Stephen, I don't think those numbers are right. Of course this is 2 days later than your email so ... Anyway, right now when I look, I see the following: If I consider all Linux jobs and job slots, **including systems in dedicated BaBar queues**, I see this: there are 3743 jobs running in 4930 possible job slots, about 78% full But if I look only at the job slots available for general queue jobs, then I see there are 525 jobs running in 538 possible job slots, about 98% full Anything over about 95% full is "goodness" since job termination and rescheduling etc. probably takes a few percent. On Tue, 13 Feb 2007 14:35:07 +0100 (CET) "Stephen J. Gowdy" wrote: > > Hi All, > I see there are very few busy CPUs (around 691 out of 5918) just > now at SLAC. Can we increase the number used for ATLAS production? I guess > I'm not sure how the single NFS server will deal with a higher load. Wei, > do you have an idea of how far it can be pushed? > > regards, > > Stephen. > > -- > /------------------------------------+-------------------------\ > |Stephen J. Gowdy, SLAC | CERN Office: 32-2-A22| > |http://www.slac.stanford.edu/~gowdy/ | CH-1211 Geneva 23 | > |http://calendar.yahoo.com/gowdy | Switzerland | > |EMail: [log in to unmask] | Tel: +41 22 767 5840 | > \------------------------------------+-------------------------/