Provided by: coop-computing-tools_9.9-2ubuntu3_amd64 bug

NAME

       parrot_run - run a program in the Parrot virtual file system

SYNOPSIS

       parrot_run [parrot_options] program [program_options]

DESCRIPTION

       parrot_run  runs  an  application or a shell inside the Parrot virtual filesystem.  Parrot
       redirects the application's system calls to  remote  storage  systems.   Parrot  currently
       supports  the  following  remote  storage  systems: HTTP, GROW, FTP, GridFTP, iRODS, HDFS,
       XRootd, Chirp.  This list may vary depending on how Parrot was built.  Run  parrot  -h  to
       see exactly what support is available on your system.

       Parrot  works  by  trapping  the  application's  system calls through the ptrace debugging
       interface.  It does not require any special privileges to install or run, so it is  useful
       to  ordinary  users  that  wish  to  access  data  across  wide area networks.  The ptrace
       debugging interface does have some cost, so applications may run slower, depending on  how
       many I/O operations they perform.

       For    complete    details    with    examples,    see    the    Parrot    User's   Manual
       (http://ccl.cse.nd.edu/software/manuals/parrot.html)

OPTIONS

        --check-driver <driver>
               Check for the presence of a given driver (e.g. http, ftp, etc) and return  success
              if it is currently enabled.

       -a, --chirp-auth=<unix|hostname|ticket|globus|kerberos>
              Use  this Chirp authentication method.  May be invoked multiple times to indicate a
              preferred list, in order.

       -b, --block-size=<bytes>
              Set the I/O block size hint.

       -c, --status-file=<file>
              Print exit status information to file.

        -C    Enable data channel authentication in GridFTP.

       -d, --debug=<flag>
              Enable debugging for this sub-system.

        -D    Disable small file optimizations.

        --dynamic-mounts
               Enable the use of parot_mount in this session.

        -F    Enable file snapshot caching for all protocols.

        -f    Disable following symlinks.

       -G, --gid=<num>
              Fake this gid; Real gid stays the same.

        -h    Show this screen.

        --helper
              Enable use of helper library.

       -i, --tickets=<files>
              Comma-delimited list of tickets to use for authentication.

       -I, --debug-level-irods=<num>
              Set the iRODS driver internal debug level.

        -K    Checksum files where available.

        -k    Do not checksum files.

       -l, --ld-path=<path>
              Path to ld.so to use.

       -m, --ftab-file=<file>
              Use this file as a mountlist.

       -M, --mount=</foo=/bar>
              Mount (redirect) /foo to /bar.

       -e, --env-list=<path>
              Record the environment variables.

       -n, --name-list=<path>
              Record all the file names.

        --no-set-foreground
              Disable changing the foreground process group of the session.

       -N, --hostname=<name>
              Pretend that this is my hostname.

       -o, --debug-file=<file>
              Write debugging output to this file.  By  default,  debugging  is  sent  to  stderr
              (":stderr"). You may specify logs to be sent to stdout (":stdout") instead.

       -O, --debug-rotate-max=<bytes>
              Rotate debug files of this size.

       -p, --proxy=<host:port>
              Use this proxy server for HTTP requests.

        -Q    Inhibit catalog queries to list /chirp.

       -r, --cvmfs-repos=<repos>
              CVMFS repositories to enable (PARROT_CVMFS_REPO).

        --cvmfs-repo-switching
               Allow repository switching with CVMFS.

       -R, --root-checksum=<cksum>
              Enforce this root filesystem checksum, where available.

        -s    Use streaming protocols without caching.

        -S    Enable whole session caching for all protocols.

        --syscall-disable-debug
              Disable tracee access to the Parrot debug syscall.

       -t, --tempdir=<dir>
              Where to store temporary files.

       -T, --timeout=<time>
              Maximum  amount  of  time  to retry failures.  time)Maximum amount of time to retry
              failures.

        --time-stop
               Stop virtual time at midnight, Jan 1st, 2001 UTC.

        --time-warp
               Warp virtual time starting from midnight, Jan 1st, 2001 UTC.

       -U, --uid=<num>
              Fake this unix uid; Real uid stays the same.

       -u, --username=<name>
              Use this extended username.

        --fake-setuid
              Track changes from setuid and setgid.

        --valgrind
              Enable valgrind support for Parrot.

        -v    Display version number.

        --is-running
              Test is Parrot is already running.

       -w, --work-dir=<dir>
              Initial working directory.

        -W    Display table of system calls trapped.

        -Y    Force synchronous disk writes.

        -Z    Enable automatic decompression on .gz files.

        --disable-service <service>
               Disable a compiled-in service (e.g. http, cvmfs, etc.)

ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES

       parrot_run sets the environment variable PARROT_ENABLED to  the  value  1  for  its  child
       processes.   This  makes  it  possible  to  set  a  visible flag in your shell prompt when
       parrot_run is enabled.

EXIT STATUS

       parrot_run returns the exit status of the process that it runs.  If parrot_run  is  unable
       to start the process, it will return non-zero.

EXAMPLES

       To access a single remote file using vi:

               % parrot_run vi /anonftp/ftp.gnu.org/pub/README

       You can also run an entire shell inside of Parrot, like this:

               % parrot_run bash
               % cd /anonftp/ftp.gnu.org/pub
               % ls -la
               % cat README
               % exit

       To see the list of available Chirp servers around the world:

               % parrot_run ls -la /chirp

       Parrot can record the names of all the accessed files and the environment variables during
       the execution process of one program, like this:

               % parrot_run --name-list list.txt --env-list envlist ls ~

       The environment variables at the starting moment of your program  will  be  recorded  into
       envlist.  The  absolute  paths  of  all  the accessed files, together with the system call
       types, will be recorded into list.txt. For example, the file /usr/bin/ls is accessed using
       the stat system call, like this:

               % /usr/bin/ls|stat

NOTES ON DOCKER

       Docker  by  default  blocks  ptrace, the system call on which parrot relies. To run parrot
       inside  docker,  the  container   needs   to   be   started   using   the   --security-opt
       seccomp=unconfined command line argument. For example:

                   docker run --security-opt seccomp=unconfined MY-DOCKER-IMAGE

COPYRIGHT

       The  Cooperative Computing Tools are Copyright (C) 2005-2019 The University of Notre Dame.
       This software is distributed under the GNU General Public License.  See the  file  COPYING
       for details.

SEE ALSO

Cooperative Computing Tools DocumentationParrot User Manualparrot_run(1)   parrot_cp(1)   parrot_getacl(1)   parrot_setacl(1)   parrot_mkalloc(1)
           parrot_lsalloc(1)      parrot_locate(1)       parrot_timeout(1)       parrot_whoami(1)
           parrot_mount(1)     parrot_md5(1)    parrot_package_create(1)    parrot_package_run(1)
           chroot_package_run(1)