drslib() | drslib() |
NAME¶
drs_tool - Command-line interface to DRSLIB
SYNPOSIS¶
DESCRIPTION¶
USAGE¶
Usage
Usage: drs_tool [command] [options] [drs-pattern]
command: list list publication-level datasets todo show file operations pending for the next version upgrade make changes to the selected datasets to upgrade to the next version mapfile make a mapfile of the selected dataset history list all versions of the selected dataset init initialise CMIP5 product detection data
OPTIONS¶
- --help
- display this help message and exit
- --version
- output version information and exit
-h, --help show this help message and exit
-R ROOT, --root=ROOT
Root directory of the DRS tree
-I INCOMING, --incoming=INCOMING
Incoming directory for DRS files. Defaults to <root>/output
-a ACTIVITY, --activity=ACTIVITY
Set DRS attribute activity for dataset discovery
-p PRODUCT, --product=PRODUCT
Set DRS attribute product for dataset discovery
-i INSTITUTE, --institute=INSTITUTE
Set DRS attribute institute for dataset discovery
-m MODEL, --model=MODEL
Set DRS attribute model for dataset discovery
-e EXPERIMENT, --experiment=EXPERIMENT
Set DRS attribute experiment for dataset discovery
-f FREQUENCY, --frequency=FREQUENCY
Set DRS attribute frequency for dataset discovery
-r REALM, --realm=REALM
Set DRS attribute realm for dataset discovery
-v VERSION, --version=VERSION
Force version upgrades to this version
-P FILE, --profile=FILE
Profile the script exectuion into FILE
--detect-product
Automatically detect the DRS product of incoming data
REQUIRES¶
FILES¶
drs_tool uses metaconfig to configure and store configuration information. Its configuration may be found then in a metaconfig.conf file, in /etc/metaconfig/metaconfig.conf on Debian systems, which may be overriden by $HOME/.metaconfig.conf or ./metaconfig.conf
ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES¶
The variable METACONF_CONF
VERSION¶
0.3.0a3
BUGS¶
To query and report bugs in drs_tool, please use reportbug on Debian systems.
SEE ALSO¶
AUTHOR¶
DRSLIB was written by Stephen Pascoe, STFC.SC.UK. This manual page was written by Alastair McKinstry.