PMIESTATUS(1) General Commands Manual PMIESTATUS(1)NAME
pmiestatus - display information from pmie stats file
SYNOPSIS
pmiestatus statsfile [...]
DESCRIPTION
pmiestatus displays information used to identify a running pmie process. It is mostly used by pmie_check and pmie_daily when they hunt for
instances of pmie to check against the control file.
FILES
$PCP_TMP_DIR/pmie/*
pmie stats files
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 configura-
tion file, as described in pcp.conf(5).
SEE ALSO pmie(1), pmie_check(1), pmie_daily(1), pcp.conf(5), and pcp.env(5).
Performance Co-Pilot PCP PMIESTATUS(1)
Check Out this Related Man Page
PMIE_CHECK(1) General Commands Manual PMIE_CHECK(1)NAME
pmie_check, pmie_daily - administration of the Performance Co-Pilot inference engine
SYNOPSIS
$PCP_BINADM_DIR/pmie_check [-CNsV] [-c control]
$PCP_BINADM_DIR/pmie_daily [-NV] [-c control] [-k discard] [-m addresses] [-x compress] [-X program] [-Y regex]
DESCRIPTION
This series of shell scripts and associated control files may be used to create a customized regime of administration and management for
the Performance Co-Pilot (see PCPintro(1)) inference engine, pmie(1).
pmie_daily is intended to be run once per day, preferably in the early morning, as soon after midnight as practicable. Its task is to
rotate the log files for the running pmie processes - these files may grow without bound if the ``print'' action is used, or any other pme
action writes to its stdout/stderr streams. After some period, old pmie log files are discarded. This period is 14 days by default, but
may be changed using the -k option. Two special values are recognized for the period (discard), namely 0 to keep no log files beyond the
current one, and forever to prevent any log files being discarded.
Log files can optionally be compressed after some period (compress), to conserve disk space. This is particularly useful for large numbers
of pmie processes under the control of pmie_check. The -x option specifies the number of days after which to compress archive data files,
and the -X option specifies the program to use for compression - by default this is bzip2(1). Use of the -Y option allows a regular
expression to be specified causing files in the set of files matched for compression to be omitted - this allows only the data file to be
compressed, and also prevents the program from attempting to compress it more than once. The default regex is
".meta$|.index$|.Z$|.gz$|.bz2|.zip$" - such files are filtered using the -v option to egrep(1).
Use of the -m option causes pmie_daily to construct a summary of the log files generated for all monitored hosts in the last 24 hours
(lines matching `` OK '' are culled), and e-mail that summary to the set of space-separated addresses.
pmie_check may be run at any time, and is intended to check that the desired set of pmie(1) processes are running, and if not to re-launch
any failed inference engines. Use of the -s option provides the reverse functionality, allowing the set of pmie processes to be cleanly
shutdown. Use of the -C option queries the system service runlevel information for pmie, and uses that to determine whether to start or
stop processes.
Both pmie_check and pmie_daily are controlled by a PCP inference engine control file that specifies the pmie instances to be managed. The
default control file is $PCP_PMIECONTROL_PATH but an alternate may be specified using the -c option.
The control file should be customized according to the following rules.
1. Lines beginning with a ``#'' are comments.
2. Lines beginning with a ``$'' are assumed to be assignments to environment variables in the style of sh(1), and all text following
the ``$'' will be eval'ed by the script reading the control file, and the corresponding variable exported into the environment.
This is particularly useful to set and export variables into the environment of the administrative script, e.g.
$ PMCD_CONNECT_TIMEOUT=20
Warning: The $PCP_PMIECONTROL_PATH file must not be writable by any user other than root.
3. There should be one line in the control file for each pmie instance of the form:
host y|n logfile args
4. Fields within a line of the control file are separated by one or more spaces or tabs.
5. The first field is the name of the host that is the default source of the performance metrics for this pmie instance.
6. The second field indicates whether this pmie instance needs to be started under the control of pmsocks(1) to connect to a pmcd
through a firewall (y or n).
8. The third field is the name of the pmie activity log file. A useful convention is that pmie instances monitoring the local host
with hostname myhost are maintained in the directory $PCP_LOG_DIR/pmie/myhost, while activity logs for the remote host mumble are
maintained in $PCP_LOG_DIR/pmie/mumble. This is consistent with the way pmlogger(1) maintains its activity logs and archive files.
9. All other fields are interpreted as arguments to be passed to pmie(1). Most typically this would be the -c option.
The following sample control lines specify one pmie instance monitoring the local host (wobbly), and another monitoring performance metrics
from the host splat.
wobbly n PCP_LOG_DIR/pmie/wobbly -c config.default
splat n PCP_LOG_DIR/pmie/splat -c splat/cpu.conf
Typical crontab(5) entries for periodic execution of pmie_daily and pmie_check are given in $PCP_SYSCONF_DIR/pmie/crontab (unless installed
by default in /etc/cron.d already) and shown below.
# daily processing of pmie logs
08 0 * * * $PCP_BINADM_DIR/pmie_daily
# every 30 minutes, check pmie instances are running
28,58 * * * * $PCP_BINADM_DIR/pmie_check
The output from the cron(1) execution of the scripts may be extended using the -V option to the scripts which will enable verbose tracing
of their activity. By default the scripts generate no output unless some error or warning condition is encountered.
The -N option enables a ``show me'' mode, where the actions are echoed, but not executed, in the style of ``make -n''. Using -N in con-
junction with -V maximizes the diagnostic capabilities for debugging.
FILES
$PCP_PMIECONTROL_PATH
the default PCP inference engine control file
Warning: this file must not be writable by any user other than root.
$PCP_SYSCONF_DIR/pmie/crontab
sample crontab for automated script execution by $PCP_USER (or root) - exists only if the platform does not support the
/etc/cron.d mechanism.
$PCP_SYSCONF_DIR/pmie/config.default
default pmlogger configuration file location for a localhost inference engine, typically generated automatically by pmieconf(1).
$PCP_LOG_DIR/pmie/hostname
default location for the pmie log file for the host hostname
$PCP_LOG_DIR/pmie/hostname/lock
transient lock file to guarantee mutual exclusion during pmie administration for the host hostname - if present, can be safely
removed if neither pmie_daily nor pmie_check are running
$PCP_LOG_DIR/NOTICES
PCP ``notices'' file used by pmie(1) and friends
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 configura-
tion file, as described in pcp.conf(5).
SEE ALSO chkconfig(1), cron(1), PCPintro(1), pmie(1)pmieconf(1) and pmsocks(1).
Performance Co-Pilot PCP PMIE_CHECK(1)