global_equiv_resol
Note
The uwtools drivers are idempotent, meaning that actions they successfully complete during one invocation are not repeated in subsequent invocations. For example, an asset like a configuration file will not be recreated when the driver is run again, even if its UW YAML configuration changes. To force recreation, remove the asset(s) in question – up to and including the entire provisioned run directory – then re-run the driver, which will recreate any missing assets based on the current configuration.
The uw mode for configuring and running the UFS Utils preprocessing component global_equiv_resol. Documentation for this UFS Utils component is here.
uw global_equiv_resol --help
usage: uw global_equiv_resol [-h] [--version] [--show-schema] TASK ...
Execute global_equiv_resol tasks
Optional arguments:
-h, --help
Show help and exit
--version
Show version info and exit
--show-schema
Show driver schema and exit
Positional arguments:
TASK
input_file
Ensure the specified input grid file exists
provisioned_rundir
Run directory provisioned with all required content
run
A run
runscript
The runscript
show_output
Show the output to be created by this component
validate
Validate the UW driver config
All tasks take the same arguments. For example:
uw global_equiv_resol run --help
usage: uw global_equiv_resol run [-h] [--version] [--config-file PATH]
[--batch] [--dry-run] [--graph-file PATH]
[--key-path KEY[.KEY...]]
[--schema-file PATH] [--quiet] [--verbose]
A run
Optional arguments:
-h, --help
Show help and exit
--version
Show version info and exit
--config-file PATH, -c PATH
Path to UW YAML config file (default: read from stdin)
--batch
Submit job to batch scheduler
--dry-run
Only log info, making no changes
--graph-file PATH
Path to Graphviz DOT output [experimental]
--key-path KEY[.KEY...]
Dot-separated path of keys to driver config block
--schema-file PATH
Path to schema file to use for validation
--quiet, -q
Print no logging messages
--verbose, -v
Print all logging messages
Examples
The examples use a configuration file named config.yaml with contents similar to:
global_equiv_resol:
execution:
batchargs:
cores: 1
walltime: "00:01:00"
executable: /path/to/global_equiv_resol.exe
input_grid_file: /path/to/input/grid/file
rundir: /path/to/run/dir
platform:
account: me
scheduler: slurm
Its contents are described in section global_equiv_resol.
Run
global_equiv_resolon an interactive node$ uw global_equiv_resol run --config-file config.yaml
The driver creates a
runscript.global_equiv_resolfile in the directory specified byrundir:in the config and runs it, executingglobal_equiv_resol.Run
global_equiv_resolvia a batch job$ uw global_equiv_resol run --config-file config.yaml --batch
The driver creates a
runscript.global_equiv_resolfile in the directory specified byrundir:in the config and submits it to the batch system. Running with--batchrequires a correctly configuredplatform:block inconfig.yaml, as well as appropriate settings in theexecution:block underglobal_equiv_resol:.Specifying the
--dry-runflag results in the driver logging messages about actions it would have taken, without actually taking any.$ uw global_equiv_resol run --config-file config.yaml --batch --dry-run
The
--key-pathoption can be used to navigate from the top of the config to the driver’s configuration block. For example, specifying--key-path foo.barwith configfoo: bar: driver: # driver config block
is equivalent to using config
driver: # driver config block
without specifying
--key-path.
Specifying the
--show-schemaflag, with no other options, prints the driver’s schema:uw global_equiv_resol --show-schema >schema head -n20 schema{ "properties": { "global_equiv_resol": { "additionalProperties": false, "properties": { "execution": { "additionalProperties": false, "properties": { "batchargs": { "additionalProperties": true, "properties": { "account": { "type": "string" }, "clusters": { "type": "string" }, "cores": { "type": "integer" },Use the
--schema-fileoption to specify a custom JSON Schema file with which to validate the driver config. A custom schema could range in complexity from the simplest, most permissive schema,{}, to one based on the internal schema shown by--show-schema.