Version 2 (modified by 15 years ago) (diff) | ,
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Submitting jobs
To submit a job you must
- Write XML 'template files' that describe the job's input and outputs (typically the same template files can be used for many jobs).
- Create the job's input file(s), and put them in the right place (as determined by the file name) in the download directory hierarchy.
- Invoke a BOINC function or script that submits the job.
Once this is done, BOINC takes over: it creates one or more instances of the job, distributes them to client hosts, collects the output files, finds a canonical instance, assimilates the canonical instance, and deletes files.
Typically, steps 2) and 3) are done by a work generator program that creates lots of jobs.
Input and output template files
An input template file has the form
<file_info> <number>0</number> [ <sticky/> ] [ <nodelete/> ] [ <report_on_rpc/> ] </file_info> [ ... other files ] <workunit> <file_ref> <file_number>0</file_number> <open_name>NAME</open_name> [ <copy_file/> ] </file_ref> [ ... other files ] [ <command_line>-flags xyz</command_line> ] [ <rsc_fpops_est>x</rsc_fpops_est> ] [ <rsc_fpops_bound>x</rsc_fpops_bound> ] [ <rsc_memory_bound>x</rsc_memory_bound> ] [ <rsc_disk_bound>x</rsc_disk_bound> ] [ <delay_bound>x</delay_bound> ] [ <min_quorum>x</min_quorum> ] [ <target_nresults>x</target_nresults> ] [ <max_error_results>x</max_error_results> ] [ <max_total_results>x</max_total_results> ] [ <max_success_results>x</max_success_results> ] [ <credit>X</credit> ] </workunit>
Elements and tags must be on separate lines as shown. The components are:
- <file_info>, <file_ref>
Each pair describes an input file and the way it's referenced.
- <command_line>
The command-line arguments to be passed to the main program.
- <credit>
The amount of credit to be granted for successful completion of this workunit. Use this only if you know in advance how many FLOPs it will take. Your validator must use get_credit_from_wu() as its compute_granted_credit() function.
- Other elements
- Work unit attributes
An output template file has the form
<file_info> <name><OUTFILE_0/></name> <generated_locally/> <upload_when_present/> <max_nbytes>32768</max_nbytes> <url><UPLOAD_URL/></url> </file_info> <result> <file_ref> <file_name><OUTFILE_0/></file_name> <open_name>result.sah</open_name> [ <optional>0|1</optional> ] [ <no_validate>0|1</no_validate> ] </file_ref> </result>
Elements and tags must be on separate lines as shown. Each <file_info>, <file_ref> pair describes an output file. The elements include:
- <name> and <file_name>
- the physical file name. Typically use <OUTFILE_0>, <OUTFILE_1> etc.; this will be replaced with a generated name based on the job name.
- <generated_locally/>
- always include this for output files.
- <max_nbytes>
- maximum file size. If the actual size exceeds this, the file will not be uploaded, and the job will be marked as an error.
- <url>
- the URL of the file upload handler. You may include this explicitly, or use <UPLOAD_URL/> to use the URL in your project's config.xml file.
- <open_name>
- the "logical name" by which your application will reference the file.
- <optional>
- if false, your application must create the file, otherwise the job will be marked as an error.
- <no_validate>
- if true, don't include this file in the result validation process (relevant only if you are using the sample bitwise validator).
Both elements may have other properties, see BoincFiles for the full list.
Note: when a job is created, the name of its output template file is stored in the database. The file is read when instances of the job are created, which may happen days or weeks later. Thus, editing an output template file can affect existing jobs. If this is not desired, you must create a new output template file.
You can safely remove a workunit template file after creating your last WU with it. However, you can't delete a result template file until any WU that refers to it is completed (i.e. no more replicas will be created).
Submitting a job manually
To move an input file to the download directory, use
dir_hier_path filename
which prints the full pathname and creates the directory if needed (run this in the project's root directory). For example:
cp test_files/12ja04aa `bin/dir_hier_path 12ja04aa`
copies an input file from the test_files directory to the download directory hierarchy.
To submit a job, run bin/create_work from the project root directory:
create_work [ arguments ] infile_1 ... infile_n
Mandatory arguments are:
- --appname name
- application name
- --wu_name name
- workunit name
- --wu_template filename
- WU template filename relative to project root; usually in templates/
- --result_template filename
- result template filename, relative to project root; usually in templates/
- --batch n
- --priority n
The following job parameters may be passed in the input template, or as command-line arguments to create_work, or not passed at all, in which case defaults will be used.
- --command_line "-flags foo"
- --rsc_fpops_est x
- FLOPs estimate
- --rsc_fpops_bound x
- --rsc_memory_bound x
- --rsc_disk_bound x
- --delay_bound x
- --min_quorum x
- --target_nresults x
- --max_error_results x
- --max_total_results x
- --max_success_results x
- --opaque N
- --additional_xml 'x'
- This can be used to supply, for example, <credit>12.4</credit>.
Submitting jobs from a C++ program
BOINC's library provides the functions:
// convert filename to path in download hierarchy // SCHED_CONFIG::download_path( const char* filename, char* path, ); // submit a job // int create_work( DB_WORKUNIT& wu, const char* wu_template, // contents, not path const char* result_template_filename, // relative to project root const char* result_template_filepath, // absolute or relative to current dir const char** infiles, // array of input file names int ninfiles SCHED_CONFIG&, const char* command_line = NULL, const char* additional_xml = NULL );
The name and appid fields of the DB_WORKUNIT structure must always be initialized. Other job parameters may be passed either in the DB_WORKUNIT structure or in the input template file (the latter has priority). On a successful return, wu.id contains the database ID of the workunit.