MaxJobRetirementTime = 24*3600
 {endcode}
 
-{subsection: Accounting}
+{subsection: Accounting and Monitoring}
 
 The above policies rely on job suspension.  Should the jobs be "charged" for the time they spend in a suspended state?  This affects the user's fair-share priority and the accumulated number of hours reported by condor_userprio.  As of Condor 7.4, the default behavior is to charge the jobs for time they spend in a suspended state.  There is a configuration variable, NEGOTIATOR_DISCOUNT_SUSPENDED_RESOURCES that can be used to get the opposite behavior.
 
@@ -132,6 +132,7 @@
 When looking at condor_status, the extra slot representing the whole machine is visible.  Notice that it appears in the Owner state, because the start expression we have configured is false unless presented with a whole-machine job.  We could modify the IS_OWNER expression to make the slot appear as Unclaimed rather than Owner, but we find that Owner is a nice reminder that this slot is special and is not available to run "normal" jobs.
 
 {verbatim}
+$ condor_status
 Name               OpSys      Arch   State     Activity LoadAv Mem   ActvtyTime
 
 slot1@execute.node LINUX      X86_64 Unclaimed Idle     0.750  2006  0+00:00:04
@@ -154,6 +155,9 @@
 When the whole-machine slot is claimed, the other slots will appear in the Owner state, because they are configured to not start any new jobs while the whole-machine slot is claimed.  Again, we could make them appear as Unclaimed by changing the IS_OWNER expression, but the Owner state serves as a useful reminder that these slots are reserved during this time.
 
 {verbatim}
+$ condor_status
+Name               OpSys      Arch   State     Activity LoadAv Mem   ActvtyTime
+
 slot1@execute.node LINUX      X86_64 Owner     Idle     0.870  2006  0+00:00:04
 slot2@execute.node LINUX      X86_64 Owner     Idle     0.000  2006  0+00:00:05
 slot3@execute.node LINUX      X86_64 Owner     Idle     0.000  2006  0+00:00:06
@@ -164,3 +168,5 @@
 slot8@execute.node LINUX      X86_64 Owner     Idle     0.000  2006  0+00:00:03
 slot9@execute.node LINUX      X86_64 Claimed   Busy     0.000  16054  0+00:00:04
 {endverbatim}
+
+Since the whole-machine policy depends on STARTD_SLOT_EXPRS, it can take a few iterations of =ClassAd= updates for the state of the slots to converge.  For this reason, the information visible in condor_status may lag behind the true state of the slots when conditions have recently changed.  It is therefore useful to use the -direct option to condor_status when verifying that the whole-machine policy is correctly working.