This is an outdated version of the HTCondor Manual. You can find current documentation at http://htcondor.org/manual.
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Subsections


condor_status

Display status of the HTCondor pool

Synopsis

condor_status [-debug] [help options] [query options] [display options] [custom options] [name ... ]

Description

condor_status is a versatile tool that may be used to monitor and query the HTCondor pool. The condor_status tool can be used to query resource information, submitter information, checkpoint server information, and daemon master information. The specific query sent and the resulting information display is controlled by the query options supplied. Queries and display formats can also be customized.

The options that may be supplied to condor_status belong to five groups:

At any time, only one help option, one query option and one display option may be specified. Any number of custom options and host options may be specified.

Options

-debug
Causes debugging information to be sent to stderr, based on the value of the configuration variable TOOL_DEBUG
-help
(Help option) Display usage information.
-diagnose
(Help option) Print out ClassAd query without performing the query.
-absent
(Query option) Query for and display only absent resources.
-any
(Query option) Query all ClassAds and display their type, target type, and name.
-avail
(Query option) Query condor_startd ClassAds and identify resources which are available.
-ckptsrvr
(Query option) Query condor_ckpt_server ClassAds and display checkpoint server attributes.
-claimed
(Query option) Query condor_startd ClassAds and print information about claimed resources.
-cod
(Query option) Display only machine ClassAds that have COD claims. Information displayed includes the claim ID, the owner of the claim, and the state of the COD claim.
-collector
(Query option) Query condor_collector ClassAds and display attributes.
-defrag
(Query option) Query condor_defrag ClassAds.
-direct hostname
(Query option) Go directly to the given host name to get the ClassAds to display. By default, returns the condor_startd ClassAd. If -schedd is also given, return the condor_schedd ClassAd on that host.
-java
(Query option) Display only Java-capable resources.
-license
(Query option) Display license attributes.
-master
(Query option) Query condor_master ClassAds and display daemon master attributes.
-negotiator
(Query option) Query condor_negotiator ClassAds and display attributes.
-pool centralmanagerhostname[:portnumber]
(Query option) Query the specified central manager using an optional port number. condor_status queries the machine specified by the configuration variable COLLECTOR_HOST by default.
-run
(Query option) Display information about machines currently running jobs.
-schedd
(Query option) Query condor_schedd ClassAds and display attributes.
-server
(Query option) Query condor_startd ClassAds and display resource attributes.
-startd
(Query option) Query condor_startd ClassAds.
-state
(Query option) Query condor_startd ClassAds and display resource state information.
-statistics WhichStatistics
(Query option) Can only be used if the -direct option has been specified. Identifies which Statistics attributes to include in the ClassAd. WhichStatistics is specified using the same syntax as defined for STATISTICS_TO_PUBLISH. A definition is in the HTCondor Administrator's manual section on configuration.
-storage
(Query option) Display attributes of machines with network storage resources.
-submitters
(Query option) Query ClassAds sent by submitters and display important submitter attributes.
-subsystem type
(Query option) If type is one of collector, negotiator, master, schedd, startd, or quill, then behavior is the same as the query option without the -subsystem option. For example, -subsystem collector is the same as -collector. A value of type of CkptServer, Machine, DaemonMaster, or Scheduler targets that type of ClassAd.
-vm
(Query option) Query condor_startd ClassAds, and display only VM-enabled machines. Information displayed includes the machine name, the virtual machine software version, the state of machine, the virtual machine memory, and the type of networking.
-attributes Attr1[,Attr2 ... ]
(Display option) Explicitly list the attributes in a comma separated list which should be displayed when using the -xml or -long options. Limiting the number of attributes increases the efficiency of the query.
-expert
(Display option) Display shortened error messages.
-long
(Display option) Display entire ClassAds (same as -verbose).
-sort expr
(Display option) Change the display order to be based on ascending values of an evaluated expression given by expr. Evaluated expressions of a string type are in a case insensitive alphabetical order. If multiple -sort arguments appear on the command line, the primary sort will be on the leftmost one within the command line, and it is numbered 0. A secondary sort will be based on the second expression, and it is numbered 1. For informational or debugging purposes, the ClassAd output to be displayed will appear as if the ClassAd had two additional attributes. CondorStatusSortKeyExpr<N> is the expression, where <N> is replaced by the number of the sort. CondorStatusSortKey<N> gives the result of evaluating the sort expression that is numbered <N>.
-total
(Display option) Display totals only.
-verbose
(Display option) Display entire ClassAds. Implies that totals will not be displayed.
-xml
(Display option) Display entire ClassAds, in XML format. The XML format is fully defined in the reference manual, obtained from the ClassAds web page, with a link at http://research.cs.wisc.edu/htcondor/research.html.
-constraint const
(Custom option) Add constraint expression.
-format fmt attr
(Custom option) Display attribute or expression attr in format fmt. To display the attribute or expression the format must contain a single printf(3)-style conversion specifier. Attributes must be from the resource ClassAd. Expressions are ClassAd expressions and may refer to attributes in the resource ClassAd. If the attribute is not present in a given ClassAd and cannot be parsed as an expression, then the format option will be silently skipped. The conversion specifier must match the type of the attribute or expression. %s is suitable for strings such as Name, %d for integers such as LastHeardFrom, and %f for floating point numbers such as LoadAvg. %v identifies the type of the attribute, and then prints the value in an appropriate format. %V identifies the type of the attribute, and then prints the value in an appropriate format as it would appear in the -long format. As an example, strings used with %V will have quote marks. An incorrect format will result in undefined behavior. Do not use more than one conversion specifier in a given format. More than one conversion specifier will result in undefined behavior. To output multiple attributes repeat the -format option once for each desired attribute. Like printf(3)-style formats, one may include other text that will be reproduced directly. A format without any conversion specifiers may be specified, but an attribute is still required. Include $\mathtt{\backslash}$n to specify a line break.
-autoformat[:tn,lVh] attr1 [attr2 ...]
(Custom option) Display machine ClassAd attribute values formatted in a default way according to their attribute types. This option takes an arbitrary number of attribute names as arguments, and prints out their values. It is like the -format option, but no format strings are required. It is assumed that no attribute names begin with a dash character, so that the next word that begins with dash is the start of the next option. The autoformat option may be followed by a colon character and formatting qualifiers:

t add a tab character before each field instead of the default space character,

n add a newline character after each field,

, add a comma character after each field,

l label each field,

V use %V rather than %v for formatting,

h print headings before the first line of output.

The newline and comma characters may not be used together.

-target filename
(Custom option) Where evaluation requires a target ClassAd to evaluate against, file filename contains the target ClassAd.

General Remarks

Examples

Example 1 To view information from all nodes of an SMP machine, use only the host name. For example, if you had a 4-CPU machine, named vulture.cs.wisc.edu, you might see

% condor_status vulture

Name               OpSys      Arch   State     Activity LoadAv Mem   ActvtyTime

slot1@vulture.cs.w LINUX      INTEL  Claimed   Busy     1.050   512  0+01:47:42
slot2@vulture.cs.w LINUX      INTEL  Claimed   Busy     1.000   512  0+01:48:19
slot3@vulture.cs.w LINUX      INTEL  Unclaimed Idle     0.070   512  1+11:05:32
slot4@vulture.cs.w LINUX      INTEL  Unclaimed Idle     0.000   512  1+11:05:34

                     Total Owner Claimed Unclaimed Matched Preempting Backfill

         INTEL/LINUX     4     0       2         2       0          0        0

               Total     4     0       2         2       0          0        0

Example 2 To view information from a specific nodes of an SMP machine, specify the node directly. You do this by providing the name of the slot. This has the form slot#@hostname. For example:

% condor_status slot3@vulture

Name               OpSys      Arch   State     Activity LoadAv Mem   ActvtyTime

slot3@vulture.cs.w LINUX      INTEL  Unclaimed Idle     0.070   512  1+11:10:32

                     Total Owner Claimed Unclaimed Matched Preempting Backfill

         INTEL/LINUX     1     0       0         1       0          0        0

               Total     1     0       0         1       0          0        0

Constraint option examples

The Unix command to use the constraint option to see all machines with the OpSys of "LINUX":

% condor_status -constraint OpSys==\"LINUX\"
Note that quotation marks must be escaped with the backslash characters for most shells.

The Windows command to do the same thing:

>condor_status -constraint " OpSys==""LINUX"" "
Note that quotation marks are used to delimit the single argument which is the expression, and the quotation marks that identify the string must be escaped by using a set of two double quote marks without any intervening spaces.

To see all machines that are currently in the Idle state, the Unix command is

% condor_status -constraint State==\"Idle\"

To see all machines that are bench marked to have a MIPS rating of more than 750, the Unix command is

% condor_status -constraint 'Mips>750' 

-cod option example

The -cod option displays the status of COD claims within a given HTCondor pool.

Name        ID   ClaimState TimeInState RemoteUser JobId Keyword
astro.cs.wi COD1 Idle        0+00:00:04 wright
chopin.cs.w COD1 Running     0+00:02:05 wright     3.0   fractgen
chopin.cs.w COD2 Suspended   0+00:10:21 wright     4.0   fractgen

               Total  Idle  Running  Suspended  Vacating  Killing
 INTEL/LINUX       3     1        1          1         0        0
       Total       3     1        1          1         0        0

-format option example To display the name and memory attributes of each job ClassAd in a format that is easily parsable by other tools:

% condor_status -format "%s " Name -format "%d\n" Memory
To do the same with the autoformat option, run
% condor_status -autoformat Name Memory

Exit Status

condor_status 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 © 1990-2015 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.
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