README.md:
The Parse Cloud Code job queue. Define, queue, and process work on a constant basis.
First, you'll want to define some jobs:
| <!doctype html> | |
| <html> | |
| <head> | |
| <script src="//ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/2.1.1/jquery.min.js"></script> | |
| <script type="text/javascript"> | |
| var spData = null; | |
| function doData(json) { | |
| spData = json.feed.entry; | |
| } | |
| --- | |
| # This has been tested with ansible 1.3 with these commands: | |
| # ansible-playbook -i hosts ansible_conditionals_examples.yaml --extra-vars="hosts=myhosts isFirstRun=false" | |
| # ansible-playbook -i hosts ansible_conditionals_examples.yaml --extra-vars="hosts=myhosts isFirstRun=true" | |
| # ansible-playbook -i hosts ansible_conditionals_examples.yaml --extra-vars="hosts=myhosts" | |
| # NB: The type of the variable is crucial! | |
| - name: Ansible Conditionals Examples | |
| hosts: $hosts | |
| vars_files: |
TCL-Expect scripts are an amazingly easy way to script out laborious tasks in the shell when you need to be interactive with the console. Think of them as a "macro" or way to programmaticly step through a process you would run by hand. They are similar to shell scripts but utilize the .tcl extension and a different #! call.
The first step, similar to writing a bash script, is to tell the script what it's executing under. For expect we use the following:
#!/usr/bin/expect