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Sometimes you want a task to run at a given time, or to run every three hours,
or to run only on the first of the month, or on Mondays,...
For that ecFlow supports date and time dependencies.
time
time dependencies can be absolute, i.e. they will run at the exact time.
They can also be relative; in this case we provide the time from the moment the suite is begun.
Time dependencies can be repeated at regular intervals. The nodes stays complete once all time instances have run.
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time 23:00 # at next 23:00
time 10:00 20:00 01:00 # every hour from 10am to 8pm
time +00:01 # one minute after the suite has begun, or 1 minute after re-queue in a presence of a repeat
time +00:10 01:00 00:05 # 10 to 60 minutes after begin every 5 minutes |
In the last example we have task that runs every five minutes, however what happens if the task takes longer ?
When this happens, the time slot, is missed.
cron
Cron dependencies can be specified using the cron keyword. Cron differs from time as when the node is complete it queues again immediately. Cron also only works with a real time clock (not a hybrid clock).
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cron 23:00 # every day at 23:00
cron 08:00 12:00 01:00 # every hour between 8 and 12
cron -w 0,2 11:00 # every sunday and tuesday at 11 am
cron -d 1,15 02:00 # every 1st and 15th of each month at 2 am
cron -m 1 -d 1 14:00 # every first of January at 2 pm
cron -w 5L 23:00 # run on *last* Friday(5L) of each month at 23pm
cron -d 1,L 23:00 # Run on the first and last of the month at 23pm |
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When a time has expired, the associated node is free to run. The time will stay expired, until the node is re-queued. |
date or day
...
In this section we show an alternative to time-based attributes, using time triggers.
The following suite based generated variables are available for time-based triggers.
(In ecflow_ui, select a suite, then look at the variables tab)
- DD day of the month
- DOW day of the week, 0-6, where 0 is Sunday
- DOY day of the year
- ECF_DATE YYYYMMDD year, month, day format. This has the same format as repeat date.
- MM month 01-12
- TIME HHMM
- YYYY year
These time-based variables on the suite, use the suites calendar. The suites calendar can be configured with the clock attribute.
Here are examples of time attributes and the corresponding trigger examples
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date 31.12.2012 # the 31st of December 2012
date 01.*.* # every first of the month
date *.10.* # every day in October
date 1.*.2008 # every first of the month, but only in 2008
day monday # every monday |
Mixing time dependencies on the same node
A task can have several time and date dependencies. For example:
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task tt
day monday # Here Day/date acts like a guard over the time. i.e. time is not considered until Monday
time 10:00 # run on Monday at 10 am |
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task tt
day sunday # Ontrigger the:TIME same node, Day/date act like a guard over the time attributes.
day wednesday
date 01== 2300
date 1.*.* # Thetrigger first:DD of every month and year
date 10.*.* == 1
day monday # The tenth of every month and year
time 01:00 # The time is only set free *if* we are on one of the day/dates
time 16:00 |
The task will run on Sunday’s and Wednesday’s at 1am and 4pm, but only if the day is the 1st or the 10th of the month.
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With multiple time dependencies on the same node, the dependencies of the same type are or'ed together, then and'ed with the different types. |
Mixing time dependencies on different nodes
When time dependencies are placed on different nodes in the hierarchy, the results may seem surprising. Notice the difference between ecflow 4 and ecflow 5
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family fam
day monday # The day attribute no longer guards the time attribute.
task tt
time 10:00 # runs on Monday morning at 00:00 ?, and Monday at 10 am |
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family fam
day monday # The day STILL guards the time attribute.
task tt
time 10:00 # Will run on Monday at 10 am |
The ':' means a search for the variable up the node tree.
Triggers can also use AND/OR logic and the full range of operators <,>,<=,>=
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language | bash |
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title | Time attributes |
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| task t1
day monday
time 13:00 |
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language | bash |
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title | time based trigger |
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| task t1
trigger :DOW == 1 and :TIME >= 1300 |
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language | bash |
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title | combination |
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| task t1
day monday
trigger :TIME >= 1300 |
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It should be noted that relative time( time + 00 : 01) are not possible with time-based triggers, and time series are more problematic. |
Text
Let us modify the previous definition file for family f2.
For brevity,
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family fam2
time 10:00
task tt
day monday # This will run on Monday morning at 00:00 and Monday at 10 am |
The example above assumes we have suite, with an infinite repeat loop. So why does the task run on Monday morning at 00:00 ?
This is because time dependencies on different nodes act independently of each other. In this case time attribute was set free on Sunday at 10 am ( and once free it stays free until it is re-queued). Hence task tt is free to run on Monday morning. After task has run and re-queued. It will then run on Monday at 10 am.
...
Note |
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All time related dependencies(like cron, time, today, date and day) are relative to the clock of the suite. For more information, see Dates and Clocks |
Text
Let us modify the definition file to add a family f2.
For brevity we have omitted the previous family f1
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# Definition of the suite test
suite test
edit ECF_INCLUDE "$HOME/course" # replace '$HOME' with the path to your home directory
edit ECF_HOME "$HOME/course"
family f2
edit SLEEP 20
task t1
trigger time 00:30 23:30 00:30 # start(hh:mm) end(hh:mm) increment(hh:mm):ECF_DATE ==20200720 and :TIME >= 1000
task t2
daytrigger thursday
:DOW == 4 and :TIME >= 1300 time 13:00
task t3
date 1.*.* # Date(day,month,year) - * means every day,month,year
time 12:00 # Time is not considered until date is freetrigger :DD == 1 and :TIME >= 1200
task t4
timetrigger +00(:02.DOW == 1 and :TIME >= 1300) or (:DOW == 5 and #:TIME + means realative to suite begin/requeue time>= 1000)
task t5
timetrigger 00:02:TIME == 0002 # 2 minutes past midnight
endfamily
endsuite |
Python
For brevity, we have left out family f1. In python this would be:
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language | py |
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title | $HOME/course/test.py |
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import os
from ecflow import Defs,Suite,Family,Task,Edit,Trigger,Complete,Event,Meter,Time,Day,Date,Edit
def create_family_f2():
return Family("f2",
Edit(SLEEP=20),
Task("t1", TimeTrigger("00:30 23:30 00:30:ECF_DATE ==20200720 and :TIME >= 1000")), # start(hh:mm) end(hh:mm) increment(hh:mm)
Task("t2", Day("thursday"),Time("13:00Trigger(":DOW == 4 and :TIME >= 1300")),
Task("t3", DateTrigger("1.*.*"), Time("12:00:DD == 1 and :TIME >= 1200")), # Date(day,month,year) - * means every day,month,year
Task("t4", TimeTrigger("+00:02")), (:DOW == 1 and :TIME >= 1300) or (:DOW == 5 and :TIME >= 1000)")), # + means realative to suite begin/requeue time
Task("t5", TimeTrigger("00:02:TIME == 0002"))) # 2 minutes past midnight
print("Creating suite definition")
home = os.path.join(os.getenv("HOME"), "course")
defs = Defs(
Suite("test",
Edit(ECF_INCLUDE=home,ECF_HOME=home),
create_family_f2()
))
print(defs)
print("Checking job creation: .ecf -> .job0")
print(defs.check_job_creation())
print("Checking trigger expressions")
errors = defs.check()
assert len(errors) == 0,errors
print("Saving definition to file 'test.def'")
defs.save_as_defs("test.def") |
What to do
- Make the changes to the suite definition fileCreate all the necessary ecf script‘s by copying the one from /test/f1/t7
- Replace the suite
python: python3 test.py; python3 client.py
text: ecflow_client --suspend=/test ; ecflow_client --replace=/test test.def - ecflow_ui has a special window to explain why a task is queued. Select a queued task and click on the 'Why tab'
- Vary the time attributes triggers so that all task runs
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title | Previous |
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type | standard |
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url | https://confluence.ecmwf.int/display/ECFLOW/Time+Dependencies |
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title | Up |
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type | standard |
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url | https://softwareconfluence.ecmwf.int/wiki/display/ECFLOW/Going+Further |
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title | Next |
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type | standard |
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