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One important difference between Argon and previous systems is that Argon has Hyperthreaded processor cores turned on. Hyperthreaded cores can be thought of as splitting a single processor into two virtual cores, much as a Linux process can be split into threads. That oversimplifies it but if your application is multithreaded then hyperthreaded cores can potentially run the application more efficiently. For non-threaded applications you can think of any pair of hyperthreaded cores to be roughly equivalent to two cores at half the speed if both cores of the pair are in use. This can help ensure that the physical processor is kept busy for processes that do not always use the full capacity of a core. The reasons for enabling HT for Argon are to try to increase system efficiency on the workloads that we have observed. There are some thing to keep in mind as you are developing your workflows.

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If your job does not use the system openmpi, or does not use MPI, then any desired core binding will need to be set up with whatever mechanism the software uses. Otherwise, there will be no core binding. Again, that may not be a major issue. If your job does not work well with HT then run on a number of cores equal to half of the number of slots requested and the OS scheduler will minimize contention. 

new SGE utilities

While SoGE is very similar to previous versions of SGE there are some new utilities that people may find of interest. There are manual pages for each of these.

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