pmrep - performance metrics reporter
pmrep [-1235CdgGHIjkLnprRuUvVxz?] [-4
action] [-6 sort-metric] [-8|-9
limit] [-a archive] [--archive-folio
folio] [-A align] [-b|-B
space-scale] [-c config] [--container
container] [--daemonize] [-e derived] [-E
lines] [-f format] [-F outfile]
[-h host] [-i instances] [-J rank]
[-K spec] [-l delimiter] [-N
predicate] [-o output] [-O origin]
[-P|-0 precision] [-q|-Q
count-scale] [-s samples] [-S starttime]
[-t interval] [-T endtime] [-w|-W
width] [-X label] [-y|-Y
time-scale] [-Z timezone] metricspec
[...]
pmrep is a customizable performance metrics reporting tool.
Any available performance metric, live or archived, system and/or
application, can be selected for reporting using one of the output
alternatives listed below together with applicable formatting options.
pmrep collects the selected metric values through the
facilities of the Performance Co-Pilot (PCP), see PCPIntro(1). The
metrics to be reported are specified on the command line, in a configuration
file, or both. Metrics can be automatically converted and scaled using the
PCP facilities, either by default or by per-metric scaling specifications.
In addition to the existing metrics, derived metrics can be defined using
the arithmetic expressions described in pmRegisterDerived(3).
Unless directed to another host by the -h option,
pmrep will contact the Performance Metrics Collector Daemon (PMCD,
see pmcd(1)) on the local host.
The -a option causes pmrep to use the specified set
of archive logs rather than connecting to a PMCD. The -a and
-h options are mutually exclusive.
The -L option causes pmrep to use a local context to
collect metrics from DSO PMDAs (Performance Metrics Domain Agents,
``plugins'') on the local host without PMCD. Only some metrics are available
in this mode. The -a, -h, and -L options are mutually
exclusive.
The metrics of interest are named in the metricspec
argument(s). If a metricspec specifies a non-leaf node in the Performance
Metrics Name Space (PMNS), then pmrep will recursively descend the
PMNS and report on all leaf nodes (i.e., metrics) for that metricspec. (Use
for example pminfo(1) to list all the leaf nodes and their
descriptions.)
A metricspec has three different forms. First, on the
command line it can start with a colon (``:'') to indicate a
metricset to be read from a pmrep configuration file (see
pmrep.conf(5)) which can then consist of any number of metricspecs.
Second, a metricspec starting with non-colon specifies a PMNS node as
described above, optionally followed by metric formatting definitions. This
so-called compact form of a metricspec is defined as follows:
metric[,label[,instances[,unit/scale[,type[,width[,precision[,limit]]]]]]]
A valid PMNS node (metric) is mandatory. It can be followed
by a text label used by supporting output targets (currently:
stdout, see below). The optional instances definition
restricts csv and stdout reporting to the specified instances
(so non-matching instances will be filtered). An optional unit/scale
is applicable for dimension-compatible, non-string metrics. (See below for
supported unit/scale specifications.) By default, cumulative counter
metrics are converted to rates, an optional type can be set to
raw to disable this rate conversion. For supporting output targets
(currently: stdout) a numeric width can be used to set the
width of the output column for this metric. Too-wide numeric values for
output will not be printed (apart from trailing decimals, numeric values
will never be silently truncated). Too-wide strings will be truncated. Then,
a metric-specific precision can be provided for numeric non-integer
output values. Lastly, a metric-specific limit can be set for
filtering numeric values per limit.
As a special case with metrics that are counters with time units
(nanoseconds to hours), the unit/scale can be used to change the
default reporting (for example, milliseconds / second) to normalize to the
range zero to one by setting this to sec (see also -y and
-Y).
The following metricspec requests the metric
kernel.all.sysfork to be reported under the text label forks,
converting to the default rate count/s in an 8 wide column. Although
the definitions in this compact form are optional, they must always
be provided in the order specified above.
kernel.all.sysfork,forks,,,,8
The third form of a metricspec, verbose form, is described
and valid only in pmrep.conf(5).
Derived metrics are specified like PMNS leaf node metrics.
Options via environment values (see pmGetOptions(3))
override the corresponding built-in default values (if any). Configuration
file options override the corresponding environment variables (if any).
Command line options override the corresponding configuration file options
(if any).
The available command line options are:
- -0 precision, --precision-force=precision
- Like -P but this option will override per-metric
specifications.
- -1, --dynamic-header
- Print a new dynamically adjusted header every time changes in availability
of metric and instance values occur. By default a static header that never
changes is printed once. See also -E and -4.
- -2, --overall-rank
- Perform overall ranking of instances in archive. By default ranking (see
-J) and reporting happens on each interval. With this option all
instances and values are ranked before a summary is reported. See
pmlogsummary(1) for further archive summary reporting alternatives,
including averages and peak times for values.
- -3, --overall-rank-alt
- Like -2 but print metric instances in pmrep
metricspec format, to allow easily selecting the instances for
further investigation.
- -4 action, --names-change=action
- Specify which action to take on receiving a metric names change
event during sampling. These events occur when a PMDA discovers new
metrics sometime after starting up, and informs running client tools like
pmrep. Valid values for action are update (refresh
metrics being sampled), ignore (do nothing - the default behaviour)
and abort (exit the program if such an event happens).
update implies --dynamic-header.
- -5, --ignore-unknown
- Silently ignore any metric name that cannot be resolved. At least one
metric must be found for the tool to start.
- -6, --sort-metric=sort-metric
- Specify a sort reference metric to sort output by values with -X.
By default sorting order is descending, prepending the metric name with
the minus sign (``-'') will change the order to be ascending. See also
-J and -N.
- -8 limit, --limit-filter=limit
- Limit results to instances with values above/below limit. A
positive integer will include instances with values at or above the limit
in reporting. A negative integer will include instances with values at or
below the limit in reporting. A value of zero performs no limit filtering.
This option will not override possible per-metric specifications.
See also -J and -N.
- -9 limit, --limit-filter-force=limit
- Like -8 but this option will override per-metric
specifications.
- -a archive,
--archive=archive
- Performance metric values are retrieved from the set of Performance
Co-Pilot (PCP) archive log files identified by the argument
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. See also -u.
- --archive-folio=folio
- Read metric source archives from the PCP archive folio created by
tools like pmchart(1) or, less often, manually with
mkaf(1).
- -A align,
--align=align
- Force the initial sample to be aligned on the boundary of a natural time
unit align. Refer to PCPIntro(1) for a complete description
of the syntax for align.
- -b scale,
--space-scale=scale
- Unit/scale for space (byte) metrics, possible values include
bytes, Kbytes, KB, Mbytes, MB, and so
forth. This option will not override possible per-metric
specifications. See also pmParseUnitsStr(3).
- -B scale,
--space-scale-force=scale
- Like -b but this option will override per-metric
specifications.
- -c config,
--config=config
- Specify the config file to use. The default is the first found of:
./pmrep.conf, $HOME/.pmrep.conf,
$HOME/pcp/pmrep.conf, and $PCP_SYSCONF_DIR/pmrep/pmrep.conf.
See pmrep.conf(5).
- --container=container
- Fetch performance metrics from the specified container, either
local or remote (see -h).
- -C, --check
- Exit before reporting any values, but after parsing the configuration and
metrics and printing possible headers.
- -d, --delay
- When replaying from an archive, this option requests that the prevailing
real-time delay be applied between samples (see -t) to effect a
pause, rather than the default behaviour of replaying at full speed.
- --daemonize
- Daemonize on startup.
- -e derived,
--derived=derived
- Specify derived performance metrics. If derived starts with
a slash (``/'') or with a dot (``.'') it will be interpreted as a derived
metrics configuration file, otherwise it will be interpreted as comma- or
semicolon-separated derived metric expressions. For details see
pmLoadDerivedConfig(3) and pmRegisterDerived(3).
- -E lines,
--repeat-header=lines
- Repeat the header every lines of output. See also -1.
- -f format,
--timestamp-format=format
- Use the format string for formatting the timestamp. The format will
be used with Python's datetime.strftime method which is mostly the
same as that described in strftime(3). An empty format
string (i.e., "") will remove the timestamps from the output.
Defaults to %H:%M:%S when using the stdout output target.
Defaults to %Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S when using the csv output
target.
- -F outfile,
--output-file=outfile
- Specify the output file outfile. See -o.
- -g,
--separate-header
- Output the column number and complete metric information, one-per-line,
before printing the metric values.
- -G,
--no-globals
- Do not include global metrics in reporting (see
pmrep.conf(5)).
- -h host,
--host=host
- Fetch performance metrics from pmcd(1) on host, rather than
from the default localhost.
- -H,
--no-header
- Do not print any headers.
- -i instances,
--instances=instances
- Report only the listed instances from current instances (if
present, see also -j). By default all current instances are
reported, except when writing an archive (see -o) when all
instances, present and future, are reported. This is a global option that
is used for all metrics unless a metric-specific instance definition is
provided as part of a metricspec. By default single-valued ``flat''
metrics without multiple instances are still reported as usual, use
-v to change this.
The list may consist of one or more comma-separated instances. The
instance name may be quoted with single (') or double (") quotes for
those cases where the instance name contains commas or whitespace. Note that
on the command line when specifying more than one instance, all the names
must be quoted.
Multiple -i options are allowed as an alternative way of
specifying more than one instance of interest. Regular expressions can also
be used.
As an example, the following would report the same instances:
$ pmrep -i "'1 minute','5 minute'" kernel.all.load
$ pmrep -i '"1 minute","5 minute"' kernel.all.load
$ pmrep -i "'1 minute'" -i "'5 minute'" kernel.all.load
$ pmrep kernel.all.load,,"'1 minute','5 minute'"
$ pmrep kernel.all.load,,'"1 minute","5 minute"'
However, this would report only the 1-minute instance:
$ pmrep -i '"1 minute","5 minute"' kernel.all.load,,"1 minute"
But this would report all instances (due to per-metric override):
$ pmrep -i '"1 minute","5 minute"' 'kernel.all.load,,.*'
- -I,
--ignore-incompat
- Ignore incompatible metrics. By default incompatible metrics (that is,
their type is unsupported or they cannot be scaled as requested) will
cause pmrep to terminate with an error message. With this option
all incompatible metrics are silently omitted from reporting. This may be
especially useful when requesting non-leaf nodes of the PMNS tree for
reporting.
- -j,
--live-filter
- Perform instance live filtering. This allows capturing all filtered
instances even if processes are restarted at some point (unlike without
live filtering). Performing live filtering over a huge amount of instances
will add some internal overhead so a bit of user caution is advised. See
also -1 and -n.
- -J rank,
--rank=rank
- Limit results to highest/lowest rank instances of set-valued
metrics. A positive integer will include highest valued instances in
reporting. A negative integer will include lowest valued instances in
reporting. A value of zero performs no ranking. See also -2,
-6 and -8.
- -k,
--extended-csv
- Write extended CSV output, similar to sadf(1).
- -K spec,
--spec-local=spec
- When fetching metrics from a local context (see -L), the -K
option may be used to control the DSO PMDAs that should be made
accessible. The spec argument conforms to the syntax described in
pmSpecLocalPMDA(3). More than one -K option may be
used.
- -l delimiter,
--delimiter=delimiter
- Specify the delimiter that separates each column of csv or
stdout output. The default for stdout is two spaces (`` '')
and comma (``,'') for csv. In case of CSV output or stdout output
with non-whitespace delimiter, any instances of the delimiter in string
values will be replaced by the underscore (``_'') character.
- -L,
--local-PMDA
- Use a local context to collect metrics from DSO PMDAs on the local host
without PMCD. See also -K.
- -n,
--invert-filter
- Perform ranking before live filtering. By default instance live filtering
(when requested, see -j) happens before instance ranking (when
requested, see -J). With this option the logic is inverted and
ranking happens before live filtering.
- -N predicate,
--predicate=predicate
- Specify a comma-separated list of predicate filter reference
metrics. By default ranking (see -J) happens for each metric
individually. With predicates, ranking is done only for the specified
predicate metrics. When reporting, rest of the metrics sharing the same
instance domain (see PCPIntro(1)) as the predicate will
include only the highest/lowest ranking instances of the corresponding
predicate.
So for example, using proc.memory.rss (resident memory size
of process) as the predicate metric together with
proc.io.total_bytes and mem.util.used as metrics to be
reported, only the processes using most/least (as per -J) memory will
be included when reporting total bytes written by processes. Since
mem.util.used is a single-valued metric (thus not sharing the same
instance domain as the process-related metrics), it will be reported as
usual.
- -o output,
--output=output
- Use output target for reporting. The default target is
stdout. The available target alternatives are:
- archive
- Record metrics into a PCP archive which can later be replayed with PCP
tools, including pmrep itself. See LOGARCHIVE(5) and
PCPIntro(1) for details about PCP archive files. Requires
-F.
- csv
- Print metrics in CSV format (subject to formatting options).
- stdout
- Print metrics to stdout (format subject to formatting options).
- -O origin,
--origin=origin
- When reporting archived metrics, start reporting at origin within
the time window (see -S and -T). Refer to PCPIntro(1)
for a complete description of the syntax for origin.
- -p,
--timestamps
- Print timestamps. By default no timestamps are printed.
- -P precision,
--precision=precision
- Use precision for numeric non-integer output values. If the value
is too wide for its column width, precision is reduced one by one
until the value fits, or not printed at all if it does not. The default is
to use 3 decimal places (when applicable). This option will not
override possible per-metric specifications.
- -q scale,
--count-scale=scale
- Unit/scale for count metrics, possible values include count x
10^-1, count, count x 10, count x 10^2, and so
forth from 10^-8 to 10^7. (These values are currently
space-sensitive.) This option will not override possible per-metric
specifications. See also pmParseUnitsStr(3).
- -Q scale,
--count-scale-force=scale
- Like -q but this option will override per-metric
specifications.
- -r, --raw
- Output raw metric values, do not convert cumulative counters to rates.
When writing archives, raw values are always used. This option will
override possible per-metric specifications.
- -R,
--raw-prefer
- Like -r but this option will not override per-metric
specifications.
- -s samples,
--samples=samples
- The argument samples defines the number of samples to be retrieved
and reported. If samples is 0 or -s is not specified,
pmrep will sample and report continuously (in real time mode) or
until the end of the set of PCP archives (in archive mode). See also
-T.
- -S starttime,
--start=starttime
- When reporting archived metrics, the report will be restricted to those
records logged at or after starttime. Refer to PCPIntro(1)
for a complete description of the syntax for starttime.
- -t interval,
--interval=interval
- The default update interval may be set to something other than the
default 1 second. The interval argument follows the syntax
described in PCPIntro(1), and in the simplest form may be an
unsigned integer (the implied units in this case are seconds). See also
the -T and -u options.
- -T endtime,
--finish=endtime
- When reporting archived metrics, the report will be restricted to those
records logged before or at endtime. Refer to PCPIntro(1)
for a complete description of the syntax for endtime.
When used to define the runtime before pmrep will exit, if
no samples is given (see -s) then the number of reported
samples depends on interval (see -t). If samples is
given then interval will be adjusted to allow reporting of
samples during runtime. In case all of -T, -s, and
-t are given, endtime determines the actual time pmrep
will run.
- -u,
--no-interpol
- When reporting archived metrics, by default values are reported according
to the selected sample interval (-t option), not according to the
actual record interval in an archive. To this effect PCP interpolates the
values to be reported based on the records in the archive. With the
-u option uninterpolated reporting is enabled, every recorded value
for the selected metrics is reported and the requested sample interval
(-t) is ignored.
So for example, if a PCP archive contains recorded values for
every 10 seconds and the requested sample interval is 1 hour, by default
pmrep will use an interpolation scheme to compute the values of the
requested metrics from the values recorded in the proximity of these
requested metrics and values for every 1 hour are reported. With -u
every record every 10 seconds are reported as such (the reported values are
still subject to rate conversion, use -r or -R to
disable).
- -U,
--no-unit-info
- Omit unit information from headers.
- -v,
--omit-flat
- Omit single-valued ``flat'' metrics from reporting, only consider
set-valued metrics (i.e., metrics with multiple values) for reporting. See
-i and -I.
- -V, --version
- Display version number and exit.
- -w width,
--width=width
- Set the stdout output column width. Strings will be
truncated to this width. The default width is the shortest that can
fit the metric text label, the forced minimum is 3. This option will
not override possible per-metric specifications.
- -W width,
--width-force=width
- Like -w but this option will override per-metric
specifications.
- -x,
--extended-header
- Print extended header.
- -X label,
--colxrow=label
- Swap columns and rows in stdout output, reporting one instance per
line, using label as the text label for instance column (set to an
empty string "" to enable swapping without a specific
text label). This is convenient to allow easily using grep(1) to
filter results or to more closely mimic other utilities. See also
-i and -6.
- -y scale,
--time-scale=scale
- Unit/scale for time metrics, possible values include
nanosec, ns, microsec, us, millisec,
ms, and so forth up to hour, hr. This option will
not override possible per-metric specifications. See also
pmParseUnitsStr(3).
- -Y scale,
--time-scale-force=scale
- Like -y but this option will override per-metric
specifications.
- -z,
--hostzone
- Use the local timezone of the host that is the source of the performance
metrics, as identified by either the -h or the -a options.
The default is to use the timezone of the local host.
- -Z timezone,
--timezone=timezone
- Use timezone for the date and time. Timezone is in the
format of the environment variable TZ as described in
environ(7). Note that when including a timezone string in output,
ISO 8601 -style UTC offsets are used (so something like -Z EST+5 will
become UTC-5).
- -?, --help
- Display usage message and exit.
The following examples use the standard PCP facilities for
collecting the metric values, no external utilities are needed. The
referenced colon-starting metricsets are part of the system
pmrep.conf file.
Display network interface metrics on the local host:
$ pmrep network.interface.total.bytes
Display all outgoing network metrics for the wlan0
interface:
$ pmrep -i wlan0 -v network.interface.out
Display timestamped vmstat(8) like information using
megabytes instead of kilobytes and also include the number of inodes used
(tab completes available metrics and after a colon metricsets with bash and
zsh):
$ pmrep -p -B MB :vmstat vfs.inodes.count
Display per-device disk reads and writes from the host
server1 using two seconds interval and sadf(1) like CSV output
format:
$ pmrep -h server1 -t 2s -o csv -k disk.dev.read disk.dev.write
Display processes using at least 100MB of memory using dynamic
headers:
$ pmrep -b MB --limit-filter 100 --dynamic-header proc.memory.rss
Display the predefined set of metrics from the default
pmrep.conf(5) containing information about I/O issued by current
firefox process(es):
$ pmrep -i '.*firefox.*' :proc-io
Display the three most CPU-using processes:
$ pmrep -1gUJ 3 proc.hog.cpu
Display sar -w and sar -W like information at the
same time from the PCP archive ./20150921.09.13 showing values
recorded between 3 - 5 PM:
$ pmrep -a ./20150921.09.13 -S @15:00 -T @17:00 :sar-w :sar-W
Record most relevant CPU, memory, and I/O related information
about every Java process on the system, present and future, to an archive
./a on one minute interval at every full minute in a background
process:
$ pmrep --daemonize -A 1m -t 1m -i '.*java.*' -j -o archive -F ./a \
:proc-info :proc-cpu :proc-mem :proc-io
Record all 389 Directory Server, XFS file system, and
CPU/memory/disk metrics every five seconds for five minutes to a PCP archive
./a:
$ pmrep -t 5s -T 5m -o archive -F ./a ds389 xfs kernel.all.cpu mem disk
Record process memory and I/O information for those processes
which are the three most memory-consuming processes:
$ pmrep -o archive -F ./a -J 3 -N proc.memory.rss proc.memory proc.io
- pmrep.conf
- pmrep configuration file (see -c)
- $PCP_SYSCONF_DIR/pmrep/pmrep.conf
- system provided pmrep configuration file
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).
mkaf(1), PCPIntro(1), pcp(1),
pcp-atop(1), pcp2elasticsearch(1), pcp2graphite(1),
pcp2influxdb(1), pcp2json(1), pcp2spark(1),
pcp2xlsx(1), pcp2xml(1), pcp2zabbix(1), pmcd(1),
pmchart(1), pmcollectl(1), pmdiff(1),
pmdumplog(1), pmdumptext(1), pminfo(1),
pmiostat(1), pmlogextract(1), pmlogsummary(1),
pmprobe(1), pmstat(1), pmval(1), sadf(1),
sar(1), pmGetOptions(3), pmSpecLocalPMDA(3),
pmLoadDerivedConfig(3), pmParseUnitsStr(3),
pmRegisterDerived(3), strftime(3), LOGARCHIVE(5),
pcp.conf(5), pmns(5), pmrep.conf(5), environ(7)
and vmstat(8).