xcat-core/xCAT-client/pods/man3/noderange.3.pod

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=head1 Name
B<noderange> - syntax for compactly expressing a list of node names
=head1 B<Synopsis>
I<Examples:>
node1,node2,node8,node20,group1
node14-node56,node70-node203,group1-group10
node1,node2,node8,node20,node14-node56,node70-node203
node[14-56]
all,-node129-node256,-frame01-frame03
/node.*
^/tmp/nodes
node10+5
10-15,-13
group1@group2
=head1 B<Description>
B<noderange> is a syntax that can be used in most xCAT commands to
conveniently specify a list of nodes. The result is that the command will
be applied to a range of nodes, often in parallel.
B<noderange> is a comma-separated list. Each token (text between commas)
in the list can be any of the forms listed below:
Individual node or group:
node01
group1
A range of nodes or groups:
node01-node10 (equivalent to: node01,node02,node03,...node10)
node[01-10] (same as above)
node01:node10 (same as above)
node[01:10] (same as above)
group1-group3 (equivalent to: group1,group2,group3)
(all the permutations supported above for nodes are also supported for groups)
B<nodeRange> tries to be intelligent about detecting padding, so
you can specify "node001-node200" and it will add the proper number of
zeroes to make all numbers 3 digits.
An incremented range of nodes:
node10+3 (equivalent to: node10,node11,node12,node13)
A node shorthand range of nodes:
10-20 (equivalent to: node10,node11,node12,...node20)
10+3 (equivalent to: node10,node11,node12,node13)
Currently, the prefix that will be prepended for the above syntax is always "node".
Eventually, the prefix and optional suffix will be settable via the environment variables
XCAT_NODE_PREFIX and XCAT_NODE_SUFFIX, but currently this only works in bypass mode.
A regular expression match of nodes or groups:
/node[345].* (will match any nodes that start with node3, node4, or node5)
/group[12].* (will match any groups that start with group1 or group2)
The full path of a file containing noderanges of nodes or groups:
^/tmp/nodelist
where /tmp/nodelist can contain entries like:
#my node list (this line ignored)
^/tmp/foo #ignored
node01 #node comment
node02
node03
node10-node20
/group[456].*
-node50
Node ranges can contain any combination:
node01-node30,node40,^/tmp/nodes,/node[13].*,2-10,node50+5
Any individual B<noderange> may be prefixed with an exclusion operator
(default -) with the exception of the file operator (default ^). This will cause
that individual noderange to be subtracted from the total resulting list of nodes.
The intersection operator @ calculates the intersection of the left and
right sides:
group1@group2 (will result in the list of nodes that group1 and group2 have in common)
Any combination or multiple combinations of inclusive and exclusive
ranges of nodes and groups is legal. There is no precedence implied in
the order of the arguments. Exclusive ranges have precedence over
inclusive. Parentheses can be used to explicitly specify precendence of any operators.
Nodes have precedence over groups. If a node range match is made then
no group range match will be attempted.
All node and group names are validated against the nodelist table. Invalid names
are ignored and return nothing.
=head2 B<xCAT Node Name Format>
Throughout this man page the term B<xCAT Node Name Format> is used.
B<xCAT Node Name Format> is defined by the following regex:
^([A-Za-z-]+)([0-9]+)(([A-Za-z-]+[A-Za-z0-9-]*)*)
In plain English, a node or group name is in B<xCAT Node Name Format> if starting
from the begining there are:
=over 2
=item *
one or more alpha characters of any case and any number of "-" in any combination
=item *
followed by one or more numbers
=item *
then optionally followed by one alpha character of any case or "-"
=item *
followed by any combination of case mixed alphanumerics and "-"
=back
B<noderange> supports node/group names in I<any> format. B<xCAT Node Name Format> is
B<not> required, however some node range methods used to determine range
will not be used for non-conformant names.
Example of B<xCAT Node Name Format> node/group names:
NODENAME PREFIX NUMBER SUFFIX
node1 node 1
node001 node 001
node-001 node- 001
node-foo-001-bar node-foo- 001 -bar
node-foo-1bar node-foo- 1 bar
foo1bar2 foo 1 bar2
rack01unit34 rack 01 unit34
unit34rack01 unit 34 rack01
pos0134 pos 0134
=head1 B<Examples>
=over 3
=item 1.
Generates a list of all nodes (assuming all is a group) listed in the
B<nodelist> table less node5 through node10:
all,-node5-node10
=item 2.
Generates a list of nodes 1 through 10 less nodes 3,4,5. Note that
node4 is listed twice, first in the range and then at the end. Because
exclusion has precedence node4 will be excluded.
node1-node10,-node3-node5,node4
=item 3.
Generates a list of nodes 1 through 10 less nodes 3 and 5.
node1-node10,-node3,-node5
=item 4.
Generates a list of all (assuming `all' is a group) nodes in the
B<nodelist> table less 17 through 32.
-node17-node32,all
=item 5.
Generates a list of nodes 1 through 128, and user nodes 1 through 4.
node1-node128,user1-user4
=item 6.
Generates a list of all nodes (assuming `all' is a group), less nodes
in groups rack1 through rack3 (assuming groups rack1, rack2, and rack3
are defined), less nodes 100 through 200, less nodes in the storage
group. Note that node150 is listed but is excluded.
all,-rack1-rack3,-node100-node200,node150,-storage
=item 7.
Generates a list of nodes matching the regex I<node[23].*>. That is all
nodes that start with node2 or node3 and end in anything or nothing.
E.g. node2, node3, node20, node30, node21234 all match.
/node[23].*
=back
=head1 B<SEE ALSO>
L<nodels(1)|nodels.1>