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@ -692,161 +692,6 @@ testWeights:
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d: 100
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```
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## Writing Job Configuration
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To run and evaluate an exercise the backend needs to know the steps how to do
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that. This is different for each environment (operation system, programming
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language, etc.), so each of the environments needs to have separate
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configuration.
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Backend works with a powerful, but quite low level description of simple
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connected tasks written in YAML syntax. More about the syntax and general task
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overview can be found on [separate
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page](https://github.com/ReCodEx/wiki/wiki/Assignments). One of the planned
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features was user friendly configuration editor, but due to tight deadline and
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team composition it did not make it to the first release. However, writing
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configuration in the basic format will be always available and allows users to
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use the full expressive power of the system.
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This section walks through creation of job configuration for _hello world_
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exercise. The goal is to compile file _source.c_ and check if it prints `Hello
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World!` to the standard output. This is the only test case named **A**.
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The problem can be split into several tasks:
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- compile _source.c_ into _helloworld_ with `/usr/bin/gcc`
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- run _helloworld_ and save standard output into _out.txt_
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- fetch predefined output (suppose it is already uploaded to fileserver) with
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hash `a0b65939670bc2c010f4d5d6a0b3e4e4590fb92b` to _reference.txt_
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- compare _out.txt_ and _reference.txt_ by `/usr/bin/diff`
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The absolute path of tools can be obtained from system administrator. However,
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`/usr/bin/gcc` is location, where the GCC binary is available almost everywhere,
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so location of some tools can be (professionally) guessed.
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First, write header of the job to the configuration file.
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```{.yml}
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submission:
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job-id: hello-word-job
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hw-groups:
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- group1
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```
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Basically it means, that the job _hello-world-job_ needs to be run on workers
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that belong to the `group_1` hardware group . Reference files are downloaded
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from the default location configured in API (such as
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`http://localhost:9999/exercises`) if not stated explicitly otherwise. Job
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execution log will not be saved to result archive.
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Next the tasks have to be constructed under _tasks_ section. In this demo job,
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every task depends only on previous one. The first task has input file
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_source.c_ (if submitted by user) already available in working directory, so
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just call the GCC. Compilation is run in sandbox as any other external program
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and should have relaxed time and memory limits. In this scenario, worker
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defaults are used. If compilation fails, the whole job is immediately terminated
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(because the _fatal-failure_ bit is set). Because _bound-directories_ option in
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sandbox limits section is mostly shared between all tasks, it can be set in
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worker configuration instead of job configuration (suppose this for following
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tasks). For configuration of workers please contact your administrator.
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Please note that working directory inside sandbox is automatically bounded to
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the directory with fetched user source codes and therefore you do not have to
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bound it by yourself. Also note that directories inside sandbox can be bound to
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different paths, so inside sandbox you have to use special paths. For working
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directory inside sandbox you can use ${EVAL_DIR} variable.
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```{.yml}
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- task-id: "compilation"
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type: "initiation"
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fatal-failure: true
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cmd:
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bin: "/usr/bin/gcc"
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args:
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- "source.c"
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- "-o"
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- "helloworld"
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sandbox:
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name: "isolate"
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limits:
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- hw-group-id: group1
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```
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The compiled program is executed with time and memory limit set and the standard
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output is redirected to a file. This task depends on _compilation_ task, because
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the program cannot be executed without being compiled first. It is important to
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mark this task with _execution_ type, so exceeded limits will be reported in
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frontend.
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Time and memory limits set directly for a task have higher priority than worker
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defaults. One important constraint is, that these limits cannot exceed limits
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set by workers. Worker defaults are present as a safety measure so that a
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malformed job configuration cannot block the worker forever. Worker default
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limits should be reasonably high, like a gigabyte of memory and several hours of
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execution time. For exact numbers please contact your administrator.
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It is important to know that if the output of a program (both standard and
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error) is redirected to a file, the sandbox disk quotas apply to that file, as
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well as the files created directly by the program. In case the outputs are
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ignored, they are redirected to `/dev/null`, which means there is no limit on
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the output length (as long as the printing fits in the time limit).
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```{.yml}
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- task-id: "execution_1"
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test-id: "A"
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type: "execution"
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dependencies:
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- compilation
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cmd:
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bin: "helloworld"
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sandbox:
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name: "isolate"
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stdout: ${EVAL_DIR}/out.txt
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limits:
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- hw-group-id: group1
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time: 0.5
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memory: 8192
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```
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Fetch sample solution from file server. Base URL of file server is in the header
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of the job configuration, so only the name of required file (its `sha1sum` in
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our case) is necessary.
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```{.yml}
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- task-id: "fetch_solution_1"
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test-id: "A"
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dependencies:
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- execution
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cmd:
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bin: "fetch"
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args:
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- "a0b65939670bc2c010f4d5d6a0b3e4e4590fb92b"
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- "${SOURCE_DIR}/reference.txt"
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```
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Comparison of results is quite straightforward. It is important to set the task
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type to _evaluation_, so that the return code is set to 0 if the program is
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correct and 1 otherwise. We do not set our own limits, so the default limits are
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used.
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```{.yml}
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- task-id: "judge_1"
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test-id: "A"
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type: "evaluation"
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dependencies:
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- fetch_solution_1
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cmd:
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bin: "/usr/bin/diff"
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args:
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- "out.txt"
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- "reference.txt"
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sandbox:
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name: "isolate"
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limits:
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- hw-group-id: group1
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```
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<!---
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// vim: set formatoptions=tqn flp+=\\\|^\\*\\s* textwidth=80 colorcolumn=+1:
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-->
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