The following tables describe the purpose of each sub-directory and whether they are writable or non-writable by LSF.
LSF_TOP
Directory Path
Description
Attribute
LSF_TOP/8.0
LSF 8.0 binaries and other machine dependent files
Non-writable
LSF_TOP/conf
LSF 8.0 configuration files
You must be LSF administrator or root to edit files in this directory
Writable by the LSF administrator, master host, and master candidate hosts
LSF_TOP/log
LSF 8.0 log files
Writable by all hosts in the cluster
LSF_TOP/work
LSF 8.0 working directory
Writable by the master host and master candidate hosts, and is accessible to slave hosts
EGO directories
Directory Path
Description
Attribute
LSF_BINDIR
EGO binaries and other machine dependent files
Non-writable
LSF_CONFDIR/ego/cluster_name/eservice
(EGO_ESRVDIR)
EGO services configuration and log files.
Writable
LSF_CONFDIR/ego/cluster_name/kernel
(EGO_CONFDIR, LSF_EGO_ENVDIR)
EGO kernel configuration, log files and working directory, including conf/log/work
Writable
LSB_SHAREDIR/cluster_name/ego (EGO_WORKDIR)
EGO working directory
Writable
Example directory structures
UNIX and Linux
The following figures show typical directory structures for a new UNIX or Linux installation with lsfinstall. Depending on which products you have installed and platforms you have selected, your directory structure may vary.
Microsoft Windows
The following diagram shows an example directory structure for a Windows installation.