This chapter describes the error messaging procedures of the grid engine system and offers tips on how to resolve various common problems.
The grid engine software reports errors and warnings by logging messages into certain files or by sending email, or both. The log files include message files and job STDERR output.
As soon as a job is started, the standard error (STDERR) output of the job script is redirected to a file. The default file name and location are used, or you can specify the filename and the location with certain options of the qsub command. See the grid engine system man pages for detailed information.
Separate messages files exist for the sge_qmaster, the sge_schedd, and the sge_execds. The files have the same file name: messages. The sge_qmaster log file resides in the master spool directory. The sge_schedd message file resides in the scheduler spool directory. The execution daemons' log files reside in the spool directories of the execution daemons. See Spool Directories Under the Root Directory in Sun N1 Grid Engine 6.1 Installation Guide for more information about the spool directories.
Each message takes up a single line in the files. Each message is subdivided into five components separated by the vertical bar sign (|).
The components of a message are as follows:
The first component is a time stamp for the message.
The second component specifies the grid engine system daemon that generates the message.
The third component is the name of the host where the daemon runs.
The fourth is a message type. The message type is one of the following:
N for notice – for informational purposes
I for info – for informational purposes
W for warning
E for error – an error condition has been detected
C for critical – can lead to a program abort
Use the loglevel parameter in the cluster configuration to specify on a global basis or a local basis what message types you want to log.
The fifth component is the message text.
If an error log file is not accessible for some reason, the grid engine system tries to log the error message to the files /tmp/sge_qmaster_messages, /tmp/sge_schedd_messages, or /tmp/sge_execd_messages on the corresponding host.
In some circumstances, the grid engine system notifies users, administrators, or both, about error events by email. The email messages sent by the grid engine system do not contain a message body. The message text is fully contained in the mail subject field.
The following table lists the consequences of different job-related error codes or exit codes. These codes are valid for every type of job.
Table 7–1 Job-Related Error or Exit Codes
Script/Method |
Exit or Error Code |
Consequence |
---|---|---|
Job script |
0 |
Success |
|
99 |
Requeue |
|
Rest |
Success: exit code in accounting file |
prolog/epilog |
0 |
Success |
|
99 |
Requeue |
|
Rest |
Queue error state, job requeued |
The following table lists the consequences of error codes or exit codes of jobs related to parallel environment (PE) configuration.
Table 7–2 Parallel-Environment-Related Error or Exit Codes
Script/Method |
Exit or Error Code |
Consequence |
---|---|---|
pe_start |
0 |
Success |
|
Rest |
Queue set to error state, job requeued |
pe_stop |
0 |
Success |
|
Rest |
Queue set to error state, job not requeued |
The following table lists the consequences of error codes or exit codes of jobs related to queue configuration. These codes are valid only if corresponding methods were overwritten.
Table 7–3 Queue-Related Error or Exit Codes
Script/Method |
Exit or Error Code |
Consequence |
---|---|---|
Job starter |
0 |
Success |
|
Rest |
Success, no other special meaning |
Suspend |
0 |
Success |
|
Rest |
Success, no other special meaning |
Resume |
0 |
Success |
|
Rest |
Success, no other special meaning |
Terminate |
0 |
Success |
|
Rest |
Success, no other special meaning |
The following table lists the consequences of error or exit codes of jobs related to checkpointing.
Table 7–4 Checkpointing-Related Error or Exit Codes
Script/Method |
Exit or Error Code |
Consequence |
---|---|---|
Checkpoint |
0 |
Success |
|
Rest |
Success. For kernel checkpoint, however, this means that the checkpoint was not successful. |
Migrate |
0 |
Success |
|
Rest |
Success. For kernel checkpoint, however, this means that the checkpoint was not successful. Migration will occur. |
Restart |
0 |
Success |
|
Rest |
Success, no other special meaning |
Clean |
0 |
Success |
|
Rest |
Success, no other special meaning |
For jobs that run successfully, the qacct -j command output shows a value of 0 in the failed field, and the output shows the exit status of the job in the exit_status field. However, the shepherd might not be able to run a job successfully. For example, the epilog script might fail, or the shepherd might not be able to start the job. In such cases, the failed field displays one of the code values listed in the following table.
Table 7–5 qacct -j failed Field Codes
Code |
Description |
acctvalid |
Meaning for Job |
---|---|---|---|
0 |
No failure |
t |
Job ran, exited normally |
1 |
Presumably before job |
f |
Job could not be started |
3 |
Before writing config |
f |
Job could not be started |
4 |
Before writing PID |
f |
Job could not be started |
5 |
On reading config file |
f |
Job could not be started |
6 |
Setting processor set |
f |
Job could not be started |
7 |
Before prolog |
f |
Job could not be started |
8 |
In prolog |
f |
Job could not be started |
9 |
Before pestart |
f |
Job could not be started |
10 |
In pestart |
f |
Job could not be started |
11 |
Before job |
f |
Job could not be started |
12 |
Before pestop |
t |
Job ran, failed before calling PE stop procedure |
13 |
In pestop |
t |
Job ran, PE stop procedure failed |
14 |
Before epilog |
t |
Job ran, failed before calling epilog script |
15 |
In epilog |
t |
Job ran, failed in epilog script |
16 |
Releasing processor set |
t |
Job ran, processor set could not be released |
24 |
Migrating (checkpointing jobs) |
t |
Job ran, job will be migrated |
25 |
Rescheduling |
t |
Job ran, job will be rescheduled |
26 |
Opening output file |
f |
Job could not be started, stderr/stdout file could not be opened |
27 |
Searching requested shell |
f |
Job could not be started, shell not found |
28 |
Changing to working directory |
f |
Job could not be started, error changing to start directory |
100 |
Assumedly after job |
t |
Job ran, job killed by a signal |
The Code column lists the value of the failed field. The Description column lists the text that appears in the qacct -j output. If acctvalid is set to t, the job accounting values are valid. If acctvalid is set to f, the resource usage values of the accounting record are not valid. The Meaning for Job column indicates whether the job ran or not.
For some severe error conditions, the error-logging mechanism might not yield sufficient information to identify the problems. Therefore, the grid engine system offers the ability to run almost all ancillary programs and the daemons in debug mode. Different debug levels vary in the extent and depth of information that is provided. The debug levels range from zero through 10, with 10 being the level delivering the most detailed information and zero turning off debugging.
To set a debug level, an extension to your .cshrc or .profile resource files is provided with the distribution of the grid engine system. For csh or tcsh users, the file sge-root/util/dl.csh is included. For sh or ksh users, the corresponding file is named sge-root/util/dl.sh. The files must be sourced into your standard resource file. As csh or tcsh user, include the following line in your .cshrc file:
source sge-root/util/dl.csh |
As sh or ksh user, include the following line in your .profile file:
. sge-root/util/dl.sh |
As soon as you log out and log in again, you can use the following command to set a debug level:
% dl level |
If level is greater than 0, starting a grid engine system command forces the command to write trace output to STDOUT. The trace output can contain warning messages, status messages, and error messages, as well as the names of the program modules that are called internally. The messages also include line number information, which is helpful for error reporting, depending on the debug level you specify.
To watch a debug trace, you should use a window with a large scroll-line buffer. For example, you might use a scroll-line buffer of 1000 lines.
If your window is an xterm, you might want to use the xterm logging mechanism to examine the trace output later on.
If you run one of the grid engine system daemons in debug mode, the daemons keep their terminal connection to write the trace output. You can abort the terminal connections by typing the interrupt character of the terminal emulation you use. For example, you might use Control-C.
To switch off debug mode, set the debug level back to 0.
The sgedbwriter script starts the dbwriter program. The script is located in sge_root/dbwriter/bin/sgedbwriter. The sgedbwriter script reads the dbwriter configuration file, dbwriter.conf. This configuration file is located in sge_root/cell/common/dbwriter.conf. This configuration file sets the debug level of dbwriter. For example:
# # Debug level # Valid values: WARNING, INFO, CONFIG, FINE, FINER, FINEST, ALL # DBWRITER_DEBUG=INFO |
You can use the –debug option of the dbwriter command to change the number of messages that the dbwriter produces. In general, you should use the default debug level, which is info. If you use a more verbose debug level, you substantially increase the amount of data output by dbwriter.
You can specify the following debug levels:
Displays only severe errors and warnings.
Adds a number of informational messages. info is the default debug level.
Gives additional information that is related to dbwriter configuration, for example, about the processing of rules.
Produces more information. If you choose this debug level, all SQL statements run by dbwriter are output.
For debugging.
For debugging.
Displays information for all levels. For debugging.
The grid engine system offers several reporting methods to help you diagnose problems. The following sections outline their uses.
Sometimes a pending job is obviously capable of being run, but the job does not get dispatched. To diagnose the reason, the grid engine system offers a pair of utilities and options, qstat -j job-id and qalter-w v job-id.
qstat -j job-id
When enabled, qstat -j job-id provides a list of reasons why a certain job was not dispatched in the last scheduling run. This monitoring can be enabled or disabled. You might want to disable monitoring because it can cause undesired communication overhead between the schedd daemon and qmaster. See schedd_job_info in the sched_conf(5) man page. The following example shows output for a job with the ID 242059:
% qstat -j 242059 scheduling info: queue "fangorn.q" dropped because it is temporarily not available queue "lolek.q" dropped because it is temporarily not available queue "balrog.q" dropped because it is temporarily not available queue "saruman.q" dropped because it is full cannot run in queue "bilbur.q" because it is not contained in its hard queuelist (-q) cannot run in queue "dwain.q" because it is not contained in its hard queue list (-q) has no permission for host "ori" |
This information is generated directly by the schedd daemon. The generating of this information takes the current usage of the cluster into account. Sometimes this information does not provide what you are looking for. For example, if all queue slots are already occupied by jobs of other users, no detailed message is generated for the job you are interested in.
qalter -w v job-id
This command lists the reasons why a job is not dispatchable in principle. For this purpose, a dry scheduling run is performed. All consumable resources, as well as all slots, are considered to be fully available for this job. Similarly, all load values are ignored because these values vary.
Job or queue errors are indicated by an uppercase E in the qstat output.
A job enters the error state when the grid engine system tries to run a job but fails for a reason that is specific to the job.
A queue enters the error state when the grid engine system tries to run a job but fails for a reason that is specific to the queue.
The grid engine system offers a set of possibilities for users and administrators to gather diagnosis information in case of job execution errors. Both the queue and the job error states result from a failed job execution. Therefore the diagnosis possibilities are applicable to both types of error states.
User abort mail. If jobs are submitted with the qsub -m a command, abort mail is sent to the address specified with the -M user[@host] option. The abort mail contains diagnosis information about job errors. Abort mail is the recommended source of information for users.
qacct accounting. If no abort mail is available, the user can run the qacct -j command. This command gets information about the job error from the grid engine system's job accounting function.
Administrator abort mail. An administrator can order administrator mails about job execution problems by specifying an appropriate email address. See under administrator_mail on the sge_conf(5) man page. Administrator mail contains more detailed diagnosis information than user abort mail. Administrator mail is the recommended method in case of frequent job execution errors.
Messages files. If no administrator mail is available, you should investigate the qmaster messages file first. You can find entries that are related to a certain job by searching for the appropriate job ID. In the default installation, the qmaster messages file is sge-root/cell/spool/qmaster/messages.
You can sometimes find additional information in the messages of the execd daemon from which the job was started. Use qacct -j job-id to discover the host from which the job was started, and search in sge-root/cell/spool/host/messages for the job ID.
This section provides information to help you diagnose and respond to the cause of common problems.
Problem — The output file for your job says, Warning: no access to tty; thus no job control in this shell....
Possible cause — One or more of your login files contain an stty command. These commands are useful only if a terminal is present.
Possible solution — No terminal is associated with batch jobs. You must remove all stty commands from your login files, or you must bracket such commands with an if statement. The if statement should check for a terminal before processing. The following example shows an if statement:
/bin/csh: stty -g # checks terminal status if ($status == 0) # succeeds if a terminal is present <put all stty commands in here> endif |
Problem — The job standard error log file says `tty`: Ambiguous. However, no reference to tty exists in the user's shell that is called in the job script.
Possible cause — shell_start_mode is, by default, posix_compliant. Therefore all job scripts run with the shell that is specified in the queue definition. The scripts do not run with the shell that is specified on the first line of the job script.
Possible solution — Use the -S flag to the qsub command, or change shell_start_mode to unix_behavior.
Problem — You can run your job script from the command line, but the job script fails when you run it using the qsub command.
Possible cause — Process limits might be being set for your job. To test whether limits are being set, write a test script that performs limit and limit -h functions. Run both functions interactively, at the shell prompt and using the qsub command, to compare the results.
Possible solution — Remove any commands in configuration files that sets limits in your shell.
Problem — Execution hosts report a load of 99.99.
Possible cause — The execd daemon is not running on the host.
Possible solution — As root, start up the execd daemon on the execution host by running the $SGE_ROOT/default/common/'rcsge' script.
Possible cause — A default domain is incorrectly specified.
Possible solution — As the grid engine system administrator, run the qconf -mconf command and change the default_domain variable to none.
Possible cause — The qmaster host sees the name of the execution host as different from the name that the execution host sees for itself.
Possible solution — If you are using DNS to resolve the host names of your compute cluster, configure /etc/hosts and NIS to return the fully qualified domain name (FQDN) as the primary host name. Of course, you can still define and use the short alias name, for example, 168.0.0.1 myhost.dom.com myhost.
If you are not using DNS, make sure that all of your /etc/hosts files and your NIS table are consistent, for example, 168.0.0.1 myhost.corp myhost or 168.0.0.1 myhost
Problem — Every 30 seconds a warning that is similar to the following message is printed to cell/spool/host/messages:
Tue Jan 23 21:20:46 2001|execd|meta|W|local configuration meta not defined - using global configuration |
But cell/common/local_conf contains a file for each host, with FQDN.
Possible cause — The host name resolving at your machine meta returns the short name, but at your master machine, meta with FQDN is returned.
Possible solution — Make sure that all of your /etc/hosts files and your NIS table are consistent in this respect. In this example, a line such as the following text could erroneously be included in the /etc/hosts file of the host meta:
168.0.0.1 meta meta.your.domain
The line should instead be:
168.0.0.1 meta.your.domain meta.
Problem — Occasionally you see CHECKSUM ERROR, WRITE ERROR, or READ ERROR messages in the messages files of the daemons.
Possible cause — As long as these messages do not appear in a one-second interval, you need not do anything. These messages typically can appear between 1 and 30 times a day.
Problem — Jobs finish on a particular queue and return the following message in qmaster/messages:
Wed Mar 28 10:57:15 2001|qmaster|masterhost|I|job 490.1 finished on host exechost |
Then you see the following error messages in the execution host's exechost/messages file:
Wed Mar 28 10:57:15 2001|execd|exechost|E|can't find directory "active_jobs/490.1" for reaping job 490.1 |
Wed Mar 28 10:57:15 2001|execd|exechost|E|can't remove directory "active_jobs/490.1": opendir(active_jobs/490.1) failed: Input/output error |
Possible cause — The $SGE_ROOT directory, which is automounted, is being unmounted, causing the sge_execd daemon to lose its current working directory.
Possible solution — Use a local spool directory for your execd host. Set the parameter execd_spool_dir, using qmon or the qconf command.
Problem — When submitting interactive jobs with the qrsh utility, you get the following error message:
% qrsh -l mem_free=1G error: error: no suitable queues |
However, queues are available for submitting batch jobs with the qsub command. These queues can be queried using qhost -l mem_free=1G and qstat -f -l mem_free=1G.
Possible cause — The message error: no suitable queues results from the -w e submit option, which is active by default for interactive jobs such as qrsh. Look for -w e on the qrsh(1) man page. This option causes the submit command to fail if the qmaster does not know for sure that the job is dispatchable according to the current cluster configuration. The intention of this mechanism is to decline job requests in advance, in case the requests can't be granted.
Possible solution — In this case, mem_free is configured to be a consumable resource, but you have not specified the amount of memory that is to be available at each host. The memory load values are deliberately not considered for this check because memory load values vary. Thus they can't be seen as part of the cluster configuration. You can do one of the following:
Omit this check generally by explicitly overriding the qrsh default option -w e with the -w n option. You can also put this command into sge-root/cell/common/cod_request.
If you intend to manage mem_free as a consumable resource, specify the mem_free capacity for your hosts in complex_values of host_conf by using qconf -me hostname.
If you do not intend to manage mem_free as a consumable resource, make it a nonconsumable resource again in the consumable column of complex(5) by using qconf -mc hostname.
Problem — qrsh won't dispatch to the same node it is on. From a qsh shell you get a message such as the following:
host2 [49]% qrsh -inherit host2 hostname error: executing task of job 1 failed: host2 [50]% qrsh -inherit host4 hostname host4 |
Possible cause — gid_range is not sufficient. gid_range should be defined as a range, not as a single number. The grid engine system assigns each job on a host a distinct gid.
Possible solution — Adjust the gid_range with the qconf -mconf command or with QMON. The suggested range is as follows:
gid_range 20000-20100 |
Problem — qrsh -inherit -V does not work when used inside a parallel job. You get the following message:
cannot get connection to "qlogin_starter" |
Possible cause — This problem occurs with nested qrsh calls. The problem is caused by the -V option. The first qrsh -inherit call sets the environment variable TASK_ID. TASK_ID is the ID of the tightly integrated task within the parallel job. The second qrsh -inherit call uses this environment variable for registering its task. The command fails as it tries to start a task with the same ID as the already-running first task.
Possible solution — You can either unset TASK_ID before calling qrsh -inherit, or choose to use the -v option instead of -V. This option exports only the environment variables that you really need.
Problem — qrsh does not seem to work at all. Messages like the following are generated:
host2$ qrsh -verbose hostname local configuration host2 not defined - using global configuration waiting for interactive job to be scheduled ... Your interactive job 88 has been successfully scheduled. Establishing /share/gridware/utilbin/solaris64/rsh session to host exehost ... rcmd: socket: Permission denied /share/gridware/utilbin/solaris64/rsh exited with exit code 1 reading exit code from shepherd ... error: error waiting on socket for client to connect: Interrupted system call error: error reading return code of remote command cleaning up after abnormal exit of /share/gridware/utilbin/solaris64/rsh host2$ |
Possible cause — Permissions for qrsh are not set properly.
Possible solution — Check the permissions of the following files, which are located in $SGE_ROOT/utilbin/. (Note that rlogin and rsh must be setuid and owned by root.)
-r-s--x--x 1 root root 28856 Sep 18 06:00 rlogin*
-r-s--x--x 1 root root 19808 Sep 18 06:00 rsh*
-rwxr-xr-x 1 sgeadmin adm 128160 Sep 18 06:00 rshd*
The sge-root directory also needs to be NFS-mounted with the setuid option. If sge-root is mounted with nosuid from your submit client, qrsh and associated commands will not work.
Problem – When you try to start a distributed make, qmake exits with the following error message:
qrsh_starter: executing child process qmake failed: No such file or directory |
Possible cause — The grid engine system starts an instance of qmake on the execution host. If the grid engine system environment, especially the PATH variable, is not set up in the user's shell resource file (.profile or .cshrc), this qmake call fails.
Possible solution — Use the -v option to export the PATH environment variable to the qmake job. A typical qmake call is as follows:
qmake -v PATH -cwd -pe make 2-10 -- |
Problem — When using the qmake utility, you get the following error message:
waiting for interactive job to be scheduled ...timeout (4 s) expired while waiting on socket fd 5 Your "qrsh" request could not be scheduled, try again later. |
Possible cause — The ARCH environment variable could be set incorrectly in the shell from which qmake was called.
Possible solution – Set the ARCH variable correctly to a supported value that matches an available host in your cluster, or else specify the correct value at submit time, for example, qmake -v ARCH=solaris64 ...
The installation of the Sun Web console Version 2.0.3 fails with the follow error message:
# ./inst_reporting ... Register the N1 SGE reporting module in the webconsole Registering com.sun.grid.arco_6u3. Starting Sun(TM) Web Console Version 2.0.3... Ambiguous output redirect. |
. This Sun Web Console Version can only be installed by the user noacces who has /bin/sh as their login shell. The user must be added with the following command:
# useradd -u 60002 -g 60002 -d /tmp -s /bin/sh -c "No Access User" noaccess |
The table/view dropdown menu of a simple query definition does not contain any entry, but the tables are defined in the database.
Solution:The problem normally occurs if Oracle is used as the database. During the installation of the reporting module the wrong database schema name has been specified. For Oracle, the database schema name is equal to the name of the database user which is used by dbwriter (the default name is arco_write). For Postgres, the database schema name should be public.
Problem:Connection refused.
Solution:The smcwebserver might be down. Start or restart the smcwebserver.
Problem:The list of queries or the list of results is empty.
Solution:The cause can be any of the following:
The database is down. Start or restart the database.
No more database connections are available. Increase the number of allowable connections to the database.
An error exists in the configuration file of the application. Check the configuration for wrong database users, wrong user passwords, or wrong type of database, and then restart the application.
No queries are available. If the query directory /var/spool/arco/queries is not empty, the following errors might have occurred:
Queries in the XML files are syntactically incorrect. Check the log file for error messages from the XML parser.
User noaccess has no read or write permissions on the query directory.
The list of available database tables is empty.
Solution:The cause can be any of the following:
The database is down. Start or restart the database.
No more database connections are available. Increase the number of allowable connections to the database.
An error exists in the configuration file of the application. Check the configuration for wrong database users, wrong user passwords, or wrong type of database, and then restart the application.
The list of selectable fields is empty.
Solution:No table is selected. Select a table from the list.
Problem:The list of filters is empty.
Solution:No fields are selected. Define at least one field.
Problem:The sort list is empty.
Solution:No fields are selected. Define at least one field.
Problem:A defined filter is not used.
Solution:The filter may be inactive. Modify the unused filter and make it active.
Problem:The late binding in the advanced query is ignored, but the execution runs into an error.
Solution:The late binding macro has a syntactical error. The correct syntax for the late binding macro in the advanced query is as follows:
latebinding{attribute;operator} latebinding{attribute;operator;defaultvalue} |
The breadcrumb is used to move back, but the login screen is shown.
Solution:The session timed out. Log in again, or raise the session time in the app.xml.
Problem:The view configuration is defined, but the default configuration is shown.
Solution:The defined view configuration is not set to be visible. Open the view configuration and define the view configuration to be used.
Problem:The view configuration is defined, but the last configuration is shown.
Solution:The defined view configuration is not set to be visible. Open the view configuration and define the view configuration to be used.
Problem:The execution of a query takes a very long time.
Solution:The results coming from the database are very large. Set a limit for the results, or extend the filter conditions.