The following figure shows the syntax for the mposter
command.
mposter syntax
mposter [-h|-?] [-z] [-q] [-v] [-c <ConfigFile>] {-p <Var=Value>} [-l <HomeLocation>] [-n <CellName> | -n <@Host[/Port[#Key]>]] [-i <Userid[/Password][@Host[/Port]>] ] [-v] [-x] [-w MSecAnswerWait][-d] [-e] [-k] [-j <BufDir>] [ - | { <SourceFile> } | -a <Class> [-m <Message>] [-r <Severity>] [-b <SlotSetValue>] | -u <ObjectID> [-b <SlotSetValue>]]
The following figure shows the syntax for the msend
command. The syntax for msend
is very similar to mposter
except that mposter
supports the -d
option.
msend syntax
msend [-h|-?] [-z] [-q] [-v] [-c <ConfigFile>] {-p <Var Value>}[-l <HomeLocation>] [-n <CellName> | -n <Host[/Port[#Key]>] ] [-i <Userid_[/Password [@Host[/Port]>] ] [-v] [-x] [-w MSecAnswerWait][-d] [-e] [-k] [-j <BufDir>] [ - | { <SourceFile> } | -a <Class> [-m <Message>] [-r <Severity>] [-b <SlotSetValue>] | -u <ObjectID> [-b <SlotSetValue>]]
The following table lists the command-specific options for mposter
and msend
. For a list of common command options that apply to all CLI commands, see Event management common command options.
mposter and msend options
Option | Description |
---|---|
| Input from standard input stream |
| Sends an object of class |
| Adds |
| (Used with |
| Specifies to use EIF instead of MCELL format |
| Sets the directory to be used for persisting events that are buffered until they are sent |
-k | Kills the |
| Sets event message to the specified Message text |
| Connects to cell Note Allows only one cell |
| Can be used to specify the directory path to the source file by using the following syntax: |
| Sets the event severity value to the |
| Specifies to update or modify data or event object specified by objectID rather than creating a new object.
|
| Sets the length of time in milliseconds to wait for message answer; default is |
| Examines timings |
Note
To send a punctuation mark as part of a text field by using msend
or mposter
, enclose the value within a set of single quotation marks (' '
) framed by a set of double quotation marks(" "
). For example, if you were sending a semicolon (;) as part of a text field, the command would look like this:
msend -n CellName -m "'a;b'"
1 Comment
Moritz Jung
What else
SlotSetValue
settings do we have than mc_tool?