Skip to main content

Notice: this Wiki will be going read only early in 2024 and edits will no longer be possible. Please see: https://gitlab.eclipse.org/eclipsefdn/helpdesk/-/wikis/Wiki-shutdown-plan for the plan.

Jump to: navigation, search

Difference between revisions of "PTP/designs/Resource Manager Configuration"

< PTP‎ | designs
(Regex and File Match Types)
Line 359: Line 359:
  
 
<p>Attributes also carry optional validators which allow you to
 
<p>Attributes also carry optional validators which allow you to
  enforce syntactic rules or file-system semantics on the value when the
+
enforce syntactic rules, numerical ranges (each with one or both
  user enters text.</p>
+
boundaries; these are OR'd) or file-system semantics on the value when
 +
the user enters text.</p>
  
 
[[Image:041validator.jpeg]]
 
[[Image:041validator.jpeg]]
Line 891: Line 892:
  
 
<p>
 
<p>
  A tokenizer may be given any number of
+
A tokenizer may be given any number of
  <code>target</code>
+
<code>target</code>
  elements. The target denotes a particular value (object) currently in,
+
elements. The target denotes a particular value (object) currently in,
  or to be written to, the environment, which will be side-effected on
+
or to be written to, the environment, which will be side-effected on
  the basis of the result of the tokenization. A target in turn contains
+
the basis of the result of the tokenization. A target in turn contains
  <code>match</code>
+
<code>match</code>
  elements and
+
elements and
  <code>test</code>
+
<code>test</code>
  elements; the former are run as part of the stream processing; the
+
elements; the former are run as part of the stream processing; the
  latter are run after the stream processing has been completed.
+
latter are run after the stream processing has been completed. The
</p>
+
optional
 +
<code>else</code>
 +
element is applied only if there are no other tests defined or if none
 +
of the defined tests succeed).
 +
</p>
  
 
<p>
 
<p>
Line 1,018: Line 1,023:
 
</table>
 
</table>
 
<br>
 
<br>
<p>
+
<p>
  The actions listed here all have
+
The actions listed here all have
  <code>entry-type</code>
+
<code>entry-type</code>
  children, either single (
+
children, either single (
  <code>set, throw</code>
+
<code>set, throw</code>
  ) or potentially multiple.
+
) or potentially multiple. All of these except
</p>
+
<code>throw</code>
 +
also allow you to force the creation of a new object (<i>forceNewObject</i>)
 +
each time it is applied; the new object then replaces the current one
 +
for successive actions in the match.
 +
</p>
  
 
====== Entry Type ======
 
====== Entry Type ======

Revision as of 20:50, 1 August 2011

The JAXB Configurable Resource Manager

PTP 5.0.1 Changes

Aside from some significant bug fixes, there are a number of new features with the 5.0.1 release.

  1. The widget component has been split up into three components: widget, button-group, and browse;
  2. action push-button functionality has been added;
  3. control-state elements have been added to all UI control descriptors;
  4. The launch tab import controller type has been modified (largely for maintaining unformity of implementation) to subclass the dynamic controller;
  5. Ability to inspect invisible discovered (excluded) properties and attributes via a "View" button (see note) has been added;
  6. Preferences have been added to help with the debugging of stream tokenizers;
  7. Resource Manager "environment" handling has been totally rewritten in order to support the exclusion of properties associated with invisible or disabled widgets, and to allow for the restoration of their values when re-enabled.

In addition, some tweaking of the SWT "knobs" was necessary to get the XML to reflect more closely the behavior of the Java classes (especially in terms of defaults).


Introduction

The JAXB Resource Manager plug-ins allow you to launch and monitor applications on local or remote resources using resource managers which are configured from an XML file via JAXB ( javax.xml.bind ) technology.

There are two main motivations for providing this class of resource managers:

  1. To allow for maximum adaptability. Often job schedulers (PBS, LSF, LoadLeveler, etc.) or interactive runtime systems (OpenMPI, PE, SLURM, etc.) are set up by system administrators in special or non-standard ways which make it difficult to use a generic tool. The configuration file allows a user or community of users to fit the resource manager to a class of systems, to a single host, or even to special application usage.
  2. Building the resource manager and its UI presentation from an XML configuration means that in most cases no special Java coding is necessary. Users should be able to accommodate new systems, at least on the client-end, without writing and loading additional Eclipse plugins. (The only qualification here is that the monitoring component also support that type of scheduler or runtime; see the following paragraphs.)

Additional considerations in designing a generically configurable resource manager were to partition the client functionality so as to eliminate the need for special server-side proxies and to scale more successfully in the updating of job and resource information.

To this end, JAXB resource managers now consist of two components, a "control", which governs the configuration, launch and cancellation of individual jobs entirely from the client end, and a "monitor", which displays job status as well as global information about the HPC resource. In most cases, the monitor will be a pre-built type provided by the PTP distribution, implemented using LLview. Since LLview already supports a good number of the standard scheduler types, adding a new resource manager type will normally entail only the specific configuration of its control part. The default mode of usage is that the client stages the necessary LLview components (mostly Perl scripts) automatically, but in a future release, the monitor will also be capable of connecting directly to a system-wide (web-based) deployment.

The following is a guide to the resource manager XML definition. Those interested only in using the JAXB resource managers already provided with the PTP distribution should consult the User pages under the relevant scheduler (currently only the PBS resource managers are JAXB-configurable; please see the PBS Res Mgr help).

Configuring/Customizing the Resource Manager

We provide here an introductory tutorial slide set demonstrating some simple additions to a pre-existing resource manager definition file.

Tutorial Slides - JAXBDemo.pdf

Example .xml definitions, including the demo-example.xml used in this tutorial, are available here: Demo XML (PTP 5.0.0); further examples which work with the upcoming 5.0.1 release: Demo XML (PTP 5.0.1).

Preferences

The preference options are aids for debugging configuration changes. The first has to do with altering the default behavior of the resource manager, which is to cache its XML definition file; this can be overridden to reread the file every time you start the Resource Manager. This way, if you make changes, they will automatically be picked up without having to reboot the application or recreate the Resource Manager.

The other options are useful if you are writing a new stream tokenizer for a command; checking all four options usually produces quite a bit of output, so in that case it may be advisable to log the results to a file rather than stdout (at any rate the latter would be available only if PTP were running as an application within the Eclipse IDE platform, which is not the case for those modifying the XML simply from within the PTP package installation workspace).


00Preferences.png


The JAXB Configurable Resource Manager XML Schema

The JAXB Resource Manager is model-driven ; this means that its functioning and appearance are determined by a set of definitions provided via an XML file. What follows is a detailed explanation of the XML schema (XSD) governing the resource manager XML definition.

The Resource Manager Data Type


01rm-data.jpeg

The top-level of the definition tree consists of three elements: site-, control- and monitor-data. In addition, a resource manager should be given a name which sufficiently distinguishes it from others of a similar type; e.g., pbs-torque-v_2.3.7_abe is specific to an installation on the host abe, ll-v_4.0 suits all installations of LoadLeveler version 4, etc.

The site-data element provides an optional place to set fixed or default remote site information. The connection strings are URIs which are specific to the PTP RemoteServices definitions. The scheme for these URIs will usually name the specific remote service (e.g, rse: or remotetools:  ; local is simply file: ). The host name and port given here will appear as defaults in the resource manager selection wizard when you create a new connection.

The principal section of the schema is devoted to defining the resource manager's control part. The top-level control elements include properties and attributes, files to be staged, job script to be generated (if any), commands specific to the resource manager, and the layout of the Launch Tab.

Resource Manager Environment

The resource manager implementation constructs a variable map from the defined properties and attributes which serves as the resource manager "environment". Some elements directly reference these by name; a text/string representation of property or attribute fields can be obtained via the Eclipse variable resolver syntax, with the namespace prefix set to ptp_rm: ${ptp_rm:name#fieldName} , e.g., ${ptp_rm:queues#value} (see further below on the specific fields for properties and attributes).

All properties and attributes defined in the configuration are mapped. The following hard-coded properties are also added at runtime:

control.user.name
control.address
control.working.dir
executablePath
progArgs
directory

In addition, these properties may be linked (see below) to other attributes to furnish the resource manager with an implementation-independent variable for the queue and for any remote output files produced in connection with the job submission.

control.queue.name
stdout_remote_path
stderr_remote_path

Resource Manager Command Types

Commands are system calls, either to a local or remote OS, depending on the connection defined for the resource manager. The start-up- and shut-down-commands are arbitrary commands to be run (serially in order) when the resource manager is started or stopped. The submit commands are those used to launch jobs. Currently a configuration may have only a batch or an interactive mode. Thus it may have only two submission modes, a run and a debug, for the given type. In the future we may allow all four to coexist in a single configuration. get-job-status is a user-initiated (on-demand) request to refresh the status information for a submission. Normal (polled) updates, on the other hand, are the responsibility of the monitor component. The status command nevertheless needs to be implemented in most cases, as it will be called internally just after submission. The remaining "-job" commands are operations which can be executed on submitted jobs; with the exception of terminate, the rest of these have to do with schedulers (batch-systems) and do not apply to resource managers which connect to interactive runtime-systems such as OpenMPI or PE. Note: if the submission type is interactive, the terminate-job command usually does not need to be implemented, as the process termination will be handled internally. However, in some cases (such as PBS -I) which require the interactive job to run as a pseudo-terminal, one may need this command in order to force its termination externally. Finally, a button-action is an arbitrary command associated with a button exposed through the Launch Tab (see further below).

The Control Data Type


02control.jpeg

The majority of the XML definition is given over to the set-up of the resource manager control. One can think of this section as having four subdivisions:

  1. Configuration Variable Definitions (the Environment)
  2. Files and Scripts
  3. External Commands and their Stream Parsers
  4. UI Configuration (Launch Tab)

We will look at these each in turn.

1. Property and Attribute Types

A property is any variable necessary for the functioning of the resource manager. Properties often (but not necessarily) are not visible. The value for properties can be any primitive type, or lists or maps of strings. If stdout and stderr from a scheduled job is to be delivered to the client, the properties stdout_remote_path and stderr_remote_path should be included in the resource manager property set. Simarly, the native designation for the selected queue, if used, should be linked to control.queue.name.

The distinction between attribute and property is not hard and fast, but the intention is to provide a way of differentiating between external, system-determined variables (attributes) and variables only required by the PTP implementation itself. There are several other elements and fields on the attribute, e.g., for type-specific defaults (min/max, choice). Generally, if the variable is exposed to the user, who should also be provided with a description or instructions for use, then it should be defined as an attribute.

040attribute.jpeg

The visible attribute is a way of indicating to the resource manager that the user will not be directly changing the value of the property or attribute via the user interface. Certain widgets (such as the attribute viewer ) check this to see if the property or attribute should be included automatically in its list.


BEST PRACTICE: VISIBLE vs INVISIBLE

Always mark properties or attributes which are the targets of saveValueTo (see below) as visible="true"; if this value is false, this variable will always be passed to the configuration/environment of the resource manager; selection/exclusion of sets of properties or attributes pertains only to those marked visible.


status is an optional field for capturing the validity of the attribute at runtime or for a particular installation, if such information is made available by the system. The readOnly property can be defined here, but more often will be enforced directly on the widget which is connected to the property or attribute. min and max give the boundaries for integer values, usually represented by spinner widgets. translateBooleanAs applies to boolean values which should be represented as strings other than "true" and "false"; use a comma-delimited pair to indicate the string equivalent for the boolean; e.g., "YES,NO" would mean true yields the first string and false the second.

description is meant to be a brief one-sentence definition; most of the time detailed information will go into the tooltip element. choice is a predetermined, fixed set of values to choose from; these are comma-delimited and will appear as the items of a combo-box. items-from instead links the combo items (choice) to another property or attribute value (whose type must be java.util.Collection ).

Property and Attribute Values

The untyped value element on properties and attributes is for internal use only; to give a predefined (primitive) value, use the default element along with the type attribute.

link-value-to works as follows: the property or attribute gets its value from the property or attribute linked to, unless that property or attribute has an undefined (empty) value; in the latter case, any default defined on the present property or attribute will be used. This feature is primarily intended for defining dependent properties or attributes whose values are not directly modified by the user.

Attributes also carry optional validators which allow you to enforce syntactic rules, numerical ranges (each with one or both boundaries; these are OR'd) or file-system semantics on the value when the user enters text.

041validator.jpeg

Regex and File Match Types

The validator makes use of the regex type (also used in the parser or tokenizer; see below), along with a special file-match type. A regex can be used to match by setting the expression field; to split the segment into tokens on the basis of the expression, set the split field to true (this applies only to the match type discussed below). The expression should follow the grammar in java.util.regex  ; the flags are those made available in the java.util.regex.Pattern class (consult the Javadoc for explanations):

  • CASE_INSENSITIVE
  • MULTILINE
  • DOTALL
  • UNICODE_CASE
  • CANON_EQ
  • LITERAL
  • COMMENTS
  • UNIX_LINES

These can be OR'd in the usual manner. NOTE: when using the regex on the match type, the expression can contain variable references to be resolved in the environment.

file-match exports the attributes pertaining to org.eclipse.core.filesystem.IFileInfo  ; efsAttributes is an OR'd string of the EFS constants:

  • ATTRIBUTE_READ_ONLY
  • ATTRIBUTE_IMMUTABLE
  • ATTRIBUTE_OWNER_READ
  • ATTRIBUTE_OWNER_WRITE
  • ATTRIBUTE_OWNER_EXECUTE
  • ATTRIBUTE_GROUP_READ
  • ATTRIBUTE_GROUP_WRITE
  • ATTRIBUTE_GROUP_EXECUTE
  • ATTRIBUTE_OTHER_READ
  • ATTRIBUTE_OTHER_WRITE
  • ATTRIBUTE_OTHER_EXECUTE
  • ATTRIBUTE_EXECUTABLE
  • ATTRIBUTE_ARCHIVE
  • ATTRIBUTE_HIDDEN
  • ATTRIBUTE_SYMLINK
  • ATTRIBUTE_LINK_TARGET

The lastModified... fields require the format yyyy/MM/dd HH:mm:ss .

2. Managed Files

By "managed file" is meant a local file required by the executable but which may not be present on the host on which the job will run; hence, these files may either be external or may actually be generated from the resource manager environment in conjunction with the job submission, but in any case need to be copied to that host just prior to it. The script file used in connection with scheduler (batch) jobs is a special category of the managed-file type, and will be discussed in the next sub-section.

05managed-files.jpeg

Managed files are added to the definition in groups determined by their shared staging location, which is a path relative to the working directory of the connection. (The batch script is by default staged to .eclipsesettings in the user home directory, since it is by default temporary and deleted after the submit call returns; however, one can use the file-staging-location on the script element to set the path explicitly.) The file itself can be set to be deleted after submission (deleteTargetAfterUse; this is currently not implemented in the general case) and if the file is actually generated by the resource manager, the local temporary copy can be deleted or retained (deleteSourceAfterUse). In the latter case, one can also distinguish multiple copies of the generated file by setting uniqueIdPrefix to true.

The managed file definition allows one of three possibilities as to specifying content.

  1. If it is an external file or one edited perhaps through the workspace, one can use the path element to indicate location; this can be either a hard-coded path or a reference to a property or attribute value.
  2. The contents element is a string which literally represents the file contents. The resolveContents attribute in this case is used to indicate whether to pass this string through the variable resolver, substituting any references to property or attribute values it may contain. However, caution should be exercised here in that this string should not contain "${...}" sequences which do not actually refer to Eclipse variables (such as batch script variables), or the resolution will fail. If resolveContents is set to false, you can still provide this text element with a single reference to a property or attribute, in which case the value of that property or attribute will be used as is, without further dereferencing.
  3. The preferred, and most flexible way to represent the contents of a file to be generated, however, is to use the line type which is discussed below in connection with the script type.

When the submit call is executed, managed files are written out, if so indicated, and then their target paths are determined as follows:

  • If the path element is used, the target path becomes staging directory / name of pre-existing file;
  • If the content or line elements are used, the target path becomes staging directory/ [uniqueIdPrefix]managed-file-name);
  • A property is placed in the environment whose name is the managed-file name and whose value is this target path.
The (Batch) Script Element

A resource manager definition for a scheduler system such as PBS or LoadLeveler can be instrumented to work without a batch script (by setting command-line flags or passing all the job control information as environment variables, for instance), but most frequently the use of a script allows more flexibility in configuring the job (interactive managers of course have no need of a script).

06script.jpeg

If the script is specified in the XML definition, its path is automatically added to the list of managed files to be staged to the appropriate directory (by default .eclipsesettings, or whereever indicated by the file-staging-location element), and so there is no need to include a script entry explicitly under the managed-files element. As with the managed-file , deleteAfterSubmit indicates that the script target should not be retained (this is the default behavior); unlike the managed-file , however, the local copy of the generated script is always deleted. A reserved property, managed_file_for_script , should be used to reference the script's path on the target resource; for instance, in the PBS submit command:

   <arg>qsub</arg> <arg>${ptp_rm:managed_file_for_script#value}</arg>


Note: If the import tab (see below) is used to provide an external or workspace edited batch script to the run, nothing extra need be done in the definition XML, as the presence of any external path for the script is handled under the covers.

insertEnvironmentAfter is a line number indicating where in the script to add any extra environment variables set through the Environment tab provided as part of the Run Configuration wizard. This way the user has control over whether these should overwrite previously defined environment variable values.

line and arg types

The line element was mentioned above in connection with managed file content; it is essentially a wrapper around a series of whitespace separated arg elements, all of which are placed on a single line (that is, the group is terminated by a line separator).

07line-arg.jpeg

The arg element is used for script and managed file content as well as in the definition of commands. Its text element can contain variable references to be resolved against the environment, but also allows for the entire string to be treated as a literal by setting resolve to false (default is true). This is useful inasmuch as it allows for the presence of batch-type variables (e.g., ${HOME}) which should be resolved by the remote shell and not inside the Eclipse client.

The default behavior of the argument resolver is not to write out or include arguments whose value is undefined (either null or zero-length). isUndefinedIfMatches affords more nuanced control over whether an argument should be so eliminated. If the argument references property or attribute values, but also has text-literal segments, a regex can be provided to define what an "empty" argument would be in this case. For instance, if an argument flag should not appear when the value it precedes is an empty string, one could write:

 
   <arg isUndefinedIfMatches="-f">-f ${ptp_rm:flag#value}</arg>


For the purposes of matching, trailing whitespace is trimmed from the resolved argument, so there is no need to specify this as part of the regex used to match.

"Just-in-time" resolution of @jobId and managed-file paths

@jobId is a special property name designating the runtime id for a job instance. In the lifecycle of the run/launch (submit) call, this value begins as an internally generated unique id which then is swapped for the id returned by the scheduler or runtime system.

The @jobId, along with the target paths for managed-file elements, are not known at configuration time (i.e., before the user hits "Run"). While the former is made visible to the parsers and the returned status object of the submit command, neither is in the scope of (available for reference in) other managed files or the script element, because these latter elements are generated just prior to the actual submission.

If the script needs to refer to the @jobId, it must do so via the variable made available by the particular scheduler it is written for. An example of how to reference the target path of a managed-file inside the script is included in the tutorial slides ; this essentially involves defining a variable in the submission command's environment, with a reference to the managed-file path property as its value, and then using this environment variable inside the script .

3. Commands

As mentioned above, the resource manager command denotes a [UNIX-type] system call made on the resource manager's remote (target) connection (PTP does not generally support execution on Windows systems). The command is always configured and executed through a Java API (the "process builder") which bottoms out in a bash -c command. The first argument of the command thus must be the name/path of the executable only. Its own arguments can then be subsequently specified by an arbitrary number of arg elements.

08command.jpeg

There are a number of important attributes on the command-type element which bear detailed discussion here. directory of course refers to where the command will be executed; this defaults to the "home" or working directory of the remote control connection (the control.working.dir property); also as expected, redirectStderr means that both output and error streams are sent back on stdout . One can, if necessary, tune the buffer sizes on the stream readers via the streamBufferLimit. If the environment set on the command should entirely replace the shell environment (the default behavior is to append the command environment), set replaceEnvironment to true.

If you do not wish an error to be thrown in the case of non-zero exit of the command, set ignoreExitStatus to true. The flags attribute is an OR'd string of three possible values:

  • NONE (default)
  • ALLOCATE_PTY (allocates a pseudo-terminal)
  • FORWARD_X11

Two crucial fields for command control are waitForId and keepOpen. The former indicates to the resource manager that the output stream for the command is being parsed for an id which will appear as a property in the environment during the command execution, and that the execution should not return until it sees this id. Very often the submit commands will have these semantics. The latter field indicates that the command should be held open for potentially repeated redirection of input (see next paragraph). There can only be one such process open inside the resource manager at a time (these semantics will usually pertain to interactive managers using a pseudo-terminal mode to control job submission).


BEST PRACTICE: WAIT-FOR-ID

As previously described, there are two basic types of commands, (uu)id commands which are related to a specific job, and generic (non-uuid) commands. submit- and -job- commands fall into the former category; those in the latter category are usually simple interactive commands, and their output is not redirected to the console, but uuid-commands have several subclasses:


COMMAND TYPE WAIT FOR ID TOKENIZER STATES
batch yes SUBMITTED
interactive no
interactive yes RUNNING
interactive, open no
interactive, open yes (SUBMITTED,) RUNNING
interactive, open, pseudo-terminal no
interactive, open, pseudo-terminal yes (SUBMITTED,) RUNNING


This table shows the various combinations that are feasible between command type and waiting states. Simple interactive commands, whether held open for further input or not, can wait or not wait, but in the case of waiting, they should be provided with a stream tokenizer which recognizes and sets the RUNNING state. Batch jobs, on the other hand, will usually have a tokenizer which recognizes and sets SUBMITTED. In the case of some open-process jobs (e.g., qsub -I for PBS, which also requires a pseudo-terminal to connect remotely), there will usually be a pause before the terminal job is actually scheduled; in order to allow the user to see that the job has been accepted and is pending, the tokenizer needs to set both SUBMITTED and RUNNING states, the latter when the job has actually started.


We have discussed the arg type above. Note that the command arguments, input and even environment variables make use of this element. For the name-value-pair type comprising the latter one can as simple alternative set the value attribute to a string (which will be resolved first in the current environment); finer-grained control over the resolution of the value, however, requires the use of the arg type. When there is input present, it is directed to the input stream of the command. If the keepOpen attribute is true, a check will be made to see if there already exists an open process (which is also alive), which will then be used; otherwise, the arguments are executed, then the input arguments are given to the process. With an open command/process, the input arguments can be fed repeatedly to the same process; this allows, for instance, for continuous testing of an interactive job in the same interactive session.

Stream Parsers

One can attach parsers (which we also refer to as tokenizers) to the output and error streams of any command in order to capture information and use it to side-effect existing properties or attributes, or to generate new ones on the fly. While the parser is not completely general, it is capable of a wide range of tasks which would typically be required in the handling of output from batch and runtime systems. We here explain the main elements ( target, match, test ) used by the tokenizer; one should further consult the tokenizer examples demonstrating various usage scenarios.

090tokenizer.jpeg

The type element will most commonly not be set, meaning the built-in parser will be used; however, it is possible to implement a custom parser as a contribution to the org.eclipse.ptp.rm.jaxb.core.streamParserTokenizer extension point, in which case this element should be set to its extension id. Note that the extension requires the class to implement org.eclipse.ptp.rm.jaxb.control.internal.IStreamParserTokenizer , which is a Runnable interface with an initialize method which passes in any job id plus the current environment map; the details of such a parser's implementation are not, however, configured from the XML document.

The built-in tokenizer can read the stream in two different ways. If delim is provided, the stream is split using the indicated value. The string should only be one character in length (escaped or non-escaped). Provision is made for the '\r\n' (Windows) two-character delimiter internally; in this case the delimiter should be set to "\r" (however, as already mentioned, PTP does not generally guarantee that system calls will work on Windows). Setting includeDelim means that the delimiter will appear as the last char on the returned stream segment.

The second way to read from the stream is to provide a maxMatchLen size; what this indicates is that whatever substring needs to be found on the stream will not exceed this length. The stream is then read in swatches of maxMatchLen, with the internal buffer set to twice this size, so that each successive read shifts the buffer to the "left" by one length. This guarantees that all such substrings will eventually be matched.

Sometimes a sort of "look-ahead" paradigm is necessary. For instance, one may need to match a segment or segments whose position is defined from the end of the output, but you do not know in advance the actual stream length. In this case, one can opt to read until the end of the stream (all="true"), retaining only the last N buffer-lengths or delimited segments, as indicated by the save field. When the parser reaches the end of the stream, it will then apply the various targets to each saved segment in order.

applyToAll is discussed further under target . The exit-on element indicates that the tokenizer should quit immediately when it encounters this pattern; exit-after indicates that the tokenizer should quit when it encounters this pattern, but should first apply the current segment to its targets.

Target Type


091target.jpeg

A tokenizer may be given any number of target elements. The target denotes a particular value (object) currently in, or to be written to, the environment, which will be side-effected on the basis of the result of the tokenization. A target in turn contains match elements and test elements; the former are run as part of the stream processing; the latter are run after the stream processing has been completed. The optional else element is applied only if there are no other tests defined or if none of the defined tests succeed).

The target object is either to be constructed at match time, or it pre-exists in the environment. If constructed, the type field is used to indicate whether the object is a property or an attribute type; otherwise, ref points to the name of the property or attribute in the environment (recall that for the runtime job identifier, @jobId is used).

Note: when new targets are constructed, there is a merge operation at the end of tokenization which attempts to combine objects into a single instance identified by their name attribute. This assumes that such names will be unique and that any other values to be set on the object which are not explicitly bound in some way to that name via the match pattern will appear on the stream before a new name does (see ex. 5 in tokenizer examples). The default behavior of this merge is that it will fail if two objects with the same name but differing values are generated by the parsing. (This excludes add and put operations which create a list or map; in these cases, the two collections or maps will be combined into one. This does NOT work, however, for append actions.) To allow duplicates, set the allowOverwrites to true; in this case, successive duplicates simply replace the preceding object.

The default behavior of the tokenizer read-match sequence is as follows:

  1. read from the stream either a set number of chars or until the delimiter is found;
  2. for each target:
    • for each match:
      • if the match is positive, process each of the actions, and go to (1).

Only one qualifying target is processed for any given segment read, and for the given target, the first pattern matched is the one processed for its actions. This is basically the "OR" semantics of normal logic programming; hence the implementer must be careful to arrange the matches inside a target in such a way that the more specific match patterns precede the more general.

Three boolean fields allow you to modify this behavior.

  1. The applyToAll field on the tokenizer-type element means take the unmatched part of the read stream and pass it to the next target, even if there was a previous match; this allows you to capture more than one regex pattern per stream segment (see ex. 6 in tokenizer examples).
  2. The matchAll field on the target-type element means do not try to match an already matched expression until all the others are matched (i.e., a logical AND instead of OR governs the set of matches at successive calls to the target match operation); this allows one to use, for instance, .* repeatedly but set different fields of the object with the resulting match (see ex. 5 in tokenizer examples).
  3. The moveToTop field on the match-type element indicates to the tokenizer that the matched target be promoted to first position in the list of targets. This is useful when there is an ordering which expects types of attributes or properties to be grouped in sequence on the stream (see ex. 4 in tokenizer examples).

When a match is found, the set of action types it contains are all applied.

Match Type


10match.jpeg

Each of these types corresponds to an action to be taken on the indicated field of the target object.


set sets the value of that field
append adds to a string buffer, whose string value will be set on the field
add adds to a list to which the value of that field will be set
put places a key-value pair in a map to which the value of that field will be set
throw throws an exception and (optionally) also sets the value of the field


The actions listed here all have entry-type children, either single ( set, throw ) or potentially multiple. All of these except throw also allow you to force the creation of a new object (forceNewObject) each time it is applied; the new object then replaces the current one for successive actions in the match.

Entry Type


11entry.jpeg

This value-abstraction allows one to set key (for maps) and value as literals or references to other properties or attributes to be resolved in the current environment; to reference the matched segment parts one sets keyIndex and valueIndex if the regex was used to split the segment; otherwise, keyGroup and valueGroup refer to the capture group of the regex pattern, with group 0 referring to the entire match.

Test Type


12test.jpeg

As mentioned above, the test-type elements are all run after the tokenization has reached the end of the stream. This class of actions is useful for setting values based on other values produced during tokenization. A test is one or more comparison operations plus a set of actions to apply to the target fields in the case of either success or failure (the "else" element); see ex. 3 or the "get-job-status" example in tokenizer examples.

The op attribute can be one of the following comparisons:

EQ : equals
LT : less than
LE : less than or equal to
GT : greater than
GE : greater than or equal to


When the operation is set to one of these, it is expected that the two value elements will be used. As usual, these elements can be literals or can contain variables to be resolved into a string type; #FIELD refers to the value of the given field on the current target; the strings will be converted in conformity with the inferred (primitive) type of the comparison. The else element also pertains to comparison tests; the actions listed there will be taken upon failure of the comparison.

The op attribute can also be a logical operator [AND, OR, NOT], in which case the embedded test object should be used; these can be nested to an arbitrary depth, but of course must bottom out in a comparison operation.

Tokenizer Examples


See: Tokenizer Example XML.

Example Description
1 output is a list of line-separated queue names to be assigned to the known property "available-queues"
2 output is to be searched for its final line which should contain a job id of the form "[digits].[chars]"
3 indeterminate number and order of lines containing parts of attribute definitions, but each line bearing a distinct id (e.g., openMPI attribute discovery)
4 indeterminate number of definitions, but grouped by caption; use of moveToTop to promote the target to the top of the list when the caption appears
5 similar to 4, but without delimiter (implicit ordering)
6 similar to 4, but with indeterminate type order and using buffer + DOTALL | UNIX_LINES
7 indeterminate number of property definitions, but on single line
8 looking for values interspersed in the stream but which will not exceed 32 chars
9 successive names/values, in order, but staggered
10 forced merge
11 exit-on
12 exit-after
13 get-job-status (use of tests)


4. The Launch Tab

The UI component which needs to be configured in conjunction with the resource manager control is the Launch Tab, which is actually the main area of the Resources Tab, one of the six tabs comprising the Run Configuration wizard or the seven tabs comprising the Debug Configuration wizard. The purpose of this component is to allow the user to set up the job by providing values relating to resource requirements or to the properties of the job in general. In other words, it is in this component that the user can set the values on the attribute elements making up the configurable environment as defined in the XML.

Specifying the composition and layout of this component can be tricky and tedious because it deals with widgets defined by the Eclipse JFace library and with their underlying implementation in SWT . We intend in the near future to provide some standard "templates" for typical widget groups that can be cut and pasted into the XML definition. Some of this can already be achieved by importing into the workspace a provided definition (such as for the PBS resource manager) and modifying it or borrowing from it. This is, in fact, the approach demostrated in the tutorial.

Throughout the following, it may generally be assumed that fields such as style, foreground, background, etc., take string equivalents of the corresponding SWT constants (e.g., "SWT.LEFT", "SWT.VERTICAL", "SWT.NONE") which can be OR'd (using "|") wherever they would be in Java code. We will not exhaustively specify here which constants pertain to which widgets, because in most cases we have tried to reflect very closely the names of the SWT object types and fields, and this information can be found by consulting the Javadocs relative to the widgets in question.

13launch-tab.jpeg

As seen from this top-level specification, the Launch Tab can have any number of dynamic tab-controllers, "dynamic" meaning configurable from the XML, which will discuss in more detail in the following paragraphs.

There is also a fixed import controller type (implemented as an extension/subclass of the dynamic controller, in order to provide uniform handling of the environment); this component allows you to browse the workspace to set a custom script as the one to run. Its main text area widget is read-only; any editing of the script must be done through the workspace editor. The browse is local only, so remote scripts should first be imported into a local project in the workspace (using the remote systems import wizard), and then captured by this controller's browse button.

The configurable part of the import tab is an optional attribute viewer for selecting the variables from the environment which you wish to pass to the launch command along with the script. The values set here should correspond to whatever the script contains; they are set for the benefit of the internal consistency of the PTP client, and do not override those hard-coded in script. For an example, see the Import PBS Script tab.

Tab Controller

The dynamic controllers belong to the tab-controller-type , which contains an arbitrary number of tab-folder, composite, widget, browse, button-group, action, or viewer elements; as will be seen shortly, the first two, which are "containers", are potentially recursive elements, so that one can nest widgets in the usual manner. For all intents and purposes, the tab-controller-type is the same as a composite , but without the group attribute and with the extra field for controlling shared widgets.

14tab-controller.jpeg

The includeWidgetValuesFrom field is important. By default, it is set to empty, meaning that the subset of the total resource manager environment represented by the controller's widgets is all that will be passed to the actual job configuration when the job is launched from this tab. This behavior can be changed by giving a comma-delimited list of the title values for other controllers. In this case, the configuration for the job, when the "Run" button is pressed with this controller being the visible one, will also include all the properties or attributes valid for the listed but currently invisible controllers.


PROPERTY/ATTRIBUTE NAMES vs VALUES

While this field controls the inclusion or exclusion of attribute and property names in the configuration, their values are always shared across the controllers (there is only one environment); thus if a variable value is changed on one controller, and this variable is also exposed on another, the value for that variable will also change on the other controller when it becomes visible; similarly, if the user switches off a controller to another having only a subset of the first controller's variables, the variables not represented on the second controller will become undefined or return to their defaults.

Note that the union of valid names is not transitively closed; that is, if Tab1 has includeWidgetValuesFrom="Tab2", and Tab2 similarly has includeWidgetValuesFrom="Tab3", Tab1 will get only the valid values local to Tab2. Note also, that if there are names which intersect with strictly local widget targets, the local settings (visibility, selection, enablement) still determine whether they belong in the set of valid property/attribute names.


The showViewConfig and showViewExcluded fields allow control over whether the "View Configuration" and "View Excluded" buttons appear at the bottom of the tab (the "View Script" button appears if the configuration contains a script element). showViewConfig is true by default; this button brings up a scrolling dialog which allows you to inspect the current configuration (that is, the one relevant to the visible controller). showViewExcluded is by default false, and should only be set if the resource manager processes attributes or properties discovered by a command at run time; this dialog allows you to see which ones have been marked invisible; unlike invisible predefined properties or attributes, which are always included, invisible discovered properties or attributes are always excluded from the configuration and thus do not persist across resource manager sessions.

Tab Folders and Tab Items


15tab-folder.jpeg

The tab-folder is a container which looks like a file-folder, with tabs running across the top or bottom (style includes SWT.TOP, SWT.BOTTOM). Each tab label corresponds to a tab-item which provides the actual visible content. The tooltip pertains to the entire folder.

The tab-item is another all-purpose "container" in which all widget types can be embedded, but distinguished from the composite in that it can only be the child of a tab-folder and that it can have a tooltip (which appears on the tab).

As with composite (see below), the tab folder and tab item take layout and layout-data elements; these closely reflect their SWT objects and types; for further explanation we refer the reader once again to the relevant Javadocs.

Layout


17layout.jpeg

Layout Data


18layout-data.jpeg

Composite/Group

The main container, of course, is the composite; its sub-type, the group (group="true"), allows for decoration and a title, while the simple composite acts as a widget holder and has no visible characteristics, though it does have a layout. As is evident, composites can be contained in composites and tab-items, and tab-folders can be contained in composites.

16composite.jpeg

Control State Wiring

It should be evident that all the XML elements corresponding to UI SWT control types have been given control-state children.

22control-state.jpeg

The purpose of these elements is to provide an optional way of setting the enabled and/or visible states of the control on the basis of the state of button (checkbox/radio) selection. One can define two such elements per control, using one of the show/hide or enable/disable pairs. Each of these is associated with a control-state-rule:

23control-state-rule.jpeg

The basic rule is defined by its attributes:

  1. the id of the button control to check;
  2. whether its selected state should be true or false.

Rules can be nested to an arbitrary depth to form clauses governed by the logical operators.

A SelectionListener is created for this target which subscribes to all the controls in the rule; when it receives an event, it evaluates the rule, and if the result is true, takes the associated action on this target.

When one wishes to wire two or more such controls in this way, the "trigger" button control must have an id unique to the resource manager configuration. This will be assigned via the buttonId element on the widget corresponding to the button (true also for the buttons nested in a button-group ).

Here is an example which sets the enabled and visible properties of both a text field and a related checkbox:

               <widget type="checkbox" buttonId="002" title="Host list:" saveValueTo="checked002">
                  <layout-data>
                     <grid-data horizontalAlign="SWT.LEFT" verticalAlign="SWT.TOP"/>
                  </layout-data>
                  <control-state>
                     <show-if button="001" selected="true"/>
                  </control-state>
               </widget>
               <widget type="text" style="SWT.V_SCROLL | SWT.BORDER" saveValueTo="host_list">
                  <layout-data>
                     <grid-data horizontalAlign="SWT.FILL" verticalAlign="SWT.FILL" horizontalSpan="2" grabExcessHorizontal="true"
                        grabExcessVertical="true"/>
                  </layout-data>
                  <control-state>
                     <show-if button="001" selected="true"/>
                     <enable-if>
                        <and>
                           <rule button="001" selected="true"/>
                           <rule button="002" selected="true"/>
                        </and>
                     </enable-if>
                  </control-state>
               </widget> 
   

Note also that this implicit dependency graph is checked for cycles; the building of the UI tab will be aborted if such a cycle is discovered.


BEST PRACTICE: CONTROL STATE

An invisible property should be assigned to each checkbox which controls the state of other widgets (e.g., checked002 in the example above); this will allow you to restore the state of the tab correctly when it is rebuilt or re-initialized.


Widget

We now come to the five non-container widget elements with functional characteristics. The first of these is the widget , which comprises a number of simple widget types.

19widget.jpeg

The type of the widget can be one of the following:


label fixed text for display
text area for entering/editing text
checkbox corresponds to a boolean choice
radiobutton usually used in connection with button-group
spinner provides a continuous range of integer values
combo select from a list of items


Not all attributes and elements of the widget descriptor are applicable to all types.


title used with checkbox and radiobutton widgets for the button label.
style carries the SWT style constants appropriate to the widget type.
readOnly applies to text, spinner and combo widgets; the text area in this case is not editable.
saveValueTo applies to all widgets except label; the name of the property or attribute whose value should be set on the basis of the widget's "selected" value or text
Note: use of this attribute is mutually exclusive with the fixed- and dynamic-text elements.
items-from applies to the combo widget; indicates a property or attribute value (of type java.util.Collection) to use to populate the items.
Note: if a combo widget saves its value to an attribute and the present element on the widget descriptor is not set, the attribute will be checked for non-empty choice or items-from values, which then will be used to populate the combo items; the items-from field on the widget is for added flexibility (for instance, linking up a target property with another property providing the list of choices).
fixed-text applies to the label and (read-only) text widgets; text is resolved once and remains constant thereafter.
dynamic-text applies only to (read-only) text widgets; text is resolved each time there is an update of a value from the Launch Tab.


Widget foreground, background (color) and font are in principle configurable, though the font setting may not always work. The tooltip will appear on the widget whereever it usually does.

Button Group

20button-group.jpeg

The button group provides an explicit selection of a single value based on a mutually exclusive set of button labels. Just as with the widget , one uses saveValueTo to indicate what property or attribute value to set. The button elements, which can be arranged horizontally or vertically using the style attribute (SWT.HORIZONTAL, SWT.VERTICAL), will be widget elements whose type is either checkbox or radiobutton (if a different widget type is given, an error will occur); the saveValueTo attribute on the individual button will be ignored. Radio buttons are "sticky" in the sense that once they are selected, they cannot be "unchecked" until a different button in the group is selected. It is thus advisable always to provide a default value for the property or attribute associated with the group value if radio buttons are used. If check boxes are used, they can be individually checked on and off (one at a time), thus allowing for the value of the group to be potentially empty.

Below is an example of a button group using radio buttons, disposed vertically.


ButtonGroup.jpeg

Browse

190browse.jpeg

A special widget-pair -- a text widget followed by a push button -- allowing the user to browse directories or files from either the local or remote file system. Aside from the fields shared with the widget type, we note the following:


directory limit the browse widget to directories.
uri have the browse widget set a URI as the text (default is false, in which case the text is an absolute path).
localOnly limit the browse widget to the local file system (otherwise, the choice of local or remote is enabled).


layout and control-state are specified as belonging to either the text or the button. Style applies only to the text widget.

Action Button

191push-button.jpeg

A push button which is associated with a button-action command. The button-action specifies the name of a command ( action ) defined in the XML; this can be one of the start-up or shut-down commands, or a special button-action command (note that it cannot, however, be a (uu)id command, as the Launch Tab is not coupled to any submitted jobs); the button-action-type also indicates whether the variable affected by the command should be cleared prior to the command execution, and whether the launch tab should be refreshed (default is true) afterward.

Attribute Viewer

21attribute-viewer.jpeg

The last of the widget types, the attribute-viewer , displays visible properties and attributes in a table or tree viewer, with the value columns as editable widgets. The type of cell editor is determined implicitly here by the type of the property or attribute; the presence of a combo editor is determined by an attribute whose choice or items-from element is defined. (This is the only viable possibility for a combo in the table, as there would also need to be a target to save the selected item to, viz., the value of this same attribute.)

Each entry in the viewer is provided with a checkbox to indicate which attributes have been chosen (and thus marked valid). A checkbox is also placed above the viewer to allow for filtering the unchecked items. The viewer outputs its values to the environment. The name of the viewer is also stored against a string of all selected values, constructed from a template (further discussion at the end of this section).

The viewer type can be either "table" or "tree"; in the case of the tree, the type, default, status and description fields of the attribute or property are displayed as collapsible child rows hanging off the main name entry. Either table or tree can have up to six columns whose names/types are based on the following property and attribute fields:

Name
Value
Type
Status
Default
Description


These can appear in any order. There is a slight difference in how these columns are treated, depending upon whether tree or table is chosen as type. For table type, the value of the field simply appears in the corresponding column:


Table.jpg

In the tree type, the name field displays all fields except value as children; value always appears as a separate column on the same row as the name (it contains the cell editor). If the viewer also has the column corresponding to the child field, that field value appears in that column;


Tree1.jpg

Otherwise, the child fields display their value in the value column along with the actual value field:


Tree2.jpg

Tooltips for the column appear when hovering over the column header. (A caveat on the foreground and background settings for this type: they are exposed here but may not work as expected: these are currently applied to the column through the cell label provider; foreground does not change the font color but applies the color to the entire cell.)

sort is done on the name field/column. This is a toggle sort, such that alternate clicks reverse the sort direction. headerVisible and linesVisible control the look of the table. tooltipEnabled enables column-viewer label provider tooltip support. The tooltip defined for an attribute will appear on the row of the table or the parent node of the tree. The attribute description will also appear as a tooltip on the description columns if they exist.

Control over the actual contents of the viewer is achieved through the viewer-items-type ; one can here explicitly list properties or attributes for inclusion using the include element, or one can set one or both of the all attributes; in the latter case, attributes and properties can be excluded from the set using exclude . The initialCheckAll field, which defaults to true, indicates that if the attribute or property is new or undefined from a previous session, it will appear as checked; turn this off if you want new attributes or properties to appear at first as unchecked.

A property bearing the name given to this widget is written to the environment at each update/refresh; the value of the property is a string formed from the selected (checked) rows of the table using the template-type (the value element). The pattern can be any literal string embedding @name and @value tags as placeholders for the row's name and value; for instance, '@name="@value"' would generate a string of name-value assignments. The default separator between patterned segments is a single space.

Below is a fuller example of the tree version of the attribute viewer. The text area above it displays the current value of its templated pattern string. The child rows reporting status, default, etc., cannot be selected or unselected (only the parent row can). Hovering over the name (here walltime) displays the tooltip.


AttribViewerTree.jpeg

The Monitor Data Type

At present, the monitor component has less elements to define; this may change in future releases, when certain hard-coded features of the driver may be handed over to the client for configuration.

22monitor.jpeg

This component can be furnished with its own set of properties (currently unused). What is necessary to set at present is only the schedulerType attribute (e.g., "PBS"). refreshFrequencyInSeconds defaults to 60, but this can be changed according to the needs of the user. Be aware that too low a setting will probably not work, as the command on an average sized system will take upwards of five seconds to complete (XML is being streamed to the driver and a diff is sent back to the client ).

If the driver element is configured, then the default behavior, which is to stage over the necessary driver scripts to the .eclipsesettings directory in the user's home, is overridden by connecting to a pre-existent installation. This can be specified either using the url , or a combination of the name , path and args elements.

Back to the top