bionic (1) condor_cod.1.gz

Provided by: htcondor_8.6.8~dfsg.1-2_amd64 bug

Name

       condor_cod manage - COD machines and jobs

Synopsis

       condor_cod [-help -version]

       condor_codrequest[-pool   centralmanagerhostname[:portnumber]-name   scheddname][-addr  "<a.b.c.d:port>"]
       [[-help -version] [-debug -timeout N -classad file] ] [-requirements expr] [-lease N]

       condor_codrelease-id ClaimID[[-help -version] [-debug -timeout N -classad file] ] [-fast]

       condor_codactivate-id ClaimID[[-help -version] [-debug -timeout  N  -classad  file]  ]  [-keyword  string
       -jobad filename -cluster N -proc N -requirements expr]

       condor_coddeactivate-id ClaimID[[-help -version] [-debug -timeout N -classad file] ] [-fast]

       condor_codsuspend-id ClaimID[[-help -version] [-debug -timeout N -classad file] ]

       condor_codrenew-id ClaimID[[-help -version] [-debug -timeout N -classad file] ]

       condor_codresume-id ClaimID[[-help -version] [-debug -timeout N -classad file] ]

       condor_coddelegate_proxy-id  ClaimID[[-help  -version]  [-debug  -timeout  N -classad file] ] [-x509proxy
       ProxyFile]

Description

       condor_codissues commands that manage and use COD claims on machines, given proper authorization.

       Instead of specifying an argument of request, release, activate, deactivate, suspend, renew,  or  resume,
       the  user may invoke the condor_codtool by appending an underscore followed by one of these arguments. As
       an example, the following two commands are equivalent:

          condor_cod  release -id "<128.105.121.21:49973>#1073352104#4"

          condor_cod _release -id "<128.105.121.21:49973>#1073352104#4"

       To make these extended-name commands work, hard link the extended name to the  condor_codexecutable.  For
       example on a Unix machine:

       ln condor_cod _request condor_cod

       The requestargument gives a claim ID, and the other commands (release, activate, deactivate, suspend, and
       resume) use the claim ID. The claim ID is given as the last line of output for a request, and the  output
       appears of the form:

       ID of new claim is: "<a.b.c.d:portnumber>#x#y"

       An actual example of this line of output is

       ID of new claim is: "<128.105.121.21:49973>#1073352104#4"

       The HTCondor manual has a complete description of COD.

Options

       -help

          Display usage information

       -version

          Display version information

       -pool centralmanagerhostname[:portnumber]

          Specify a pool by giving the central manager's host name and an optional port number

       -name scheddname

          Send the command to a machine identified by scheddname

       -addr <a.b.c.d:port>

          Send the command to a machine located at "<a.b.c.d:port>"

       -lease N

          For the requestof a new claim, automatically release the claim after Nseconds.

       request

          Create a new COD claim

       release

          Relinquish a claim and kill any running job

       activate

          Start a job on a given claim

       deactivate

          Kill the current job, but keep the claim

       suspend

          Suspend the job on a given claim

       renew

          Renew the lease to the COD claim

       resume

          Resume the job on a given claim

       delegate_proxy

          Delegate an X509 proxy for the given claim

General Remarks

Examples

Exit Status

       condor_codwill exit with a status value of 0 (zero) upon success, and it will exit with the value 1 (one)
       upon failure.

Author

       Center for High Throughput Computing, University of Wisconsin-Madison

       Copyright (C) 1990-2016 Center for High Throughput Computing, Computer Sciences Department, University of
       Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI. All Rights Reserved. Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0.

                                                   April 2018                                      condor_cod(1)