Many computing-intensive processes in R involve the repeated evaluation of a function over many items or parameter sets. These so-called embarrassingly parallel calculations can be run serially with the lapply
or Map
function, or in parallel on a single machine with mclapply
or mcMap
(from the parallel
package).
The rslurm package simplifies the process of distributing this type of calculation across a computing cluster that uses the Slurm workload manager. Its main function, slurm_apply
(and the related slurm_map
) automatically divide the computation over multiple nodes and write the necessary submission scripts. The package also includes functions to retrieve and combine the output from different nodes, as well as wrappers for common Slurm commands.
To illustrate a typical rslurm workflow, we use a simple function that takes a mean and standard deviation as parameters, generates a million normal deviates and returns the sample mean and standard deviation.
<- function(par_mu, par_sd) {
test_func <- rnorm(10^6, par_mu, par_sd)
samp c(s_mu = mean(samp), s_sd = sd(samp))
}
We then create a parameter data frame where each row is a parameter set and each column matches an argument of the function.
<- data.frame(par_mu = 1:10,
pars par_sd = seq(0.1, 1, length.out = 10))
head(pars, 3)
## par_mu par_sd
## 1 1 0.1
## 2 2 0.2
## 3 3 0.3
We can now pass that function and the parameters data frame to slurm_apply
, specifiying the number of cluster nodes to use and the number of CPUs per node. The latter (cpus_per_node
) determines how many processes will be forked on each node, as the mc.cores
argument of parallel::mcMap
.
library(rslurm)
<- slurm_apply(test_func, pars, jobname = 'test_apply',
sjob nodes = 2, cpus_per_node = 2, submit = FALSE)
## Submission scripts output in directory _rslurm_test_apply
The output of slurm_apply
is a slurm_job
object that stores a few pieces of information (job name, job ID, and the number of nodes) needed to retrieve the job’s output.
The default argument submit = TRUE
would submit a generated script to the Slurm cluster and print a message confirming the job has been submitted to Slurm, assuming your are running R on a Slurm head node. When working from a R session without direct access to the cluster, you must set submit = FALSE
. Either way, the function creates a folder called \_rslurm\_[jobname]
in the working directory that contains scripts and data files. This folder may be moved to a Slurm head node, the shell command sbatch submit.sh
run from within the folder, and the folder moved back to your working directory. The contents of the \_rslurm\_[jobname]
folder after completion of the test_apply
job, i.e. following either manual or automatic (i.e. with submit = TRUE
) submission to the cluster, includes one results_*.RDS
file for each node:
list.files('_rslurm_test_apply', 'results')
## [1] "results_0.RDS" "results_1.RDS"
The results from all the nodes can be read back into R with the get_slurm_out()
function. In this example, wait = FALSE
, but if you use the default argument wait = TRUE
, execution will be paused until the Slurm job finishes running.
<- get_slurm_out(sjob, outtype = 'table', wait = FALSE)
res head(res, 3)
## s_mu s_sd
## 1 1.000137 0.09995552
## 2 2.000144 0.19988175
## 3 2.999822 0.30030102
The utility function print_job_status
displays the status of a submitted job (i.e. in queue, running or completed), and cancel_slurm
will remove a job from the queue, aborting its execution if necessary. These functions are R wrappers for the Slurm command line functions squeue
and scancel
, respectively.
When outtype = 'table'
, the outputs from each function evaluation are row-bound into a single data frame; this is an appropriate format when the function returns a simple vector. The default outtype = 'raw'
combines the outputs into a list and can thus handle arbitrarily complex return objects.
<- get_slurm_out(sjob, outtype = 'raw', wait = FALSE)
res_raw 1:3] res_raw[
## [[1]]
## s_mu s_sd
## 1.00013690 0.09995552
##
## [[2]]
## s_mu s_sd
## 2.0001445 0.1998817
##
## [[3]]
## s_mu s_sd
## 2.999822 0.300301
The utility function cleanup_files
deletes the temporary folder for the specified Slurm job.
cleanup_files(sjob)
In addition to slurm_apply
, rslurm also defines a slurm_call
function, which sends a single function call to the cluster. It is analogous in syntax to the base R function do.call
, accepting a function and a named list of parameters as arguments.
<- slurm_call(test_func, jobname = 'test_call',
sjob list(par_mu = 5, par_sd = 1), submit = FALSE)
## Submission scripts output in directory _rslurm_test_call
Because slurm_call
involves a single process on a single node, it does not recognize the nodes
and cpus_per_node
arguments; otherwise, it accepts the same additional arguments (detailed in the sections below) as slurm_apply
.
cleanup_files(sjob)
The function passed to slurm_apply
can only receive atomic parameters stored within a data frame. Suppose we want instead to apply a function func
to a list of complex R objects, obj_list
. In that case we can use the function slurm_map
, which is similar in syntax to lapply
from base R and map
from the purrr
package. Its first argument is a list which can contain objects of any type, and its second argument is a function that acts on a single element of the list.
<- slurm_map(obj_list,
sjob
func,nodes = 2, cpus_per_node = 2)
The output generated by slurm_map
is structured the same way as slurm_apply
. The procedures for checking the job status, extracting the results of the job, and cleaning up job files are also the same as described above.
Each of the tasks started by slurm_apply
and slurm_map
begin by default in an “empty” R environment containing only the function to be evaluated and its parameters. If we want to pass additional arguments to the function that do not vary with each task, we can simply add them as additional arguments to slurm_apply
or slurm_map
, like in this example, where we want to take the logarithm of many integers but always use log(x, base = 2)
.
<- slurm_apply(log,
sjob data.frame(x = 1:10000),
base = 2,
nodes = 2, cpus_per_node = 2)
To pass additional objects to the jobs that aren’t explicitly included as arguments to the function passed to slurm_apply
or slurm_map
, we can use the argument global_objects
. For example we might want to use an inline function that calls two other previously defined functions.
<- slurm_apply(function(a, b) c(func1(a),func2(b)),
sjob data.frame(a, b),
global_objects = c("func1", "func2"),
nodes = 2, cpus_per_node = 2)
The global_objects
argument specifies the names of any R objects (besides the parameters data frame) that must be accessed by the function passed to slurm_apply
. These objects are saved to a .RDS
file that is loaded on each cluster node prior to evaluating the function in parallel.
By default, all R packages attached to the current R session will also be attached (with library
) on each cluster node, though this can be modified with the optional pkgs
argument.
Particular clusters may require the specification of additional Slurm options, such as time and memory limits for the job. The slurm_options
argument allows you to set any of the command line options (view list) recognized by the Slurm sbatch
command. It should be formatted as a named list, using the long names of each option (e.g. “time” rather than “t”). Flags, i.e. command line options that are toggled rather than set to a particular value, should be set to TRUE
in slurm_options
. For example, the following code sets the command line options --time=1:00:00 --share
.
<- list(time = '1:00:00', share = TRUE)
sopt <- slurm_apply(test_func, pars, slurm_options = sopt) sjob
As mentioned above, the slurm_apply
function creates a job-specific folder. This folder contains the parameters as a RDS file and (if applicable) the objects specified as global_objects
saved together in a RData file. The function also generates a R script (slurm_run.R
) to be run on each cluster node, as well as a Bash script (submit.sh
) to submit the job to Slurm.
More specifically, the Bash script tells Slurm to create a job array and the R script takes advantage of the unique SLURM\_ARRAY\_TASK\_ID
environment variable that Slurm will set on each cluster node. This variable is read by slurm_run.R
, which allows each instance of the script to operate on a different parameter subset and write its output to a different results file. The R script calls parallel::mcMap
to parallelize calculations on each node.
Additionally, the --dependency
option can be utilized by taking the job ID from the slurm_job
object returned by slurm_apply
, slurm_map
, and slurm_call
functions.
The ID can be manually added to the slurm options. In the following example, the job ID of sjob1
is used to ensure that sjob2
does not begin running until after sjob1
finishes.
# Job1
<- list(time = '1:00:00', share = TRUE)
sopt1 <- slurm_apply(test_func, pars, slurm_options = sopt1)
sjob1
# Job2 depends on Job1
<- data.frame(par_mu = 2:20,
pars2 par_sd = seq(0.2, 2, length.out = 20))
<- c(sopt1, list(dependency=sprintf("afterany:%s", sjob1$jobid)))
sopt2 <- slurm_apply(test_func2, pars2, slurm_options = sopt2) sjob2
Both slurm_run.R
and submit.sh
are generated from templates, using the whisker
package; these templates can be found in the rslurm/templates
subfolder in your R package library. There are two templates for each script, one for slurm_apply
and the other (with the word “single”" in its title) for slurm_call
.
While you should avoid changing any existing lines in the template scripts, you may want to add #SBATCH
lines to the submit.sh
templates in order to permanently set certain Slurm command line options and thus customize the package to your particular cluster setup.