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The ecflow_start.sh script will automatically set up and start your ecflow_server.
If you started an ecFlow manually then your server will start in a halted state.
In this case you you will have to “restart” your server before you can use it.
In a halted state the server will not schedule any tasks.
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To check the status of the server, type the following at the unix prompt:
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ecflow_client --stats |
Examine the output. If the ecflow_server is halted you would restart with:
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ecflow_client --restart |
Once the ecflow_server is running you have to start the suite by typing:
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ecflow_client --begin=test |
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Restarting and beginning the suite can also be done with the Client Server API.
Modify your client.py file and then run it.
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If you had previously loaded the suite, then comment out the ci.load(..) statement |
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import ecflow try: print("Loading definition in 'test.def' into the server") ci = ecflow.Client() ci.load("test.def") print("Restarting the server. This starts job scheduling") ci.restart_server() print("Begin the suite named 'test'") ci.begin_suite("test") except RuntimeError as e: print("Failed:", e) |
What to do
- Restart the ecflow_server
- Begin the suite
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