Cisco Cisco Workload Automation 6.3 ユーザーガイド

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Events
Event Activity Interface
Calendar Name – The calendar or calendar group indicating which days the event monitor should run. You must 
select a calendar for the event monitor to be scheduled automatically. Select the Calendar Name from the list. A 
calendar can encompass one or more days. If you do not select a calendar than the event monitor will run every day.
You can clear a calendar by right-clicking on the Calendar field and selecting Clear from the context menu or by 
pressing the Delete key.
Offset – The job will run a given number of days before or after every day in the calendar. Each day in the calendar 
is adjusted by the offset you provide. For example, if the event monitor is using the Fiscal Month End calendar with 
an offset of 2, the event monitor will be inserted into the schedule 2 days after Fiscal Month End date. If you use an 
offset of -2, the event monitor will be inserted 2 days before the Fiscal Month End date.
From – The earliest date that the event monitor should be active. The event monitor will operate starting from the 
first date in the calendar that is on or after this date. You can choose a date using the built-in calendar dialog by 
clicking the adjacent drop-down arrow.
To – The last date the event monitor can operate based on the calendar. If not specified, and your calendar includes 
repetitive dates, your event monitor will run indefinitely. You can choose a date using the built-in calendar dialog by 
clicking the adjacent drop-down arrow.
Forecast – This button displays the Calendar Forecast dialog for the selected calendar (adjusted by offset, if 
provided) showing all the dates for which the event monitor will be active.
Time Window Section
Selecting this option will limit the event monitor to being active only during the defined time windows that are listed here. 
If this option is not selected then the event monitor will always be active. This section lists multiple time windows that 
the event monitor will monitor for the defined conditions. Any number of time windows can be created.
Only start the job between the hours of:...and – A sequence number for the defined time window.
If not ready by end of time window
Do not time out – Select this option if you want the job to continue to run without timing out.
Run again tomorrow – Select this option if the job has not run by the end of the time pane specified, and you 
want to carry it forward to the next day. After the time pane has passed, the job has the status Timed Out For 
Day
. With this option selected, the job is eligible to run on each subsequent day, until it does run. You can set 
up a job action to notify you if your job does not run on the originally scheduled day.
Note: Each instance of the job that is scheduled through the Repeats section rechecks the dependencies of the 
original job.
No repeats – Only one instance of the job is compiled for each production day that the job is scheduled to run.
Run new occurrence every X minutes, up to Y times
X – The interval between consecutive job start times in minutes relative to the beginning of the time window.
Y – The number of instances to create for the job. A job does not launch after the end of its time window. If this 
text field is left blank, the job continually repeats until the end of the time range specified above, or if the time 
window is omitted, until 11:59 PM of that day.
The following rules govern this function:
If the job is defined to run at specific intervals relative to a time window, the resultant run times are fixed.
For example, if a job’s time window begins at 12:00 PM, and the job is defined to run every hour up to 4 times, the 
job runs at 12:00 PM, 1:00PM, 2:00PM and 3:00PM. If the Create Schedule command occurs at 1:30PM, this job 
runs twice, once at 2:00 PM and once at 3:00 PM (unless the Start repeats now option is selected).