-oo

Overwrites the standard output of the job to the specified file path.

Categories

io

Synopsis

bsub -oo output_file

Description

Overwrites the standard output of the job to the specified file if it exists, or sends the output to a new file if it does not exist. Sends the output by mail if the system has trouble writing to the file.

If only a file name is specified, LSF writes the output file to the current working directory. If the current working directory is not accessible on the execution host after the job starts, LSF writes the standard output file to /tmp/.

If the specified output_file path is not accessible, the output will not be stored.

If you use the special character %J in the name of the output file, then %J is replaced by the job ID of the job. If you use the special character %I in the name of the output file, then %I is replaced by the index of the job in the array, if the job is a member of an array. Otherwise, %I is replaced by 0 (zero).

Note: The file path can contain up to 4094 characters for UNIX and Linux, or up to 255 characters for Windows, including the directory, file name, and expanded values for %J (job_ID) and %I (index_ID).

If the parameter LSB_STDOUT_DIRECT in lsf.conf is set to Y or y, the standard output of a job overwrites the output file you specify as the job runs, which occurs every time the job is submitted with the overwrite option, even if it is requeued manually or by the system. If LSB_STDOUT_DIRECT is not set, the output is written to a temporary file that overwrites the specified file after the job finishes. LSB_STDOUT_DIRECT is not supported on Windows.

If you use -oo without -e or -eo, the standard error of the job is stored in the output file.

If you use -oo without -N, the job report is stored in the output file as the file header.

If you use both -oo and -N, the output is stored in the output file and the job report is sent by mail. The job report itself does not contain the output, but the report advises you where to find your output.