes that are presently not re-
	      sponding.

       TMP_DISK
	      Size of temporary	disk space in mebibytes	on these nodes.

NODE STATE CODES
       Node state codes	are shortened as required for the field	 size.	 These
       node  states  may  be followed by a special character to	identify state
       flags associated	with the node.	The following node suffixes and	states
       are used:

       *   The node is presently not responding	and will not be	allocated  any
	   new	work. If the node remains non-responsive, it will be placed in
	   the DOWN state (except in the case of COMPLETING,  DRAINED,	DRAIN-
	   ING,	FAIL, FAILING nodes).

       ~   The node is presently in powered off.

       #   The node is presently being powered up or configured.

       !   The node is pending power down.

       %   The node is presently being powered down.

       $   The	node is	currently in a reservation with	a flag value of	"main-
	   tenance".

       @   The node is pending reboot.

       ^   The node reboot was issued.

       -   The node is planned by the backfill scheduler for a higher priority
	   job.

       ALLOCATED   The node has	been allocated to one or more jobs.

       ALLOCATED+  The node is allocated to one	or more	active jobs  plus  one
		   or more jobs	are in the process of COMPLETING.

       BLOCKED	   The node has	been blocked by	exclusive topo job.

       COMPLETING  All	jobs  associated  with this node are in	the process of
		   COMPLETING. This node state will be removed when all	of the
		   job's processes have	terminated and the Slurm  epilog  pro-
		   gram	 (if  any) has terminated. While a node	is in the COM-
		   PLETING state, it is	not eligible for new job placement and
		   no jobs will	be scheduled on	it. See	the  Epilog  parameter
		   description in the slurm.conf(5) man	page for more informa-
		   tion.

       DOWN	   The	node  is  unavailable for use. Slurm can automatically
		   place nodes in this state if	some  failure  occurs.	System
		   administrators  may	also  explicitly  place	 nodes in this
		   state. If a node resumes normal operation, Slurm can	 auto-
		   matically return it to service. See the ReturnToService and
		   SlurmdTimeout  parameter  descriptions in the slurm.conf(5)
		   man page for	more information.

       DRAINED	   The node is unavailable for use  per	 system	 administrator
		   request. See	the update node	command	in the scontrol(1) man
		   page	or the slurm.conf(5) man page for more information.

       DRAINING	   The	node is	currently allocated a job, but will not	be al-
		   located additional jobs. The	node state will	be changed  to
		   state  DRAINED when the last	job on it completes. Nodes en-
		   ter this state per system administrator  request.  See  the
		   update  node	 command  in  the  scontrol(1) man page	or the
		   slurm.conf(5) man page for more information.

       FAIL	   The node is expected	to fail	soon and  is  unavailable  for
		   use	per system administrator request.  See the update node
		   command in the scontrol(1) man page	or  the	 slurm.conf(5)
		   man page for	more information.

       FAILING	   The	node  is currently executing a job, but	is expected to
		   fail	soon and is unavailable	for use	per system administra-
		   tor request.	 See the update	 node  command	in  the	 scon-
		   trol(1) man page or the slurm.conf(5) man page for more in-
		   formation.

       FUTURE	   The node is currently not fully configured, but expected to
		   be  available  at  some  point in the indefinite future for
		   use.

       IDLE	   The node is not allocated to	any jobs and is	available  for
		   use.

       INVAL	   The	node  did  not register	correctly with the controller.
		   This	happens	when a node registers with less	resources than
		   configured in the slurm.conf	file.	The  node  will	 clear
		   from	 this  state  with a valid registration	(i.e. a	slurmd
		   restart is required).

       MAINT	   The node is currently in a reservation with a flag value of
		   "maintenance".

       REBOOT_ISSUED
		   A reboot request has	been sent to the agent	configured  to
		   handle this request.

       REBOOT_REQUESTED
		   A  request  to  reboot  this	node has been made, but	hasn't
		   been	handled	yet.

       MIXED	   The node has	some of	its CPUs ALLOCATED  while  others  are
		   IDLE.  Or the node has a suspended job allocated to some of
		   its TRES (e.g. memory).

       PERFCTRS	(NPC)
		   Network  Performance	Counters associated with this node are
		   in use, rendering this node as not  usable  for  any	 other
		   jobs

       PLANNED	   The	node is	planned	by the backfill	scheduler for a	higher
		   priority job.

       POWER_DOWN  The node is pending power down.

       POWERED_DOWN
		   The node is currently powered down and not capable of  run-
		   ning	any jobs.

       POWERING_DOWN
		   The node is in the process of powering down and not capable
		   of running any jobs.

       POWERING_UP The node is in the process of being powered up.

       RESERVED	   The	node  is  in an	advanced reservation and not generally
		   available.

       UNKNOWN	   The Slurm controller	has just started and the node's	 state
		   has not yet been determined.

PERFORMANCE
       Executing  sinfo	 sends a remote	procedure call to slurmctld. If	enough
       calls from sinfo	or other Slurm client commands that send remote	proce-
       dure calls to the slurmctld daemon come in at once, it can result in  a
       degradation  of performance of the slurmctld daemon, possibly resulting
       in a denial of service.

       Do not run sinfo	or other Slurm client commands that send remote	proce-
       dure calls to slurmctld from loops in shell scripts or other  programs.
       Ensure  that programs limit calls to sinfo to the minimum necessary for
       the information you are trying to gather.

ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
       Some sinfo options may be set via environment variables.	These environ-
       ment variables, along with their	corresponding options, are listed  be-
       low.  NOTE: Command line	options	will always override these settings.

       SINFO_ALL	   Same	as -a, --all

       SINFO_FEDERATION	   Same	as --federation

       SCONTROL_FUTURE	   -F, --future

       SINFO_FORMAT	   Same	 as  -o	<output_format>, --format=<output_for-
			   mat>

       SINFO_LOCAL	   Same	as --local

       SINFO_PARTITION	   Same	as -p <partition>, --partition=<partition>

       SINFO_SORT	   Same	as -S <sort>, --sort=<sort>

       SLURM_CLUSTERS	   Same	as --clusters

       SLURM_CONF	   The location	of the Slurm configuration file.

       SLURM_DEBUG_FLAGS   Specify debug flags	for  sinfo  to	use.  See  De-
			   bugFlags  in	 the slurm.conf(5) man page for	a full
			   list	 of  flags.  The  environment  variable	 takes
			   precedence over the setting in the slurm.conf.

       SLURM_JSON	   Control JSON	serialization:

			   compact
				  Output JSON as compact as possible.

			   pretty Output JSON in pretty	format to make it more
				  readable.

       SLURM_TIME_FORMAT   Specify  the	 format	 used to report	time stamps. A
			   value of standard,  the  default  value,  generates
			   output	     in		   the		  form
			   "year-month-dateThour:minute:second".  A  value  of
			   relative  returns  only "hour:minute:second"	if the
			   current day.	 For other dates in the	 current  year
			   it  prints  the  "hour:minute" preceded by "Tomorr"
			   (tomorrow), "Ystday"	(yesterday), the name  of  the
			   day	for the	coming week (e.g. "Mon", "Tue",	etc.),
			   otherwise the date  (e.g.  "25  Apr").   For	 other
			   years  it  returns  a date month and	year without a
			   time	(e.g.  "6 Jun 2012"). All of the  time	stamps
			   use a 24 hour format.

			   A  valid  strftime()	 format	can also be specified.
			   For example,	a value	of "%a %T" will	report the day
			   of the week and a time stamp	(e.g. "Mon 12:34:56").

       SLURM_YAML	   Control YAML	serialization:

			   compact Output YAML as compact as possible.

			   pretty Output YAML in pretty	format to make it more
			   readable.

EXAMPLES
       Report basic node and partition configurations:

	      $	sinfo
	      PARTITION	AVAIL TIMELIMIT	NODES STATE  NODELIST
	      batch	up     infinite	    2 alloc  adev[8-9]
	      batch	up     infinite	    6 idle   adev[10-15]
	      debug*	up	  30:00	    8 idle   adev[0-7]

       Report partition	summary	information:

	      $	sinfo -s
	      PARTITION	AVAIL TIMELIMIT	NODES(A/I/O/T) NODELIST
	      batch	up     infinite	2/6/0/8	       adev[8-15]
	      debug*	up	  30:00	0/8/0/8	       adev[0-7]

       Report more complete information	about the partition debug:

	      $	sinfo --long --partition=debug
	      PARTITION	AVAIL TIMELIMIT	JOB_SIZE ROOT OVERSUBS GROUPS NODES STATE NODELIST
	      debug*	up	  30:00	       8 no   no       all	  8 idle  dev[0-7]

       Report only those nodes that are	in state DRAINED:

	      $	sinfo --states=drained
	      PARTITION	AVAIL NODES TIMELIMIT STATE  NODELIST
	      debug*	up	  2	30:00 drain  adev[6-7]

       Report node-oriented information	with details and exact matches:

	      $	sinfo -Nel
	      NODELIST	  NODES	PARTITION STATE	 CPUS MEMORY TMP_DISK WEIGHT FEATURES REASON
	      adev[0-1]	      2	debug*	  idle	    2	3448	38536	  16 (null)   (null)
	      adev[2,4-7]     5	debug*	  idle	    2	3384	38536	  16 (null)   (null)
	      adev3	      1	debug*	  idle	    2	3394	38536	  16 (null)   (null)
	      adev[8-9]	      2	batch	  allocated 2	 246	82306	  16 (null)   (null)
	      adev[10-15]     6	batch	  idle	    2	 246	82306	  16 (null)   (null)

       Report only down, drained and draining nodes and	their reason field:

	      $	sinfo -R
	      REASON				  NODELIST
	      Memory errors			  dev[0,5]
	      Not Responding			  dev8

COPYING
       Copyright (C) 2002-2007 The Regents of the  University  of  California.
       Produced	at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (cf, DISCLAIMER).
       Copyright (C) 2008-2009 Lawrence	Livermore National Security.
       Copyright (C) 2010-2022 SchedMD LLC.

       This  file  is  part  of	Slurm, a resource management program.  For de-
       tails, see <https://slurm.schedmd.com/>.

       Slurm is	free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it	 under
       the  terms  of  the GNU General Public License as published by the Free
       Software	Foundation; either version 2 of	the License, or	(at  your  op-
       tion) any later version.

       Slurm  is  distributed  in the hope that	it will	be useful, but WITHOUT
       ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of  MERCHANTABILITY  or
       FITNESS	FOR  A	PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See	the GNU	General	Public License
       for more	details.

SEE ALSO
       scontrol(1), squeue(1), slurm_load_ctl_conf (3),	 slurm_load_jobs  (3),
       slurm_load_node	(3), slurm_load_partitions (3),	slurm_reconfigure (3),
       slurm_shutdown  (3),  slurm_update_job  (3),   slurm_update_node	  (3),
       slurm_update_partition (3), slurm.conf(5)

Slurm 26.05			Slurm Commands			      sinfo(1)

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