Usage & Fair-Share reading your fair-share score, what it means for scheduling Understanding Your Fair-Share Score Fair-share is Slurm's mechanism for balancing cluster access across all users and groups. Your fair-share score determines your job priority in the queue relative to other users. How fair-share works Every user and account is allocated a target share of the cluster — a fraction of the total resources they are expected to use over time. Slurm tracks actual usage and compares it to the target: If you have used less than your share, your priority is higher — your jobs start sooner. If you have used more than your share, your priority is lower — other users' jobs take precedence. Usage decays over time, so a period of heavy use does not permanently lower your priority. The decay window on this cluster is set by HPC staff. Viewing your fair-share Click Usage in the navbar. The page shows your current fair-share score, your account's usage, and how you compare to other users in your group. Improving your priority Wait — priority increases naturally as past usage decays. Use less — avoid requesting more CPUs, memory, or time than your job actually needs. Over-requesting counts as usage even if the resources sit idle. Request accurate time limits — a job that requests 24 hours but finishes in 2 hours still accrues 2 hours of usage, but an accurate time limit helps the scheduler backfill other jobs around yours, which benefits everyone. Checking from the command line sshare -u $USER The FairShare column shows your current score. A value close to 1.0 means you are under your target share (high priority); close to 0.0 means you are over it (low priority).