condor_config_val Query(1) or set a given HTCondor configuration variable

Synopsis

condor_config_val <help option>

condor_config_val[<location options>] <edit option>

condor_config_val[<location options>] [<view options>] vars

Description

condor_config_valcan be used to quickly see what the current HTCondor configuration is on any given machine. Given a space separated set of configuration variables with the varsargument, condor_config_valwill report what each of these variables is currently set to. If a given variable is not defined, condor_config_valwill halt on that variable, and report that it is not defined. By default, condor_config_vallooks in the local machine's configuration files in order to evaluate the variables. Variables and values may instead be queried from a daemon specified using a location option.

Rawoutput of condor_config_valdisplays the string used to define the configuration variable. This is what is on the right hand side of the equals sign ( = ) in a configuration file for a variable. The default output is an expandedone. Expanded output recursively replaces any macros within the raw definition of a variable with the macro's raw definition.

Each daemon remembers settings made by a successful invocation of condor_config_val. The configuration fileis not modified.

condor_config_valcan be used to persistently set or unset configuration variables for a specific daemon on a given machine using a -setor -unsetedit option. Persistent settings remain when the daemon is restarted. Configuration variables for a specific daemon on a given machine may be set or unset for the time period that the daemon continues to run using a -rsetor -runsetedit option. These runtime settings will override persistent settings until the daemon is restarted. Any changes made will not take effect until condor_reconfigis invoked.

In general, modifying a host's configuration with condor_config_valrequires the CONFIG access level, which is disabled on all hosts by default. Administrators have more fine-grained control over which access levels can modify which settings. See section 3.6.1on page for more details on security settings. Further, security considerations require proper settings of configuration variables SETTABLE_ATTRS_<PERMISSION-LEVEL> (see 3.3.4), ENABLE_PERSISTENT_CONFIG (see 3.3.4), and HOSTALLOW... (see 3.3.4) in order to use condor_config_valto change any configuration variable.

It is generally wise to test a new configuration on a single machine to ensure that no syntax or other errors in the configuration have been made before the reconfiguration of many machines. Having bad syntax or invalid configuration settings is a fatal error for HTCondor daemons, and they will exit. It is far better to discover such a problem on a single machine than to cause all the HTCondor daemons in the pool to exit. condor_config_valcan help with this type of testing.

Options

-help

(help option) Print usage information and exit.

-version

(help option) Print the HTCondor version information and exit.

-set var = value

(edit option) Sets one or more persistent configuration file variables. The new value remains if the daemon is restarted. One or more variables can be set; the syntax requires double quote marks to identify the pairing of variable name to value, and to permit spaces.

-unset var

(edit option) Each of the persistent configuration variables listed reverts to its previous value.

-rset var = value

(edit option) Sets one or more configuration file variables. The new value remains as long as the daemon continues running. One or more variables can be set; the syntax requires double quote marks to identify the pairing of variable name to value, and to permit spaces.

-runset var

(edit option) Each of the configuration variables listed reverts to its previous value as long as the daemon continues running.

-dump

(view option) Display the raw value of all varslisted. If no varsare listed, then print all configuration variables and their values. The -expand, -default, and -evaluateoptions take precedence over this -dumpoption, such that the output will not be raw.

-default

(view option) Default values are displayed.

-expand

(view option) Expanded values are displayed. This is the default.

-raw

(view option) Raw values are displayed.

-verbose

(view option) Display configuration file name and line number where the variable is set, along with the raw, expanded, and default values of the variable.

-debug[:<opts>]

(view option) Send output to stderr , overriding a set value of TOOL_DEBUG .

-evaluate

(view option) Applied only when a location optionspecifies a daemon. The value of the requested parameter will be evaluated with respect to the ClassAd of that daemon.

-used

(view option) Applied only when a location optionspecifies a daemon. Modifies which variables are displayed to only those used by the specified daemon.

-unused

(view option) Applied only when a location optionspecifies a daemon. Modifies which variables are displayed to only those notused by the specified daemon.

-config

(view option) Applied only when the configuration is read from files (the default), and notwhen applied to a specific daemon. Display the current configuration file that set the variable.

-writeconfig[:upgrade] filename

(view option) For the configuration read from files (the default), write to file filenameall configuration variables. Values that are the same as internal, compile-time defaults will be preceded by the comment character. If the :upgrade option is specified, then values that are the same as the internal, compile-time defaults are omitted. Variables are in the same order as the they were read from the original configuration files.

-mixedcase

(view option) Applied only when the configuration is read from files (the default), and notwhen applied to a specific daemon. Print variable names with the same letter case used in the variable's definition.

-local-name <name>

(view option) Applied only when the configuration is read from files (the default), and notwhen applied to a specific daemon. Inspect the values of attributes that use local names, which is useful to distinguish which daemon when there is more than one of the particular daemon running.

-subsystem <daemon>

(view option) Applied only when the configuration is read from files (the default), and notwhen applied to a specific daemon. Specifies the subsystem or daemon name to query, with a default value of the TOOL subsystem.

-address <ip:port>

(location option) Connect to the given IP address and port number.

-pool centralmanagerhostname[:portnumber]

(location option) Use the given central manager and an optional port number to find daemons.

-name <machine_name>

(location option) Query the specified machine's condor_masterdaemon for its configuration. Does not function together with any of the options: -dump, -config, or -verbose.

-master | -schedd | -startd | -collector | -negotiator

(location option) The specific daemon to query.

Exit Status

condor_config_valwill exit with a status value of 0 (zero) upon success, and it will exit with the value 1 (one) upon failure.

Examples

Here is a set of examples to show a sequence of operations using condor_config_val. To request the condor_schedddaemon on host perdita to display the value of the MAX_JOBS_RUNNING configuration variable:



  % condor_config_val  -name perdita -schedd MAX_JOBS_RUNNING

  500

To request the condor_schedddaemon on host perdita to set the value of the MAX_JOBS_RUNNING configuration variable to the value 10.



  % condor_config_val  -name perdita -schedd -set "MAX_JOBS_RUNNING = 10"

  Successfully set configuration "MAX_JOBS_RUNNING = 10" on 

  schedd perdita.cs.wisc.edu <128.105.73.32:52067>.

A command that will implement the change just set in the previous example.



  % condor_reconfig -schedd perdita

  Sent "Reconfig" command to schedd perdita.cs.wisc.edu

A re-check of the configuration variable reflects the change implemented:



  % condor_config_val  -name perdita -schedd MAX_JOBS_RUNNING

  10

To set the configuration variable MAX_JOBS_RUNNING back to what it was before the command to set it to 10:



  % condor_config_val  -name perdita -schedd -unset MAX_JOBS_RUNNING

  Successfully unset configuration "MAX_JOBS_RUNNING" on 

  schedd perdita.cs.wisc.edu <128.105.73.32:52067>.

A command that will implement the change just set in the previous example.



  % condor_reconfig -schedd perdita

  Sent "Reconfig" command to schedd perdita.cs.wisc.edu

A re-check of the configuration variable reflects that variable has gone back to is value before initial set of the variable:



  % condor_config_val  -name perdita -schedd MAX_JOBS_RUNNING

  500

Author

Center for High Throughput Computing, University of Wisconsin-Madison

Copyright

Copyright (C) 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.