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condor_configure
Configure or install Condor
condor_configure or condor_install
[--
help]
condor_configure or condor_install
[--
install[=path/to/release] ]
[--
install-dir=path]
[--
prefix=path]
[--
local-dir=path]
[--
make-personal-condor]
[--
type = submit, execute, manager ]
[--
central-manager = hostname]
[--
owner = ownername ]
[--
make-personal-stork]
[--
overwrite]
[--
ignore-missing-libs]
[--
force]
[--
no-env-scripts]
[--
env-scripts-dir = directory ]
[--
backup]
[--
stork]
[--
credd]
[--
verbose]
condor_configure and condor_install refer to a single script that installs
and/or configures Condor on Unix machines. As the names imply,
condor_install is intended to perform a Condor installation, and
condor_configure is intended to configure (or reconfigure) an
existing installation.
Both will run with Perl 5.6.0 or more recent versions.
condor_configure (and condor_install) are designed to be run more
than one time where required.
It can install Condor when invoked with a correct configuration via
condor_install
or
condor_configure --install
or, it can change the configuration files when invoked via
condor_configure
Note that changes in the configuration files do not result
in changes while Condor is running.
To effect changes while Condor is running,
it is necessary to further use the condor_reconfig or condor_restart
command.
condor_reconfig is required where the currently executing
daemons need to be informed of configuration changes.
condor_restart is required where the options
--
make-personal-condor or
--
type
are used, since these affect which daemons are running.
Running condor_configure or condor_install with no options results
in a usage screen being printed.
The --
help option can be used to display a full help screen.
Within the options given below,
the phrase release directories is the list of directories that are
released with Condor. This list includes:
bin, etc, examples, include,
lib, libexec, man, sbin,
sql and src.
- --help
- Print help screen and exit
- --install
- Perform installation, assuming that
the current working directory contains the release directories.
Without further options, the configuration is that of
a Personal Condor, a complete one-machine pool.
If used as an
upgrade within an existing installation directory, existing
configuration files and local directory are preserved. This
is the default behavior of condor_install.
- --install-dir=path
- Specifies the path
where Condor should be installed or the path where it already is
installed. The default is the current working directory.
- --prefix=path
- This is an alias for
-install-dir.
- --local-dir=path
- Specifies the
location of the local directory, which is the directory that generally
contains the local (machine-specific) configuration file as well as the
directories where Condor daemons write their run-time information
(spool, log, execute).
This location is indicated by the LOCAL_DIR
variable in the configuration file.
When installing (that is, if -install is specified),
condor_configure
will properly create the local directory in the location specified.
If none is specified, the default value is given by the evaluation of
$(RELEASE_DIR)/local.$(HOSTNAME).
During subsequent invocations of condor_configure
(that is, without the --install option),
if the --local-dir option is specified, the new directory
will be created and the log, spool and execute
directories will be moved there from their current location.
- --make-personal-condor
- Installs and configures for
Personal Condor, a fully-functional, one-machine pool.
- --type= submit, execute, manager
- One
or more of the types may be listed.
This determines the roles that a machine may play in a pool.
In general, any machine can be a submit and/or execute machine,
and there is one central manager per pool.
In the case of a Personal Condor,
the machine fulfills all three of these roles.
- --central-manager=hostname
- Instructs
the current Condor installation to use the specified machine
as the central manager.
This modifies the configuration variables COLLECTOR_HOST
and NEGOTIATOR_HOST to point to the given host name).
The central manager machine's Condor configuration needs
to be independently configured to
act as a manager using the option -type=manager.
- --owner=ownername
- Set configuration
such that Condor daemons will be executed as the given owner.
This modifies the
ownership on the log, spool and execute
directories and sets the CONDOR_IDS value
in the configuration file,
to ensure that Condor daemons start up as the specified effective user.
See section 3.6.13 on
UIDs in Condor on page for details.
This is only applicable when condor_configure is run by root.
If not run as root, the owner is the user running
the condor_configure command.
- -overwrite
- Always overwrite the contents of the sbin directory in
the installation directory. By default, condor_install
will not install if it finds an existing sbin directory
with Condor programs in it. In this case, condor_install
will exit with an error message. Specify
-overwrite or -backup to tell condor_install
what to do.
This prevents condor_install from moving an sbin
directory out of the way that it should not move. This is
particularly useful when trying to install Condor in a
location used by other things (/usr, /usr/local, etc.)
For example: condor_install -prefix=/usr
will not move
/usr/sbin out of the way unless you specify the
-backup option.
The -backup behavior is used to
prevent condor_install from overwriting running daemons -
Unix semantics will keep the existing binaries running, even
if they have been moved to a new directory.
- --backup
- Always backup the sbin directory in the installation
directory. By default, condor_install will not install if
it finds an existing sbin directory with Condor programs
in it. In this case, condor_install with exit with an
error message. You must specify -overwrite or
-backup to tell condor_install what to do.
This prevents condor_install from moving an sbin
directory out of the way that it should not move. This is
particularly useful if you're trying to install Condor in a
location used by other things (/usr, /usr/local, etc.)
For example: condor_install -prefix=/usr
will not move
/usr/sbin out of the way unless you specify the
-backup option.
The -backup behavior is used to
prevent condor_install from overwriting running daemons -
Unix semantics will keep the existing binaries running, even
if they have been moved to a new directory.
- --ignore-missing-libs
- Ignore missing shared libraries that are detected by
condor_install. By default, condor_install will detect
missing shared libraries such as libstdc++.so.5 on
Linux; it will print messages and exit if missing libraries
are detected. The --ignore-missing-libs will cause
condor_install to not exit, and to proceed with the
installation if missing libraries are detected.
- --force
- This is equivalent to enabling both the --overwrite and
--ignore-missing-libs command line options.
- --no-env-scripts
- By default, condor_configure writes simple sh and csh
shell scripts which can be sourced by their respective
shells to set the user's PATH and CONDOR_CONFIG
environment
variables. This option prevents condor_configure from
generating these scripts.
- --env-scripts-dir=directory
- By default, the simple sh and csh shell scripts (see
--no-env-scripts for details) are created in
the root directory of the Condor installation. This option
causes condor_configure to generate these scripts in the
specified directory.
- --make-personal-stork
- Creates a
Personal Stork, using the condor_credd daemon.
- --stork
- Configures the
Stork data placement server.
Use this option with the --credd option.
- --credd
- Configure the
the condor_credd daemon (credential manager daemon).
- --verbose
- Print information about changes
to configuration variables as they occur.
condor_configure will exit with a status value of 0 (zero) upon success,
and it will exit with a nonzero value upon failure.
Install Condor on the machine (machine1@cs.wisc.edu)
to be the pool's central manager.
On machine1,
within the directory that contains the unzipped Condor
distribution directories:
% condor_install --type=submit,execute,manager
This will allow the machine to submit and execute Condor jobs,
in addition to being the central manager of the pool.
To change the configuration such that
machine2@cs.wisc.edu is an execute-only machine
(that is, a dedicated computing node)
within a pool with central manager on machine1@cs.wisc.edu,
issue the command on that machine2@cs.wisc.edu
from within the directory where Condor is installed:
% condor_configure --central-manager=machine1@cs.wisc.edu --type=execute
To change the location of the LOCAL_DIR directory
in the configuration file, do (from the directory where Condor is installed):
% condor_configure --local-dir=/path/to/new/local/directory
This will move the log,spool,execute directories
to /path/to/new/local/directory from the current local directory.
Condor Team, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Copyright © 1990-2011 Condor Team, Computer Sciences Department,
University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI. All Rights Reserved.
Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0.
See the Condor Version 7.7.5 Manual or
http://www.condorproject.org/license
for
additional notices.
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