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powerman.dev(5)			   powerman		       powerman.dev(5)

NAME
       powerman.dev - PowerMan device specification files

DESCRIPTION
       PowerMan	 device	 specifications	are rather wierd.  For this reason, we
       suggest that you	leave the writing of these scripts to the PowerMan au-
       thors.  However,	if you insist, here is how they	work.

       Note: the authors do not	guarantee that the PowerMan specification lan-
       guage will not change, however we are open to taking on maintenance  of
       scripts	submitted by PowerMan users.  We can't guarantee that we'll be
       able to test new	releases against all devices but we'll do our best not
       to break	anything.  NOTE: the best way to help us in this  endeavor  is
       to  provide  a  ``simulator''  for your power controller	and associated
       tests in	the test subdirectory of the powerman source  code.   See  the
       examples	in that	directory.

       By  convention, device scripts are one device per file and are included
       as needed from a	powerman.conf file, like this:

	      include "/etc/powerman/icebox3.dev"

       A device	script is surrounded by	an outer block:

	      specification "my_device_name" {
		  # configuration settings
		  # script blocks
	      }

       The possible configuration settings are:

       timeout <float>
	      (optional) device	script timeout in seconds -  applies  to  each
	      script, the whole	thing, not just	a particular "expect".

       plug name { <string list> }
	      (optional)  if  plug  names  are static, they should be defined.
	      Any reference to a plug name in the powerman.conf	must match one
	      of the defined plug names.

       pingperiod <float>
	      (optional) if a  ping  script  is	 defined,  and	pingperiod  is
	      nonzero,	the  ping  script will be executed periodically, every
	      <float> seconds.

       Script blocks have the form:

	      script <script_name> {
		  # statements
	      }

       Script blocks should all	be grouped together with no  config  lines  in
       between.	  Scripts  are	for  performing	 particular operations such as
       power on, get power status, etc.	 The various script names  are	listed
       below.	Those marked with [%s] are called with a plug name "argument",
       which can be included in	a send statements by including	a  %s  (printf
       style).	 Warning:  all	the send strings are processed with printf and
       you can cause powermand to segfault if you include  any	printf	tokens
       other than the appropriate zero or one %s.

       login  Executed	immediately  on	(re-)connect.  If you need to login to
	      the box, do it here.  This is  also  a  good  place  to  descend
	      through  a  first	 layer of menus.  Caveat: % occurring in pass-
	      words must be escaped as %%.  Caveat: occurs outside  of	client
	      session  so  cannot be debugged with -T.	A trick	when debugging
	      is to move this code into	the status script temporarily  so  you
	      can see what is going on.

       logout Executed	prior  to  disconnect.	Get device in a	state so login
	      script will work (though hopefully disconnecting	will  do  that
	      too).

       status_all, status[%s]
	      Obtain  plug  state  for	all  plugs or only the specified plug.
	      When all plugs of	a device are involved in a plug	status	query,
	      the  status_all script, if defined, will be called in preference
	      to the status script; otherwise the status script	is called  for
	      each plug.

       on_all, on_range[%s], on[%s]
	      Power on all plugs, a range of plugs, or the specified plug.

       off_all,	off_range[%s], off[%s]
	      Power off	all plugs, a range of plugs, or	the specified plug.

       cycle_all, cycle_range[%s], cycle[%s]
	      Power  cycle all plugs, a	range of plugs,	or the specified plug.
	      The intent of this command was to	map to the  RPC's  cycle  com-
	      mand;  however, device script are	increasingly implementing this
	      in terms of a power off/delay/power so the off time can be  con-
	      trolled by the script.

       status_soft_all,	status_soft[%s]
	      Obtain  soft  power  state  for  all plugs or only the specified
	      plug.  Soft Power	refers to the "standby state" of the node.  On
	      means the	node is	powered	up.  Off means either the node is pow-
	      ered off at the plug or is powered on at the plug	and in standby
	      mode.  This is really only useful	on devices that	include	both a
	      plug relay and a probe into the node attached to	a  non-standby
	      power source.

       status_temp_all,	status_temp[%s]
	      Obtain  temperature  reading for all plugs or only the specified
	      plug.  Temperature is obtained by	sampling a thermocouple	in the
	      node.  Results are reported as a text string -  not  interpreted
	      by Powerman beyond any regex chopping done by the	script.

       status_beacon_all, status_beacon[%s]
	      Obtain  beacon  state  for all plugs or only the specified plug.
	      Some RPC's include a way to flash	a light	on a node.

       beacon_on[%s]
	      Flash beacon on the specified plug.

       beacon_off[%s]
	      Clear beacon on the specified plug.

       reset_all, reset_range[%s], reset[%s]
	      Reset all	plugs, a range of plugs, or only the  specified	 plug.
	      Reset refers to signaling	a motherboard reset butten header, not
	      a	plug cycle.

       Within a	script,	the following statements can be	used:

       send <string>
	      Send <string> to the device.

       delay <float>
	      Pause script for <float> seconds.

       expect <string>
	      <string>	is  compiled  as a regular expression with regcomp(3).
	      The regular expression is	matched	 against  device  input.   The
	      script  blocks  until the	regex is matched or the	device timeout
	      occurs (in which case the	script is  aborted).   Upon  matching,
	      any parenthesized	expressiones are assigned to variables:	$1 for
	      the  first  match, $2 for	the second match, and so on.  Warning:
	      some implementations of regex(3) silently	fail  if  the  regular
	      expression exceeds available static storage.

       setplugstate [<string>|<regmatch>]  <regmatch> [off=<string>]
       [on=<string>]
	      Set the plug state.  The first argument, if present, is the lit-
	      eral  plug  name	or a <regmatch>	from the previous expect which
	      contains the plug	name.  If omitted, the plug name  is  presumed
	      to  be the script	argument.  The off and on strings are compiled
	      regexes, which if	matched	by the second argument,	result in  the
	      plug  state being	set to off or on.  Yes we are applying regexes
	      to regmatches!  If no off	or on strings are provided, state will
	      be unknown.

       ifoff, ifon
	      Script statements	enclosed in an	ifon/ifoff  block  are	condi-
	      tional  executed	based on the state of the plug passed in as an
	      argument.	 Ifon/ifoff blocks can only be	used  in  single  plug
	      scripts that take	an argument.

       foreachplug
	      Script  statements  enclosed in a	foreachplug block are executed
	      iteratively with a %s argument defined  for  each	 target	 plug.
	      Foreachplug  blocks  can	only  be used in all plug scripts that
	      take no argument.

       Script terminals	are  defined as	follows:

       <float>
	      decimal number - exponent	forms not supported

       <string>
	      Text surrounded by double	quotes.	 May  contain  C  style	 back-
	      slash-escaped  characters,  including  three digit octal values,
	      and most common backslash-escaped	single character values.

       <string list>
	      Multiple <string>	values separated by white space.

       <script_name>
	      Name of script (see above).

       <regmatch>
	      Results of a parenthesized regular expression match are assigned
	      to $1, $2, ... $N.

FILES
       /usr/local/etc/powerman/*.dev

ORIGIN
       PowerMan	was originally developed by Andrew  Uselton  on	 LLNL's	 Linux
       clusters.  This software	is open	source and distributed under the terms
       of the GNU GPL.

SEE ALSO
       powerman(1),  powermand(8),  httppower(8), plmpower(8), vpcd(8),	power-
       man.conf(5), powerman.dev(5).

       http://code.google.com/p/powerman

powerman-2.3.20			  2014-08-26		       powerman.dev(5)

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