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This specification describes Flux job states and the events that trigger job state transitions.
Name | github.com/flux-framework/rfc/spec_21.rst |
Editor | Jim Garlick <[email protected]> |
State | raw |
The job state machine is intended to be a useful abstraction of job life cycle for users. If a job is not yet running, the job state communicates at a high level what it is waiting for. In addition to being available to query, job states may also be used as a basis for synchronization by tools such as workflow managers.
A job is said to be active if it has not yet reached the captive end state, and inactive once it has.
- Job states SHOULD exist for job phases with the potential for long duration, to provide transparency to users.
- The instance owner and job owner SHALL be permitted to monitor job state transitions, for synchronization.
- There SHALL be one initial state and one final state.
- All job state transitions SHALL be initiated by the job manager.
- A state SHALL exist for synchronization on job completion, such that job data in the KVS is stable once this state is reached.
- All job state transitions SHALL be driven by events.
- Events SHALL be logged to the job eventlog.
- Replaying the job eventlog SHALL accurately reproduce the current job state.
- The job manager SHOULD be capable of ingesting job eventlogs following recent versions of this specification, to avoid losing job data when Flux is restarted after a software upgrade.
- NEW
- Initial state. The required first
submit
event logs the job’s creation, and thevalidate
event transitions the state to DEPEND after the job has been validated. - DEPEND
- The job is blocked waiting for dependencies to be satisfied. Once all
dependencies have been satisfied the
depend
event is logged and the state transitions to PRIORITY. - PRIORITY
- The job is blocked waiting for a priority to be assigned by the job
manager priority plugin. Upon priority assignment, the job manager logs the
priority
event. The state transitions to SCHED. - SCHED
- The job is blocked waiting for resources. The job manager sends an
allocation request to the scheduler and receives a response once the
job has been assigned resources, then logs the
alloc
event. The state transitions to RUN. - RUN
- The job is able to run or is running. The job manager sends a request
to the exec service to start the job, then logs a
start
event once the job shells have been started, and afinish
event once all the job shells have exited. The state transitions to CLEANUP. - CLEANUP
- The job has completed or an exception has occurred. Under normal termination,
the job manager waits for notification from the exec service that job
resources can be released, logging
release
events, then returns resources to the scheduler and logs afree
event. Under exceptional termination, one or more steps may be unnecessary, depending on prior events. Once cleanup is complete, the job manager logs aclean
event. The state transitions to INACTIVE. - INACTIVE
- Job data in KVS is now read-only (captive state).
In the interest of encouraging consistent language, we define the following "virtual states" as shorthand for the union of two or more actual job states:
- PENDING
- The job is in DEPEND, PRIORITY, or SCHED states.
- RUNNING
- The job is in RUN or CLEANUP states.
- ACTIVE
- The job is in DEPEND, PRIORITY, SCHED, RUN, or CLEANUP states.
An exception event is an extraordinary occurrence that MAY interrupt the "normal" job life cycle.
An exception SHALL be assigned a severity value from 0 (most severe) to 7 (least severe).
An exception event with severity of zero SHALL cause the job state to
immediately transition to CLEANUP
. Exception events with a severity
other than zero do not affect job state, and are assumed to be meaningful
to other components managing non-fatal exceptions.
More than one exception MAY occur per job.
The exception event format is described below.
Job state transitions are driven by events that are logged to
job.<jobid>.eventlog
as required by RFC 16.
Events are formatted as described in RFC 18, with additional requirements described below.
Events beyond those listed below MAY appear in a job eventlog.
Unless otherwise specified, keys beyond those listed as OPTIONAL and REQUIRED below MAY be included in event context objects for use by plugins or extensions.
Job was submitted.
The following keys are REQUIRED in the event context object:
- urgency
- (integer) Initial urgency in the range of 0-31.
- userid
- (integer) Authenticated user ID of submitter.
- flags
- (integer) Mask of flags (1=debug).
- version
- (integer) Version of the job eventlog format. This document describes version 1.
Example:
{"timestamp":1552593348.073045,"name":"submit","context":{"urgency":16,"userid":5588,"flags":0,"version":1}}
The submit
event SHALL be the first event posted for each job.
Change jobspec after job submission. The event context object SHALL consist of a dictionary of period-delimited keys that SHALL be interpreted as a hierarchical JSON path. The dictionary MUST contain at least one entry. If the key already exists in the jobspec object, the old value SHALL be replaced with the new value.
Example:
{"timestamp":1552593348.073045,"name":"jobspec-update","context":{"attributes.system.duration":3600}}
Note
The jobspec-update
event affects only the Flux instance's view of the
job. The signed request containing the user's original jobspec SHALL NOT
be altered.
Update R expiration time after allocation. The event context object SHALL
consist of a dictionary containing the key expiration
with an integer
value representing seconds since the Unix Epoch (1970-01-01 UTC).
Example:
{"timestamp":1552593348.073045,"name":"resource-update","context":{"expiration":1692206240}}
Job submission is valid.
No context is defined for this event.
Example:
{"timestamp":1605115080.0358412,"name":"validate"}
Job submission is invalid. The job (including the KVS eventlog) SHALL be immediately removed.
No context is defined for this event.
Example:
{"timestamp":1605115080.0358412,"name":"invalidate"}
One or more flags have been set on the job.
The following key is REQUIRED in the event context object:
- flags
- (array of string) array of flag names to set.
Example:
{"timestamp":1552593348.073045,"name":"set-flags","context":{"flags":["debug"]}}
A dependency has been added to the job. This dependency must then be removed
via a dependency-remove
event.
The following keys are REQUIRED in the event context object:
- description
- (string) Name or description of this dependency.
{"timestamp":1552593348.073045,"name":"dependency-add","context":{"description":"begin-time=1552594348"}}
A dependency has be removed from a job. The dependency description MUST
match a previously added dependency from a dependency-add
event.
The following keys are REQUIRED in the event context object:
- description
- (string) Name or description of the dependency to remove.
{"timestamp":1552594348.0,"name":"dependency-remove","context":{"description":"begin-time=1552594348"}}
All job dependencies have been met.
No context is defined for this event.
Example:
{"timestamp":1605115080.0358412,"name":"depend"}
Job's priority has been assigned.
The following keys are REQUIRED in the event context object:
- priority
- (integer) Priority in the range of 0-4294967295.
{"timestamp":1552593547.411336,"name":"priority","context":{"priority":42}}
The job manager has restarted.
No context is defined for this event.
Example:
{"timestamp":1605115080.0358412,"name":"flux-restart"}
Job's urgency has changed.
The following keys are REQUIRED in the event context object:
- urgency
- (integer) New urgency in the range of 0-31.
- userid
- (integer) Authenticated user ID of requester.
{"timestamp":1552593547.411336,"name":"urgency","context":{"urgency":0,"userid":5588}}
Resources have been allocated by the scheduler.
The following keys are OPTIONAL in the event context object:
- annotations
- (object) A dictionary of scheduler-dependent key-value pairs as described in RFC 27
Example:
{"timestamp":1552593348.088391,"name":"alloc","context":{"annotations":{"sched.resource_summary":"rank0/core[0-1]"}}}
A prolog action has started for the job. This event SHALL prevent the job
manager from initiating a start request to the execution system until the
prolog action is completed with a corresponding prolog-finish
event.
The following keys are REQUIRED in the event context object:
- description
- (string) Name or description of the prolog action.
{"timestamp":1552593348.073045,"name":"prolog-start","context":{"description":"/usr/sbin/job-prolog.sh"}}
A prolog action for the job has completed. The prolog description SHOULD
match a previous prolog-start
event.
The following keys are REQUIRED in the event context object:
- description
- (string) Name or description of the prolog action.
- status
- (integer) Completion status of the prolog action. A status of zero SHALL be considered success, with a non-zero status indicating failure.
{"timestamp":1552594348.0,"name":"prolog-finish","context":{"description":"/usr/sbin/job-prolog.sh", "status":0}}
An epilog action has started for the job. This event SHALL prevent the job
manager from initiating a free request to the scheduler until the
epilog action is completed with a corresponding epilog-finish
event.
The following keys are REQUIRED in the event context object:
- description
- (string) Name or description of the epilog action.
{"timestamp":1552593348.073045,"name":"epilog-start","context":{"description":"/usr/sbin/job-epilog.sh"}}
A epilog action for the job has completed. The epilog description SHOULD
match a previous epilog-start
event.
The following keys are REQUIRED in the event context object:
- description
- (string) Name or description of the epilog action.
- status
- (integer) Completion status of the epilog action. A status of zero SHALL be considered success, with a non-zero status indicating failure.
{"timestamp":1552594348.0,"name":"epilog-finish","context":{"description":"/usr/sbin/job-epilog.sh", "status":0}}
Resources have been released to the scheduler.
The context SHALL be empty.
Example:
{"timestamp":1552593348.093541,"name":"free"}
Job shells have started.
The context SHALL be empty.
Example:
{"timestamp":1552593348.089787,"name":"start"}
Resources have been released.
The following keys are REQUIRED in the event context object:
- ranks
- (string) An idset of broker ranks or "all", indicating a subset of resources that are being released.
- final
- (boolean) True if all resources allocated to the job have been released.
Example:
{"timestamp":1552593348.092830,"name":"release","context":{"ranks":"all","final":true}}
Job shells have terminated.
The following keys are REQUIRED in the event context object:
- status
- (integer) The largest of the job shell wait status codes, as defined by POSIX wait(2) [1].
Example:
{"timestamp":1552593348.090927,"name":"finish","context":{"status":0}}
Cleanup has completed.
The context SHALL be empty.
Example:
{"timestamp":1552593348.104432,"name":"clean"}
An exception occurred.
The following keys are REQUIRED in the event context object:
- type
- (string) Specify the type of exception (see below).
- severity
- (integer) Specify the severity of the exception, in range of 0 (most severe) to to 7 (least severe).
note
(string) Brief human-readable explanation of the exception. If no explanation is given, an empty string SHOULD be set for the note.
The following keys are OPTIONAL:
- userid
- (integer) User ID that initiated the exception, if other than instance owner.
Example:
{"timestamp":1552593986.335602,"name":"exception","context":{"type":"oom","severity":0,"userid":5588,"note":"out of memory on foo42"}}
Exception types include but are not limited to:
- cancel
- The job was canceled.
- timelimit
- The job’s wall clock limit was exceeded.
- depend
- A problem occurred during dependency resolution.
- alloc
- A problem occurred during scheduling.
- start
- A problem occurred while starting job shells.
- free
- A problem occurred while releasing resources to the scheduler.
A brief data record has been associated with the job.
The context object SHALL contain a set of key-value pairs to associate
with the job. Existing identical keys from a previous memo event SHALL
be replaced. A value of JSON null
SHALL remove the associated key.
Example:
{"timestamp":1637723184.3725791,"name":"memo","context":{"key":"value"}}
Debug event names are prefixed with "debug." They are optional and are intended to provide context in the eventlog that aids debugging.
There are no specific requirements for the event context.
Example:
{"timestamp":1552594649.848032,"name":"debug.free-request"}
Any state but NEW
is valid for synchronization.
Once a given state has been signaled (with a KVS snapshot reference), the following invariants hold with respect to the KVS job schema described in RFC 16:
- CLEANUP
- Either an exception has been logged to
job.<jobid>.eventlog
, or a global status code from the application is available (TBD). - INACTIVE
job.<jobid>
contains the final snapshot of the job schema.
[1] | wait, waitpid - wait for a child process to stop or terminate; The Open Group Base Specifications Issue 6; IEEE Std 1003.1, 2004 Edition |