table of contents
PEGASUS-INVOKE(1) | Pegasus Manual | PEGASUS-INVOKE(1) |
NAME¶
pegasus-invoke - invokes a command from a fileSYNOPSIS¶
pegasus-invoke ( app | @fn ) [ arg | *@fn [..]]
DESCRIPTION¶
The pegasus-invoke tool invokes a single application with as many arguments as your Unix permits (128k characters for Linux). Arguments are come from two places, either the command-line as regular arguments, or from a special file, which contains one argument per line. The pegasus-invoke tool became necessary to work around the 4k argument length limit in Condor. It also permits to use arguments inside argument files without worry about shell, Condor or Globus escape necessities. All argument file contents are passed as is, one line per argument entry.ARGUMENTS¶
-dThis option increases the debug level. Currently, only
debugging or no debugging is distinguished. Debug message are generated on
stdout . By default, debugging is disabled.
-h
This option prints the help message and exits the
program.
--
This option stops any option processing. It may only be
necessary, if the application is stated on the command-line, and starts with a
hyphen itself.The first argument must either be the application to run as
fully-specified location (either absolute, or relative to current wd), or a
file containing one argument per line. The PATH environment variables
is not used to locate an application. Subsequent arguments may either
be specified explicitely on the commandline. Any argument that starts with an
at (@) sign is taken to introduce a filename, which contains one argument per
line. The textual file may contain long arguments and filenames. However,
Unices still impose limits on the maximum length of a directory name, and the
maximum length of a file name. These lengths are not checked, because
pegasus-invoke is oblivious of the application (e.g. what argument is a
filename, and what argument is a mere string resembling a filename).
RETURN VALUE¶
The pegasus-invoke tool returns 127, if it was unable to find the application. It returns 126, if there was a problem parsing the file. All other exit status, including 126 and 127, come from the application.SEE ALSO¶
pegasus-kickstart(1)EXAMPLE¶
$ echo "/bin/date" > X $ echo "-Isec" >> X $ pegasus-invoke @X 2005-11-03T15:07:01-0600
$ cat test.3 This is test 3 $ cat test.2 /bin/echo @test.3 @@test.3 $ pegasus-invoke @test.2 This is test 3 @test.3
RESTRICTIONS¶
While the arguments themselves may contain files with arguments to parse, starting with an at (@) sign as before, the maximum recursion limit is 32 levels of inclusions. It is not possible (yet) to use stdin as source of inclusion.HISTORY¶
As you may have noticed, pegasus-invoke had the name invoke in previous incantations. We are slowly moving to the new name to avoid clashes in a larger OS installation setting. However, there is no pertinent need to change the internal name, too, as no name clashes are expected.AUTHORS¶
Mike Wilde <wilde at mcs dot anl dot gov> Jens-S. Vöckler <voeckler at isi dot edu> Pegasus http://pegasus.isi.edu/07/30/2014 | Pegasus 4.4.0 |