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LUMI Support and Documentation

Distributed nature of LUMI support

Distributed nature of support (1)

Distributed nature of support (2)

User support for LUMI comes from several parties. Unfortunately, as every participating consortium countries has some responsibilities also and solves things differently, there is no central point where you can go with all questions.

Resource allocators work independently from each other and the central LUMI User Support Team. This also implies that they are the only ones who can help you with questions regarding your allocation: How to apply for compute time on LUMI, add users to your project, running out of resources (billing units) for your project, failure to even get access to the portal managing the allocations given by your resource allocator (e.g., because you let expire an invite), ... For projects allocated in the Belgian allocation, help can be requested via the email address lumi-be-support@enccb.be. However, we cannot help you with similar problems for compute time directly obtained via EuroHPC. For granted EuroHPC projects, support is available via lumi-customer-accounts@csc.fi, but you will have to contact EuroHPC directly at access@eurohpc-ju.europa.eu if, e.g., you need more resources or an extension to your project.

The central LUMI User Support Team (LUST) offers L1 and basic L2 support. Given that the LUST team is very small compared to the number of project granted annually on LUMI (roughly 10 FTE for on the order of 700 projects per year, and support is not their only task), it is clear that the amount of support they can give is limited. E.g., don't expect them to install all software you request for them. There is simply too much software and too much software with badly written install code to do that with that number of people. Nor should you expect domain expertise from them. Though several members of the LUST have been scientist before, it does not mean that they can understand all scientific problems thrown at them or all codes used by users. Also, the team cannot fix bugs for you in the codes that you use, and usually not in the system code either. For fixing bugs in HPE or AMD-provided software, they are backed by a team of experts from those companies. However, fixing bugs in compilers or libraries and implementing those changes on the system takes time. The system software on a big shared machine cannot be upgraded as easily as on a personal workstation. Usually you will have to look for workarounds, or if they show up in a preparatory project, postpone applying for an allocation until all problems are fixed.

In Flanders, the VSC has a Tier-0 support project to offer more advanced L2 and some L3 support. The project unfortunately is not yet fully staffed. VSC Tier-0 support can be contacted via the LUMI-BE help desk at lumi-be-support@enccb.be (the same help desk that you need to contact for allocation problems).

In the Walloon region, there is some limited advanced support via Orian Louant. However, this is only a part of all his tasks. Here also the lumi-be-support@enccb.be mail address can be used.

EuroHPC has also granted the EPICURE project that started in February 2024 to set up a network for advanced L2 and L3 support across EuroHPC centres. Belgium also participates in that project as a partner in the LUMI consortium. However, this project is also so small that it will have to select the problems they tackle. Moreover, access is only for EuroHPC extreme scale, regular or development projects, though development projects are relatively easy to get without too much administration. Yet, this only makes sense for a sufficiently large project with a long enough duration.

In principle the EuroHPC Centres of Excellence should also play a role in porting some applications in their field of expertise and offer some support and training, but so far especially the support and training are not yet what one would like to have.

Basically given the growing complexity of scientific computing and diversity in the software field, what one needs is the equivalent of the "lab technician" that many experimental groups have who can then work with various support instances, a so-called Research Software Engineer...

Support level 0: Help yourself!

Support starts with taking responsibility yourself and use the available sources of information before contacting support. Support is not meant to be a search assistant for already available information.

The LUMI User Support Team has prepared trainings and a lot of documentation about LUMI. Good software packages also come with documentation, and usually it is possible to find trainings for major packages. And a support team is also not there to solve communication problems in the team in which you collaborate on a project!

Take a training!

L0 support: Take a training!

There exist system-specific and application-specific trainings. Ideally of course a user would want a one-step solution, having a specific training for a specific application on a specific system (and preferably with the workflow tools they will be using, if any), but that is simply not possible. The group that would be interested in such a training is for most packages too small, and it is nearly impossible to find suitable teachers for such course given the amount of expertise that is needed in both the specific application and the specific system. It would also be hard to repeat such a training with a high enough frequency to deal with the continuous inflow of new users.

The LUMI User Support Team organises 2 system-specific trainings:

  1. There is a 2-day introductory course entirely given by members of the LUST. The training does assume familiarity with HPC systems, e.g., obtained from the introductory courses taught by VSC and CÉCI.

    The course is basically equivalent to this training.

  2. And there is a 4-day comprehensive training with more attention on how to run efficiently, and on the development and profiling tools. Even if you are not a developer, you may benefit from more knowledge about these tools as especially a profiler can give you insight in why your application does not run as expected.

This training builds upon the older 1-day LUMI training offered by the LUST, but has been enriched with links to the situation specifically in Belgium.

Application-specific trainings should come from other instances though that have the necessary domain knowledge: Groups that develop the applications, user groups, the EuroHPC Centres of Excellence, ...

What users really want is of course a training for a specific application on a specific system, but as most applications have a too small usergroup and within that usergroup often still a large variety of workflows, and teaching such a course also requires an instructor with a lot of domain knowledge in the science field of the application. EuroHPC is also setting up some support initiatives specifically for AI, including the AI factories, more oriented towards industry startups, and the MINERVA project.

Currently the training landscape in Europe is not too well organised. EuroHPC is starting some new training initiatives to succeed the excellent PRACE trainings. Moreover, CASTIEL, the centre coordinating the National Competence Centres also tries to maintain an overview of available trainings (and several National Competence Centres organise trainings open to others also).

Read/search the documentation

The LUST has developed extensive documentation for LUMI. That documentation is split in two parts:

  1. The main documentation at docs.lumi-supercomputer.eu covers the LUMI system itself and includes topics such as how to get on the system, where to place your files, how to start jobs, how to use the programming environment, how to install software, etc.

    L0 support: Check the docs! (1)

  2. The LUMI Software Library contains an overview of software pre-installed on LUMI or for which we have install recipes to start from. For some software packages, it also contains additional information on how to use the software on LUMI.

    L0 support: Check the docs! (3)

    That part of the documentation is generated automatically from information in the various repositories that are used to manage those installation recipes. It is kept deliberately separate, partly to have a more focused search in both documentation systems and partly because it is managed and updated very differently.

Both documentation systems contain a search box which may help you find pages if you cannot find them easily navigating the documentation structure. E.g., you may use the search box in the LUMI Software Library to search for a specific package as it may be bundled with other packages in a single module with a different name.

Some examples:

  1. Search in the main documentation at docs.lumi-supercomputer.eu for "quota" and it will take you to pages that among other things explain how much quota you have in what partition.

    L0 support: Check the docs! (2)

  2. Users of the Finnish national systems have been told to use a tool called "Tykky" to pack conda and Python installations to reduce the stress on the filesystems and wonder if that tool is also on LUMI. So let's search in the LUMI Software Library:

    L0 support: Check the docs! (4)

    It is, but with a different name as foreigners can't pronounce those Finnish names anyway and as something more descriptive was needed.

  3. Try searching for the htop command in the LUMI Software Library

    L0 support: Check the docs! (5)

    So yes, htop is on LUMI, but if you read the page you'll see it is in a module together with some other small tools.

Talk to your colleagues

L0 support: Talk to your colleagues

A LUMI project is meant to correspond to a coherent research project in which usually multiple people collaborate.

This implies that your colleagues may have run in the same problem and may already have a solution, or they didn't even experience it as a problem and know how to do it. So talk to your colleagues first.

Support teams are not meant to deal with your team communication problems. There is nothing worse than having the same question asked multiple times from different people in the same project. As a project does not have a dedicated support engineer, the second time a question is asked it may land at a different person in the support team so that it is not recognized that the question has been asked already and the answer is readily available, resulting in a loss of time for the support team and other, maybe more important questions, remaining unanswered. Similarly bad is contacting multiple help desks with the same question without telling them, as that will also duplicate efforts to solve a question. We've seen it often that users contact both a local help desk and the LUST help desk without telling.

Resources on LUMI are managed on a project basis, not on a user-in-project basis, so if you want to know what other users in the same project are doing with the resources, you have to talk to them and not to the LUST. We do not have systems in place to monitor use on a per-user, per-project basis, only on a per-project basis, and also have no plans to develop such tools as a project is meant to be a close collaboration of all involved users.

LUMI events and on-site courses are also an excellent opportunity to network with more remote colleagues and learn from them! Which is why we favour on-site participation for courses. No video conferencing system can give you the same experience as being physically present at a course or event.

L1 and basic L2 support: LUST

L1 and basic L2: LUST (1)

L1 and basic L2: LUST (2)

L1 and basic L2: LUST (3)

The LUMI User Support Team is responsible for providing L1 and basic L2 support to users of the system. Their work starts from the moment that you have userid on LUMI (the local RA is responsible for ensuring that you get a userid when a project has been assigned).

The LUST is a distributed team roughly 10 FTE strong, with people in all LUMI consortium countries, but they work as a team, coordinated by CSC. The Belgian contribution currently consists of two people both working half time for LUMI and half time for user support in their own organisation (VSC and CÉCI). However, you will not necessarily be helped by one of the Belgian team members when you contact LUST, but by the team member who is most familiar with your problem.

There are some problems that we need to pass on to HPE or AMD, particularly if it may be caused by bugs in system software, but also because they have more experts with in-depth knowledge of very specific tools.

The LUMI help desk is staffed from Monday till Friday between 8am and 6pm Brussels time (except on public holidays in Finland). You can expect a same day first response if your support query is well formulated and submitted long enough before closing time, but a full solution of your problem may of course take longer, depending on how busy the help desk is and the complexity of the problem.

Data security on LUMI is very important. Some LUMI projects may host confidential data, and especially industrial LUMI users may have big concerns about who can access their data. Therefore only very, very few people on LUMI have the necessary rights to access user data on the system, and those people even went through a background check. The LUST members do not have that level of access, so we cannot see your data and you will have to pass all relevant information to the LUST through other means!

The LUST help desk should be contacted through web forms in the "User Support - Contact Us" section of the main LUMI web site. The page is also linked from the "Help Desk" page in the LUMI documentation. These forms help you to provide more information that we need to deal with your support request. Please do not email directly to the support web address (that you will know as soon as we answer at ticket as that is done through e-mail). Also, separate issues should go in separate tickets so that separate people in the LUST can deal with them, and you should not reopen an old ticket for a new question, also because then only the person who dealt with the previous ticket gets notified, and they may be on vacation or even not work for LUMI anymore, so your new request may remain unnoticed for a long time.

Tips for writing good tickets that we can answer promptly

How not to write a ticket

How not to write a ticket

  • Use a meaningful subject line. All we see in the ticket overview is a number and the subject line, so we need to find back a ticket we're working on based on that information alone.

    Yes, we have a user on LUMI who managed to send 8 tickets in a short time with the subject line "Geoscience" but 8 rather different problems...

    Hints:

    • For common problems, including your name in the subject may be a good idea.
    • For software problems, including the name of the package helps a lot. So not "Missing software" but "Need help installing QuTiP 4.3.1 on CPU". Or not "Program crashes" but "UppASD returns an MPI error when using more than 1000 ranks".
  • Be accurate when describing the problem. Support staff members are not clairvoyants with mysterious superpowers who can read your mind across the internet.

    We'll discuss this a bit more further in this lecture.

  • If you have no time to work with us on the problem yourself, then tell so.

    Note: The priorities added to the ticket are currently rather confusing. You have three choices in the forms: "It affects severely my work", "It is annoying, but I can work", and "I can continue to work normally", which map to "high", "medium" and "low". So tickets are very easily marked as high priority because you cannot work on LUMI, even though you have so much other work to do that it is really not that urgent or that you don't even have time to answer quickly.

The improved version could be something like this:

Improved version login ticket

  • The subject line makes it stand out as the person doing login tickets can quickly find back the ticket.

  • There is already a lot of useful information in the ticket:

    • When did the user first notice the problem, and has it worked before (and when)?

    • The user clearly tried to check if anything has changed on their side, and in this case at least the configuration files of the ssh client have remained unchanged.

    • We know what client the user is using and luckily it is a standard one so that we know ourselves how to use it (apart from local permission problems, but since it still works on the local cluster, permissions on files in the local .ssh directory cannot be the issue here). Hence we can tell the user how to gather more information. (Unfortunately, some users use exotic ssh clients that we cannot even have access to without taking licenses, but expect us to be able to support them...)

    • It is also useful to know that it is not a one-time hiccup.

How to write tickets

1 ticket = 1 issue = 1 ticket

1 ticket = 1 issue = 1 ticket

  • If you have multiple unrelated issues, submit them as multiple tickets. In a support team, each member has their own specialisation so different issues may end up with different people. Tickets need to be assigned to people who will deal with the problem, and it becomes very inefficient if multiple people have to work on different parts of the ticket simultaneously.

    Moreover, the communication in a ticket will also become very confusing if multiple issues are discussed simultaneously.

  • Conversely, don't submit multiple tickets for a single issue just because you are too lazy to look for the previous e-mail if you haven't been able to do your part of the work for some days. If you've really lost the email, at least tell us that it is related to a previous ticket so that we can try to find it back.

    So keep the emails you get from the help desk to reply!

  • Avoid reusing exactly the same subject line. Surely there must be something different for the new problem?

  • Avoid reopening old tickets that have been closed long ago.

    If you get a message that a ticket has been closed (basically because there has been no reply for several weeks so we assume the issue is not relevant anymore) and you feel it should not have been closed, reply immediately.

    When you reply to a closed ticket and the person who did the ticket is not around (e.g., on vacation or left the help desk team), your reply may get unnoticed for weeks. Closed tickets are not passed to a colleague when we go on a holiday or leave.

  • Certainly do not reopen old tickets with new issues. Apart from the fact that the person who did the ticket before may not be around, they may also have no time to deal with the ticket quickly or may not even be the right person to deal with it.

The subject line is important!

Subject line is important

  • The support team has two identifiers in your ticket: Your mail address and the subject that you specified in the form (LUST help desk) or email (LUMI-BE help desk). So:

    • Use consistently the same mail address for tickets. This helps us locate previous requests from you and hence can give us more background about what you are trying to do.

      The help desk is a professional service, and you use LUMI for professional work, so use your company or university mail address and not some private one.

    • Make sure your subject line is already descriptive and likely unique in our system.

      We use the subject line to distinguish between tickets we're dealing with so make sure that it can easily be distinguished from others and is easy to find back.

  • So include relevant keywords in your subject, e.g.,

    • The userid you were using and the way of logging in to the system for login problems.

    • Name of software packages for software installations or crashes.

Some proper examples are

  • User abcdefgh cannot log in via web interface

    So we know we may have to pass this to our Open OnDemand experts, and your userid makes the message likely unique. Moreover, after looking into account databases etc., we can immediately find back the ticket as the userid is in the subject.

  • ICON installation needs libxml2

  • VASP produces MPI error message when using more than 1024 ranks

Think with us

Think with us (1)

Think with us (2)

  • Provide enough information for us to understand who you are:

    • Name: and the name as we would see it on the system, not some nickname.

    • Userid: Important especially for login problems.

    • Project number:

      • When talking to the LUST: they don't know EuroHPC or LUMI-BE project numbers, only the 465xxxxxx numbers, and that is what they need.

      • When talking to LUMI-BE: for LUMI-BE projects, the LUMI-BE project number may be useful. It is the ticket number of you project submission. Not all LUMI-BE help team members have access to the data associated with your LUMI project number 465xxxxxx, but some have and can use this to diagnose some problems.

  • For login and data transfer problems, your client environment is often also important to diagnose the problem.

    • This does include your geographical location. Doing things from work may have different issues then doing things from your home connection, and being abroad may be part of the problem!

      • Extreme example: Iran blocks most encrypted internet traffic going abroad. This is an extreme example though as you are not allowed to use LUMI while being in Iran as it breaks the US export restrictions and hence the LUMI conditions of use.
  • What software are you using, and how was it installed or where did you find it?

    We know that certain installation procedures (e.g., simply downloading a binary) may cause certain problems on LUMI. Also, there are some software installations on LUMI for which neither LUST nor the LUMI-BE help desk is responsible, so we need to direct to to their support instances when problems occur that are likely related to that software.

  • Describe your environment (though experience learns that some errors are caused by users not even remembering they've changed things while those changes can cause problems)

    • Which modules are you using?

    • Do you have special stuff in .bashrc or .profile?

    • For problems with running jobs, the batch script that you are using can be very useful.

  • Describe what worked so far, and if it ever worked: when? E.g., was this before a system update?

    The LUST has had tickets were a user told that something worked before but as we questioned further it was long ago before a system update that we know broke some things that affects some programs...

  • What did you change since then? Think carefully about that. When something worked some time ago but doesn't work know the cause is very often something you changed as a user and not something going on on the system.

  • What did you already try to solve the problem?

  • How can we reproduce the problem? A simple and quick reproducer speeds up the time to answer your ticket. Conversely, if it takes a 24-hour run on 256 nodes to see the problem it is very, very likely that the support team cannot help you.

    Moreover, if you are using licensed software with a license that does not cover the support team members, usually we cannot do much for you. Neither the LUMI-BE help desk team nor the LUST will knowingly violate software licenses only to solve your problems!

  • The LUST and LUMI-BE help desk members know a lot about LUMI but they are (usually) not researchers in your field so cannot help you with problems that require domain knowledge in your field. We can impossibly know all software packages and tell you how to use them (and, e.g., correct errors in your input files).

    You as a user should be the domain expert, and since you are doing computational science, somewhat multidisciplinary and know something about both the "computational" and the "science".

    We as the support team should be the expert in the "computational". Some of us where researchers in the past so have some domain knowledge about a the specific subfield we were working in, but there are simply too many scientific domains and subdomains to have full coverage of that in a central support team for a generic infrastructure.

    We do see that lots of crashes and performance problems with software are in fact caused by wrong use of the package!

    However, some users expect that we understand the science they are doing, find the errors in their model and run that on LUMI, preferably by the evening they submitted the ticket. If we could do that, then we could basically make a Ph.D that usually takes 4 years in 4 weeks and wouldn't need users anymore as it would be more fun to produce the science that our funding agencies expect ourselves.

  • The LUST and LUMI-BE help desk members know a lot about LUMI but cannot know or solve everything and may need to pass your problem to other instances, and in particular HPE or AMD.

    Debugging system software is not the task of the LUMI-BE help desk nor of the LUST. Issues with compilers or libraries can only be solved by those instances that produce those compilers or libraries, and this takes time.

    We have a way of working that enables us to quickly let users test changes to software in the user software stack by making user installations relatively easy and reproducible using EasyBuild, but changing the software installed in the system images - which includes the Cray programming environment - where changes have an effect on how the system runs and can affect all users, are non-trivial and many of those changes can only be made during maintenance breaks.

Beware of the XY-problem!

Beware of the XY-problem

Partly quoting from xyproblem.info: Users are often tempted to ask questions about the solution they have in mind and where they got stuck, while it may actually be the wrong solution to the actual problem. As a result one can waste a lot of time attempting to get the solution they have in mind to work, while at the end it turns out that that solution does not work. It goes as follows:

  1. The user wants to do X.
  2. The user doesn't really know how to do X. However, they think that doing Y first would be a good step towards solving X.
  3. But the user doesn't really know how to do Y either and gets stuck there too.
  4. So the user contacts the help desk to help with solving problem Y.
  5. The help desk tries to help with solving Y, but is confused because Y seems a very strange and unusual problem to solve.
  6. Once Y is solved with the help of the help desk, the user is still stuck and cannot solve X yet.
  7. User contacts the help desk again for further help and it turns out that Y wasn't needed in the first place as it is not part of a suitable solution for X.

Or as one of the colleagues of the author of these notes says: "Often the help desk knows the solution, but doesn't know the problem so cannot give the solution."

To prevent this, you as a user has to be complete in your description:

  1. Give the broader problem and intent (so X), not just the small problem (Y) on which you got stuck.

  2. Promptly provide information when the help desk asks you, even if you think that information is irrelevant. The help desk team member may have a very different look on the problem and come up with a solution that you couldn't think of, and you may be too focused on the solution that you have in mind to see a better solution.

  3. Being complete also means that if you ruled out some solutions, share with the help desk why you ruled them out as it can help the help desk team member to understand what you really want.

After all, if your analysis of your problem was fully correct, you wouldn't need to ask for help, don't you?

What support can we offer?

Restrictions

help desk restrictions

Contrary to what you may be familiar with from your local Tier-2 system and support staff, team members of the LUMI help desks have no elevated privileges. This holds for both the LUST and LUMI-BE help desk.

As a result,

  • We cannot access user files. A specific person of the LUMI-BE help desk can access your project, scratch and flash folders if you make them part of the project. This requires a few steps and therefore is only done for a longer collaboration between a LUMI project and that help desk member. The LUST members don't do that.

  • Help desk team members cannot install or modify system packages or settings.

    A good sysadmin usually wouldn't do so either. You are working on a multi-user system and you have to take into account that any change that is beneficial for you, may have adverse effects for other users or for the system as a whole.

    E.g., installing additional software in the images takes away from the available memory on each node, slows down the system boot slightly, and can conflict with software that is installed through other ways.

  • The help desk cannot extend the walltime of jobs.

    Requests are never granted, even not if the extended wall time would still be within the limits of the partition.

  • The LUST is in close contact with the sysadmins, but as the sysadmins are very busy people they will not promptly deal with any problem. Any problem though endangering the stability of the system gets a high priority.

  • The help desk does not monitor running jobs. Sysadmins monitor the general health of the system, but will not try to pick out inefficient jobs unless the job does something that has a very negative effect on the system.

What support can and cannot do

What support can and cannot do (1)

What support can and cannot do (2)

What support can and cannot do (3)

What support can and cannot do (4)

  • The LUST and LUMI-BE help desk do not replace a good introductory HPC course nor are they a search engine for the documentation. L0 support is the responsibility of every user.

  • Resource allocators are responsible for the first steps in getting a project and userid on LUMI. For LUMI-BE project this support is offered through the LUMI-BE help desk at lumi-be-support@enccb.be and for EuroHPC projects the support is offered through CSC, the operator of LUMI, at lumi-customer-accounts@csc.fi, or by EuroHPC itself at access@eurohpc-ju.europa.eu if you have not yet been granted a project by them.

    Once your project is created and accepted (and the resource allocator can confirm that you properly accepted the invitation), support for account problems (in particular login problems) moves to the LUST.

  • If you run out of block or file quota, the LUST can increase your quota within the limits specified in the LUMI documentation.

    If you run out of billing units for compute or storage, only the instance that granted your project can help you, so contact the LUMI-BE help desk for LUMI-BE projects and access@eurohpc-ju.europa.eu for EuroHPC projects (CSC EuroHPC support at lumi-customer-accounts@csc.fi cannot help you directly for project extensions and increase of billing units as they can only do so when EuroHPC instructs them to).

    Projects cannot be extended past one year unless the granting instance is willing to take a charge on the annual budget for the remaining billing units.

    As a rule, for LUMI-BE projects we will not increase the CPU or GPU billing units. However, as for now we have plenty of storage billing units compared to demand and as we understand that it takes time for the user community to get used to working with storage billing units, we're rather flexible in increasing those.

  • The LUST cannot do much complete software installations but often can give useful advice and do some of the work.

    In LUMI-BE we have some resources, though mostly for VSC users.

    Note however that the LUST or LUMI-BE team may not even be allowed to help you due to software license restrictions. Similarly, the LUMI-BE team can only produce an install recipe if we have no access to your project, and though the LUST has technically speaking a zone where they can install software on the system, this is only done for software that the LUST can properly support and that is of interest to a wide enough audience. It is also not done for software where many users may want a specifically customised installation. Neither is it done for software that LUST cannot sufficiently test themselves.

  • Both the LUST and LUMI-BE team can help with questions regarding compute and storage use. LUST provides L1 and basic L2 support. These are basically problems that can solved in hours rather than days or weeks. LUMI-BE has some resources to offer more advanced L2 and some L3 support, but most of these resources are for users eligible for VSC-use only currently.

  • The LUST can help with analysing the source of crashes or poor performance (with the emphasis on "help" as they rarely have all the application knowledge required to dig deep). There are some resources within LUMI-BE also, again mostly on the VSC side.

  • However, neither LUST nor the LUMI-BE help desk is a debugging service (though of course we do take responsibility for code that we developed)

  • The LUST has some resources for work on porting and optimising codes to/for AMD GPUs via porting calls and hackathons respectively.

    VSC also has some resources, but not the same level of access to experts from HPE or AMD to assist.

  • Neither help desk can do your science or solve your science problems though.

Remember:

"Supercomputer support is there to support you in the computational aspects of your work related to the supercomputer but not to take over your work."

Any support will always be a collaboration where you may have to do most of the work. Supercomputer support services are not a free replacement of a research software engineer (the equivalent of the lab assistant that many experimental groups have).

  • LUMI web sites

    • The main LUMI web site contains very general information about LUMI and also has a section in which the trainings organised by the LUST and some other trainings are announced. It is also the starting point to contact the LUST with your support questions via web forms. The web forms assure that we have the necessary information to start investigating your issues.

      Note that when the support form asks for a project number, this is the project number on LUMI (of the form 465XXXXXX for most projects) and not the project number used in LUMI-BE or EuroHPC, as the LUST does not know these numbers.

    • The LUMI documentation covers the LUMI system itself and includes topics such as how to get on the system, where to place your files, how to start jobs, how to use the programming environment, how to install software, etc.

      This is your primary source of information when you are investigating if LUMI might be suitable for you, or once you have obtained a project on LUMI.

    • The LUMI Software Library contains an overview of software pre-installed on LUMI or for which we have install recipes to start from. For some software packages, it also contains additional information on how to use the software on LUMI.

  • Web sites in Belgium:

  • These course notes also contain a page with links into technical documentation of the scheduler and the programming environments on LUMI, and links to the user documentation of some similar systems.