This is an outdated version of the HTCondor Manual. You can find current documentation at http://htcondor.org/manual.
next up previous contents index
Next: condor_cod Up: 9. Command Reference Manual Previous: condor_checkpoint   Contents   Index

Subsections


condor_chirp

Access files or job ClassAd from an executing job

Synopsis

condor_chirp <Chirp-Command>


Description

condor_chirp is not a command-line tool. condor_chirp is invoked by a Condor job, while the job is executing. It accesses files or job ClassAd attributes on the submit machine. Files can be read, written or removed. Job attributes can be read, and most attributes can be updated.

When invoked by a Condor job, the command-line arguments describe the operation to be performed. Each of these arguments is described below within the section on Chirp Commands. Descriptions using the terms local and remote are given from the point of view of the executing job.

If the input file name for put or write is a dash, condor_chirp uses standard input as the source. If the output file name for fetch is a dash, condor_chirp writes to standard output instead of a local file.

Jobs that use condor_chirp must have the attribute WantIOProxy set to True in the job ClassAd. To do this, place

+WantIOProxy = true
in the submit description file of the job.

condor_chirp only works for jobs run in the vanilla, parallel and java universes.

Chirp Commands

fetch RemoteFileName LocalFileName
Copy the RemoteFileName from the submit machine to the execute machine, naming it LocalFileName.
put [-mode mode] [-perm UnixPerm] LocalFileName RemoteFileName
Copy the LocalFileName from the execute machine to the submit machine, naming it RemoteFileName. The optional -perm UnixPerm argument describes the file access permissions in a Unix format; 660 is an example Unix format.

The optional -mode mode argument is one or more of the following characters describing the RemoteFileName file: w, open for writing; a, force all writes to append; t, truncate before use; c, create the file, if it does not exist; x, fail if c is given and the file already exists.

remove RemoteFileName
Remove the RemoteFileName file from the submit machine.
get_job_attr JobAttributeName
Prints the named job ClassAd attribute to standard output.
set_job_attr JobAttributeName AttributeValue
Sets the named job ClassAd attribute with the given attribute value.
ulog Message
Appends Message to the job's user log.
read [-offset offset] [-stride length skip] RemoteFileName Length
Read Length bytes from RemoteFileName. Optionally, implement a stride by starting the read at offset and reading length bytes with a stride of skip bytes.
write [-offset offset] [-stride length skip] RemoteFileName LocalFileName
Write the contents of LocalFileName to RemoteFileName. Optionally, start writing to the remote file at offset and write length bytes with a stride of skip bytes.
rmdir [-r] RemotePath
Delete the directory specified by RemotePath. If the optional -r is specified, recursively delete the entire directory.
getdir [-l] RemotePath
List the contents of the directory specified by RemotePath. If -l is specified, list all metadata as well.
whoami
Get the user's current identity.
whoareyou RemoteHost
Get the identity of RemoteHost.
link [-s] OldRemotePath NewRemotePath
Create a hard link from OldRemotePath to NewRemotePath. If the optional -s is specified, create a symbolic link instead.
readlink RemoteFileName
Read the contents of the file defined by the symbolic link RemoteFileName.
stat RemotePath
Get metadata for RemotePath. Examines the target, if it is a symbolic link.
lstat RemotePath
Get metadata for RemotePath. Examines the file, if it is a symbolic link.
statfs RemotePath
Get file system metadata for RemotePath.
access RemotePath Mode
Check access permissions for RemotePath. Mode is one or more of the characters r, w, x, or f, representing read, write, execute, and existence, respectively.
chmod RemotePath UnixPerm
Change the permissions of RemotePath to UnixPerm. UnixPerm describes the file access permissions in a Unix format; 660 is an example Unix format.
chown RemotePath UID GID
Change the ownership of RemotePath to UID and GID. Changes the target of RemotePath, if it is a symbolic link.
chown RemotePath UID GID
Change the ownership of RemotePath to UID and GID. Changes the link, if RemotePath is a symbolic link.
truncate RemoteFileName Length
Truncates RemoteFileName to Length bytes.
utime RemotePath AccessTime ModifyTime
Change the access to AccessTime and modification time to ModifyTime of RemotePath.

Examples

To copy a file from the submit machine to the execute machine while the user job is running, run

  condor_chirp fetch remotefile localfile

To print to standard output the value of the Requirements expression from within a running job, run

  condor_chirp get_job_attr Requirements

Note that the remote (submit-side) directory path is relative to the submit directory, and the local (execute-side) directory is relative to the current directory of the running program.

To append the word "foo" to a file called RemoteFile on the submit machine, run

  echo foo | condor_chirp put -mode wa - RemoteFile

To append the message "Hello World" to the user log, run

  condor_chirp ulog "Hello World"

Exit Status

condor_chirp will 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

Copyright © 1990-2012 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.

See the Condor Version 7.6.10 Manual or http://research.cs.wisc.edu/htcondor/ for additional notices.


next up previous contents index
Next: condor_cod Up: 9. Command Reference Manual Previous: condor_checkpoint   Contents   Index
htcondor-admin@cs.wisc.edu