I am trying to write a file watcher job in autosys that would watch out for a particular file. The file name format would be filename_ddmmyyyy.
The requirement is that the file comes at 7.15am everyday and the file watcher job starts running at 6.50am and the runs till 8am. If the file is received by then, job is successful else an alert is raised.
Now what I am trying to do is to watch out the file filename_ddmmyyyy for a particular day. e.g. if today is 22nd Feb 2013, the file name will be filename_22022013 and this is the file that I am looking for. If I use wildcards like filename_*, it would look for all possible files which I don't want.
I am not sure how to do this in Windows.
Any help would be much appreciated.
Let me know in case of questions.
You will need to use the profile job attribute to initalize variables when the job starts. One of these variables will need to be the date pattern you are looking for (you'll need another process that outputs that dynamically). Then once you set it to a variable in your profile script, you can refer to that variable name from within the watch_file attribute.
Create global variable as variable with date and us that variable :
example:filename_$${GV_DATE}
GV_DATE: ddmmyyyy
Pretty late to answer, but here is an answer without using global variable. You can use formatted system date variable in the file name.
File_to_watch: filename_%date:~10,4%%date:~4,2%%date:~7,2%
Related
I have a question related with report.html that maybe someone could help me to clarify
If i execute the same test case two times, is there a way to generate report.html with a timestamp in the file name so after 2 executions i have 2 reports.html.
for example:
report_20200529_15:00:00.html
report_20200529:15:05:00.html
Thanks in advance for your help
This is covered in the robot framework user guide, in a section titled timestamping output files:
All output files listed in this section can be automatically timestamped with the option --timestampoutputs (-T). When this option is used, a timestamp in the format YYYYMMDD-hhmmss is placed between the extension and the base name of each file.
When I run test cases from RIDE the reports are saved in the below path.
C:\Windows\Temp\RIDExf4xla.d
I want save reports in specific path. Can I do this from RIDE? Is there any setting to change the reports location?
Can anyone please suggest the way to do it.
Thanks
Look at the --outputdir command within the Robot Framework Documentation:
Here is what I use:
--outputdir C:/Robot/AutomationLogs/etc/etc --timestampoutputs
You use this one liner on the "Arguments" Field, right on the top of RIDE within the run tab.
From Wamans comment you can add formats to the end of the argument, to also change the dir name dynamically. See the 2nd answer within that SO question. This should be enough for you to get what you're asking for.
There is no way to set this within a UI.
Just set it by pasting that argument option within the "Arguments" Field at the top.
use below code in command line
C:\Tests\> robot -d C:\Test_results Test.robot
I would like to move all my output files to a custom location, to a Run directory created based on Date time during Run time. The output folder by datetime is created in the TestSetup
I have function "Process_Output_files" which will move the files to the Run folder(Run1,Run2,Run3 Folders).
I have tried using the argument-d and used the function "Process_Output_files" as suite tear down to move the output files to the respective Run directory.
But I get the following error "The process cannot access the file because it is being used by another process". I know this is because the Robot Framework (Ride) is currently using this.
If I dont use the -d argument, the output files are getting saved in temp folders.
c:\users\<user>\appdata\local\temp\RIDEfmbr9x.d\output.xml
c:\users\<user>\appdata\local\temp\RIDEfmbr9x.d\log.html
c:\users\<user>\appdata\local\temp\RIDEfmbr9x.d\report.html
My question is, Is there a way to get move the files to custom location during run time with in Robot Framework.
You can use the following syntax in RIDE (Arguments:) to create the output in newfolders dynamically
--outputdir C:/AutomationLogs/%date:~-4,4%%date:~-10,2%%date:~-7,2% --timestampoutputs
The above syntax gives you the output in below folder:
Output: C:\AutomationLogs\20151125\output-20151125-155017.xml
Log: C:\AutomationLogs\20151125\log-20151125-155017.html
Report: C:\AutomationLogs\20151125\report-20151125-155017.html
Hope this helps :)
I understand the end result you want is to have your output files in their custom folders. If this is your desire, it can be accomplished at runtime and you won't have to move them as part of your post processing. This will not work in RIDE, unfortunately, since the folder structure is created dynamically. I have two options for you.
Option 1: Use a script to kick off your tests
RIDE is awesome, but in my humble opinion, one shouldn't be using it to run ones tests, only to build and debug ones tests. Scripts are far more powerful and flexible.
Assuming you have a test, test2.txt, you wish to run, the script you use to do this could be something like:
from time import gmtime, strftime
import os
#strftime returns string representations of a date-time tuple.
#gmtime returns the date-time tuple representing greenwich mean time
dts=strftime("%Y.%m.%d.%H.%M.%S", gmtime())
cmd="pybot -d Run%s test2"%(dts,)
os.system(cmd)
As an aside, if you do intend to do post processing of your files using rebot, be aware you may not need to create intermediate log and report files. The output.xml files contain everything you need, so if you don't want to create superfluous files, use --log NONE --report NONE
Option 2: Use a listener to do post processing
A listener is a program you write that responds to events (x_start, x_end, etc). The close() event is akin to the teardown function and is the last thing called. So, assuming you have a function moveFiles() you simply need to create a listener class (myListener), define the close() method to call your moveFiles() function, and alert your test that it should report to a listener with the argument --listener myListener.
This option should be compatible with RIDE though I admit I have never tried to use listeners with the IDE.
At least you can write a custom run script that handles the moving of files after the test case execution. In this case the files are no longer used by pybot.
Hello it is possible to add a time stamp to the entries of resource file. It will help the translation workflow.
I want to do something like this:
Name value note ModDate
key1 valueofkey1 11/11/2013
Use source control, Tortuase SVN, SourceSafe, TFS etc. You will know when add or changed, from who and additionaly you can add comments.
I am trying to use filters to select specific tables to replicate.
I tried running this with the installer
./tools/tungsten-installer --master-slave -a \
...
--svc-extractor-filters=replicate \
--property=replicator.filter.replicate.do=test,*.foo"
and got this exception in trepctl status after the master had not installed properly:
Plugin class name property is missing or null: key=replicator.filter.replicate
which file is this properties file? How do I find it? Moreover, in specifying the settings for the filter, how do I know what exactly to put?
I discovered that I am supposed to Modify the configuration template file prior to configuration according to Issue 219 but what changes am I supposed to make in tungsten-replicator-2.0.5-diff that will later on be patched to the extraction?
Issue 254 suggests that If you want to apply a filter out of the box, you can use these options with tungsten-installer:
-a --property=replicator.filter.Replicate.ignoreFilter=schema_x.tablex,schema_x,tabley,schema_y,tablez
--svc-thl-filter=Replicate
However when I try using this for --property=replicator.filter.replicate.do,
but the problem is still the same:
pendingExceptionMessage: Plugin class name property is missing or null: key=replicator.filter.replicate
Your assistance will be greatly appreciated.
Rumbi
Update:
Hi
I had a look at this file: /root/tungsten/tungsten-replicator/samples/
conf/filters/default/tableignore.tpl .Acoording to this sample, a
static-SERVICE_NAME.properties file is supposed to have something like
this configured, please confirm if this is the correct syntax:
replicator.filter.tabledo=com.continuent.tungsten.replicator.filter.JavaScr iptFilter
replicator.filter.tabledo.script=${replicator.home.dir}/samples/
scripts/javascript-advanced/tabledo.js
replicator.filter.tabledo.tables=foo(database).bar(table)
replicator.stage.thl-to-dbms.filters=tabledo
However, I did not find tabledo.js (or something similar) in the
directory where tableignore.js exists. Could I please have the
location of this file. If there is an alternative way of specifiying
--property=replicator.filter.replicate.do=test without the use of
this .js file, your suggestions are most welcome.
Download the latest version of tungsten replicator. The missing tpl file was added about a month ago. After installation, the filtered tables should be added to static-service.properties under the section FILTERS.
Locate your replicator configuration file in static-YOUR_SERVICE_NAME.properties, e.g.
/opt/continuent/tungsten/tungsten-replicator/conf/static-mysql2vertica.properties
Make sure the individual dbms properties are set, in particular the setting replicator.applier.dbms:
# Batch applier basic configuration information.
replicator.applier.dbms=com.continuent.tungsten.replicator.applier.batch.SimpleBatchApplier
replicator.applier.dbms.url=jdbc:mysql:thin://${replicator.global.db.host}:${replicator.global.db.port}/tungsten_${service.name}?createDB=true
replicator.applier.dbms.driver=org.drizzle.jdbc.DrizzleDriver
replicator.applier.dbms.user=${replicator.global.db.user}
replicator.applier.dbms.password=${replicator.global.db.password}
replicator.applier.dbms.startupScript=${replicator.home.dir}/samples/scripts/batch/mysql-connect.sql
# Timezone and character set.
replicator.applier.dbms.timezone=GMT+0:00
replicator.applier.dbms.charset=UTF-8
# Parameters for loading and merging via stage tables.
replicator.applier.dbms.stageTablePrefix=stage_xxx_
replicator.applier.dbms.stageDirectory=/tmp/staging
replicator.applier.dbms.stageLoadScript=${replicator.home.dir}/samples/scripts/batch/mysql-load.sql
replicator.applier.dbms.stageMergeScript=${replicator.home.dir}/samples/scripts/batch/mysql-merge.sql
replicator.applier.dbms.cleanUpFiles=false
Depending on the database you are replicating to you may have to omit/modify some of the lines.
For more information see:
https://code.google.com/p/tungsten-replicator/wiki/Replicator_Batch_Loading
I don't know if this problem is still open or not.
I am using this version 2.0.6-xxx and installing the service using the parameters works for me.
I would like to point it out, that as the parameter says "--svc-extractor-filters" defines an extractor filter. Meaning that the parameters will guide the extraction of data in the master server.
If you intend to use it on the slave service, you should use the "--svc-applier-filters".
The parameters
--svc-extractor-filters=replicate \
--property=replicator.filter.replicate.do=test,*.foo"
supposed to create the following in the properties file:
This is the filter set up.
replicator.filter.replicate=com.continuent.tungsten.replicator.filter.ReplicateFilter
replicator.filter.replicate.ignore=
replicator.filter.replicate.do=test,*.foo
And you should also be able to find the
replicator.stage.binlog-to-q.filters=replicate
parameter set.
If you intend to use this filter in the slave, please find the line with:
replicator.stage.q-to-dbms.filters=mysqlsessions,pkey,bidiSlave
and change it as
replicator.stage.q-to-dbms.filters=mysqlsessions,pkey,bidiSlave,replicate
Hope this brief description did help to you!