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A CLI tool for checking if GPUs are available before running your script that uses GPUs.

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knock-on-gpus

A CLI tool for checking if GPUs are available before running your script that uses GPUs.

Installation

pip install knock-on-gpus

Quick start

Basic usage

You can use knock-on-gpus to run a script that uses GPUs.

knock-on-gpus -- python my_script.py

If some GPUs are not available, knock-on-gpus will return an error code and print a message to the console.

Note

knock-on-gpus prohibits omitting the extra command (python my_script.py in this example) by default. This is to avoid accidentally executing the subsequent command without passing CUDA_VISIBLE_DEVICES.

Please see --allow-noop option for details.

Using with CUDA_VISIBLE_DEVICES

You can also use knock-on-gpus to run a script with specific GPUs.

CUDA_VISIBLE_DEVICES=0,1 knock-on-gpus -- python my_script.py

You can also use --devices or -d to specify the GPUs to use.

knock-on-gpus -d 0,1 -- python my_script.py

Auto selection

You can use --auto-select to automatically allocate the number of GPUs.

knock-on-gpus --auto-select 2 -- python my_script.py

If GPU:0, GPU:1, and GPU:3 are unavailable, knock-on-gpus will use GPU:2 and GPU:4.

Set alias for python

You can set an alias for python to use knock-on-gpus by default.

alias unsafe-python="`which python`"
alias python="knock-on-gpus -- python"

Then you can run your script without knock-on-gpus.

Options

--devices

(Alias: -d, --device)

Specifies the GPUs to use. The value is a comma-separated list of GPU IDs.

--memory-border-mib

Specifies the memory border (MiB) to treat as vacant. If the memory usage exceeds this value, the GPU will be treated as occupied.

--use-gpu-strictly

If true, use GPU strictly. If CUDA is not available, it will fail.

--min-gpus

Specifies the number of min GPUs to use.

--max-gpus

Specifies the number of max GPUs to use.

--cuda-visible-devices-env-key

Specifies the environment variable key to set visible devices.

--verbose

If true, print verbose logs.

--auto-select

(Alias: -a, --auto)

If a number is given, it will automatically allocate the number of GPUs.

--allow-noop

If true, allow running without executing extra commands.

Examples

$ knock-on-gpus -d "0,1,2,3" -- sh -c 'echo "devices=$CUDA_VISIBLE_DEVICES"'
# => devices=0,1,2,3

If GPUs are available, this will succeed. "devices=0,1,2,3" will be printed.

$ knock-on-gpus && sh -c 'echo "devices=$CUDA_VISIBLE_DEVICES"'
# => ERROR: Omitting the command is not allowed.

Even if GPUs are available, this will fail because no command passed to knock-on-gpus.

Note that && has no effect to pass the command to knock-on-gpus.

$ knock-on-gpus --allow-noop && sh -c 'echo "devices=$CUDA_VISIBLE_DEVICES"'
# => devices=

If GPUs are available, this will succeed. BUT "devices=" is printed instead of "devices=0,1,2,3" because sh -c ... is not passed to knock-on-gpus.

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A CLI tool for checking if GPUs are available before running your script that uses GPUs.

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