pmlogreduce - temporal reduction of Performance Co-Pilot
archives
$PCP_BINADM_DIR/pmlogreduce [-z?] [-A
align] [-s samples] [-S starttime]
[-t interval] [-T endtime] [-v
volsamples] [-Z timezone] input
output
pmlogreduce reads one set of Performance Co-Pilot (PCP)
archives identified by input and creates a temporally reduced PCP
archive 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 data reduction involves statistical and
temporal reduction of samples with an output sampling interval defined by
the -t option in the output archive (independent of the
sampling intervals in the input archives), and is further controlled
by other command line arguments.
For some metrics, temporal data reduction is not going to be
helpful, so for metrics with types PM_TYPE_AGGREGATE or
PM_TYPE_EVENT, a warning is issued if these metrics are found in
input and they will be skipped and not appear in the output
archive.
The available command line options are:
- -A align,
--align=align
- Specify a ``natural'' alignment of the output sample times; refer to
PCPIntro(1).
- -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,
pmlogreduce will sample until the end of the set of PCP archives,
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.
- -S starttime,
--start=starttime
- Define the start of a time window to restrict the samples retrieved from
the input archives; refer to PCPIntro(1).
- -t interval,
--interval=interval
- Consecutive samples in the output archive will appear with a time
delta defined by interval; refer to PCPIntro(1). Note the
default value is 600 (seconds, i.e. 10 minutes).
- -T endtime,
--finish=endtime
- Define the termination of a time window to restrict the samples retrieved
from the input archives; refer to PCPIntro(1).
- -v volsamples
- The output archive is potentially a multi-volume data set, and the
-v option causes pmlogreduce to start a new volume after
volsamples log records have been written to the output
archive.
Independent of any -v option, each volume of an archive is
limited to no more than 2^31 bytes, so pmlogreduce will automatically
create a new volume for the archive before this limit is reached.
- -z,
--hostzone
- Use the local timezone of the host from the input archives when
displaying the date and time, or interpreting the -S and -T
options. The default is to initially use the timezone of the local
host.
- -Z timezone,
--timezone=timezone
- Use timezone when displaying the date and time, or interpreting the
-S and -T options. Timezone is in the format of the
environment variable TZ as described in environ(7).
- -?, --help
- Display usage message and exit.
The statistical and temporal reduction follows the following
rules:
- 1.
- Consecutive records from input are read without interpolation, and
at most one output record is written for each interval, summarizing
the performance data over that period.
- 2.
- If the semantics of a metric indicates it is instantaneous or
discrete then output value is computed as the arithmetic
mean of the observations (if any) over each interval.
- 3.
- If the semantics of a metric indicates it is a counter then the
following transformations are applied:
- a)
- Metrics with 32-bit precision are promoted to 64-bit precision.
- b)
- Any counter wrap (overflow) is noted, and appropriate adjustment made in
the value of the metric over each interval. This will be correct in
the case of a single counter wrap, but will silently underestimate
in the case where more than one counter wrap occurs between consecutive
observations in the input archives, and silently
overestimate in the case where a counter reset occurs between
consecutive observations in the input archives; unfortunately these
situations cannot be detected, but are believed to be rare events for the
sort of production monitoring environments where pmlogreduce is
most likely to be deployed.
- 4.
- Any changes in instance domains, and indeed all metadata, is
preserved.
- 5.
- Any ``mark'' records in the input archives (as created by
pmlogextract(1)) will be preserved in the output archive, so
periods where no data is available are maintained, and data interpolation
will not occur across these periods when the output archive
is subsequently processed with PCP applications.
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
pmlogreduce. These metrics are only relevant while the archive is
being created, and have no significance once recording has finished.
All error conditions detected by pmlogreduce are reported
on stderr with textual (if sometimes terse) explanation.
Should the input archives be corrupted (this can happen if
the pmlogger instance writing the archive suddenly dies), then
pmlogreduce will detect and report the position of the corruption in
the file, and any subsequent information from the input archives will
not be processed.
If any error is detected, pmlogreduce will exit with a
non-zero status.
For each of the input and output archives, 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.
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).