###################################################################### ## ## condor_config.local.dedicated.submit ## ## This is the default local configuration file for the schedd you ## designate as your dedicated scheduler. If you are going to have ## users submitting MPI jobs in your pool, you should configure a ## single schedd to act as the dedicated scheduler, and have all ## users submit from there. ## ## PLEASE READ the discussion on "Configuring Condor for Dedicated ## Scheduling" in the "Setting up Condor for Special Environments" ## section of the Condor Manual for more details. ## ## You should copy this file to the appropriate location and, ## optionally, customize it for your needs. ## ## Unless otherwise specified, settings that are commented out show ## the defaults that are used if you don't define a value. Settings ## that are defined here MUST BE DEFINED since they have no default ## value. ## ###################################################################### ###################################################################### ###################################################################### ## Settings you may want to customize: ## (it is generally safe to leave these untouched) ###################################################################### ###################################################################### ## If the dedicated scheduler has resources claimed, but nothing to ## use them for (no MPI jobs in the queue that could use them), how ## long should it hold onto them before releasing them back to the ## regular Condor pool? Specified in seconds. Default is 10 minutes. ## If you define this to '0', the schedd will never release claims ## (unless the schedd is shutdown). If your dedicated resources are ## configured to only run jobs, you should probably set this attribute ## to '0' #UNUSED_CLAIM_TIMEOUT = 600