The following are the commands used in the Job Execution Control function.
Commands executed with system administrator privileges
The commands provided by Job Execution Control and executed using the system administrator privileges are discussed in the sections from 7.2 to 7.13 in this chapter.
Starts the operation of the Job Execution Control.
Stops the operation of the Job Execution Control.
Displays the job execution history and operation information of the Job Execution Control service/daemon.
Alters queue attributes.
Alters job attributes.
Starts the inactive queue.
Stops the running queue.
With distributed job execution, adds a destination host to the host group during its operation.
With distributed job execution, deletes a destination host from the host group during its operation.
With distributed job execution, alters the multiplicity of jobs on the destination host during its operation.
Specifies the startup mode of the Job Execution Control.
Commands executed with the general users privileges
The commands provided by Job Execution Control and executed using the general users privileges are discussed in the sections from 7.14 to 7.21.
Deletes jobs.
Holds jobs.
Displays the job information (job name/job number/queue name/job status etc.).
Moves a job to another queue.
Releases the held job.
Displays the queue status.
Submits a job.
Displays the destination host status with distributed job execution.
mjrmtjob remote machine command/shell script execution command
Executes commands or scripts on a remote machine.
mjkeygen key pair creation command [Windows]
Creates, sets, or deletes a key pair (public key/private key) to be used by the mjrmtjob command.
Cautions
If you request other servers to execute a network job, the job should be operated on the server that submitted it, not on the execution server that executes the job. If you operate it on the execution server, it is not certified to work correctly.