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Accessing parameters in shell scripts

  • Job parameters and order parameters are accessible by exposed as environment variables to shell scripts.
  • Environment variables are named using a predefined prefix and the name of the original parameter: 
    • The default value for the environment variable prefix is 
    There is a simple rule for the naming of environment variables: 
    • the name of the environment variable for a parameter is SCHEDULER_PARAM_NAMEOFPARAM 
    • Environment variable names are provided with uppercase letters.
    • For example, a parameter param1 can be accessed by the for example the job parameter param1 is available by the environment variable SCHEDULER_PARAM_PARAM1 environment variable.
    • For details see Which environment variables are

      used with uppercase letters

      provided by JobScheduler?

Examples

The following two examples show a task parameter defined in a job <param> tag can be called in a shell script. 

Code Block
languagexml
titleExample for Windows showing how a task parameter can be used in a shell script
collapsetrue
 <job>
    <params>
        <param name="param1"  value="Test"/>
    </params>
    <script language="shell">
        <![CDATA[
 rem This is an example shell script to show the use of parameters
 echo Param1 has the value %SCHEDULER_PARAM_PARAM1%
        ]]>
    </script>
    <run_time/>
 </job>
Code Block
languagexml
titleExample for Unix showing how a task parameter can be used in a shell script
collapsetrue
 <job>
    <params>
        <param name="param1" value="Test"/>
    </params>
    <script language="shell">
        <![CDATA[
 # This is an example shell script to show the use of parameters
 echo "Param1Parameter param1 has the value $SCHEDULER_PARAM_PARAM1"
        ]]>
    </script>
    <run_time/>
 </job

 

If you want to use the parameters for a script in the command line then just add the environment variables when calling the script:

Code Block
languagebash
titleExample for command line (Unix)
  anyshellscript.sh $SCHEDULER_PARAM_PARAM1 $SCHEDULER_PARAM_PARM2 ...

Passing parameters to subsequent shell jobs in a job chain

  • JobScheduler allows the creation or overwriting of order parameters for subsequent jobs in a job chain.
  • With every change of status in job chains JobScheduler parses a temporary file for name=/value pairs after termination of each job in a job chain.
    • The name of the this temporary file is available with held in the environment variable SCHEDULER_RETURN_VALUES environment variable.
    • The name/value pairs are automatically added as order parameters.
    • A parameter set in one job shell script can be written to this temporary file and made available to subsequent jobs using the following (for Windows):
      • myParam=myValue >> %SCHEDULER_RETURN_VALUES%
    • A task parameter set in one job can be written to this temporary file and thereby made available to subsequent jobs in a job chain using the following (for Windows):
      • myParam=%SCHEDULER_PARAM_MYPARAM% >> %SCHEDULER_RETURN_VALUES%
    • Such parameters are accessible in subsequent job using the following (for Windows):
      • echo myParam = %SCHEDULER_PARAM_MYPARAM%

The following code blocks show two jobs that demonstrate the setting and retrieval of shell script parameters in a job chain:.

Code Block
languagexml
titleExample for First Job
 <job order="yes"
     stop_on_error="no" name="job1_shell_with_parameter_set">
    <params>
        <param name="param1" value="Value1-Job1" />
        <param name="param2" value="TestValue2-Job1" />
    </params>
    <script language="shell">
        <![CDATA[
 rem This is ana examplesample shell script to demonstrate the usesetting of parameters 
echo param1 = %SCHEDULER_PARAM_PARAM1%
echo newParam=an example param2 = %SCHEDULER_PARAM_PARAM2% 
 
rem creating order parameters for subsequent jobs
echo param2 = some-other-value >> %SCHEDULER_RETURN_VALUES%
echo param3 = Value3 >> %SCHEDULER_RETURN_VALUES%
        ]]>
    </script>
    <run_time/>
 </job>
Code Block
languagexml
titleExample for Second Job
 <job order="yes" stop_on_error="no" name="job2_shell_with_parameter_get">
    <params>
        <param name="param1" value="Test"Value1-Job2" />
        <param name="param2" value="Value2-Job2" />
    </params>
    <script language="shell">
        <![CDATA[
echo param1 has the value: %SCHEDULER_PARAM_PARAM1%
echo param2 has the value: %SCHEDULER_PARAM_PARAM2%
echo newParamparam3 has the value: %SCHEDULER_PARAM_NEWPARAM%PARAM3%
        ]]>
    </script>
    <run_time/>
 </job>

 

The job chain for the two example shell jobs is listed below:

Code Block
languagexml
titleExample for Job Chain
collapsetrue
 <job_chain>
    <job_chain_node state="100"
                    job="job_samplejob1_shell_with_parameter_set"
                    next_state="200"
                    error_state="error"/>
    <job_chain_node state="200"
                    job="job_sample_shelljob2_shell_with_parameter_get"
                    next_state="success"
                    error_state="error"/>
    <job_chain_node state="success"/>
    <job_chain_node state="error"/>
 </job_chain>

...

Example Behavior

The screen shot below shows the log file for the example order and the values for the environment variables.

Image Added

The log file shows that:

  • The param1 task parameters set in both the first and second jobs are only valid within the respective jobs.
  • The param2 task parameter set in the first job and which is forwarded as an environment variable to the second job overwrites the param2 task parameter set in the second job.
  • The param3 shell script parameter set in the shell script in the first job is passed to the script in the second job.

Example Download

The example described above can be downloaded from the following link:

Unpack the files into your JobScheduler's live folder and run the order using JOC.

The example behavior described above will be visible in the order log file.

Further References

Job and Order Parameters