Class StartTask


  • public class StartTask
    extends Object
    A Task which is run when a Node joins a Pool in the Azure Batch service, or when the Compute Node is rebooted or reimaged. Batch will retry Tasks when a recovery operation is triggered on a Node. Examples of recovery operations include (but are not limited to) when an unhealthy Node is rebooted or a Compute Node disappeared due to host failure. Retries due to recovery operations are independent of and are not counted against the maxTaskRetryCount. Even if the maxTaskRetryCount is 0, an internal retry due to a recovery operation may occur. Because of this, all Tasks should be idempotent. This means Tasks need to tolerate being interrupted and restarted without causing any corruption or duplicate data. The best practice for long running Tasks is to use some form of checkpointing. In some cases the StartTask may be re-run even though the Compute Node was not rebooted. Special care should be taken to avoid StartTasks which create breakaway process or install/launch services from the StartTask working directory, as this will block Batch from being able to re-run the StartTask.
    • Constructor Detail

      • StartTask

        public StartTask()
    • Method Detail

      • commandLine

        public String commandLine()
        Get the command line does not run under a shell, and therefore cannot take advantage of shell features such as environment variable expansion. If you want to take advantage of such features, you should invoke the shell in the command line, for example using "cmd /c MyCommand" in Windows or "/bin/sh -c MyCommand" in Linux. If the command line refers to file paths, it should use a relative path (relative to the Task working directory), or use the Batch provided environment variable (https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/azure/batch/batch-compute-node-environment-variables).
        Returns:
        the commandLine value
      • withCommandLine

        public StartTask withCommandLine​(String commandLine)
        Set the command line does not run under a shell, and therefore cannot take advantage of shell features such as environment variable expansion. If you want to take advantage of such features, you should invoke the shell in the command line, for example using "cmd /c MyCommand" in Windows or "/bin/sh -c MyCommand" in Linux. If the command line refers to file paths, it should use a relative path (relative to the Task working directory), or use the Batch provided environment variable (https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/azure/batch/batch-compute-node-environment-variables).
        Parameters:
        commandLine - the commandLine value to set
        Returns:
        the StartTask object itself.
      • containerSettings

        public TaskContainerSettings containerSettings()
        Get when this is specified, all directories recursively below the AZ_BATCH_NODE_ROOT_DIR (the root of Azure Batch directories on the node) are mapped into the container, all Task environment variables are mapped into the container, and the Task command line is executed in the container. Files produced in the container outside of AZ_BATCH_NODE_ROOT_DIR might not be reflected to the host disk, meaning that Batch file APIs will not be able to access those files.
        Returns:
        the containerSettings value
      • withContainerSettings

        public StartTask withContainerSettings​(TaskContainerSettings containerSettings)
        Set when this is specified, all directories recursively below the AZ_BATCH_NODE_ROOT_DIR (the root of Azure Batch directories on the node) are mapped into the container, all Task environment variables are mapped into the container, and the Task command line is executed in the container. Files produced in the container outside of AZ_BATCH_NODE_ROOT_DIR might not be reflected to the host disk, meaning that Batch file APIs will not be able to access those files.
        Parameters:
        containerSettings - the containerSettings value to set
        Returns:
        the StartTask object itself.
      • resourceFiles

        public List<ResourceFile> resourceFiles()
        Get files listed under this element are located in the Task's working directory.
        Returns:
        the resourceFiles value
      • withResourceFiles

        public StartTask withResourceFiles​(List<ResourceFile> resourceFiles)
        Set files listed under this element are located in the Task's working directory.
        Parameters:
        resourceFiles - the resourceFiles value to set
        Returns:
        the StartTask object itself.
      • environmentSettings

        public List<EnvironmentSetting> environmentSettings()
        Get the environmentSettings value.
        Returns:
        the environmentSettings value
      • withEnvironmentSettings

        public StartTask withEnvironmentSettings​(List<EnvironmentSetting> environmentSettings)
        Set the environmentSettings value.
        Parameters:
        environmentSettings - the environmentSettings value to set
        Returns:
        the StartTask object itself.
      • userIdentity

        public UserIdentity userIdentity()
        Get if omitted, the Task runs as a non-administrative user unique to the Task.
        Returns:
        the userIdentity value
      • withUserIdentity

        public StartTask withUserIdentity​(UserIdentity userIdentity)
        Set if omitted, the Task runs as a non-administrative user unique to the Task.
        Parameters:
        userIdentity - the userIdentity value to set
        Returns:
        the StartTask object itself.
      • maxTaskRetryCount

        public Integer maxTaskRetryCount()
        Get the Batch service retries a Task if its exit code is nonzero. Note that this value specifically controls the number of retries. The Batch service will try the Task once, and may then retry up to this limit. For example, if the maximum retry count is 3, Batch tries the Task up to 4 times (one initial try and 3 retries). If the maximum retry count is 0, the Batch service does not retry the Task. If the maximum retry count is -1, the Batch service retries the Task without limit.
        Returns:
        the maxTaskRetryCount value
      • withMaxTaskRetryCount

        public StartTask withMaxTaskRetryCount​(Integer maxTaskRetryCount)
        Set the Batch service retries a Task if its exit code is nonzero. Note that this value specifically controls the number of retries. The Batch service will try the Task once, and may then retry up to this limit. For example, if the maximum retry count is 3, Batch tries the Task up to 4 times (one initial try and 3 retries). If the maximum retry count is 0, the Batch service does not retry the Task. If the maximum retry count is -1, the Batch service retries the Task without limit.
        Parameters:
        maxTaskRetryCount - the maxTaskRetryCount value to set
        Returns:
        the StartTask object itself.
      • waitForSuccess

        public Boolean waitForSuccess()
        Get if true and the StartTask fails on a Node, the Batch service retries the StartTask up to its maximum retry count (maxTaskRetryCount). If the Task has still not completed successfully after all retries, then the Batch service marks the Node unusable, and will not schedule Tasks to it. This condition can be detected via the Compute Node state and failure info details. If false, the Batch service will not wait for the StartTask to complete. In this case, other Tasks can start executing on the Compute Node while the StartTask is still running; and even if the StartTask fails, new Tasks will continue to be scheduled on the Compute Node. The default is true.
        Returns:
        the waitForSuccess value
      • withWaitForSuccess

        public StartTask withWaitForSuccess​(Boolean waitForSuccess)
        Set if true and the StartTask fails on a Node, the Batch service retries the StartTask up to its maximum retry count (maxTaskRetryCount). If the Task has still not completed successfully after all retries, then the Batch service marks the Node unusable, and will not schedule Tasks to it. This condition can be detected via the Compute Node state and failure info details. If false, the Batch service will not wait for the StartTask to complete. In this case, other Tasks can start executing on the Compute Node while the StartTask is still running; and even if the StartTask fails, new Tasks will continue to be scheduled on the Compute Node. The default is true.
        Parameters:
        waitForSuccess - the waitForSuccess value to set
        Returns:
        the StartTask object itself.