Difference between revisions of "Applications/SAS"

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== Further Information ==
 
== Further Information ==
* [http://www.sas.com/en_gb/home.html Product information]
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* [http://www.sas.com/en_gb/home.html SAS website]
 
* [http://support.sas.com/documentation/cdl/en/hostunx/69602/HTML/default/viewer.htm#titlepage.htm SAS 9.4 Companion for UNIX <Linux> Environments ]
 
* [http://support.sas.com/documentation/cdl/en/hostunx/69602/HTML/default/viewer.htm#titlepage.htm SAS 9.4 Companion for UNIX <Linux> Environments ]

Revision as of 09:17, 7 February 2017

Application Details

  • Description: SAS (Statistical Analysis System) is a software suite developed by SAS Institute for advanced analytics, business intelligence, data management, and predictive analytics.
  • Versions: 9.4
  • Module names: SAS/9.4
  • License: Departmental research only multi-platform license, restricted to Accounting and Finance department

Usage Examples

Interactive

[username@login01 ~]$ interactive
salloc: Granted job allocation 289669
Job ID 289669 connecting to c170, please wait...
Last login: Thu Jan 26 12:59:11 2017 from 10.254.5.246
[username@c170 ~]$ module add test-modules SAS/9.4

To use the full SAS GUI, make sure you have your environment setup as detailed in LINK and run sas_en:

[username@c170 ~]$ sas_en

To use the command line interactive line mode and not the GUI, run sas_en –nodms:

[username@c170 ~]$ sas_en –nodms

Some functions invoke a SAS window even in interactive line mode, for full line mode use –noterminal flag, i.e.:

[username@c170 ~]$ sas_en -nodms –noterminal

You can then run your task using a SAS script with the following command:

[username@c170 ~]$ sas_en -noteminal sas_file.sas

Batch Submission

A better approach is to submit tasks to run automatically without any interaction. To do this, you need a job submission script, an example of which is:

#!/bin/bash
#SBATCH -J SASjob           # Job name, you can change it to whatever you want
#SBATCH -N 1                # Number of nodes (for SAS should be always one)
#SBATCH -n 1                # Number of cores (for SAS should generally be one, see tuning)
#SBATCH -o %N-%j.log        # Standard output will be written here
#SBATCH -e %N-%j.err        # Standard error will be written here
#SBATCH -p compute          # Slurm partition, where you want the job to be queued
 
module add test-modules SAS/9.4
 
sas_en -cpucount 1 -nothreads -noterminal my_sas_script.sas

Note: that the –cpucount in the sas_en command should match the #SBATCH -n number. Change the last .sas filename as appropriate

This submission script can be found at /path/to/sample/script

[username@login01 ~]$ sbatch SAStest.job
Submitted batch job 289552

Tuning SAS tasks

Memory

By default the memory allocation for a SAS is 2GB. As long as the appropriate resources are requested in the job submission script (#SBATCH --mem=XXG) this can be increased as required. The value provided with the SBATCH flag should match that provided to SAS via the -memsize option (see submission script below).

cpucount and threads

By default SAS uses 1 CPU core, however certain functions can use additional resources if they are available, which may result in performance improvements. These functions include SORT, SUMMARY, MEANS, REPORT, TABULATE, and SQL. In order to make use of additional CPU cores, you should request the appropriate resource (#SBATCH -n XX) in your job submission script and amend your SAS command with the threads and cpucount flags, see below:

#!/bin/bash
#SBATCH -J SASjob
#SBATCH -N 1
#SBATCH -n 28
#SBATCH -o %N-%j.log
#SBATCH -e %N-%j.err
#SBATCH -p compute
#SBATCH --mem=40G
 
module add test-modules SAS/9.4
 
sas_en -memsize 40G -cpucount 28 -threads -noterminal my_sas_script.sas

Further Information