уменьшать, извлекать, объединять и объединять архивы Performance Co-Pilot (reduce, extract, concatenate and merge Performance Co-Pilot archives)
Имя (Name)
pmlogextract
- reduce, extract, concatenate and merge Performance
Co-Pilot archives
Синопсис (Synopsis)
pmlogextract
[-dfmwxz?
] [-c
configfile] [-S
starttime] [-s
samples] [-T
endtime] [-v
volsamples] [-Z
timezone] input [...]
output
Описание (Description)
pmlogextract
reads one or more Performance Co-Pilot (PCP) archive
logs identified by input and creates a temporally merged and/or
reduced PCP archive log in output. input is a comma-separated
list of names, each of which may be the base name of an archive
or the name of a directory containing one or more archives. The
nature of merging is controlled by the number of input archive
logs, while the nature of data reduction is controlled by the
command line arguments. The input(s) must be sets of PCP archive
logs created by pmlogger(1) with performance data collected from
the same
host, but usually over different time periods and
possibly (although not usually) with different performance
metrics being logged.
If only one input is specified, then the default behavior simply
copies the input set of PCP archive logs, into the output PCP
archive log. When two or more sets of PCP archive logs are
specified as input, the sets of logs are merged (or concatenated)
and written to output.
In the output archive log a <mark> record may be inserted at a
time just past the end of each of the input archive logs to
indicate a possible temporal discontinuity between the end of one
input archive log and the start of the next input archive log.
See the MARK RECORDS
section below for more information. There
is no <mark> record after the end of the last (in temporal order)
of the input archive logs.
Параметры (Options)
The available command line options are:
-c
config, --config
=config
Extract only the metrics specified in config from the input
PCP archive log(s). The config syntax accepted by
pmlogextract
is explained in more detail in the
Configuration File Syntax
section.
-d
, --desperate
Desperate mode. Normally if a fatal error occurs, all trace
of the partially written PCP archive output is removed.
With the -d
option, the output archive log is not removed.
-f
, --first
For most common uses, all of the input archive logs will
have been collected in the same timezone. But if this is
not the case, then pmlogextract
must choose one of the
timezones from the input archive logs to be used as the
timezone for the output archive log. The default is to use
the timezone from the last input archive log. The -f
option
forces the timezone from the first input archive log to be
used.
-m
, --mark
As described in the MARK RECORDS
section below, sometimes it
is possible to safely omit <mark> records from the output
archive. If the -m
option is specified, then the epilogue
and prologue test is skipped and a <mark> record will always
be inserted at the end of each input archive (except the
last). This is the original behaviour for pmlogextract
.
-S
starttime, --start
=starttime
Define the start of a time window to restrict the samples
retrieved or specify a ``natural'' alignment of the output
sample times; refer to PCPIntro(1). See also the -w
option.
-s
samples, --samples
=samples
The argument samples defines the number of samples to be
written to output. If samples is 0 or -s
is not specified,
pmlogextract
will sample until the end of the PCP archive
log, or the end of the time window as specified by -T
,
whichever comes first. The -s
option will override the -T
option if it occurs sooner.
-T
endtime, --finish
=endtime
Define the termination of a time window to restrict the
samples retrieved or specify a ``natural'' alignment of the
output sample times; refer to PCPIntro(1). See also the -w
option.
-v
volsamples
The output archive log is potentially a multi-volume data
set, and the -v
option causes pmlogextract
to start a new
volume after volsamples log records have been written to the
archive log.
Independent of any -v
option, each volume of an archive is
limited to no more than 2^31 bytes, so pmlogextract will
automatically create a new volume for the archive before
this limit is reached.
-w
Where -S
and -T
specify a time window within the same day,
the -w
flag will cause the data within the time window to be
extracted, for every day in the archive log. For example,
the options -w -S @11:00 -T @15:00
specify that pmlogextract
should include archive log records only for the periods from
11am to 3pm on each day. When -w
is used, the output
archive log will contain <mark> records to indicate the
temporal discontinuity between the end of one time window
and the start of the next.
-x
It is expected that the metadata (name, PMID, type,
semantics and units) for each metric will be consistent
across all of the input PCP archive log(s) in which that
metric appears. In rare cases, e.g. in development, in QA
and when a PMDA is upgraded, this may not be the case and
pmlogextract
will report the issue and abort without
creating the output archive log. This is done so the
problem can be fixed with pmlogrewrite(1) before retrying
the merge. In unattended or QA environments it may be
preferable to force the merge and omit the metrics with the
mismatched metadata. The -x
option does this.
-Z
timezone, --timezone
=timezone
Use timezone when displaying the date and time. Timezone is
in the format of the environment variable TZ
as described in
environ(7). The default is to initially use the timezone of
the local host.
-z
, --hostzone
Use the local timezone of the host from the input archive
logs. The default is to initially use the timezone of the
local host.
-?
, --help
Display usage message and exit.
Синтаксис конфигурационного файла (Configuration file syntax)
The configfile contains metrics of interest - only those metrics
(or instances) mentioned explicitly or implicitly in the
configuration file will be included in the output archive. Each
specifications must begin on a new line, and may span multiple
lines in the configuration file. Instances may also be
specified, but they are optional. The format for each
specification is
metric [[instance[,instance...]]]
where metric may be a leaf or a non-leaf name in the Performance
Metrics Name Space (PMNS, see PMNS(5)). If a metric refers to a
non-leaf node in the PMNS, pmlogextract
will recursively descend
the PMNS and include all metrics corresponding to descendent leaf
nodes.
Instances are optional, and may be specified as a list of one or
more space (or comma) separated names, numbers or strings
(enclosed in single or double quotes). Elements in the list that
are numbers are assumed to be internal instance identifiers - see
pmGetInDom(3) for more information. If no instances are given,
then all
instances of the associated metric(s) will be extracted.
Any additional white space is ignored and comments may be added
with a `#' prefix.
CONFIGURATION FILE EXAMPLE
This is an example of a valid configfile:
#
# config file for pmlogextract
#
kernel.all.cpu
kernel.percpu.cpu.sys ["cpu0","cpu1"]
disk.dev ["dks0d1"]
MARK RECORDS
When more than one input archive log contributes performance data
to the output archive log, then <mark> records may be inserted to
indicate a possible discontinuity in the performance data.
A <mark> record contains a timestamp and no performance data and
is used to indicate that there is a time period in the PCP
archive log where we do not know the values of any
performance
metrics, because there was no pmlogger(1) collecting performance
data during this period. Since these periods are often
associated with the restart of a service or pmcd(1) or a system,
there may be considerable doubt as to the continuity of
performance data across this time period.
Most current archives are created with a prologue record at the
beginning and an epilogue record at the end. These records
identify the state of pmcd(1) at the time, and may be used by
pmlogextract
to determine that there is no discontinuity between
the end of one archive and the next output record, and as a
consequence the <mark> record can safely be omitted from the
output archive.
The rationale behind <mark> records may be demonstrated with an
example. Consider one input archive log that starts at 00:10 and
ends at 09:15 on the same day, and another input archive log that
starts at 09:20 on the same day and ends at 00:10 the following
morning. This would be a very common case for archives managed
and rotated by pmlogger_check(1) and pmlogger_daily(1).
The output archive log created by pmlogextract
would contain:
00:10.000 first record from first input archive log
...
09:15.000 last record from first input archive log
09:15.001 <mark> record
09:20.000 first record from second input archive log
...
01:10.000 last record from second input archive log
The time period where the performance data is missing starts just
after 09:15 and ends just before 09:20. When the output archive
log is processed with any of the PCP reporting tools, the <mark>
record is used to indicate a period of missing data. For example
using the output archive above, imagine one was reporting the
average I/O rate at 30 minute intervals aligned on the hour and
half-hour. The I/O count metric is a counter, so the average I/O
rate requires two valid values from consecutive sample times.
There would be values for all the intervals ending at 09:00, then
no values at 09:30 because of the <mark> record, then no values
at 10:00 because the ``prior'' value at 09:30 is not available,
then the rate would be reported again at 10:30 and continue every
30 minutes until the last reported value at 01:00.
The presence of <mark> records in a PCP archive log can be
established using pmdumplog(1) where a timestamp and the
annotation <mark>
is used to indicate a <mark> record.
METADATA CHECKS
When more than one input archive set is specified, pmlogextract
performs a number of checks to ensure the metadata is consistent
for metrics appearing in more than one of the input archive sets.
These checks include:
* metric data type is the same
* metric semantics are the same
* metric units are the same
* metric is either always singular or always has the same
instance domain
* metrics with the same name have the same PMID
* metrics with the same PMID have the same name
If any of these checks fail, pmlogextract
reports the details and
aborts without creating the output archive.
To address these semantic issues, use pmlogrewrite(1) to
translate the input archives into equivalent archives with
consistent metdadata before using pmlogextract
.
Предостережение (Caveat)
The preamble metrics (pmcd.pmlogger.archive, pmcd.pmlogger.host,
and pmcd.pmlogger.port), which are automatically recorded by
pmlogger
at the start of the archive, may not be present in the
archive output by pmlogextract
. These metrics are only relevant
while the archive is being created, and have no significance once
recording has finished.
Диагностика (Diagnostic)
All error conditions detected by pmlogextract
are reported on
stderr with textual (if sometimes terse) explanation.
If one of the input archives contains no archive records then an
``empty archive'' warning is issued and that archive is skipped.
Should one of the input archive logs be corrupted (this can
happen if the pmlogger
instance writing the log suddenly dies),
then pmlogextract
will detect and report the position of the
corruption in the file, and any subsequent information from that
archive log will not be processed.
If any error is detected, pmlogextract
will exit with a non-zero
status.
Файлы (Files)
For each of the input and output archive logs, several physical
files are used.
archive.meta
metadata (metric descriptions, instance domains, etc.) for
the archive log
archive.0
initial volume of metrics values (subsequent volumes have
suffixes 1
, 2
, ...) - for input these files may have been
previously compressed with bzip2
(1) or gzip
(1) and thus may
have an additional .bz2
or .gz
suffix.
archive.index
temporal index to support rapid random access to the other
files in the archive log.
Окружение PCP (PCP environment)
Environment variables with the prefix PCP_
are used to
parameterize the file and directory names used by PCP. On each
installation, the file /etc/pcp.conf contains the local values
for these variables. The $PCP_CONF
variable may be used to
specify an alternative configuration file, as described in
pcp.conf(5).
For environment variables affecting PCP tools, see
pmGetOptions(3).
Смотри также (See also)
PCPIntro(1), pmdumplog(1), pmlc(1), pmlogger(1), pmlogreduce(1),
pmlogrewrite(1), pcp.conf(5), pcp.env(5) and PMNS(5).