.. _instruments_method_map: Instrumentation Signal-Method Mapping ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Instrument methods get automatically hooked up to signals based on their names. Mostly, the method name corresponds to the name of the signal, however there are a few convenience aliases defined (listed first) to make easier to relate instrumentation code to the workload execution model. For an overview on when these signals are dispatched during execution please see :ref:`here `. $signal_names The methods above may be decorated with on the listed decorators to set the priority of the Instrument method relative to other callbacks registered for the signal (within the same priority level, callbacks are invoked in the order they were registered). The table below shows the mapping of the decorator to the corresponding priority: $priority_prefixes Unresponsive Targets ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ If a target is believed to be unresponsive, instrument callbacks will be disabled to prevent a cascade of errors and potential corruptions of state, as it is generally assumed that instrument callbacks will want to do something with the target. If your callback only does something with the host, and does not require an active target connection, you can decorate it with ``@hostside`` decorator to ensure it gets invoked even if the target becomes unresponsive.