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condor_updates_stats

Display output from condor_status

Synopsis

condor_updates_stats [--help | -h] | [--version]

condor_updates_stats [--long | -l] [--history=<min>-<max>] [--interval=<seconds>] [--notime] [--time] [--summary | -s]

Description

condor_updates_stats parses the output from condor_status, and it displays the information relating to update statistics in a useful format. The statistics are displayed with the most recent update first; the most recent update is numbered with the smallest value.

The number of historic points that represent updates is configurable on a per-source basis by configuration variable COLLECTOR_DAEMON_HISTORY_SIZE .

Options

—help
Display usage information and exit.
-h
Same as —help.
—version
Display HTCondor version information and exit.
—long
All update statistics are displayed. Without this option, the statistics are condensed.
-l
Same as —long.
—history=<min>-<max>
Sets the range of update numbers that are printed. By default, the entire history is displayed. To limit the range, the minimum and/or maximum number may be specified. If a minimum is not specified, values from 0 to the maximum are displayed. If the maximum is not specified, all values after the minimum are displayed. When both minimum and maximum are specified, the range to be displayed includes the endpoints as well as all values in between. If no = sign is given, command-line parsing fails, and usage information is displayed. If an = sign is given, with no minimum or maximum values, the default of the entire history is displayed.
—interval=<seconds>
The assumed update interval, in seconds. Assumed times for the the updates are displayed, making the use of the —time option together with the —interval option redundant.
—notime
Do not display assumed times for the the updates. If more than one of the options —notime and —time are provided, the final one within the command line parsed determines the display.
—time
Display assumed times for the the updates. If more than one of the options —notime and —time are provided, the final one within the command line parsed determines the display.
—summary
Display only summary information, not the entire history for each machine.
-s
Same as —summary.

Exit Status

condor_updates_stats will exit with a status value of 0 (zero) upon success, and it will exit with a nonzero value upon failure.

Examples

Assuming the default of 128 updates kept, and assuming that the update interval is 5 minutes, condor_updates_stats displays:

$ condor_status -l host1 | condor_updates_stats --interval=300  
(Reading from stdin)  
*** Name/Machine = 'HOST1.cs.wisc.edu' MyType = 'Machine' ***  
 Type: Main  
   Stats: Total=2277, Seq=2276, Lost=3 (0.13%)  
     0 @ Mon Feb 16 12:55:38 2004: Ok  
  ...  
    28 @ Mon Feb 16 10:35:38 2004: Missed  
    29 @ Mon Feb 16 10:30:38 2004: Ok  
  ...  
   127 @ Mon Feb 16 02:20:38 2004: Ok

Within this display, update numbered 27, which occurs later in time than the missed update numbered 28, is Ok. Each change in state, in reverse time order, displays in this condensed version.

Author

Center for High Throughput Computing, University of Wisconsin–Madison

Copyright

Copyright © 1990-2018 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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