ModelOp CLI Reference
The ModelOp Center command line (CLI) offers a terminal-based medium to allow you to interact with ModelOp Center via moc commands. You can execute these commands from an SSH session or from the system console.
Table of Contents
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Document conventions
- 3 CLI Installation
- 4 Overview of commands
- 5 Command details
- 5.1 moc
- 5.1.1 moc command list
- 5.2 asset
- 5.3 init
- 5.4 job
- 5.5 model
- 5.5.1 Related Articles
- 5.1 moc
Introduction
The primary functions enabled through the CLI include the ability to register models with the ModelOp Center, upload additional attachments and artifacts to an existing model, and run Batch Jobs to make sure the code is right. From there, you may use the Command Center web UI to edit and update your models further.
Document conventions
This article uses the following conventions:
Angle brackets (<>) indicate that the enclosed element is mandatory. You are required to replace the text within the angle brackets with the appropriate information.
Square brackets ([]) indicate that the enclosed element is optional. You can choose one or more items or no items.
The pipe character (|) indicates that one of the bracketed statements can be specified.
This article contains the following sections for each command:
Synopsis
A description of the commands, options, and arguments available for the command.
Description
General information about the command.
Options
Options to control the behavior of a command. Options always begin with one or two dashes. Use one dash for the abbreviated term such as -v. Use two dashes for the full term such as --version. Square brackets mean that element of the command is optional.
Not all commands have options.
Arguments
Some commands require arguments. Arguments are names of commands, files, host names, IP addresses, URLS and so on that you specify to control the behavior of the command. Not all commands have arguments. You do not precede arguments with dashes.
Not all commands have arguments.
Examples
Usage samples with expected output. Not all commands have examples.
CLI Installation
You install the CLI in these steps:
Download the CLI files to your local machine.
Make them executable if necessary.
Set a PATH to the location where the files are stored.
Run the init command to connect to your ModelOp instance.
To install the CLI
Click the file type you use to download the CLI file:
Make the Mac (Darwin) or Linux files executable. Browse to the folder where you stored the CLI file. For Macs and Linux, this folder should be /usr/local/bin/
For Darwin, type
chmod 755 <filename>
For Linux, type
chmod +x <filename>
Set a PATH to the CLI file.
Confirm the installation. At the prompt, type
moc help
.
Output:
Usage:
moc [flags]
moc [command]
Available Commands:
asset Manage assets for models
help Help about any command
init Configure CLI to point to ModelOp Center. Requires an URL with http scheme.
job Manage jobs in ModelOp Center
model Manage models in ModelOp Center
Flags:
-h, --help help for moc
-v, --version Print version information
Use "moc [command] --help" for more information about a command.
5. Configure the CLI to connect to your instance of ModelOp Center. Type
moc init <URL of ModelOp Center>
Overview of commands
The term “moc commands” refers to the list of available ModelOp Center CLI commands.
The help for the moc commands is presented in Linux man page format.
Type
help
to get general information about command-line man pages.Type
help <command>
to get information about a specific command.
The following moc commands are available:
asset
init
job
model
Command details
moc
Synopsis
moc [--help | --version]
moc <command>
Description
The ModelOp Center CLI base command which is the required prefix to execute moc commands.
Options
v, --version
Displays the version of the CLI
h, --
help
Displays information about the specified command
moc command list
asset
Manage assets for models
init
Configure CLI to point to a particular instance of ModelOp Center. Requires a URL to the specific ModelOp Center instance. This should be executed first before using other commands (besides help).
job
Manage jobs in the ModelOp Center
model
Manage models in the ModelOp Center
asset
Synopsis
moc asset [--help]
moc asset <command>
moc asset add <model name> <path to file> [--name]
[--external | --force] [--region] [--verbose]
Description
Manage assets for models. Use add
command to add an asset to an existing model.
Use moc model ls
to find the model ID and name.
Options
e, --external
Use if file is larger than 10 MB, or needs to be stored in an external storage configured with model-manage. Otherwise, by default, the file is stored internally in model-manage.
If the file already exists in external storage, provide a link to the asset in the following format: [protocol]://ResourceAccessKey: ResourceSecretKey@ResourceDomain/PATH TO FILE/FILENAME.EXTENTION
Supported protocols:
http
https
s3
s3n
s3a
You can use the environment variables to provide Accesskey and SecretKey credentials to enable access to external resource.
f, --force
Stores file in model-manage if file size is less than 10 MB, or in external storage otherwise.
h, --help
Help with asset command
-name string
Name by which asset is stored. Overrides current name
-region string
Region for the asset if provided by a link
V, --verbose
Be verbose
Arguments
Specify the model name, and the path to where the assets are stored.
Examples
init
Synopsis
Description
Configure CLI to point to a particular instance of ModelOp Center. Requires a URL to the specific ModelOp Center instance.
Options
h, --help
Help for init
n, --retry int
Number of retries (1s intervals) to connect to the URL provided
V --verbose
Be verbose
Arguments
URL of the ModelOp Center is required.
Examples
job
Synopsis
Description
Manage jobs in ModelOp Center.
Options
-engine string
Specify target engine name where the job should run
e, --external
Store the file as an external file asset
f, --force
In case file is large to be stored as local asset, store it as external asset
h, --help
Help for job command
-input-schema-check
Enable schema checking for the input
-output-schema-check
Enable schema checking for the output
-region string
Specify region for the asset to be added using external link
-schema-check
Enable schema checking for input and output
V, --verbose
Be verbose
Arguments
create
(or add
)
Create batch jobs
job ID
Use with status and result arguments
ls
Standard Linux command to list all jobs. Displays the following details about a job:
ID — unique ID that is automatically assigned by ModelOp Center upon model add
OWNER — the user who created the job or SYSTEM
TYPE — the type of batch job (batch scoring, batch metrics/test, batch training)
JOB_STATUS — States are Created, Waiting, Running, Complete, Error
TOTAL_RUNNING_TIME — How long the model took the last time it ran
LAST_MODIFIED_DATETIME — The last time the model was changed
LAST_MESSAGE — Date, time and result of last usage
result
Get results of a batch job. Requires a job ID Use moc job ls to see job ID
status
Get status of a batch job. Requires a job ID. Use moc job ls to see job ID
Examples
model
Synopsis
Description
Manage models in the ModelOp Center.
Add a model to ModelOp Center.
Use --schema-in
and --schema-out
to include externalized input and output schemas with the model. When a schema file is provided to upload with a model, schema check is enabled by default.
Use --input-check-off, --output-check-off, -schema-check-off
in order to disable schema checking for input and/or output.
Options
h, --help
Help for add
-input-check-off
Enable schema checking for the input
i, --schema-in string
Path for input schema
o, --schema-out string
Path for output schema
-output-check-off
Enable schema checking for the output
-schema-check-off
Enable schema checking for input and output
V, --verbose
Be verbose
Arguments
add
Add model to ModelOp Center
ls
Get list of all models or with given name
Examples
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