Command Reference Guide

Platform LSF Command Reference 131
The nice value at which jobs in the queue are run. This is the UNIX nice value for
reducing the process priority (see
nice(1)).
STATUS
Inactive
The long format for the -l option gives the possible reasons for a queue to be
inactive:
Inact_Win
The queue is out of its dispatch window or its run window.
Inact_Adm
The queue has been inactivated by the LSF administrator.
SSUSP
The number of job slots in the queue allocated to jobs that are suspended by LSF
because of load levels or run windows.
USUSP
The number of job slots in the queue allocated to jobs that are suspended by the job
submitter or by the LSF administrator.
RSV
The number of job slots in the queue that are reserved by LSF for pending jobs.
Migration threshold
The length of time in seconds that a job dispatched from the queue remains
suspended by the system before LSF attempts to migrate the job to another host. See
the MIG parameter in
lsb.queues and lsb.hosts.
Schedule delay for a new job
The delay time in seconds for scheduling after a new job is submitted. If the
schedule delay time is zero, a new scheduling session is started as soon as the job is
submitted to the queue. See the NEW_JOB_SCHED_DELAY parameter in
lsb.queues.
Interval for a host to accept two jobs
The length of time in seconds to wait after dispatching a job to a host before
dispatching a second job to the same host. If the job accept interval is zero, a host
may accept more than one job in each dispatching interval. See the
JOB_ACCEPT_INTERVAL parameter in
lsb.queues and lsb.params.
RESOURCE LIMITS The hard resource usage limits that are imposed on the jobs in the queue (see
getrlimit(2) and lsb.queues(5)). These limits are imposed on a per-job and a
per-process basis.
The possible per-job limits are:
CPULIMIT