Hi Yngve
You can control when in the boot sequence that each service is started. How this is done, differs on each distro. For CentOs it is definde by the defined name of the start-script in the rc0-etc folders. Perhaps this could solve your issues? We used CentOs 5/6 and I start condor very late in the sequence (file name K90 or K99).
Peter
_______________________________________________
-----Original Message-----
From: HTCondor-users [mailto:htcondor-users-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Yngve Inntjore Levinsen
Sent: 27. mai 2015 10:15
To: htcondor-users@xxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [HTCondor-users] hostname empty on node restart
Dear all,
We have a few machines in our pool now, running either Ubuntu (various recent-ish versions) or CentOS 7. HT Condor is installed from repositories on all machines. Version 8.2.8 is installed on all nodes and the master (which runs CentOS 7).
When restarting (at least the Ubuntu machines, I forget if the CentOS machines still do this), the condor service is started on the nodes, but it seems that it is probably done too early. Hence if I run condor_status I get a list as attached, where for the restarted node I see slotN@ Instead of slotN@hostname
It seems that this is also hindering the slots from being used. The solution we currently use is to manually run a simple 'sudo service condor restart'. After that the hostname is shown correctly and everything works fine. It is a bit troublesome as the Ubuntu boxes are office computers which us 'condor admins' don't have sudo access to necessarily, so we have to ask the owners to run the commands.
Does anyone know why this happens?
Cheers,
Yngve
HTCondor-users mailing list
To unsubscribe, send a message to htcondor-users-request@xxxxxxxxxxx with a
subject: Unsubscribe
You can also unsubscribe by visiting
https://lists.cs.wisc.edu/mailman/listinfo/htcondor-users
The archives can be found at:
https://lists.cs.wisc.edu/archive/htcondor-users/