Below is a basic Java example and steps you can follow and apply to your filename.java
. Remember Unix is case sensitive so it is very important for the filename HelloWorld.java
match the class name defined in the file as HelloWorld
.
public class HelloWorld { public static void main(String[] args) { System.out.println("Hello, World!"); } }
workgroup
followed by qlogin
to work on a compute node. Remember to use VALET
to select the appropriate version of Java.
Check the versions of java development available on your cluster by using
$ vpkg_versions openjdk
and make sure you select the appropriate version to compile and create the HelloWorld.class
file. The following example is based on the user traine
in workgroup it_css
on Mills using commands to create a directory /lustre/work/it_css/traine/java
to store all the files associated with this example, qlogin
to a compute node, load openjdk verison 1.8.0 using VALET, compile and test HellowWorld
, and lastly exit the compute node and return to the head node.
[mills ~]$ workgroup -g it_css [(it_css:traine)@mills ~]$ cd /lustre/work/it_css/traine/java [(it_css:traine)@mills java]$ cat HelloWorld.java public class HelloWorld { public static void main(String[] args) { System.out.println("Hello, World!"); } } [(it_css:traine)@mills java]$ qlogin Your job 2880210 ("QLOGIN") has been submitted waiting for interactive job to be scheduled ... Your interactive job 2880210 has been successfully scheduled. Establishing /opt/shared/OpenGridScheduler/local/qlogin_ssh session to host n040 ... Last login: Thu Apr 19 19:36:05 2018 from mills.mills.hpc.udel.edu [(it_css:traine)@n040 java]$ vpkg_devrequire openjdk/1.8.0 Adding dependency `x11/RHEL6.1` to your environment Adding package `openjdk/1.8.0` to your environment [(it_css:traine)@n040 java]$ javac HelloWorld.java [(it_css:traine)@n040 java]$ ls HelloWorld.class HelloWorld.java [(it_css:traine)@n040 java]$ java HelloWorld Hello, World! [(it_css:traine)@n040 java]$ exit [(it_css:traine)@mills java]$
Once we are back on the head node, you will need a job submission script to run your java job. For this simple example, copy serial.qs
from /opt/shared/templates/gridengine
on Mills, name it submit.qs
, and modify it to run the HelloWorld
executable.
# # Template: Basic Serial Job # Revision: $Id: serial.qs 549 2015-02-10 20:55:33Z frey $ # # If you want an email message to be sent to you when your job ultimately # finishes, edit the -M line to have your email address and change the # next two lines to start with #$ instead of just # # -m eas # -M my_address@mail.server.com # # Append all of your shell commands necessary to run your program # after this line: vpkg_require openjdk/1.8.0 java HelloWorld
Now submit the job using qsub submit.qs
on the head node. The example below shows this process including commands to monitor the status of job and view results of the job run.
(it_css:traine)@mills java]$ qsub submit.qs Your job 1392329 ("submit.qs") has been submitted [(it_css:traine)@mills java]$ qstat job-ID prior name user state submit/start at queue jclass slots ja-task-ID ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 1392329 0.00000 submit.qs traine qw 12/04/2017 16:54:28 1 [(it_css:traine)@mills java]$ ls HelloWorld.class HelloWorld.java submit.qs submit.qs.o1392329 [(it_css:traine)@mills java]$ qstat [(it_css:traine)@mills java]$ cat submit.qs.o1392329 Adding dependency `x11/RHEL6.1` to your environment Adding package `openjdk/1.8.0` to your environment Hello, World! [(it_css:traine)@mills java]$
/opt/shared/templates/gridengine
on Mills. If you do not specify any resources, by default you will get 1 core (a simple serial job) on Mills.