.Dd August 25, 2015 .Dt NQ 1 .Os .Sh NAME .Nm nq .Nd job queue utility .Sh SYNOPSIS .Nm .Op Fl c .Op Fl q .Ar command\ line ... .Nm .Fl t .Ar job\ id ... .Nm .Fl w .Ar job\ id ... .Sh DESCRIPTION The .Nm utility provides a very lightweight queuing system without requiring setup, maintenance, supervision or any long-running processes. .Pp Job order is enforced by a timestamp .Nm gets immediately when started. Synchronization happens on file-system level. Timer resolution is milliseconds. No sub-second file system time stamps are required. Polling is not used. Exclusive execution is maintained strictly. .Pp You enqueue(!) new jobs into the queue by running .Pp .Dl nq Ar command line ... .Pp The job id (a file name relative to .Ev NQDIR , which defaults to the current directory) is output (unless suppressed using .Fl q ) and .Nm detaches from the terminal immediately, running the job in the background. Standard output and standard error are redirected into the job id file. .Xr fq 1 can be used to conveniently watch the log files. .Pp The options are as follows: .Bl -tag -width Ds .It Fl c Clean up job id file when process exited with status 0. .It Fl q Suppress output of the job id after spawning new job. .It Fl t Enter .Em test mode : exit with status 0 when .Em all of the listed job ids are already done, else with status 1. .It Fl w Enter .Em waiting mode : wait in the foreground until .Em all listed job ids are done. .El .Sh ENVIRONMENT .Bl -hang -width Ds .It Ev NQDIR Directory where lock files/job output resides. Each .Ev NQDIR can be considered a separate queue. The current working directory is used when .Ev NQDIR is unset. .Ev NQDIR is created if needed. .It Ev NQJOBID The job id of the currently running job, exposed to the job itself. .El .Sh FILES .Nm owns all files in .Ev NQDIR (respectively .Pa \&. ) which start with .Dq Li \&, or .Dq Li \&., . These files are created according to the following scheme: .Pp .Dl ,hexadecimal-time-stamp.pid .Sh EXIT STATUS The .Nm utility exits 0 on success, and >0 if an error occurs; unless .Em test mode is used, in which case exit status 1 means there is a job running. .Pp On fatal errors, exit codes 111 and 222 are used. .Sh EXAMPLES Build .Xr make 1 targets .Ic clean , .Ic depends , .Ic all , without occupying the terminal: .Bd -literal -offset indent % nq make clean % nq make depends % nq make all % fq \&... look at output, can interrupt with C-c any time without stopping the build ... .Ed .Pp Simple download queue, accessible from multiple terminals: .Bd -literal -offset indent % alias qget='NQDIR=/tmp/downloads nq wget' % alias qwait='NQDIR=/tmp/downloads fq -q' window1% qget http://mymirror/big1.iso window2% qget http://mymirror/big2.iso window3% qget http://mymirror/big3.iso % qwait \&... wait for all downloads to finish ... .Ed .Pp As .Xr nohup 1 replacement (The benchmark will run in background, every run gets a different output file, and the command line you ran is logged too.): .Bd -literal -offset indent % ssh remote remote% nq ./run-benchmark ,14f6f3034f8.17035 remote% ^D % ssh remote remote% fq \&... see output, fq exits when job finished ... .Ed .Sh TRICKS The "file extension" of the log file is actually the PID of the job. .Nm runs all jobs in a separate process group, so you can kill an entire job process tree at once using .Xr kill 1 with a negative PID. Before the job is started, it is the PID of .Nm , so you can cancel a queued job by killing it as well. .Pp Thanks to the initial .Li exec line in the log files, you can resubmit a job by executing it as a shell command file, i.e. running .Pp .Dl sh Em job\ id .Pp Creating .Nm wrappers setting .Ev NQDIR to provide different queues for different purposes is encouraged. .Sh INTERNALS Enforcing job order works like this: .Bl -dash -compact .It every job has an output file locked using .Xr flock 2 and named according to .Sx FILES . .It every job starts only after all earlier flocked files are unlocked. .It the lock is released by the kernel after the job terminates. .El .Sh ASSUMPTIONS .Nm will only work correctly when: .Bl -dash .It .Ev NQDIR (respectively .Pa \&. ) is writable. .It .Xr flock 2 works correctly in .Ev NQDIR (respectively .Pa \&. ) . .It .Xr gettimeofday 2 behaves monotonic (using .Dv CLOCK_MONOTONIC would create confusing file names after reboot). .It No other programs put files matching .Li ,* into .Ev NQDIR (respectively .Pa \&. ) . .El .Sh SEE ALSO .Xr fq 1 , .Xr tq 1 . .Pp Alternatives to the .Nm system include .Xr batch 1 , .Xr qsub 1 , .Xr schedule 1 , .Xr srun 1 , and .Xr ts 1 . .\" .Sh STANDARDS .\" .Sh HISTORY .Sh AUTHORS .An Leah Neukirchen Aq Mt leah@vuxu.org .Sh CAVEATS All reliable queue status information is in main memory only, which makes restarting a job queue after a reboot difficult. .Sh LICENSE .Nm is in the public domain. .Pp To the extent possible under law, the creator of this work has waived all copyright and related or neighboring rights to this work. .Pp .Lk http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/ .\" .Sh BUGS