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3.1 Introduction
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CondorVersion 6.7.17 Manual
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2.16 Potential Problems
Contents
Index
3. Administrators' Manual
Subsections
3.1 Introduction
3.1.1 The Different Roles a Machine Can Play
3.1.2 The Condor Daemons
3.2 Installation
3.2.1 Obtaining Condor
3.2.2 Preparation
3.2.3 Older Installation Procedure
3.2.4 Newer Installation Procedure
3.2.5 RPMs
3.2.6 Condor is installed... now what?
3.2.7 Dynamic Deployment
3.3 Configuration
3.3.1 Introduction to Configuration Files
3.3.2 Condor-wide Configuration File Entries
3.3.3 Daemon Logging Config File Entries
3.3.4 DaemonCore Config File Entries
3.3.5 Network-Related Configuration File Entries
3.3.6 Shared File System Configuration File Macros
3.3.7 Checkpoint Server Configuration File Macros
3.3.8 condor_ master Configuration File Macros
3.3.9 condor_ startd Configuration File Macros
3.3.10 condor_ schedd Configuration File Entries
3.3.11 condor_ shadow Configuration File Entries
3.3.12 condor_ shadow.pvm Configuration File Entries
3.3.13 condor_ starter Configuration File Entries
3.3.14 condor_ submit Configuration File Entries
3.3.15 condor_ preen Configuration File Entries
3.3.16 condor_ collector Configuration File Entries
3.3.17 condor_ negotiator Configuration File Entries
3.3.18 condor_ gridmanager Configuration File Entries
3.3.19 grid_monitor Configuration File Entries
3.3.20 Configuration File Entries for DAGMan
3.3.21 Configuration File Entries Relating to Security
3.3.22 Configuration File Entries Relating to High Availability
3.3.23 Configuration File Entries Relating to Quill
3.3.24 Root Config Files
3.3.25 MyProxy Configuration File Macros
3.3.26 condor_ credd Configuration File Macros
3.3.27 Stork Configuration File Macros
3.4 Contrib Module Installation
3.4.1 Installing the CondorView Client Contrib Module
3.4.2 Installing a Checkpoint Server
3.4.3 Installing PVM Support in Condor
3.5 User Priorities and Negotiation
3.5.1 Real User Priority (RUP)
3.5.2 Effective User Priority (EUP)
3.5.3 Priorities and Preemption
3.5.4 Priority Calculation
3.5.5 Negotiation
3.5.6 Group Accounting
3.5.7 Group Quotas
3.6 Startd Policy Configuration
3.6.1 Startd ClassAd Attributes
3.6.2 Job ClassAd Attributes
3.6.3 The
START
expression
3.6.4 The
IS_VALID_CHECKPOINT_PLATFORM
expression
3.6.5 The
RANK
expression
3.6.6 Machine States
3.6.7 Machine Activities
3.6.8 State and Activity Transitions
3.6.9 State/Activity Transition Expression Summary
3.6.10 Policy Settings
3.6.11 Differences from the Version 6.0 Policy Settings
3.7 Security
3.7.1 User Accounts in Condor
3.7.2 Basic Security Configuration
3.7.3 Authentication
3.7.4 Authorization
3.7.5 Encryption
3.7.6 Integrity
3.7.7 Security Sessions
3.7.8 Host-Based Security in Condor
3.7.9 Using Condor w/ Firewalls, Private Networks, and NATs
3.8 Networking
3.8.1 Port Usage in Condor
3.8.2 Configuring Condor for Machines With Multiple Network Interfaces
3.8.3 Generic Connection Brokering (GCB)
3.8.4 Using TCP to Send Updates to the
condor_ collector
3.9 DaemonCore
3.9.1 DaemonCore and Unix signals
3.9.2 DaemonCore and Command-line Arguments
3.10 Pool Management
3.10.1 Shutting Down and Restarting a Condor Pool
3.10.2 Reconfiguring Your Condor Pool
3.10.3 Using Dynamic Attributes
3.11 The High Availability of Daemons
3.11.1 High Availability of the Job Queue
3.11.2 High Availability of the Central Manager
3.12 Quill
3.12.1 Installation and Configuration
3.12.2 Four Usage Examples
3.12.3 Quill and Its RDBMS Schema
3.12.4 Quill and Security
3.13 Setting Up for Special Environments
3.13.1 Using Condor with AFS
3.13.2 Configuring Condor for Multiple Platforms
3.13.3 Full Installation of condor_ compile
3.13.4 Installing the
condor_ kbdd
3.13.5 Configuring The CondorView Server
3.13.6 Configuring The Startd for SMP Machines
3.13.7 Configuring Condor for Running Dedicated Jobs
3.13.8 Configuring Condor for Running Backfill Jobs
3.14 Java Support Installation
condor-admin@cs.wisc.edu