Numerical Priority
Jobs have a numerical priority that is assigned to them when they are submitted, and which can be changed by the user or the wrangler later. The priority ranges from 1 to 9999, with 1 being the highest and 9999 the lowest.
Priority can be limited for non-privileged users
Administrators may not want to allow users to assign themselves the highest possible priority, reserving that privilege for render wranglers or other special users. The highest priority a non-administrator can assign to a job is controlled by the supervisor_highest_user_priority supervisor configuration parameter.
Clustering and Job Priority
Qube! makes use of a concept it calls "clusters". The clusters in a Qube! farm are laid out in a tree-like structure, much like a directory tree where files are kept on disk. The classic example of this is the show/sequence/shot hierarchy.
Clusters are designated in the same way as a directory tree; the root is written as '/', and clusters in the root are written as /A, /B, and /C/D (/C is in the root, and D is "above" /C). Clusters are organized like a directory tree, but instead of branching left to right, it's convenient to imagine them branching upwards, away from the root. In the same way that folders in a directory tree contain files and other folders, clusters can contain other clusters. Clusters can also contain Workers and jobs. This is the key to Qube!'s priority scheme.
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- the lowest priority job with cluster priority order 1 will have a higher effective priority than the highest priority job with cluster priority order 2
- the lowest priority job with cluster priority order 2 will have a higher effective priority than the highest priority job with cluster priority order 3
- and so on…
See Also
How to use clustering for workers
How clustering affects priority and worker selection for jobs
supervisor_highest_user_priority