Frequently Asked Questions
Disk quota exceeded error on /project filesystems
Some users have seen this message or some similar quota error on their project folders. Other users have reported obscure failures while transferring files into their /project
folder from another cluster. Many of the problems reported are due to bad file ownership.
Use diskusage_report
to see if you are at or over your quota:
[ymartin@cedar5 ~]$ diskusage_report
Description Space # of files
Home (user ymartin) 345M/50G 9518/500k
Scratch (user ymartin) 93M/20T 6532/1000k
Project (group ymartin) 5472k/2048k 158/5000k
Project (group/def-zrichard) 20k/1000G 4/5000k
The example above illustrates a frequent problem: /project
for user ymartin
contains too much data in files belonging to group ymartin
. The data should instead be in files belonging to def-zrichard
.
Note the two lines labelled Project
.
Project (group ymartin)
describes files belonging to groupymartin
, which has the same name as the user. This user is the only member of this group, which has a very small quota (2048k).Project (group def-zrichard)
describes files belonging to a project group. Your account may be associated with one or more project groups, and they will typically have names likedef-zrichard
,rrg-someprof-ab
, orrpp-someprof
.
In this example, files have somehow been created belonging to group ymartin
instead of group def-zrichard
. This is neither the desired nor the expected behaviour
By design, new files and directories in /project
will normally be created belonging to a project group. The two main reasons why files may be associated with the wrong group are that
- files were moved from
/home
to/project
with themv
command; to avoid this, usecp
instead; - files were transfered from another cluster using rsync or scp with an option to preserve the original group ownership. If you have a recurring problem with ownership, check the options you are using with your file transfer program.
For rsync you can use the following command to transfer a directory from a remote location to your project directory:
$ rsync -axvpH --no-g --no-p remote_user@remote.system:remote/dir/path $HOME/projects/$USER/
You can also try compressing date during transfer for better transfer rate:
$ rsync -axvpH --no-g --no-p --compress-level=5 remote_user@remote.system:remote/dir/path $HOME/projects/$USER/
To see the project groups you may use, run the following command:
[name@server ~]$ stat -c %G $HOME/projects/*/
If you are the owner of the files, you can run the chgrp
command to change their group ownership to the appropriate project group. To ask us to change the group owner for several users, contact technical support.
See Project layout for further explanations.
sbatch: error: Batch job submission failed: Socket timed out on send/recv operation
You may see this message when the load on the Slurm manager or scheduler process is too high. We are working both to improve Slurm's tolerance of that and to identify and eliminate the sources of load spikes, but that is a long-term project. The best advice we have currently is to wait a minute or so. Then run squeue -u $USER
and see if the job you were trying to submit appears: in some cases the error message is delivered even though the job was accepted by Slurm. If it doesn't appear, simply submit it again.