PMLOGSUMMARY(1) | General Commands Manual | PMLOGSUMMARY(1) |
pmlogsummary - calculate averages of metrics stored in a set of PCP archives
pmlogsummary [-abfFHiIlmMNsvxyz] [-B nbins] [-n pmnsfile] [-p precision] [-S starttime] [-T endtime] [-Z timezone] archive [metricname ...]
pmlogsummary prints statistical information about metrics of numeric type contained within the files of a set of Performance Co-Pilot (PCP) archive logs. The default output prints time averages for both counter and non-counter metrics. The set of archive logs is identified by archive, which 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 archive logs are typically created using pmlogger(1).
The metrics of interest are named in the metricname arguments. If metricname is a non-leaf node in the Performance Metrics Name Space (pmns(5)), then pmlogsummary will recursively descend the PMNS and report on all leaf nodes. If no metricname argument is given, the root of the namespace is used.
Normally pmlogsummary operates on the default pmns(5), however if the -n option is specified an alternative namespace is loaded from the file pmnsfile.
The command line options -S and -T can be used to specify a time window over which metrics should be summarized. These options are common to most Performance Co-Pilot tools and are fully described in PCPIntro(1).
The remaining options control the specific information to be reported. Metrics with counter semantics are converted to rates before being evaluated.
By default, pmlogsummary reports the time of day according to the local timezone on the system where pmlogsummary is run. The -Z option changes the timezone to timezone in the format of the environment variable TZ as described in environ(7). The -z option changes the timezone to the local timezone at the host that is the source of the performance metrics, as specified in the label record of the archive log.
The pmlogsummary output format is spartan as it is intended to be post-processed with standard tools. This means that there is no annotation associated with each output field which would make processing harder. The intention is that pmlogsummary output be massaged into a format which can be used by a spreadsheet program, is suitable for inclusion in a web page, or whatever.
For each metric, pmlogsummary produces a single output line as follows:
metricname value(s) units
For metrics with multiple instances, pmlogsummary produces multiple lines of output as follows:
metricname ["instance 1"] value(s) units metricname ["instance 2"] value(s) units metricname ["instance N"] value(s) units
The printed value(s) for each metric always follow this order: stochastic average, time average, minimum, minimum timestamp, maximum, maximum timestamp, count, [bin 1 range], bin 1 count, ... [bin nbins range], bin nbins count. The individual values for each metric are space-separated (unless the -f option is used).
All counter metrics which are measured in units of time will be converted to seconds before being rate converted and used in the pmlogsummary calculations. The values calculated for these metrics are also printed in seconds.
The units will be displayed in the format described by pmUnitsStr(3).
Given either of the -i or -I options, pmlogsummary produces two different timestamp formats, depending on the interval over which it is run. For an interval greater than 24 hours, the date is displayed in addition to the time at which the maxima and/or minima occurred. If the extent of the data being checked is less than 24 hours, a more precise format is used (time is displayed with millisecond precision, but without the date).
The average for an individual metric is calculated as follows:
Non-counter metrics are averaged using stochastic averaging - each observation has an equal weighting towards the calculation of the average (the sum of all values divided by the total number of values, for each metric).
Counter metrics are averaged using time averaging (by default), but the -x option can be used to specify that counters be averaged using the stochastic method instead. When calculating a time average, the sum of the product of each sample value multiplied by the time difference between each sample, is divided by the total time over which that metric was logged.
Counter metrics whose measurements do not span 90% of the set of archives will be printed with the metric name prefixed by an asterisk (*).
$ pmlogsummary -aN -p 1 -B 3 surf network.interface.out.bytes Log Label (Log Format Version 1) Performance metrics from host www.sgi.com
commencing Tue Jan 14 20:50:50.317 1997
ending Wed Jan 29 10:13:07.387 1997 network.interface.out.bytes ["xpi0"] 202831.3 202062.5 20618.7 \ 1235067.7 971 [<=425435.0] 912 [<=830251.4] 42 [<=1235067.7] \ 17 byte / sec network.interface.out.bytes ["xpi1"] 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 1033 [<=0.0] \ 1033 [] 0 [] 0 byte / sec network.interface.out.bytes ["et0"] 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 1033 [<=0.0] \ 1033 [] 0 [] 0 byte / sec network.interface.out.bytes ["lo0"] 899.0 895.2 142.6 9583.1 1031 \ [<=3289.4] 1027 [<=6436.2] 3 [<=9583.1] 1 byte / sec
A description of each field in the first line of statistical output, which describes one instance of the network.interface.out.bytes metric, follows:
Field | Meaning |
["xpi0"] | instance name |
202831.3 | stochastic average |
202062.5 | time average |
20618.7 | minimum value |
1235067.7 | maximum value |
971 | total number of values for this instance |
[<=425435.0] | range for first bin (20618.7-425435.0) |
912 | number of values in first bin |
[<=830251.4] | range for second bin (425435.0-830251.4) |
42 | number of values in second bin |
[<=1235067.7] | range for third bin (830251.4-1235067.7) |
17 | number of values in third bin |
byte / sec | base units for this metric |
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).
PCPIntro(1), pmchart(1), pmdumptext(1), pmlogextract(1), pmlogger(1), pmrep(1), pmval(1), PMAPI(3), pmUnitsStr(3) and pmns(5).
All are generated on standard error and are intended to be self- explanatory.
PCP | Performance Co-Pilot |