Schedule
The following scenario shows how to configure alarm schedules to be able to program custom actions in the system triggered by a timer. Timers can be executed periodically or just once, depending on the configuration.
Periodic Schedule
Description
In this example, a schedule is configured in DUT0 to enable and disable an alarm every minute.
Scenario
Step 1: Set the following configuration in DUT0
:
set system alarm ALARM set system login user admin authentication encrypted-password '$6$GSjsCj8gHLv$/VcqU6FLi6CT2Oxn0MJQ2C2tqnRDrYKNF8HIYWJp68nvXvPdFccDsT04.WtigUONbKYrgKg8d6rEs8PjljMkH0' set system schedule SCHED alarm ALARM set system schedule SCHED disable second 5 set system schedule SCHED enable second 0
Step 2: Run command system schedule show
at DUT0
and check if output matches the following regular expressions:
SCHED\s+(enable|disable).*leftShow output
---------------------------------------------------------------------- Schedule State Next Left Last Passed ---------------------------------------------------------------------- SCHED enable Tue 2025-06-24 12:47:00 UTC 8s left - - SCHED disable Tue 2025-06-24 12:47:05 UTC 13s left - -
Note
The output of the above command should show the “enable” and “disable” entries in the table with a “Left” value, since the schedule is pending.
Step 3: Run command system alarm ALARM show
at DUT0
and check if output contains the following tokens:
true
Show output
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Alarm Status Toggled Prev-toggled Toggle-count Time up (%) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ALARM true 2025-06-24 12:47:00.810086940 +00:00 1 12.93
Step 4: Run command system alarm ALARM show
at DUT0
and check if output contains the following tokens:
false
Show output
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Alarm Status Toggled Prev-toggled Toggle-count Time up (%) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ALARM false 2025-06-24 12:47:05.818248979 +00:00 2025-06-24 12:47:00.810086940 +00:00 2 33.57
Step 5: Run command system schedule show
at DUT0
and check if output matches the following regular expressions:
SCHED\s+(enable|disable).*leftShow output
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Schedule State Next Left Last Passed ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ SCHED enable Tue 2025-06-24 12:48:00 UTC 53s left Tue 2025-06-24 12:47:00 UTC 5s ago SCHED disable Tue 2025-06-24 12:48:05 UTC 58s left Tue 2025-06-24 12:47:05 UTC 764ms ago
Note
The output of the above command should show the “enable” and “disable” entries in the table with a “Left” value, since the schedule is periodic.
Schedule Script Execution
Description
In this example, a schedule is configured in DUT0 to program the execution of a script that automatically changes the system configuration.
Scenario
Step 1: Set the following configuration in DUT0
:
set system advisor ADVISOR1 test ALARM set system advisor ADVISOR2 test 'not ALARM' set system alarm ALARM set system login user admin authentication encrypted-password '$6$GSjsCj8gHLv$/VcqU6FLi6CT2Oxn0MJQ2C2tqnRDrYKNF8HIYWJp68nvXvPdFccDsT04.WtigUONbKYrgKg8d6rEs8PjljMkH0' set system schedule SCHED alarm ALARM set system schedule SCHED disable day 24 set system schedule SCHED disable hour 12 set system schedule SCHED disable minute 47 set system schedule SCHED disable month 6 set system schedule SCHED disable second 26 set system schedule SCHED disable year 2025 set system schedule SCHED enable day 24 set system schedule SCHED enable hour 12 set system schedule SCHED enable minute 47 set system schedule SCHED enable month 6 set system schedule SCHED enable second 21 set system schedule SCHED enable year 2025 set system script SCRIPT1 advisor ADVISOR1 set system script SCRIPT1 configuration 'set system description \'Test Description\'' set system script SCRIPT2 advisor ADVISOR2 set system script SCRIPT2 configuration 'delete system description \'Test Description\''
Step 2: Run command system alarm ALARM show
at DUT0
and check if output contains the following tokens:
true
Show output
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Alarm Status Toggled Prev-toggled Toggle-count Time up (%) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ALARM true 2025-06-24 12:47:21.819488412 +00:00 1 5.16
Note
The output of the above command should show that the alarm was activated according to the “enable” time configured.
Step 3: Run command show version
at DUT0
and check if output matches the following regular expressions:
Description:.*Test DescriptionShow output
OS vendor: Teldat OS name: OSDx OS version: v4.2.6.1 OS Linux kernel: 6.1.128 OS built by: jenkins@daphne OS build date: Tue Jun 24 10:36:00 UTC 2025 OS installation: physical OS boot mode: user License: VM_BASE Firewall eth-Rate-Permit-Full Hardware vendor: QEMU Hardware model: VM Hardware OEM model: Standard PC (i440FX + PIIX, 1996) Hardware version: pc-i440fx-5.2 Hardware UUID: 3ae56e40-671e-5ba3-bee0-72c1d527e6ef Hardware architecture: amd64 Hardware fwid: iso Hardware base MAC: de:ad:be:ef:6c:00 Hardware cpu: 4 x QEMU Virtual CPU version 2.5+ (4 cores) Last reboot reason: Panic Date: Tue 24 Jun 2025 12:47:22 +00:00 Uptime: 1:12:22 CPU load (1m, 5m, 15m): 0.14 0.11 0.12 CPU usage % (1m): 5.34 Storage usage (kB): 348460/8144384 Memory usage (kB): 406008/1574492 Users logged in: 1 Mode (current/next boot): user/user Hostname: osdx Description: Test Description
Note
The output of the above command should show the system description configured by the script.
Step 4: Run command system alarm ALARM show
at DUT0
and check if output contains the following tokens:
false
Show output
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Alarm Status Toggled Prev-toggled Toggle-count Time up (%) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ALARM false 2025-06-24 12:47:26.814628349 +00:00 2025-06-24 12:47:21.819488412 +00:00 2 33.49
Note
The output of the above command should show that the alarm was deactivated according to the “disable” time configured.
Step 5: Run command system schedule show
at DUT0
and check if output matches the following regular expressions:
SCHED\s+(enable|disable)\s+-\s+-\s+[a-zA-Z]{3}Show output
------------------------------------------------------------------ Schedule State Next Left Last Passed ------------------------------------------------------------------ SCHED disable - - Tue 2025-06-24 12:47:26 UTC 2s ago SCHED enable - - Tue 2025-06-24 12:47:21 UTC 7s ago
Note
The output of the above command should show the “enable” and “disable” entries in the table without a “Next” or “Left” value, since the schedule is configured to be executed just once.
Step 6: Run command show version
at DUT0
and check if output does not match the following regular expressions:
Description:.*Test DescriptionShow output
OS vendor: Teldat OS name: OSDx OS version: v4.2.6.1 OS Linux kernel: 6.1.128 OS built by: jenkins@daphne OS build date: Tue Jun 24 10:36:00 UTC 2025 OS installation: physical OS boot mode: user License: VM_BASE Firewall eth-Rate-Permit-Full Hardware vendor: QEMU Hardware model: VM Hardware OEM model: Standard PC (i440FX + PIIX, 1996) Hardware version: pc-i440fx-5.2 Hardware UUID: 3ae56e40-671e-5ba3-bee0-72c1d527e6ef Hardware architecture: amd64 Hardware fwid: iso Hardware base MAC: de:ad:be:ef:6c:00 Hardware cpu: 4 x QEMU Virtual CPU version 2.5+ (4 cores) Last reboot reason: Panic Date: Tue 24 Jun 2025 12:47:28 +00:00 Uptime: 1:12:28 CPU load (1m, 5m, 15m): 0.12 0.11 0.12 CPU usage % (1m): 5.34 Storage usage (kB): 348460/8144384 Memory usage (kB): 410292/1574492 Users logged in: 1 Mode (current/next boot): user/user Hostname: osdx
Note
The output of the above command should show the script has removed the system description.