/*! \page salome_command salome command To start SALOME a new approach is proposed, based on \ref SALOME_Application. The underlying mechanism aims at: -# Unifying start commands\n Unix Shell scripts like runAppli, runSession and runConsole are replaced by a unique Python command named \b salome. -# Handle execution context\n After SALOME exit, environment is restored to its initial state. No Shell file sourcing is required; context management is achieved using Python standard API for context files parsing. -# Promote creation of custom start commands (launchers)\n A launcher is a Python script that creates an execution context then starts SALOME in this context. It uses methods provided by an Application Programming Interface (API). The \b salome command is a launcher. Several launchers may exist simultaneously; each uses the same API and focuses on execution context creation. \section salome_launcher The salome command Usage of \c salome command is: \code salome [command] [options] [--config=] [--extra_env=] \endcode Commands are: - \c start \n Start a new SALOME instance. - \c context \n Initialize SALOME context. Current environment is extended. - \c shell \n Initialize SALOME context, attached to the last created SALOME instance if any, and executes scripts passed as command arguments. User works in a Shell terminal; SALOME environment is set but application is not started. - \c connect \n Connect a Python console to the active SALOME instance. - \c kill \n Terminate SALOME instances running on given ports for current user. Port numbers must be separated by blank characters. - \c killall \n Terminate *all* SALOME running instances for current user ; do not start a new one. - \c test \n Run SALOME tests. - \c info \n Display some information about SALOME. - \c help \n Show this message. To start an application, use \code salome start \endcode This command is equivalent to runAppli. It accepts the same options that can be listed using \code salome start --help \endcode To initialize an environment, use \code salome shell \endcode This command is equivalent to runSession. It accepts the same options that can be listed using \code salome shell --help \endcode To connect a Python console, use \code salome connect \endcode There is no options to this command. It asks user which SALOME instance to connect to. \section batch_files Batch files that set extra environment The --extra_env option is used to identify a list of batch files (or directories containing such files) that must be considered to create the SALOME execution context. Typically on linux these files are shell scripts that modify the global environment. The salome command determines environment changes implied by running these files to initialize SALOME context. Note that this functionality is not the recommanded way to set SALOME context ; it is provided for backward compatibility and convenience ; prefer \ref context_files solution. \section context_files Context files management The --config option is used to identify the list of configuration files or directories to be used for SALOME context creation. When this option is given, only files provided by user are considered. If user does not specify any context file SALOME will rely on context files detected in the env.d application folder. Two file formats can coexist, with a .cfg or .sh extension that are associated with the new and the former start mechanism, respectively. The \c salome command is based on the .cfg format; however, it is able to interpret (partially) the .sh format for software backward compatibility. The use of .cfg format is highly recommended with the new launcher. It is possible to add context files in the env.d folder; the strategy followed by \c salome for these files is as follows. All files with .cfg extension are taken into account. Files with .sh extension are taken into account only if there is no file with the same name with a .cfg extension, for example: -# Context1.cfg : taken into account because it has a .cfg extension. -# Context2.cfg : taken into account because it has a .cfg extension. -# Context2.sh : not taken into account because Context2.cfg exists. -# Context3.sh : considered because Context3.cfg does not exist. Considered .sh files are automatically translated to .cfg format (the .cfg file is not written to disk). The translator is not as complete as Unix Shell interpreter; malfunctions may emerge in case of unrecognized syntax. \section several_scripts_multiple_args Run several scripts with multiple arguments On the one hand, runAppli options allow to give a list of Python scripts to be run after application startup; but it is not possible to specify parameters for these scripts. On the other hand runSession can run one script but it admits several parameters. The \c salome command combines the two solutions: you can specify multiple scripts, each can have several parameters. For this, the following syntax must be used; to provide parameters to a script from the command line, we write script.py args: arg1, arg2, ..., argn The script parameters must be separated by commas and no spaces are allowed (except between the script name and the beginning of its parameters). For example, the following call will run sequentially three scripts, which will wait 5 seconds, say hello, and calculate 1 +2 +3: \code salome shell –p 2811 wait.py args:5 hello.py add.py args:1,2,3 \endcode The command \c salome \c shell allows a double dash syntax (- -) to indicate an extra command to be run "as is". It allows calling a extern program or system command having options and arguments that contain simple dash (-) characters. The syntax is \code salome shell -- [options] [arguments] \endcode For example: \code salome shell -- ls -l *.py salome shell -- python -tt hello.py \endcode \section handling_concurrency Handling concurrent starts A SALOME instance uses a dedicated TCP port number on which the CORBA name server of each SALOME application will connect. This refers to a technical solution that allows multiple software components belonging to the same application to communicate with each other. This approach is a standard used when multiple applications are running at the same time (components should not interfere with each other), and when application components can be distributed across multiple machines. Each SALOME application owns a specific port number. This port is determined automatically when application starts. When multiple applications are started at the same time, assigning a number to each port could be conflicting, and the same port could be assigned to several applications. To prevent from such a situation, a Python object named \c Portmanager has been implemented. This object has been introduced in SALOME 7 as an optional tool, then evaluated on Linux and Windows. In SALOME 8, this object becomes the standard. Several instances can be safely started concurrently. For example in an automated process, calling several times the following commands (WORK_DIR variable changes at each call): \code salome start -t --ns-port-log=${WORK_DIR}/session.log salome shell -p `cat ${WORK_DIR}/session.log` ${SALOME_APPLI_FOLDER}/bin/salome/waitContainers.py # may be optional salome shell -p `cat ${WORK_DIR}/session.log` ${BASE_DIR}/hello.py salome kill `cat ${WORK_DIR}/session.log` \endcode \section remote_calls Remote calls With \c salome \c shell user can connect to a SALOME instance running on a remote computer. In this case the options -p PORT, -m MACHINE, -d DIRECTORY and -u USER must be provided. Moreover syntax out:res1,res2,... can be used to get results back from remote machine. For example: \code salome shell -m remotemachine -p 2810 -u myself -d /full/path/to/salome concatenate.py args:file1.txt,file2.txt out:result.txt \endcode In this example user myself connects to remotemachine to run the script concatenate.py in a SALOME instance running on port 2810; the script takes two input parameters and produces one result file. The script and the input files are on the local computer. They are copied to the remote machine using a secure connection ; results produced on remote computer are transferred on the local machine using the same protocol. Script, input files and results are removed from remote machine. \section write_launcher How to write a launcher A launcher is a Python module that contains a single def main(args) function to sequentially execute the following operations: - Detect application path \code currentPath = os.path.dirname( os.path.abspath( __file__ ) ) launcherFile = os.path.basename(__file__) from salome_starter import initialize initialize(currentPath, launcherFile) \endcode - Identify configuration (context) files \code from salomeContextUtils import getConfigFileNames configFileNames, extraEnv, args, unexisting = getConfigFileNames(args, checkExistence=True) \endcode extraEnv variable - Create a context \code context = SalomeContext(configFileNames) \endcode The execution context can be set or overloaded using \ref salome_api, for example: \code # context.addToPath('mypath') # context.addToLdLibraryPath('myldlibrarypath') # context.addToPythonPath('mypythonpath') # context.setVariable('myvarname', 'value') \endcode - Initializing extra environment variables parsed from batch files: \code if extraEnv: for key,val in extraEnv.items(): context.addToVariable(key,val) \endcode - Run SALOME \code (out, err), returncode = context.runSalome(args) \endcode This module is generally used as a script, run from a shell command line. It thus contains the directive: \code if __name__ == "__main__": args = sys.argv[1:] main(args) # \endcode Finally the module can be called from another script, for example a test script. Considering a Python variable \c path_to_launcher that identifies the absolute path to a launcher, one can write: \code appli_dir = os.path.dirname(path_to_launcher) sys.path[:0] = [os.path.join(appli_dir, "bin", "salome", "appliskel")] self.SALOME = imp.load_source("SALOME", os.path.join(appli_dir,"salome")) try: self.SALOME.main(["shell", "hello.py"]) except SystemExit, e: if str(e) != '0': logging.error(e) \endcode \section salome_api The API An API named \c SalomeContext, written in Python, allows for the construction of SALOME execution context and for application start. Each launcher creates a \c SalomeContext object, and optionally gives it a list of configuration files to describe the context: \code SalomeContext.__init__(configFileNames=None) \endcode A launcher can also directly call the API functions to define, suppress or extend (add information) an environment variable: \code SalomeContext.setVariable(name, value, overwrite=False) SalomeContext.unsetVariable(name) SalomeContext.addToVariable(name, value, separator=os.pathsep) \endcode The \c addToVariable function consists in prefixing the variable name with the given value inserting a separator between the two items. Unix system variables PATH, LD_LIBRARY_PATH (DYLD_LIBRARY PATH for BSD) and PYTHONPATH can only be extended: \code SalomeContext.addToPath(value) SalomeContext.addToLdLibraryPath(value) SalomeContext.addToDyldLibraryPath(value) SalomeContext.addToPythonPath(value) \endcode Once the context is created, the application is started: \code SalomeContext.runSalome(args) \endcode The \c args list corresponds to commands and options given to \c salome launcher. \section context_file_syntax Syntax of a context file It is possible to write specific context files provided that the syntax defined hereinafter is respected; their analysis by the new SALOME start mechanism uses tools from the Python standard API. A context file starts with a section title, and continues with the definition of different context variables. The section title is a string enclosed by brackets, for example [My context]. \subsection context_file_syntax_definition Definition A variable can be defined with a declaration variable=value: \code SALOME_PREREQUISITES=salome/prerequisites/install \endcode \subsection context_file_syntax_substitution Substitution A variable can be defined relative to another one; this substitution corresponds to the syntax %(variable)s: \code QTDIR=${HOME}/%(SALOME_PREREQUISITES)s/Qt-484 \endcode In this example QTDIR will equal ${HOME}/salome/prerequisites/install/Qt-484 \subsection context_file_syntax_system System variables Specific system variables such as PATH, LD_LIBRARY_PATH, DYLD_LIBRARY_PATH and PYTHONPATH are extended with ADD_TO_variable: valeur. \code ADD_TO_PATH: %(QTDIR)s/bin ADD_TO_LD_LIBRARY_PATH: %(QTDIR)s/lib ADD_TO_PYTHONPATH: %(PYQT_ROOT_DIR)s/lib/python2.7/site-packages \endcode \subsection context_file_syntax_unset Unset A variable can be unset with UNSET: variable: \code UNSET: LD_LIBRARY_PATH PTHREAD_ROOT_DIR \endcode \n */