-----Original Message-----
From: condor-users-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxx
[mailto:condor-users-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxx]On Behalf Of Dr Ian C. Smith
Sent: 10 August 2004 10:27
To: Condor-Users Mail List
Subject: Re: [Condor-users] meaning of condor_stats output
Hi Alain,
I'm still totally confused as to how to interpret this. Say I have
submitted three condor jobs during the period in question, which
run for tr1, tr2 and tr3 seconds and are idle for ti1, ti2 and ti3
seconds how might this appear using -orgformat. An example of
my -orgformat
output looks like
> 1092043363 civsp@xxxxxxxxx/coastalre02.liv.ac.uk :
0 1
> 1092043604 civsp@xxxxxxxxx/coastalre02.liv.ac.uk :
0 1
> 1092043844 civsp@xxxxxxxxx/coastalre02.liv.ac.uk :
0 1
> 1092044084 civsp@xxxxxxxxx/coastalre02.liv.ac.uk :
0 1
[snip]
I'd like to create a script to produce usage reports. Is condor_stats
the best way of doing this or would I need to parse the history files
myself (is the format of these documented anywhere).
thanks,
-ian.
--On 09 August 2004 09:47 -0700 Alain Roy <roy@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>
>> Can anyone explain what the output of condor_stats indicates.
>
> The manual page is confusing, but I think that all of the
information is
> there--I apologize for the confusing text.
>
> The output is terse because it is meant for input into a
script that can
> turn the data into pretty graphs. Probably we should make a verbose
> option.
>
>> I've had a read of the man pages but I still can't work
>> it out. For example what does this mean:
>>
>> $ /opt/condor/bin/condor_stats -userquery
>> tcadmin2@xxxxxxxxx/239032-mstc22.liv.ac.uk
>> 96.62 1 0
>> 96.90 1 0
>> 97.17 0 0
>> 97.45 0 0
>> 97.73 0 0
>> 98.01 0 0
>> 98.28 0 0
>
> I assume that's a subset of the data. You should have
numbers ranging
> from close to zero to close to 100 in the first column.
>
> First column:
>
>> The first column always represents the time, as a percentage of the
>> range of the query. Thus the first entry will have a
value close to
>> 0.0, while the last will be close to 100.0. If the
-orgformat option is
>> used, the time is displayed as number of seconds since
the Unix epoch.
>> The information in the remainder of the columns depends
on the query
>> type.
>
> You may find it easier to interpret with the -orgformat argument.
>
> Next two columns:
>
>> The information displayed includes the number of running
jobs and the
>> number of idle jobs.
>
> So you have:
>
> time running-jobs idle-jobs
>
> -alain
>
>
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