
Recently, new concerns emerged about Nvidia’s acquisition of SchedMD, the company behind the open‑source scheduling software “Slurm”.
According to reports, the acquisition gives Nvidia control over software that powers roughly 60 percent of the world’s supercomputers.
This software is critical for training large AI models. Therefore, many experts worry that Nvidia could use this control to favor its own hardware over competitors like AMD and Intel.
How Slurm Became Critical Infrastructure
Slurm originated at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory. It schedules computing tasks across large clusters and it helps supercomputers and data centers allocate resources efficiently.
For example, governments use Slurm for weather forecasting and nuclear research. Similarly, AI labs like Meta, Mistral and OpenAI rely on it for training.
However, because Slurm is open‑source and widely adopted, any change to its development could have ripple effects across the entire AI ecosystem.
Why Nvidia’s Control Alarms Developers
The main concern is straightforward. Right now, Nvidia controls scheduling software that also runs on competitors’ chips. The company could subtly prioritize optimizations for its own hardware.
In addition, integration timelines already show faster support for Nvidia’s CUDA than for AMD’s ROCm or Intel’s oneAPI. As a result, this creates a “best‑supported path effect,” where developers naturally choose Nvidia hardware.
Moreover, analysts point to Nvidia’s 2022 acquisition of Bright Computing as a cautionary tale. After that deal, the software worked best on Nvidia systems.
Nvidia’s Promises and What Could Happen
On the one hand, Nvidia has publicly committed to keeping Slurm open‑source and vendor‑neutral. The company stated, “Slurm is open‑source and we continue to provide enhancements for everyone.”
Also, some users hope Nvidia’s resources will accelerate long‑awaited updates. On the other hand, some experts warn that Nvidia “could take what’s a common open‑source tool and make it work better for its own parts.”
Therefore, a concrete test will be how quickly Nvidia integrates AMD’s next‑generation chips into Slurm compared to its own hardware. For now, open‑source developers are watching closely.
How Open Source Devs Can Respond
Ultimately, developers have several options. They can either stick with the Slurm codebase and continue development independently or push for stronger governance with ultimate power.
However, some organizations may switch to alternative schedulers like Univa or PBS Professional. In short, the open‑source community’s continued vigilance will determine whether Slurm remains a neutral tool.