Provided by: gridengine-common_8.1.9+dfsg-11build3_all bug

NAME

       jsv_is_param,   jsv_get_param,  jsv_del_param,  jsv_sub_is_param,  jsv_sub_get_param,  jsv_sub_add_param,
       jsv_sub_del_param,  jsv_is_env,   jsv_get_env,   jsv_add_env,   jsv_mod_env,   jsv_del_env,   jsv_accept,
       jsv_correct,  jsv_reject, jsv_reject_wait, jsv_show_params, jsv_show_envs, jsv_log_info, jsv_log_warning,
       jsv_log_error, jsv_main, jsv_logging_enabled - Grid Engine Job Submission Verifier Scripting Interface

SYNOPSIS

       jsv_clear_params();
       jsv_is_param(param_name);
       jsv_get_param(param_name);
       jsv_set_param(param_name, param_value);
       jsv_del_param(param_name);
       jsv_sub_is_param(param_name, variable_name);
       jsv_sub_get_param(param_name, variable_name);
       jsv_sub_add_param(param_name, variable_name, variable_value);
       jsv_sub_del_param(param_name, variable_name);

       jsv_clear_envs();
       jsv_is_env(variable_name);
       jsv_get_env(variable_name);
       jsv_add_env(variable_name, variable_value);
       jsv_mod_env(variable_name, variable_value);
       jsv_del_env(variable_name);

       jsv_accept(message);
       jsv_correct(message);
       jsv_reject(message);
       jsv_reject_wait(message);

       jsv_show_params();
       jsv_show_envs();
       jsv_log_info(message);
       jsv_log_warning(message);
       jsv_log_error(message);

       jsv_main();
       jsv_send_env();
       jsv_on_start();
       jsv_on_verify();

DESCRIPTION

       The functions documented here implement the server side of the JSV protocol as described in jsv(1) (where
       "server" applies to both client- and server-side JSVs).  These functions are available  in  Bourne  shell
       (preferably  using bash(1) for greater efficiency), TCL, Perl, or Python scripts after sourcing/including
       the files jsv_inlcude.sh, jsv_include.tcl, JSV.pm, or JSV.py.  The files  and  corresponding  JSV  script
       templates are located in the directory $SGE_ROOT/util/resources/jsv.  There is also a Java implementation
       which  has a different structure, with Javadoc documentation normally in $SGE_ROOT/doc/javadocs/jjsv, and
       example files SimpleJsv.java and jjsv.sh in $SGE_ROOT/util/resources/jsv.

       Note that Bourne shell server JSVs are discouraged because any problems with unintended expansion of  job
       parameters represent a security hazard (with the qmaster running as the sgeadmin user).  Also they may be
       relatively  slow,  and  constitute  a bottleneck in high-throughput clusters.  However, shell JSVs may be
       faster using bash(1), even compared with a generally faster shell,  since  fewer  external  commands  are
       invoked.

       In the descriptions of routines here, a calling sequence like
              function(arg1, arg2)
       should be interpreted for Bourne shell and Tcl scripts as
              function arg1 arg2

   jsv_clear_params()
       This  function  clears  all  received  job  parameters  that were stored during the last job verification
       process.

   jsv_clear_envs()
       This function clears all received job  environment  variables  that  were  stored  during  the  last  job
       verification process.

   jsv_show_params()
       A  call  of  this  function reports all known job parameters to the counterpart of this script (client or
       master daemon thread). These parameters will be reported as info messages and appear either in the stdout
       stream of the client or in the message file of the master process.

   jsv_show_envs()
       This function reports all known job environment variables to the counterpart of this  script  (client  or
       master  daemon  thread).   They  will be reported as info messages and appear in the stdout stream of the
       client or in the message file of the master process.

   jsv_is_param(param_name)
       This function returns whether or not a specific job parameter is available for the job which is currently
       being verified. Either the string true or false will be  returned.  The  availability/absence  of  a  job
       parameter does not mean that the corresponding command line switch was used/not used.

       The  values  allowed  for param_name are listed below.  Find additional information in qsub(1) describing
       the availability and value format. Job parameters written in capital letters  are  pseudo  parameters.  A
       detailed description for them can be found in jsv(1).  Note that

       The  following  parameters directly reflect arguments of the same name supplied to the submission command
       (qsub etc.) or corresponding values specified with qmon:
       A, a, ar, b, ckpt, dl, e, h, hold_jid, hold_jid_ad, i, j, js, M, m, masterq, N, notify, o, P, p, R, r, S,
       shell, tc, w
       Other parameters are related to the submission command arguments as follows:

       ac     The the job context.  The outcome of the evaluation of all -ac, -dc, and -sc options is passed  as
              a parameter with the name ac, whose value is a comma-separated list of variable/value pairs;

       binding_strategy, binding_type, binding_amount, binding_step, binding_socket, binding_core, binding_exp_n, binding_exp_socketid, binding_exp_coreid
              The  values  passed  to the -binding parameter are passed as multiple parameters to JSV instances.
              binding_strategy represents the strategy to be used and is one of: linear, striding  or  explicit.
              binding_type  is  the instance that should do the binding, one of: env, set or pe.  binding_socket
              and binding_core are socket/core values whereas binding_step is  the  step  size  (used  only  for
              striding  binding).   The length of the socket/core value list of the explicit binding is reported
              as binding_exp_n.  The id part of binding_exp_socketid and binding_exp_coreid will be replaced  by
              the  position  of the socket/core pair within the explicit binding list (0 <= id < binding_exp_n).
              The first socket/core pair of the explicit binding will  be  reported  with  the  parameter  names
              binding_exp_socket0  and  binding_exp_core0.   Values  that do not apply for the specified binding
              will not be reported to JSV. E.g.  binding_step will only be reported for the striding binding and
              all binding_exp_...  values will only be passed if explicit binding was specified.

       c_interval
              Checkpoint interval, specified as a numeric value with -c;

       c_occasion
              Checkpoint "occasion_specifier" -c.  (n, s, m, or x) specified with -c;

       cwd    Working directory, possibly specified with -cwd or -wd;

       display
              Reflects the -display submit argument and also sets job environment variable DISPLAY to  the  same
              value;

       l_hard -l or -hard followed by -l;

       l_soft -soft followed by -l;

       pe_name, pe_min, pe_max
              The PE name and range limits specified with -pe;

       q_hard -q, or -hard followed by -q;

       q_soft -soft followed by -q.

       See  jsv(1)  for  explanation  of  the  following  pseudo  parameters: CLIENT, CMDNAME, CMDARGS, CMDARGi,
       CONTEXT, GROUP, JOB_ID, USER, VERSION.

   jsv_get_param(param_name)
       This function returns the value of a specific job parameter param_name.

       This value is only available if the function jsv_is_param() returns true. Otherwise an  empty  string  is
       returned.

       Find a list of allowed parameter names in the section for the function jsv_is_param().

   jsv_set_param(param_name, param_value)
       This function changes the job parameter param_name to the value param_value.

       If  param_value is an empty string then the corresponding job parameter will be deleted, similarly to the
       function jsv_del_param().  As a result, the job parameter is  not  available,  as  if  the  corresponding
       command line switch was not specified during job submission.

       For boolean parameters that only accept the values yes or no it is not allowed to pass an empty string as
       param_value.

       Also for the parameters c and m it is not allowed to use empty strings.  Details can be found in qsub(1).

   jsv_del_param(param_name)
       This function deletes the job parameter param_name.

       Find a list of allowed parameter names in the section for the function jsv_is_param().

   jsv_sub_is_param(param_name, variable_name)
       Some job parameters are lists that can contain multiple variables with an optional value.

       This  function  returns true if a job's parameters contain the list-valued param_name, with variable_name
       in the list; otherwise it returns false. false might also indicate that the parameter list itself is  not
       available. Use the function jsv_is_param() to check if the parameter list is not available.

       The  following  parameters  are  list  parameters. The second column describes the corresponding variable
       names to be used. The third column contains a dash (-) if there is no value (variable_value) allowed with
       the function jsv_sub_add_param() or jsv_sub_get_param() will return always an empty  string.  A  question
       mark (?) shows that the value is optional.

       ┌─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┐
       │ param_name      description of variable_name     variable_value │
       ├─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┤
       │ ac              job context variable name                       │
       │ hold_jid        job identifier                   -              │
       │ hold_jid_id     array job identifier             -              │
       │ l_hard          complex attribute name           ?              │
       │ l_soft          complex attribute name           ?              │
       │ M               mail address                     -              │
       │ masterq         cluster queue name or            -              │
       │                 queue instance name                             │
       │ q_hard          cluster queue name or            -              │
       │                 queue instance name                             │
       │ q_soft          cluster queue name or            -              │
       │                 queue instance name                             │
       └─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┘

   jsv_sub_get_param(param_name, variable_name)
       Some job parameters are lists that can contain multiple variables with an optional value.

       This  function  returns  the value of a variable variable_name in the parameter list param_name.  For sub
       list elements that have no value an empty string will be returned.

       Find a list of allowed parameter names (param_name) and variable names (variable_name) in the section for
       the function jsv_sub_is_param().

   jsv_sub_add_param(param_name, variable_name, variable_value)
       Some job parameters are lists that can contain multiple variables with an optional value.

       This function either adds a new variable with a new value or it modifies the value  if  the  variable  is
       already in the list.  variable_value is optional, and if it is not supplied the variable has no value.

       Find a list of allowed parameter names (param_name) and variable names (variable_name) in the section for
       the function jsv_sub_is_param().

   jsv_sub_del_param(param_name, variable_name)
       Some job parameters are lists which can contain multiple variables with an optional value.

       This  function  deletes  a  variable  variable_name  and,  if  available,  the  corresponding  value.  If
       variable_name is not available in the job parameter then the command will be ignored.

       Find a list of allowed parameter names (param_name) and variable names (variable_name )  in  the  section
       for the function jsv_sub_is_param().

   jsv_is_env(variable_name)
       If the function returns true, then the job environment variable with the name variable_name exists in the
       job  currently  being verified, and jsv_get_env() can be used to retrieve the value of that variable.  If
       the function returns false, then the job environment variable does not exist.

   jsv_get_env(variable_name)
       This function returns the value of a job environment variable variable_name.

       This variable has to be passed with the qsub command line switch -v or -V,  and  passing  of  environment
       variable  data  to  JSV scripts has to be enabled. Environment variable data are passed when the function
       jsv_send_env() is called in the callback function jsv_on_start().

       If the variable does not exist, or if environment variable information is not available,  then  an  empty
       string will be returned.

   jsv_add_env(variable_name, variable_value)
       This  function  adds an additional environment variable to the set of variables that will exported to the
       job when it is started.  As a result the variable_name and variable_value become available, as if  -v  Or
       -V was specified during job submission.

       variable_value is optional. If an empty string is passed, then the variable is defined without a value.

       If  variable_name already exists in the set of job environment variables, the corresponding value will be
       replaced by variable_value, as if the function jsv_mod_env() was used.  If an empty string is passed then
       the old value will be deleted.

       To delete an environment variable, the function jsv_del_env() has to be used.

   jsv_mod_env(variable_name, variable_value)
       This function modifies an existing environment variable that is  in  the  set  of  variables  which  will
       exported  to  the  job  when  it  is  started.  As a result, the variable_name and variable_value will be
       available as if -v Or -V was specified during job submission.

       variable_value is optional. If an empty string is passed, then the variable is defined without a value.

       If variable_name does not already exist in the set of job environment variables, then  the  corresponding
       name and value will be added as if the function jsv_add_env() was used.

       To delete a environment variable, use the function jsv_del_env().

   jsv_del_env(variable_name)
       This  function  removes  job  environment  variable  variable_name from the set of variables that will be
       exported to the job when it is started.

       If variable_name does not already exist in the set of job  environment  variables  then  the  command  is
       ignored.

       To  change  the value of a variable use the function jsv_mod_env(); to add a new value, call the function
       jsv_add_env().

   jsv_accept(message)
       This function can only be used in jsv_on_verify(). After it has been called, the function jsv_on_verify()
       has to return immediately.

       A call to this function indicates that the job that is currently being verified should be accepted as  it
       was  initially  provided.  All  job  modifications that might have been applied in jsv_on_verify() before
       this function was called, are then ignored.

       Instead of  calling  jsv_accept()  in  jsv_on_verify(),  the  functions  jsv_correct(),  jsv_reject()  or
       jsv_reject_wait() can be called, but only one of these functions can be used at a time.

   jsv_correct(message)
       This function can only be used in jsv_on_verify(). After it has been called, the function jsv_on_verify()
       has to return immediately.

       A call to this function indicates that the job that is currently being verified has to be modified before
       it  can  be  accepted. All job parameter modifications that were previously applied will be committed and
       the job will be accepted. "Accept" in that case means that the job will either be passed to the next  JSV
       instance for modification or that it is passed to that component in the master daemon that adds it to the
       master data store when the last JSV instance has verified the job.

       Instead  of  calling  jsv_correct()  in  jsv_on_verify(),  the  functions  jsv_accept(),  jsv_reject() or
       jsv_reject_wait() can be called, but only one of these functions can be used.

   jsv_reject(message)
       This function can only be used in jsv_on_verify(). After it has been called the function  jsv_on_verify()
       has to return immediately.

       The  job  that  is  currently  being  verified  will  be  rejected.  message will be passed to the client
       application that tried to submit the job. Commandline clients like qsub will print that message to stdout
       to inform the user that the submission has failed.

       jsv_reject_wait() should be called if the user  may  try  to  submit  the  job  again.  jsv_reject_wait()
       indicates that the verification process might be successful in the future.

       Instead  of  calling  jsv_reject()  in  jsv_on_verify(),  the  functions  jsv_accept(),  jsv_correct() or
       jsv_reject_wait() can be called, but only one of these functions can be used.

   jsv_reject_wait(message)
       This function can only be used in jsv_on_verify(). After it has been called the function  jsv_on_verify()
       has to return immediately.

       The  job  which is currently verified will be rejected. message will be passed to the client application,
       that tries to submit the job. Commandline clients like qsub will print that message to stdout  to  inform
       the user that the submission has failed.

       This  function should be called if the user who tries to submit the job might have a chance to submit the
       job later. jsv_reject indicates that the verified job will also be rejected in future.

       Instead of calling jsv_reject_wait() in jsv_on_verify()  the  functions  jsv_accept(),  jsv_correct()  or
       jsv_reject() can be called, but only one of these functions can be used.

   jsv_log_info(message)
       This function sends an info message to the client or master daemon instance that started the JSV script.

       For  client  JSVs,  this  means that the command line client will get the information and print it to the
       stdout stream. Server JSVs will print that message as an info message to the master daemon message file.

       If message is missing then an empty line will be printed.

   jsv_log_warning(message)
       This function sends a warning message to the client or  master  daemon  instance  that  started  the  JSV
       script.

       For  client  JSVs,  this  means that the command line client will get the information and print it to the
       stdout stream. Server JSVs will print that message as a warning message  to  the  master  daemon  message
       file.

       If message is missing then an empty line will be printed.

   jsv_log_error(message)
       This function sends an error message to the client or master daemon instance that started the JSV script.

       For  client  JSVs,  this  means that the command line client will get the information and print it to the
       stdout stream. Server JSVs will print that message as an error message to the master daemon message file.

       If message is missing then an empty line will be printed.

   jsv_send_env()
       This function can only be used in  jsv_on_start().  If  it  is  used  there,  then  the  job  environment
       information will be available in jsv_on_verify() for the next job that is scheduled to be verified.

       This   function   must   be  called  for  the  functions  jsv_show_envs(),  jsv_is_env(),  jsv_get_env(),
       jsv_add_env() and jsv_mod_env() to behave correctly.

       Job environments might become very big (10kB and more). This  will  slow  down  the  executing  component
       (submit  client  or  master daemon thread). For this reason, job environment information is not passed to
       JSV scripts by default.

       Please note also that the data in the job  environment  can't  be  verified  by  Grid  Engine  and  might
       therefore  contain  values  which  could  be  misinterpreted in the script environment and cause security
       issues.

   jsv_main()
       This function has to be called in the main function in JSV scripts. It implements the  JSV  protocol  and
       performs the communication with client and server components which might start JSV scripts.

       This  function does not return immediately. It returns only when the "QUIT" command is sent by the client
       or server component.

       During the communication with client and server components, this function triggers two callback functions
       for each job that should be verified. First jsv_on_start() and later on jsv_on_verify().

       jsv_on_start() can be used to initialize certain  things  that  might  be  needed  for  the  verification
       process. jsv_on_verify() does the verification process itself.

       The  function  jsv_send_env() can be called in jsv_on_start() so that the job environment is available in
       jsv_on_verify().

       The  following  functions  can  only  be  used  in  jsv_on_verify().   Simple  job  parameters   can   be
       accessed/modified with: jsv_is_param, jsv_get_param, jsv_set_param and jsv_del_param.

       List  based  job  parameters can be accessed with: jsv_sub_is_param, jsv_sub_get_param, jsv_sub_add_param
       and jsv_sub_del_param.

       If the environment was requested with jsv_send_env()  in  jsv_on_start()  then  the  environment  can  be
       accessed/modified  with  the  following  commands:  jsv_is_env, jsv_get_env, jsv_add_env, jsv_mod_env and
       jsv_del_env.

       Jobs  can  be  accepted/rejected  with   the   following:   jsv_accept,   jsv_correct,   jsv_reject   and
       jsv_reject_wait.

       The  following  functions  send messages to the calling component of a JSV that will either appear on the
       stdout stream of the client or in the master message file. This is especially useful when new JSV scripts
       should be tested: jsv_show_params, jsv_show_envs, jsv_log_info, jsv_log_warning and jsv_log_error.

   jsv_on_start()
       This is a callback function that has to be defined by the creator of a JSV  script.   It  is  called  for
       every job a short time before the verification process of a job starts.

       Within  this  function jsv_send_env can be called to request job environment information for the next job
       scheduled to be verified.

       After this function returns jsv_on_verify() will be called. This function does the  verification  process
       itself.

   jsv_on_verify()
       This  is  a  callback  function  that has to be defined by the creator of a JSV script.  It is called for
       every job, and when it returns the job will either be accepted or rejected. Find implementation  examples
       in the directory $SGE_ROOT/util/resources/jsv.

       The  logic of this function completely depends on its creator. The creator has only to take care that one
       of the functions jsv_accept(), jsv_reject(), jsv_reject_wait() or  jsv_correct()  is  called  before  the
       function returns.

   jsv_logging_enabled
       Setting  this  variable  to  true produces logging output tracing the JSV protocol, sent to a file of the
       form /tmp/jsv_$$.log.  In the case of shell JSVs, it may be set in the environment of the job  submission
       to effect logging without modifying the script.

EXAMPLES

       Find  in  the  table below the returned values for the "*is*" and "*get*" functions when following job is
       submitted:

              qsub -l mem=1G,mem2=200M -l a=lx-amd64 ...

              function call                      returned value
              ─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
              jsv_is_param(l_hard)               "true"
              jsv_get_param(l_hard)              "mem=1G,mem2=200M,a=lx-amd64"
              jsv_sub_is_param(l_hard,mem)       "true"
              jsv_sub_get_param(l_hard,mem)      "1G"
              jsv_sub_is_param(l_hard,mem3)      "false"
              jsv_sub_get_param(l_hard,mem3)     ""
              jsv_sub_is_param(l_hard,a)         "true"
              jsv_sub_get_param(l_hard,a)        "lx-amd64"
              jsv_sub_is_param(l_hard,arch)      "false"
              jsv_sub_get_param(l_hard,arch)     ""

FILES

       Include files:
       $SGE_ROOT/util/resources/jsv/jsv_include.sh
       $SGE_ROOT/util/resources/jsv/jsv_include.tcl
       $SGE_ROOT/util/resources/jsv/JSV.pm
       Example files:
       $SGE_ROOT/util/resources/jsv/jsv.sh
       $SGE_ROOT/util/resources/jsv/jsv.tcl
       $SGE_ROOT/util/resources/jsv/jsv.pl
       $SGE_ROOT/util/resources/jsv/jjsv.sh
       $SGE_ROOT/util/resources/jsv/SimpleJsv.java
       Debugging log file:
       /tmp/jsv_$$.log

BUGS

       Complex names seen by the script are not canonicalized, i.e.  if  the  name  and  shortcut  vary,  it  is
       necessary to consider both.

SEE ALSO

       sge_intro(1), jsv(1), qalter(1), qlogin(1), qmake(1), qrsh(1), qsh(1), qsub(1), qtcsh(1),

COPYRIGHT

       See sge_intro(1) for a full statement of rights and permissions.

SGE 8.1.3pre                                       2013-05-01                            JSV_SCRIPT_INTERFACE(3)