Brian,
Thanks for your response. I am looking into that option. I am a bit confused
about which signal is sent though. I thought it was SIGSTOP not SIGSTP. And I
read you can't really catch and stop SIGSTOP or SIGCONT signals but I am not
very good at sys admin stuff anyway.
So in the end, the
Many thanks to all the attendees, and especially to all those who
presented at the Slurm User Group 2019 meeting in Salt Lake City. Thank
you to the University of Utah as well for hosting.
I hope to see many of you again at SLUG'20, which at Harvard University
on September 15-16, 2020.
PDFs
It seems that there are some details that would need addressed.
A suspend signal is nothing more than sending a SIGSTP (like hitting
ctrl-s), so the application is still in memory awaiting SIGCONT
So what should happen when it continues and there are no more licenses?
So the proper place for