DACSSCHED(1) | DACS Tools and Utilities | DACSSCHED(1) |
dacssched — rule-based command scheduling
dacssched
[ -h
| -help
] [-ll
] [log_level
-q
] [{ -r
| -rules
}
rules_uri
] [{ -s
| -sched
}
sched_uri
] [-v
]
dacssched
--version
This program is part of the DACS suite. It is a stand-alone program that neither accepts the usual DACS command line options (dacsoptions) nor accesses any DACS configuration files.
The dacssched command runs other programs when specified conditions have been met. It does this by periodically examining a schedule, which, for each scheduled event, identifies the necessary conditions and the command line to be executed should the conditions be satisfied. Rules are stored separately from the schedule, although in a future version it might be possible to contain them with their schedule.
Although dacssched is conceptually similar to cron(8), atrun(8), and other programs used to schedule a command to be executed or a reminder to be sent at certain times or dates, there are some important differences. First, because the DACS rule evaluation engine is used, conditions much more broad and complex than simply the time or date can be used to schedule a command - DACS expressions are available. For instance, a rule to manage automated file backup could be written to take into account context other than simply the day of the week and the time of day, if necessary even running external programs to assist in making the determination. Second, both a schedule and the rules referenced by a schedule are accessed through the DACS virtual filestore, which means they can be stored in file or database, retrieved by HTTP, and so on.
Although this program may be useful, it is currently merely a prototype intended for demonstration and experimentation purposes. Some configuration capabilities, features, and security steps required by a production version have not been implemented. The prototype must be invoked periodically; a production version would run in the background and automatically rescan the schedule at a given frequency. Note that because of its flexibility, the schedule must be polled at a suitable frequency - in general, the program cannot compute when the next scheduled event will occur. Also because events need not be triggered by a time or date, some events may need to "self-disabling" so that they are not repeatedly executed unintentionally.
The program loads a schedule,
which either comes from a default file or a location specified on the
command line.
A schedule is an ordinary text file, each line of which is either
blank, a comment, or a scheduled event.
The file is processed in the order in which the events appear from the top.
Initial whitespace on any line is ignored.
A comment line begins with a "#
" character.
A scheduled event consists of a
name
, followed by whitespace,
followed by a command.
If name
evaluates to True
(i.e., it grants access), the command is executed through
system(3).
If rule evaluation fails because of an error, the event is not executed.
Events are not removed from the schedule after their command has been executed.
A name
, which must begin with a slash,
has no significance to dacssched;
it is simply a label that is used to identify the rule to apply and
is matched against a rule's service element.
Here is a simple schedule containing one event:
# A simple schedule /setdate /usr/local/sbin/rdate -a
If the condition labelled /setdate
is
True
the specified command will be executed.
A simple rule such as the following might be associated with the event:
<acl_rule status="enabled"> <services> <service url_pattern="/setdate"/> </services> <rule order="allow,deny"> <allow> time(hour) eq 2 and time(min) eq 0 </allow> </rule> </acl_rule>
This rule enables the event
/setdate
at 2:00am every day.
We will assume that the schedule is processed exactly once per minute.
Internally, dacssched converts the scheduled event above into the expression:
rule("/setdate", rule_uri
)
(where rule_uri
specifies the ruleset to use)
and then evaluates the expression.
Please refer to the
rule
predicate
for additional information.
The arguments are processed as they are examined (left-to-right) and their ordering can be significant.
By default, the program will look for a schedule in the file
.
(default: ${Conf::DACS_HOME}
/dacssched/sched/usr/local/dacs/dacssched/sched
)
The default location for the rules is
.
(default: ${Conf::DACS_HOME}
/dacssched/acls/usr/local/dacs/dacssched/acls
)
The following command line flags are recognized:
-h
Prints the usage blurb.
-ll
log_level
Set the debugging output level to
log_level
(see dacs(1)).
The default level is warn
, and the -v
flag bumps the level to debug
or trace
.
-q
Be quiet, except for error messages.
The -v
and -ll
flags are independent
of this.
-r
rule_uri
-rules
rule_uri
This flag specifies the ruleset to be used. It can be an absolute pathname or a URI in the syntax of the VFS configuration directive. Examples:
-r "[acls1]dacs-fs:/local/acls" -rules /usr/local/myrules
-s
sched_uri
-sched
sched_uri
This flag specifies the schedule. It can be an absolute pathname or a URI in the syntax of the VFS configuration directive.
-v
Increase the level of debugging output. The flag may be repeated.
--version
Display the program's version information and then exit.
Copyright © 2003-2024 Distributed Systems Software.
See the
LICENSE
file that accompanies the distribution
for licensing information.
DACS Version 1.4.52 | 24-Sep-2024 | DACSSCHED(1) |
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$Id: dacssched.1.xml 3304 2024-04-03 23:00:19Z brachman $