hdf5/bin/timekeeper
Albert Cheng 5972ef28fd [svn-r9718] Purpose:
Change time-limit to be in the unit of minutes which is easier
to use than unit of seconds.

Platforms tested:
Tested in eirene.
2004-12-25 12:09:03 -05:00

109 lines
3.0 KiB
Bash
Executable File

#!/bin/sh
##
## Copyright by the Board of Trustees of the University of Illinois.
## All rights reserved.
##
## This file is part of HDF5. The full HDF5 copyright notice, including
## terms governing use, modification, and redistribution, is contained in
## the files COPYING and Copyright.html. COPYING can be found at the root
## of the source code distribution tree; Copyright.html can be found at the
## root level of an installed copy of the electronic HDF5 document set and
## is linked from the top-level documents page. It can also be found at
## http://hdf.ncsa.uiuc.edu/HDF5/doc/Copyright.html. If you do not have
## access to either file, you may request a copy from hdfhelp@ncsa.uiuc.edu.
##
# As a time keeper of the remote daily test process launched by runtest.
# It sleeps for a certain time and then wakes up to hangup those processes
# that are still around, assuming they have run too long.
#
# Programmer: Albert Cheng
# Created Date: 2004/12/23
# variable initialization
waitminutes=300 # default to 5 hours == 300 minutes
debugtimelimit=
debugflag= # no debug
# Function definitions
#
# PRINTMSG
# Print a one line message left justified in a field of 70 characters
# without newline. More output for this line later.
#
PRINTMSG() {
SPACES=" "
echo "$* $SPACES" | cut -c1-70 | tr -d '\012'
}
USAGE()
{
echo "Usage: %0 [-h] [-debug] [<time-limit>]"
echo " Run timekeeper with <time-limit> minutes, default is $waitminutes."
echo " -h print this help page"
echo " -debug run debug mode"
}
ParseOption()
{
if [ $# -gt 0 -a "$1" = -h ]; then
shift
USAGE
exit 0
fi
if [ $# -gt 0 -a "$1" = -debug ]; then
shift
debugflag=yes
waitminutes=1 # use shorter time for debug
fi
if [ $# -gt 0 ]; then
waitminutes=$1
shift
fi
}
# Main body
echo "Timekeeper started at `date`"
ParseOption $*
waitperiod=`expr $waitminutes \* 60` # convert to seconds
if [ -z "$debugflag" ]; then
# normal time keeping mode
# sleep first
echo Timekeeper sleeping for $waitperiod seconds
sleep $waitperiod
# Look for any processes still around
echo "Timekeeper woke up at `date`, looking for processes to terminate..."
for x in PID.* ; do
if [ -f $x ]; then
pid=`cat $x`
# check if process is still around
if ps $pid > /dev/null; then
echo "terminating process $x ($pid)"
kill -HUP $pid
fi
fi
done
else
# Debug mode. Launch two rsh process, one ends before, the other after
# waitperiod. Must launch timekeeper from a subshell, else the debug
# will wait for it too.
myhostname=`hostname`
( $0 $waitminutes &)
debugtimelimit=`expr $waitperiod - 10`
echo rsh $myhostname sleep $debugtimelimit
rsh $myhostname sleep $debugtimelimit &
echo $! > PID.before
debugtimelimit=`expr $waitperiod + 10`
echo rsh $myhostname sleep $debugtimelimit
rsh $myhostname sleep $debugtimelimit &
echo $! > PID.after
wait
rm PID.before PID.after
fi
echo "Timekeeper ended at `date`"