The following should insert the hostname part of the FQDN into the
arguments:
arguments = "-c $$([regexps(""([^.]*).*"",machine,""\1"")])"
--Dan
On 2/13/12 9:48 AM, Geoffrey Hibbert wrote:
No luck, so I shall use $$(machine)!
On Mon, Feb 13, 2012 at 10:43 AM,
Geoffrey Hibbert <hibbert.geoffrey@xxxxxxxxx>
wrote:
You're the
man, Dan! Is there anyway to make it just do hostname, not
FQDN? I noticed you had me use two $$'s in front of the
variable. Off to try $$(hostname). Wether or not it works is
not really that important, just curious. Thanks again!
Geoffrey Hibbert
On 2/13/12 9:30 AM, Geoffrey Hibbert wrote:
In a submission file
that looks like this:
universe=vanilla
requirements= OpSys != "Dummy" && Arch
!= "Dummy"
priority=0
transfer_executable=false
log=X:\3.CONDOR\CondorLogs\
CONDOR.log
log_xml=true
run_as_owner=true
executable=C:\Program
Files\TestProgram\test.exe
arguments=-c %computername%
output=X:\3.CONDOR\CondorLogs\test.out
error=X:\3.CONDOR\CondorLogs\test.err
log=X:\3.CONDOR\CondorLogs\test.log
queue
The arguments of the job end up being a
literal "-c %computername%" instead of the
processing nodes environment variables being
used, like "-c process_01"
Is there a way to do this?
I also tried using $(hostname)
Perhaps $$(machine) is what you want.
--Dan
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