NAME
Siebel::Srvrmgr::ListParser::Output::Tabular::ListSessions - subclass to parse list tasks command
SYNOPSIS
See Siebel::Srvrmgr::ListParser::Output::Tabular for examples.
DESCRIPTION
This subclass of Siebel::Srvrmgr::ListParser::Output::Tabular parses the output of the command list sessions
.
It is expected that the srvrmgr
program has a proper configuration for the list sessions
command. The default configuration can be seen below:
srvrmgr:> configure list sessions
SV_NAME (31): Server name
CC_ALIAS (31): Component alias
CG_ALIAS (31): Component group alias
TK_TASKID (11): Internal task id
TK_PID (11): Task process id
TK_DISP_RUNSTATE (61): Task run once
TK_IDLE_STATE (31): Task idle or not
TK_PING_TIME (13): Last ping time for task
TK_HUNG_STATE (31): Task hung state
DB_SESSION_ID (76): Database session Id
OM_LOGIN (76): Object Manager Login
OM_BUSSVC (76): OM - Business Service
OM_VIEW (76): OM - View State
OM_APPLET (76): OM - Applet
OM_BUSCOMP (76): OM - Business Component
Be sure to include this configuration when generating output, specially because the columns name width.
The order of the fields is important too: everytime those fields are parsed, if they do not follow the order above an exception will be raised.
An instance of this class will also know how many sessions it has, independently of the sessions state. Since it cannot know which string represents a session state, be sure to use the correct list sessions
variation to get the sessions that you're interested in.
METHODS
Some methods from the parent classes are overrided.
get_servers
Returns a list of the Siebel Server names from the parsed output.
count_server_sessions
Returns an integer representing the number of sessions recovered from the parsed output.
Expects a string as parameter being the Siebel Server name, so the number of sessions are those related to the server passed as argument.
Beware that by number of sessions it means all sessions are the output, independent of the status of the session.
count_sv_alias_sessions
Returns an integer representing the number of sessions retrieved from a list sessions
command output for a given component alias in a server.
Expects as parameters, in this order:
servername
component alias
Beware that by number of sessions it means all sessions are the output, independent of the status of the session.
count_alias_sessions
Returns an integer representing the number of sessions retrieved from a list sessions
command output for a given component alias. If multiple Siebel servers are available in the output, that will be the sum of all of them.
Expects a component alias as parameter.
Beware that by number of sessions it means all sessions in the output, independent of the status of the session.
get_sessions
Returns an iterator to iterate over the list of sessions of a Siebel Server given as argument.
At each invocation of the iterator, a hash reference is returned or undef
in the case that there are no more sessions.
The hash reference will have keys corresponding to the defined columns of the list sessions
command and the respective values:
comp_alias
comp_group_alias
task_id
task_pid
task_state
task_idle_state
task_ping_time
task_hung_state
db_session_id
om_login
om_service
om_view
om_applet
om_buscomp
CAVEATS
Depending on the servers configurations, how output is being read, you might get truncated data from some fields if the fixed width output type is being used.
SEE ALSO
AUTHOR
Alceu Rodrigues de Freitas Junior, <arfreitas@cpan.org>.
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
This software is copyright (c) 2013 of Alceu Rodrigues de Freitas Junior, <arfreitas@cpan.org>.
This file is part of Siebel Monitoring Tools.
Siebel Monitoring Tools is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
Siebel Monitoring Tools is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with Siebel Monitoring Tools. If not, see http://www.gnu.org/licenses/.