5 collectd.conf - Configuration for the system statistics collection daemon B<collectd>
9 BaseDir "/var/lib/collectd"
10 PIDFile "/run/collectd.pid"
31 This config file controls how the system statistics collection daemon
32 B<collectd> behaves. The most significant option is B<LoadPlugin>, which
33 controls which plugins to load. These plugins ultimately define collectd's
34 behavior. If the B<AutoLoadPlugin> option has been enabled, the explicit
35 B<LoadPlugin> lines may be omitted for all plugins with a configuration block,
36 i.e. a C<E<lt>PluginE<nbsp>...E<gt>> block.
38 The syntax of this config file is similar to the config file of the famous
39 I<Apache> webserver. Each line contains either an option (a key and a list of
40 one or more values) or a section-start or -end. Empty lines and everything
41 after a non-quoted hash-symbol (C<#>) are ignored. I<Keys> are unquoted
42 strings, consisting only of alphanumeric characters and the underscore (C<_>)
43 character. Keys are handled case insensitive by I<collectd> itself and all
44 plugins included with it. I<Values> can either be an I<unquoted string>, a
45 I<quoted string> (enclosed in double-quotes) a I<number> or a I<boolean>
46 expression. I<Unquoted strings> consist of only alphanumeric characters and
47 underscores (C<_>) and do not need to be quoted. I<Quoted strings> are
48 enclosed in double quotes (C<">). You can use the backslash character (C<\>)
49 to include double quotes as part of the string. I<Numbers> can be specified in
50 decimal and floating point format (using a dot C<.> as decimal separator),
51 hexadecimal when using the C<0x> prefix and octal with a leading zero (C<0>).
52 I<Boolean> values are either B<true> or B<false>.
54 Lines may be wrapped by using C<\> as the last character before the newline.
55 This allows long lines to be split into multiple lines. Quoted strings may be
56 wrapped as well. However, those are treated special in that whitespace at the
57 beginning of the following lines will be ignored, which allows for nicely
58 indenting the wrapped lines.
60 The configuration is read and processed in order, i.e. from top to bottom. So
61 the plugins are loaded in the order listed in this config file. It is a good
62 idea to load any logging plugins first in order to catch messages from plugins
63 during configuration. Also, unless B<AutoLoadPlugin> is enabled, the
64 B<LoadPlugin> option I<must> occur I<before> the appropriate
65 C<E<lt>B<Plugin> ...E<gt>> block.
71 =item B<BaseDir> I<Directory>
73 Sets the base directory. This is the directory beneath which all RRD-files are
74 created. Possibly more subdirectories are created. This is also the working
75 directory for the daemon.
77 =item B<LoadPlugin> I<Plugin>
79 Loads the plugin I<Plugin>. This is required to load plugins, unless the
80 B<AutoLoadPlugin> option is enabled (see below). Without any loaded plugins,
81 I<collectd> will be mostly useless.
83 Only the first B<LoadPlugin> statement or block for a given plugin name has any
84 effect. This is useful when you want to split up the configuration into smaller
85 files and want each file to be "self contained", i.e. it contains a B<Plugin>
86 block I<and> the appropriate B<LoadPlugin> statement. The downside is that if
87 you have multiple conflicting B<LoadPlugin> blocks, e.g. when they specify
88 different intervals, only one of them (the first one encountered) will take
89 effect and all others will be silently ignored.
91 B<LoadPlugin> may either be a simple configuration I<statement> or a I<block>
92 with additional options, affecting the behavior of B<LoadPlugin>. A simple
93 statement looks like this:
97 Options inside a B<LoadPlugin> block can override default settings and
98 influence the way plugins are loaded, e.g.:
104 The following options are valid inside B<LoadPlugin> blocks:
108 =item B<Globals> B<true|false>
110 If enabled, collectd will export all global symbols of the plugin (and of all
111 libraries loaded as dependencies of the plugin) and, thus, makes those symbols
112 available for resolving unresolved symbols in subsequently loaded plugins if
113 that is supported by your system.
115 This is useful (or possibly even required), e.g., when loading a plugin that
116 embeds some scripting language into the daemon (e.g. the I<Perl> and
117 I<Python plugins>). Scripting languages usually provide means to load
118 extensions written in C. Those extensions require symbols provided by the
119 interpreter, which is loaded as a dependency of the respective collectd plugin.
120 See the documentation of those plugins (e.g., L<collectd-perl(5)> or
121 L<collectd-python(5)>) for details.
123 By default, this is disabled. As a special exception, if the plugin name is
124 either C<perl> or C<python>, the default is changed to enabled in order to keep
125 the average user from ever having to deal with this low level linking stuff.
127 =item B<Interval> I<Seconds>
129 Sets a plugin-specific interval for collecting metrics. This overrides the
130 global B<Interval> setting. If a plugin provides its own support for specifying
131 an interval, that setting will take precedence.
133 =item B<FlushInterval> I<Seconds>
135 Specifies the interval, in seconds, to call the flush callback if it's
136 defined in this plugin. By default, this is disabled.
138 =item B<FlushTimeout> I<Seconds>
140 Specifies the value of the timeout argument of the flush callback.
144 =item B<AutoLoadPlugin> B<false>|B<true>
146 When set to B<false> (the default), each plugin needs to be loaded explicitly,
147 using the B<LoadPlugin> statement documented above. If a
148 B<E<lt>PluginE<nbsp>...E<gt>> block is encountered and no configuration
149 handling callback for this plugin has been registered, a warning is logged and
150 the block is ignored.
152 When set to B<true>, explicit B<LoadPlugin> statements are not required. Each
153 B<E<lt>PluginE<nbsp>...E<gt>> block acts as if it was immediately preceded by a
154 B<LoadPlugin> statement. B<LoadPlugin> statements are still required for
155 plugins that don't provide any configuration, e.g. the I<Load plugin>.
157 =item B<CollectInternalStats> B<false>|B<true>
159 When set to B<true>, various statistics about the I<collectd> daemon will be
160 collected, with "collectd" as the I<plugin name>. Defaults to B<false>.
162 The following metrics are reported:
166 =item C<collectd-write_queue/queue_length>
168 The number of metrics currently in the write queue. You can limit the queue
169 length with the B<WriteQueueLimitLow> and B<WriteQueueLimitHigh> options.
171 =item C<collectd-write_queue/derive-dropped>
173 The number of metrics dropped due to a queue length limitation.
174 If this value is non-zero, your system can't handle all incoming metrics and
175 protects itself against overload by dropping metrics.
177 =item C<collectd-cache/cache_size>
179 The number of elements in the metric cache (the cache you can interact with
180 using L<collectd-unixsock(5)>).
184 =item B<Include> I<Path> [I<pattern>]
186 If I<Path> points to a file, includes that file. If I<Path> points to a
187 directory, recursively includes all files within that directory and its
188 subdirectories. If the C<wordexp> function is available on your system,
189 shell-like wildcards are expanded before files are included. This means you can
190 use statements like the following:
192 Include "/etc/collectd.d/*.conf"
194 Starting with version 5.3, this may also be a block in which further options
195 affecting the behavior of B<Include> may be specified. The following option is
198 <Include "/etc/collectd.d">
204 =item B<Filter> I<pattern>
206 If the C<fnmatch> function is available on your system, a shell-like wildcard
207 I<pattern> may be specified to filter which files to include. This may be used
208 in combination with recursively including a directory to easily be able to
209 arbitrarily mix configuration files and other documents (e.g. README files).
210 The given example is similar to the first example above but includes all files
211 matching C<*.conf> in any subdirectory of C</etc/collectd.d>.
215 If more than one file is included by a single B<Include> option, the files
216 will be included in lexicographical order (as defined by the C<strcmp>
217 function). Thus, you can e.E<nbsp>g. use numbered prefixes to specify the
218 order in which the files are loaded.
220 To prevent loops and shooting yourself in the foot in interesting ways the
221 nesting is limited to a depth of 8E<nbsp>levels, which should be sufficient for
222 most uses. Since symlinks are followed it is still possible to crash the daemon
223 by looping symlinks. In our opinion significant stupidity should result in an
224 appropriate amount of pain.
226 It is no problem to have a block like C<E<lt>Plugin fooE<gt>> in more than one
227 file, but you cannot include files from within blocks.
229 =item B<PIDFile> I<File>
231 Sets where to write the PID file to. This file is overwritten when it exists
232 and deleted when the program is stopped. Some init-scripts might override this
233 setting using the B<-P> command-line option.
235 =item B<PluginDir> I<Directory>
237 Path to the plugins (shared objects) of collectd.
239 =item B<TypesDB> I<File> [I<File> ...]
241 Set one or more files that contain the data-set descriptions. See
242 L<types.db(5)> for a description of the format of this file.
244 If this option is not specified, a default file is read. If you need to define
245 custom types in addition to the types defined in the default file, you need to
246 explicitly load both. In other words, if the B<TypesDB> option is encountered
247 the default behavior is disabled and if you need the default types you have to
248 also explicitly load them.
250 =item B<Interval> I<Seconds>
252 Configures the interval in which to query the read plugins. Obviously smaller
253 values lead to a higher system load produced by collectd, while higher values
254 lead to more coarse statistics.
256 B<Warning:> You should set this once and then never touch it again. If you do,
257 I<you will have to delete all your RRD files> or know some serious RRDtool
258 magic! (Assuming you're using the I<RRDtool> or I<RRDCacheD> plugin.)
260 =item B<MaxReadInterval> I<Seconds>
262 A read plugin doubles the interval between queries after each failed attempt
265 This options limits the maximum value of the interval. The default value is
268 =item B<Timeout> I<Iterations>
270 Consider a value list "missing" when no update has been read or received for
271 I<Iterations> iterations. By default, I<collectd> considers a value list
272 missing when no update has been received for twice the update interval. Since
273 this setting uses iterations, the maximum allowed time without update depends
274 on the I<Interval> information contained in each value list. This is used in
275 the I<Threshold> configuration to dispatch notifications about missing values,
276 see L<collectd-threshold(5)> for details.
278 =item B<ReadThreads> I<Num>
280 Number of threads to start for reading plugins. The default value is B<5>, but
281 you may want to increase this if you have more than five plugins that take a
282 long time to read. Mostly those are plugins that do network-IO. Setting this to
283 a value higher than the number of registered read callbacks is not recommended.
285 =item B<WriteThreads> I<Num>
287 Number of threads to start for dispatching value lists to write plugins. The
288 default value is B<5>, but you may want to increase this if you have more than
289 five plugins that may take relatively long to write to.
291 =item B<WriteQueueLimitHigh> I<HighNum>
293 =item B<WriteQueueLimitLow> I<LowNum>
295 Metrics are read by the I<read threads> and then put into a queue to be handled
296 by the I<write threads>. If one of the I<write plugins> is slow (e.g. network
297 timeouts, I/O saturation of the disk) this queue will grow. In order to avoid
298 running into memory issues in such a case, you can limit the size of this
301 By default, there is no limit and memory may grow indefinitely. This is most
302 likely not an issue for clients, i.e. instances that only handle the local
303 metrics. For servers it is recommended to set this to a non-zero value, though.
305 You can set the limits using B<WriteQueueLimitHigh> and B<WriteQueueLimitLow>.
306 Each of them takes a numerical argument which is the number of metrics in the
307 queue. If there are I<HighNum> metrics in the queue, any new metrics I<will> be
308 dropped. If there are less than I<LowNum> metrics in the queue, all new metrics
309 I<will> be enqueued. If the number of metrics currently in the queue is between
310 I<LowNum> and I<HighNum>, the metric is dropped with a probability that is
311 proportional to the number of metrics in the queue (i.e. it increases linearly
312 until it reaches 100%.)
314 If B<WriteQueueLimitHigh> is set to non-zero and B<WriteQueueLimitLow> is
315 unset, the latter will default to half of B<WriteQueueLimitHigh>.
317 If you do not want to randomly drop values when the queue size is between
318 I<LowNum> and I<HighNum>, set B<WriteQueueLimitHigh> and B<WriteQueueLimitLow>
321 Enabling the B<CollectInternalStats> option is of great help to figure out the
322 values to set B<WriteQueueLimitHigh> and B<WriteQueueLimitLow> to.
324 =item B<Hostname> I<Name>
326 Sets the hostname that identifies a host. If you omit this setting, the
327 hostname will be determined using the L<gethostname(2)> system call.
329 =item B<FQDNLookup> B<true|false>
331 If B<Hostname> is determined automatically this setting controls whether or not
332 the daemon should try to figure out the "fully qualified domain name", FQDN.
333 This is done using a lookup of the name returned by C<gethostname>. This option
334 is enabled by default.
336 =item B<PreCacheChain> I<ChainName>
338 =item B<PostCacheChain> I<ChainName>
340 Configure the name of the "pre-cache chain" and the "post-cache chain". Please
341 see L</"FILTER CONFIGURATION"> below on information on chains and how these
342 setting change the daemon's behavior.
346 =head1 PLUGIN OPTIONS
348 Some plugins may register own options. These options must be enclosed in a
349 C<Plugin>-Section. Which options exist depends on the plugin used. Some plugins
350 require external configuration, too. The C<apache plugin>, for example,
351 required C<mod_status> to be configured in the webserver you're going to
352 collect data from. These plugins are listed below as well, even if they don't
353 require any configuration within collectd's configuration file.
355 A list of all plugins and a short summary for each plugin can be found in the
356 F<README> file shipped with the sourcecode and hopefully binary packets as
359 =head2 Plugin C<aggregation>
361 The I<Aggregation plugin> makes it possible to aggregate several values into
362 one using aggregation functions such as I<sum>, I<average>, I<min> and I<max>.
363 This can be put to a wide variety of uses, e.g. average and total CPU
364 statistics for your entire fleet.
366 The grouping is powerful but, as with many powerful tools, may be a bit
367 difficult to wrap your head around. The grouping will therefore be
368 demonstrated using an example: The average and sum of the CPU usage across
369 all CPUs of each host is to be calculated.
371 To select all the affected values for our example, set C<Plugin cpu> and
372 C<Type cpu>. The other values are left unspecified, meaning "all values". The
373 I<Host>, I<Plugin>, I<PluginInstance>, I<Type> and I<TypeInstance> options
374 work as if they were specified in the C<WHERE> clause of an C<SELECT> SQL
380 Although the I<Host>, I<PluginInstance> (CPU number, i.e. 0, 1, 2, ...) and
381 I<TypeInstance> (idle, user, system, ...) fields are left unspecified in the
382 example, the intention is to have a new value for each host / type instance
383 pair. This is achieved by "grouping" the values using the C<GroupBy> option.
384 It can be specified multiple times to group by more than one field.
387 GroupBy "TypeInstance"
389 We do neither specify nor group by I<plugin instance> (the CPU number), so all
390 metrics that differ in the CPU number only will be aggregated. Each
391 aggregation needs I<at least one> such field, otherwise no aggregation would
394 The full example configuration looks like this:
396 <Plugin "aggregation">
402 GroupBy "TypeInstance"
405 CalculateAverage true
409 There are a couple of limitations you should be aware of:
415 The I<Type> cannot be left unspecified, because it is not reasonable to add
416 apples to oranges. Also, the internal lookup structure won't work if you try
421 There must be at least one unspecified, ungrouped field. Otherwise nothing
426 As you can see in the example above, each aggregation has its own
427 B<Aggregation> block. You can have multiple aggregation blocks and aggregation
428 blocks may match the same values, i.e. one value list can update multiple
429 aggregations. The following options are valid inside B<Aggregation> blocks:
433 =item B<Host> I<Host>
435 =item B<Plugin> I<Plugin>
437 =item B<PluginInstance> I<PluginInstance>
439 =item B<Type> I<Type>
441 =item B<TypeInstance> I<TypeInstance>
443 Selects the value lists to be added to this aggregation. B<Type> must be a
444 valid data set name, see L<types.db(5)> for details.
446 If the string starts with and ends with a slash (C</>), the string is
447 interpreted as a I<regular expression>. The regex flavor used are POSIX
448 extended regular expressions as described in L<regex(7)>. Example usage:
450 Host "/^db[0-9]\\.example\\.com$/"
452 =item B<GroupBy> B<Host>|B<Plugin>|B<PluginInstance>|B<TypeInstance>
454 Group valued by the specified field. The B<GroupBy> option may be repeated to
455 group by multiple fields.
457 =item B<SetHost> I<Host>
459 =item B<SetPlugin> I<Plugin>
461 =item B<SetPluginInstance> I<PluginInstance>
463 =item B<SetTypeInstance> I<TypeInstance>
465 Sets the appropriate part of the identifier to the provided string.
467 The I<PluginInstance> should include the placeholder C<%{aggregation}> which
468 will be replaced with the aggregation function, e.g. "average". Not including
469 the placeholder will result in duplication warnings and/or messed up values if
470 more than one aggregation function are enabled.
472 The following example calculates the average usage of all "even" CPUs:
474 <Plugin "aggregation">
477 PluginInstance "/[0,2,4,6,8]$/"
481 SetPluginInstance "even-%{aggregation}"
484 GroupBy "TypeInstance"
486 CalculateAverage true
490 This will create the files:
496 foo.example.com/cpu-even-average/cpu-idle
500 foo.example.com/cpu-even-average/cpu-system
504 foo.example.com/cpu-even-average/cpu-user
512 =item B<CalculateNum> B<true>|B<false>
514 =item B<CalculateSum> B<true>|B<false>
516 =item B<CalculateAverage> B<true>|B<false>
518 =item B<CalculateMinimum> B<true>|B<false>
520 =item B<CalculateMaximum> B<true>|B<false>
522 =item B<CalculateStddev> B<true>|B<false>
524 Boolean options for enabling calculation of the number of value lists, their
525 sum, average, minimum, maximum andE<nbsp>/ or standard deviation. All options
526 are disabled by default.
530 =head2 Plugin C<amqp>
532 The I<AMQP plugin> can be used to communicate with other instances of
533 I<collectd> or third party applications using an AMQP message broker. Values
534 are sent to or received from the broker, which handles routing, queueing and
535 possibly filtering out messages.
540 # Send values to an AMQP broker
541 <Publish "some_name">
547 Exchange "amq.fanout"
548 # ExchangeType "fanout"
549 # RoutingKey "collectd"
551 # ConnectionRetryDelay 0
554 # GraphitePrefix "collectd."
555 # GraphiteEscapeChar "_"
556 # GraphiteSeparateInstances false
557 # GraphiteAlwaysAppendDS false
558 # GraphitePreserveSeparator false
561 # Receive values from an AMQP broker
562 <Subscribe "some_name">
568 Exchange "amq.fanout"
569 # ExchangeType "fanout"
572 # QueueAutoDelete true
573 # RoutingKey "collectd.#"
574 # ConnectionRetryDelay 0
578 The plugin's configuration consists of a number of I<Publish> and I<Subscribe>
579 blocks, which configure sending and receiving of values respectively. The two
580 blocks are very similar, so unless otherwise noted, an option can be used in
581 either block. The name given in the blocks starting tag is only used for
582 reporting messages, but may be used to support I<flushing> of certain
583 I<Publish> blocks in the future.
587 =item B<Host> I<Host>
589 Hostname or IP-address of the AMQP broker. Defaults to the default behavior of
590 the underlying communications library, I<rabbitmq-c>, which is "localhost".
592 =item B<Port> I<Port>
594 Service name or port number on which the AMQP broker accepts connections. This
595 argument must be a string, even if the numeric form is used. Defaults to
598 =item B<VHost> I<VHost>
600 Name of the I<virtual host> on the AMQP broker to use. Defaults to "/".
602 =item B<User> I<User>
604 =item B<Password> I<Password>
606 Credentials used to authenticate to the AMQP broker. By default "guest"/"guest"
609 =item B<Exchange> I<Exchange>
611 In I<Publish> blocks, this option specifies the I<exchange> to send values to.
612 By default, "amq.fanout" will be used.
614 In I<Subscribe> blocks this option is optional. If given, a I<binding> between
615 the given exchange and the I<queue> is created, using the I<routing key> if
616 configured. See the B<Queue> and B<RoutingKey> options below.
618 =item B<ExchangeType> I<Type>
620 If given, the plugin will try to create the configured I<exchange> with this
621 I<type> after connecting. When in a I<Subscribe> block, the I<queue> will then
622 be bound to this exchange.
624 =item B<Queue> I<Queue> (Subscribe only)
626 Configures the I<queue> name to subscribe to. If no queue name was configured
627 explicitly, a unique queue name will be created by the broker.
629 =item B<QueueDurable> B<true>|B<false> (Subscribe only)
631 Defines if the I<queue> subscribed to is durable (saved to persistent storage)
632 or transient (will disappear if the AMQP broker is restarted). Defaults to
635 This option should be used in conjunction with the I<Persistent> option on the
638 =item B<QueueAutoDelete> B<true>|B<false> (Subscribe only)
640 Defines if the I<queue> subscribed to will be deleted once the last consumer
641 unsubscribes. Defaults to "true".
643 =item B<RoutingKey> I<Key>
645 In I<Publish> blocks, this configures the routing key to set on all outgoing
646 messages. If not given, the routing key will be computed from the I<identifier>
647 of the value. The host, plugin, type and the two instances are concatenated
648 together using dots as the separator and all containing dots replaced with
649 slashes. For example "collectd.host/example/com.cpu.0.cpu.user". This makes it
650 possible to receive only specific values using a "topic" exchange.
652 In I<Subscribe> blocks, configures the I<routing key> used when creating a
653 I<binding> between an I<exchange> and the I<queue>. The usual wildcards can be
654 used to filter messages when using a "topic" exchange. If you're only
655 interested in CPU statistics, you could use the routing key "collectd.*.cpu.#"
658 =item B<Persistent> B<true>|B<false> (Publish only)
660 Selects the I<delivery method> to use. If set to B<true>, the I<persistent>
661 mode will be used, i.e. delivery is guaranteed. If set to B<false> (the
662 default), the I<transient> delivery mode will be used, i.e. messages may be
663 lost due to high load, overflowing queues or similar issues.
665 =item B<ConnectionRetryDelay> I<Delay>
667 When the connection to the AMQP broker is lost, defines the time in seconds to
668 wait before attempting to reconnect. Defaults to 0, which implies collectd will
669 attempt to reconnect at each read interval (in Subscribe mode) or each time
670 values are ready for submission (in Publish mode).
672 =item B<Format> B<Command>|B<JSON>|B<Graphite> (Publish only)
674 Selects the format in which messages are sent to the broker. If set to
675 B<Command> (the default), values are sent as C<PUTVAL> commands which are
676 identical to the syntax used by the I<Exec> and I<UnixSock plugins>. In this
677 case, the C<Content-Type> header field will be set to C<text/collectd>.
679 If set to B<JSON>, the values are encoded in the I<JavaScript Object Notation>,
680 an easy and straight forward exchange format. The C<Content-Type> header field
681 will be set to C<application/json>.
683 If set to B<Graphite>, values are encoded in the I<Graphite> format, which is
684 "<metric> <value> <timestamp>\n". The C<Content-Type> header field will be set to
687 A subscribing client I<should> use the C<Content-Type> header field to
688 determine how to decode the values. Currently, the I<AMQP plugin> itself can
689 only decode the B<Command> format.
691 =item B<StoreRates> B<true>|B<false> (Publish only)
693 Determines whether or not C<COUNTER>, C<DERIVE> and C<ABSOLUTE> data sources
694 are converted to a I<rate> (i.e. a C<GAUGE> value). If set to B<false> (the
695 default), no conversion is performed. Otherwise the conversion is performed
696 using the internal value cache.
698 Please note that currently this option is only used if the B<Format> option has
701 =item B<GraphitePrefix> (Publish and B<Format>=I<Graphite> only)
703 A prefix can be added in the metric name when outputting in the I<Graphite> format.
704 It's added before the I<Host> name.
705 Metric name will be "<prefix><host><postfix><plugin><type><name>"
707 =item B<GraphitePostfix> (Publish and B<Format>=I<Graphite> only)
709 A postfix can be added in the metric name when outputting in the I<Graphite> format.
710 It's added after the I<Host> name.
711 Metric name will be "<prefix><host><postfix><plugin><type><name>"
713 =item B<GraphiteEscapeChar> (Publish and B<Format>=I<Graphite> only)
715 Specify a character to replace dots (.) in the host part of the metric name.
716 In I<Graphite> metric name, dots are used as separators between different
717 metric parts (host, plugin, type).
718 Default is "_" (I<Underscore>).
720 =item B<GraphiteSeparateInstances> B<true>|B<false>
722 If set to B<true>, the plugin instance and type instance will be in their own
723 path component, for example C<host.cpu.0.cpu.idle>. If set to B<false> (the
724 default), the plugin and plugin instance (and likewise the type and type
725 instance) are put into one component, for example C<host.cpu-0.cpu-idle>.
727 =item B<GraphiteAlwaysAppendDS> B<true>|B<false>
729 If set to B<true>, append the name of the I<Data Source> (DS) to the "metric"
730 identifier. If set to B<false> (the default), this is only done when there is
733 =item B<GraphitePreserveSeparator> B<false>|B<true>
735 If set to B<false> (the default) the C<.> (dot) character is replaced with
736 I<GraphiteEscapeChar>. Otherwise, if set to B<true>, the C<.> (dot) character
737 is preserved, i.e. passed through.
741 =head2 Plugin C<apache>
743 To configure the C<apache>-plugin you first need to configure the Apache
744 webserver correctly. The Apache-plugin C<mod_status> needs to be loaded and
745 working and the C<ExtendedStatus> directive needs to be B<enabled>. You can use
746 the following snipped to base your Apache config upon:
749 <IfModule mod_status.c>
750 <Location /mod_status>
751 SetHandler server-status
755 Since its C<mod_status> module is very similar to Apache's, B<lighttpd> is
756 also supported. It introduces a new field, called C<BusyServers>, to count the
757 number of currently connected clients. This field is also supported.
759 The configuration of the I<Apache> plugin consists of one or more
760 C<E<lt>InstanceE<nbsp>/E<gt>> blocks. Each block requires one string argument
761 as the instance name. For example:
765 URL "http://www1.example.com/mod_status?auto"
768 URL "http://www2.example.com/mod_status?auto"
772 The instance name will be used as the I<plugin instance>. To emulate the old
773 (versionE<nbsp>4) behavior, you can use an empty string (""). In order for the
774 plugin to work correctly, each instance name must be unique. This is not
775 enforced by the plugin and it is your responsibility to ensure it.
777 The following options are accepted within each I<Instance> block:
781 =item B<URL> I<http://host/mod_status?auto>
783 Sets the URL of the C<mod_status> output. This needs to be the output generated
784 by C<ExtendedStatus on> and it needs to be the machine readable output
785 generated by appending the C<?auto> argument. This option is I<mandatory>.
787 =item B<User> I<Username>
789 Optional user name needed for authentication.
791 =item B<Password> I<Password>
793 Optional password needed for authentication.
795 =item B<VerifyPeer> B<true|false>
797 Enable or disable peer SSL certificate verification. See
798 L<http://curl.haxx.se/docs/sslcerts.html> for details. Enabled by default.
800 =item B<VerifyHost> B<true|false>
802 Enable or disable peer host name verification. If enabled, the plugin checks
803 if the C<Common Name> or a C<Subject Alternate Name> field of the SSL
804 certificate matches the host name provided by the B<URL> option. If this
805 identity check fails, the connection is aborted. Obviously, only works when
806 connecting to a SSL enabled server. Enabled by default.
808 =item B<CACert> I<File>
810 File that holds one or more SSL certificates. If you want to use HTTPS you will
811 possibly need this option. What CA certificates come bundled with C<libcurl>
812 and are checked by default depends on the distribution you use.
814 =item B<SSLCiphers> I<list of ciphers>
816 Specifies which ciphers to use in the connection. The list of ciphers
817 must specify valid ciphers. See
818 L<http://www.openssl.org/docs/apps/ciphers.html> for details.
820 =item B<Timeout> I<Milliseconds>
822 The B<Timeout> option sets the overall timeout for HTTP requests to B<URL>, in
823 milliseconds. By default, the configured B<Interval> is used to set the
828 =head2 Plugin C<apcups>
832 =item B<Host> I<Hostname>
834 Hostname of the host running B<apcupsd>. Defaults to B<localhost>. Please note
835 that IPv6 support has been disabled unless someone can confirm or decline that
836 B<apcupsd> can handle it.
838 =item B<Port> I<Port>
840 TCP-Port to connect to. Defaults to B<3551>.
842 =item B<ReportSeconds> B<true>|B<false>
844 If set to B<true>, the time reported in the C<timeleft> metric will be
845 converted to seconds. This is the recommended setting. If set to B<false>, the
846 default for backwards compatibility, the time will be reported in minutes.
848 =item B<PersistentConnection> B<true>|B<false>
850 The plugin is designed to keep the connection to I<apcupsd> open between reads.
851 If plugin poll interval is greater than 15 seconds (hardcoded socket close
852 timeout in I<apcupsd> NIS), then this option is B<false> by default.
854 You can instruct the plugin to close the connection after each read by setting
855 this option to B<false> or force keeping the connection by setting it to B<true>.
857 If I<apcupsd> appears to close the connection due to inactivity quite quickly,
858 the plugin will try to detect this problem and switch to an open-read-close mode.
862 =head2 Plugin C<aquaero>
864 This plugin collects the value of the available sensors in an
865 I<AquaeroE<nbsp>5> board. AquaeroE<nbsp>5 is a water-cooling controller board,
866 manufactured by Aqua Computer GmbH L<http://www.aquacomputer.de/>, with a USB2
867 connection for monitoring and configuration. The board can handle multiple
868 temperature sensors, fans, water pumps and water level sensors and adjust the
869 output settings such as fan voltage or power used by the water pump based on
870 the available inputs using a configurable controller included in the board.
871 This plugin collects all the available inputs as well as some of the output
872 values chosen by this controller. The plugin is based on the I<libaquaero5>
873 library provided by I<aquatools-ng>.
877 =item B<Device> I<DevicePath>
879 Device path of the AquaeroE<nbsp>5's USB HID (human interface device), usually
880 in the form C</dev/usb/hiddevX>. If this option is no set the plugin will try
881 to auto-detect the Aquaero 5 USB device based on vendor-ID and product-ID.
885 =head2 Plugin C<ascent>
887 This plugin collects information about an Ascent server, a free server for the
888 "World of Warcraft" game. This plugin gathers the information by fetching the
889 XML status page using C<libcurl> and parses it using C<libxml2>.
891 The configuration options are the same as for the C<apache> plugin above:
895 =item B<URL> I<http://localhost/ascent/status/>
897 Sets the URL of the XML status output.
899 =item B<User> I<Username>
901 Optional user name needed for authentication.
903 =item B<Password> I<Password>
905 Optional password needed for authentication.
907 =item B<VerifyPeer> B<true|false>
909 Enable or disable peer SSL certificate verification. See
910 L<http://curl.haxx.se/docs/sslcerts.html> for details. Enabled by default.
912 =item B<VerifyHost> B<true|false>
914 Enable or disable peer host name verification. If enabled, the plugin checks
915 if the C<Common Name> or a C<Subject Alternate Name> field of the SSL
916 certificate matches the host name provided by the B<URL> option. If this
917 identity check fails, the connection is aborted. Obviously, only works when
918 connecting to a SSL enabled server. Enabled by default.
920 =item B<CACert> I<File>
922 File that holds one or more SSL certificates. If you want to use HTTPS you will
923 possibly need this option. What CA certificates come bundled with C<libcurl>
924 and are checked by default depends on the distribution you use.
926 =item B<Timeout> I<Milliseconds>
928 The B<Timeout> option sets the overall timeout for HTTP requests to B<URL>, in
929 milliseconds. By default, the configured B<Interval> is used to set the
934 =head2 Plugin C<barometer>
936 This plugin reads absolute air pressure using digital barometer sensor on a I2C
937 bus. Supported sensors are:
941 =item I<MPL115A2> from Freescale,
942 see L<http://www.freescale.com/webapp/sps/site/prod_summary.jsp?code=MPL115A>.
945 =item I<MPL3115> from Freescale
946 see L<http://www.freescale.com/webapp/sps/site/prod_summary.jsp?code=MPL3115A2>.
949 =item I<BMP085> from Bosch Sensortec
953 The sensor type - one of the above - is detected automatically by the plugin
954 and indicated in the plugin_instance (you will see subdirectory
955 "barometer-mpl115" or "barometer-mpl3115", or "barometer-bmp085"). The order of
956 detection is BMP085 -> MPL3115 -> MPL115A2, the first one found will be used
957 (only one sensor can be used by the plugin).
959 The plugin provides absolute barometric pressure, air pressure reduced to sea
960 level (several possible approximations) and as an auxiliary value also internal
961 sensor temperature. It uses (expects/provides) typical metric units - pressure
962 in [hPa], temperature in [C], altitude in [m].
964 It was developed and tested under Linux only. The only platform dependency is
965 the standard Linux i2c-dev interface (the particular bus driver has to
966 support the SM Bus command subset).
968 The reduction or normalization to mean sea level pressure requires (depending
969 on selected method/approximation) also altitude and reference to temperature
970 sensor(s). When multiple temperature sensors are configured the minimum of
971 their values is always used (expecting that the warmer ones are affected by
972 e.g. direct sun light at that moment).
980 TemperatureOffset 0.0
983 TemperatureSensor "myserver/onewire-F10FCA000800/temperature"
988 =item B<Device> I<device>
990 The only mandatory configuration parameter.
992 Device name of the I2C bus to which the sensor is connected. Note that
993 typically you need to have loaded the i2c-dev module.
994 Using i2c-tools you can check/list i2c buses available on your system by:
998 Then you can scan for devices on given bus. E.g. to scan the whole bus 0 use:
1002 This way you should be able to verify that the pressure sensor (either type) is
1003 connected and detected on address 0x60.
1005 =item B<Oversampling> I<value>
1007 Optional parameter controlling the oversampling/accuracy. Default value
1008 is 1 providing fastest and least accurate reading.
1010 For I<MPL115> this is the size of the averaging window. To filter out sensor
1011 noise a simple averaging using floating window of this configurable size is
1012 used. The plugin will use average of the last C<value> measurements (value of 1
1013 means no averaging). Minimal size is 1, maximal 1024.
1015 For I<MPL3115> this is the oversampling value. The actual oversampling is
1016 performed by the sensor and the higher value the higher accuracy and longer
1017 conversion time (although nothing to worry about in the collectd context).
1018 Supported values are: 1, 2, 4, 8, 16, 32, 64 and 128. Any other value is
1019 adjusted by the plugin to the closest supported one.
1021 For I<BMP085> this is the oversampling value. The actual oversampling is
1022 performed by the sensor and the higher value the higher accuracy and longer
1023 conversion time (although nothing to worry about in the collectd context).
1024 Supported values are: 1, 2, 4, 8. Any other value is adjusted by the plugin to
1025 the closest supported one.
1027 =item B<PressureOffset> I<offset>
1029 Optional parameter for MPL3115 only.
1031 You can further calibrate the sensor by supplying pressure and/or temperature
1032 offsets. This is added to the measured/caclulated value (i.e. if the measured
1033 value is too high then use negative offset).
1034 In hPa, default is 0.0.
1036 =item B<TemperatureOffset> I<offset>
1038 Optional parameter for MPL3115 only.
1040 You can further calibrate the sensor by supplying pressure and/or temperature
1041 offsets. This is added to the measured/caclulated value (i.e. if the measured
1042 value is too high then use negative offset).
1043 In C, default is 0.0.
1045 =item B<Normalization> I<method>
1047 Optional parameter, default value is 0.
1049 Normalization method - what approximation/model is used to compute the mean sea
1050 level pressure from the air absolute pressure.
1052 Supported values of the C<method> (integer between from 0 to 2) are:
1056 =item B<0> - no conversion, absolute pressure is simply copied over. For this method you
1057 do not need to configure C<Altitude> or C<TemperatureSensor>.
1059 =item B<1> - international formula for conversion ,
1061 L<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atmospheric_pressure#Altitude_atmospheric_pressure_variation>.
1062 For this method you have to configure C<Altitude> but do not need
1063 C<TemperatureSensor> (uses fixed global temperature average instead).
1065 =item B<2> - formula as recommended by the Deutsche Wetterdienst (German
1066 Meteorological Service).
1067 See L<http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barometrische_H%C3%B6henformel#Theorie>
1068 For this method you have to configure both C<Altitude> and
1069 C<TemperatureSensor>.
1074 =item B<Altitude> I<altitude>
1076 The altitude (in meters) of the location where you meassure the pressure.
1078 =item B<TemperatureSensor> I<reference>
1080 Temperature sensor(s) which should be used as a reference when normalizing the
1081 pressure using C<Normalization> method 2.
1082 When specified more sensors a minimum is found and used each time. The
1083 temperature reading directly from this pressure sensor/plugin is typically not
1084 suitable as the pressure sensor will be probably inside while we want outside
1085 temperature. The collectd reference name is something like
1086 <hostname>/<plugin_name>-<plugin_instance>/<type>-<type_instance>
1087 (<type_instance> is usually omitted when there is just single value type). Or
1088 you can figure it out from the path of the output data files.
1092 =head2 Plugin C<battery>
1094 The I<battery plugin> reports the remaining capacity, power and voltage of
1099 =item B<ValuesPercentage> B<false>|B<true>
1101 When enabled, remaining capacity is reported as a percentage, e.g. "42%
1102 capacity remaining". Otherwise the capacity is stored as reported by the
1103 battery, most likely in "Wh". This option does not work with all input methods,
1104 in particular when only C</proc/pmu> is available on an old Linux system.
1105 Defaults to B<false>.
1107 =item B<ReportDegraded> B<false>|B<true>
1109 Typical laptop batteries degrade over time, meaning the capacity decreases with
1110 recharge cycles. The maximum charge of the previous charge cycle is tracked as
1111 "last full capacity" and used to determine that a battery is "fully charged".
1113 When this option is set to B<false>, the default, the I<battery plugin> will
1114 only report the remaining capacity. If the B<ValuesPercentage> option is
1115 enabled, the relative remaining capacity is calculated as the ratio of the
1116 "remaining capacity" and the "last full capacity". This is what most tools,
1117 such as the status bar of desktop environments, also do.
1119 When set to B<true>, the battery plugin will report three values: B<charged>
1120 (remaining capacity), B<discharged> (difference between "last full capacity"
1121 and "remaining capacity") and B<degraded> (difference between "design capacity"
1122 and "last full capacity").
1124 =item B<QueryStateFS> B<false>|B<true>
1126 When set to B<true>, the battery plugin will only read statistics
1127 related to battery performance as exposed by StateFS at
1128 /run/state. StateFS is used in Mer-based Sailfish OS, for
1133 =head2 Plugin C<bind>
1135 Starting with BIND 9.5.0, the most widely used DNS server software provides
1136 extensive statistics about queries, responses and lots of other information.
1137 The bind plugin retrieves this information that's encoded in XML and provided
1138 via HTTP and submits the values to collectd.
1140 To use this plugin, you first need to tell BIND to make this information
1141 available. This is done with the C<statistics-channels> configuration option:
1143 statistics-channels {
1144 inet localhost port 8053;
1147 The configuration follows the grouping that can be seen when looking at the
1148 data with an XSLT compatible viewer, such as a modern web browser. It's
1149 probably a good idea to make yourself familiar with the provided values, so you
1150 can understand what the collected statistics actually mean.
1155 URL "http://localhost:8053/"
1170 Zone "127.in-addr.arpa/IN"
1174 The bind plugin accepts the following configuration options:
1180 URL from which to retrieve the XML data. If not specified,
1181 C<http://localhost:8053/> will be used.
1183 =item B<ParseTime> B<true>|B<false>
1185 When set to B<true>, the time provided by BIND will be parsed and used to
1186 dispatch the values. When set to B<false>, the local time source is queried.
1188 This setting is set to B<true> by default for backwards compatibility; setting
1189 this to B<false> is I<recommended> to avoid problems with timezones and
1192 =item B<OpCodes> B<true>|B<false>
1194 When enabled, statistics about the I<"OpCodes">, for example the number of
1195 C<QUERY> packets, are collected.
1199 =item B<QTypes> B<true>|B<false>
1201 When enabled, the number of I<incoming> queries by query types (for example
1202 C<A>, C<MX>, C<AAAA>) is collected.
1206 =item B<ServerStats> B<true>|B<false>
1208 Collect global server statistics, such as requests received over IPv4 and IPv6,
1209 successful queries, and failed updates.
1213 =item B<ZoneMaintStats> B<true>|B<false>
1215 Collect zone maintenance statistics, mostly information about notifications
1216 (zone updates) and zone transfers.
1220 =item B<ResolverStats> B<true>|B<false>
1222 Collect resolver statistics, i.E<nbsp>e. statistics about outgoing requests
1223 (e.E<nbsp>g. queries over IPv4, lame servers). Since the global resolver
1224 counters apparently were removed in BIND 9.5.1 and 9.6.0, this is disabled by
1225 default. Use the B<ResolverStats> option within a B<View "_default"> block
1226 instead for the same functionality.
1230 =item B<MemoryStats>
1232 Collect global memory statistics.
1236 =item B<Timeout> I<Milliseconds>
1238 The B<Timeout> option sets the overall timeout for HTTP requests to B<URL>, in
1239 milliseconds. By default, the configured B<Interval> is used to set the
1242 =item B<View> I<Name>
1244 Collect statistics about a specific I<"view">. BIND can behave different,
1245 mostly depending on the source IP-address of the request. These different
1246 configurations are called "views". If you don't use this feature, you most
1247 likely are only interested in the C<_default> view.
1249 Within a E<lt>B<View>E<nbsp>I<name>E<gt> block, you can specify which
1250 information you want to collect about a view. If no B<View> block is
1251 configured, no detailed view statistics will be collected.
1255 =item B<QTypes> B<true>|B<false>
1257 If enabled, the number of I<outgoing> queries by query type (e.E<nbsp>g. C<A>,
1258 C<MX>) is collected.
1262 =item B<ResolverStats> B<true>|B<false>
1264 Collect resolver statistics, i.E<nbsp>e. statistics about outgoing requests
1265 (e.E<nbsp>g. queries over IPv4, lame servers).
1269 =item B<CacheRRSets> B<true>|B<false>
1271 If enabled, the number of entries (I<"RR sets">) in the view's cache by query
1272 type is collected. Negative entries (queries which resulted in an error, for
1273 example names that do not exist) are reported with a leading exclamation mark,
1278 =item B<Zone> I<Name>
1280 When given, collect detailed information about the given zone in the view. The
1281 information collected if very similar to the global B<ServerStats> information
1284 You can repeat this option to collect detailed information about multiple
1287 By default no detailed zone information is collected.
1293 =head2 Plugin C<ceph>
1295 The ceph plugin collects values from JSON data to be parsed by B<libyajl>
1296 (L<https://lloyd.github.io/yajl/>) retrieved from ceph daemon admin sockets.
1298 A separate B<Daemon> block must be configured for each ceph daemon to be
1299 monitored. The following example will read daemon statistics from four
1300 separate ceph daemons running on the same device (two OSDs, one MON, one MDS) :
1303 LongRunAvgLatency false
1304 ConvertSpecialMetricTypes true
1306 SocketPath "/var/run/ceph/ceph-osd.0.asok"
1309 SocketPath "/var/run/ceph/ceph-osd.1.asok"
1312 SocketPath "/var/run/ceph/ceph-mon.ceph1.asok"
1315 SocketPath "/var/run/ceph/ceph-mds.ceph1.asok"
1319 The ceph plugin accepts the following configuration options:
1323 =item B<LongRunAvgLatency> B<true>|B<false>
1325 If enabled, latency values(sum,count pairs) are calculated as the long run
1326 average - average since the ceph daemon was started = (sum / count).
1327 When disabled, latency values are calculated as the average since the last
1328 collection = (sum_now - sum_last) / (count_now - count_last).
1332 =item B<ConvertSpecialMetricTypes> B<true>|B<false>
1334 If enabled, special metrics (metrics that differ in type from similar counters)
1335 are converted to the type of those similar counters. This currently only
1336 applies to filestore.journal_wr_bytes which is a counter for OSD daemons. The
1337 ceph schema reports this metric type as a sum,count pair while similar counters
1338 are treated as derive types. When converted, the sum is used as the counter
1339 value and is treated as a derive type.
1340 When disabled, all metrics are treated as the types received from the ceph schema.
1346 Each B<Daemon> block must have a string argument for the plugin instance name.
1347 A B<SocketPath> is also required for each B<Daemon> block:
1351 =item B<Daemon> I<DaemonName>
1353 Name to be used as the instance name for this daemon.
1355 =item B<SocketPath> I<SocketPath>
1357 Specifies the path to the UNIX admin socket of the ceph daemon.
1361 =head2 Plugin C<cgroups>
1363 This plugin collects the CPU user/system time for each I<cgroup> by reading the
1364 F<cpuacct.stat> files in the first cpuacct-mountpoint (typically
1365 F</sys/fs/cgroup/cpu.cpuacct> on machines using systemd).
1369 =item B<CGroup> I<Directory>
1371 Select I<cgroup> based on the name. Whether only matching I<cgroups> are
1372 collected or if they are ignored is controlled by the B<IgnoreSelected> option;
1375 See F</"IGNORELISTS"> for details.
1377 =item B<IgnoreSelected> B<true>|B<false>
1379 Invert the selection: If set to true, all cgroups I<except> the ones that
1380 match any one of the criteria are collected. By default only selected
1381 cgroups are collected if a selection is made. If no selection is configured
1382 at all, B<all> cgroups are selected.
1386 =head2 Plugin C<chrony>
1388 The C<chrony> plugin collects ntp data from a B<chronyd> server, such as clock
1389 skew and per-peer stratum.
1391 For talking to B<chronyd>, it mimics what the B<chronyc> control program does
1394 Available configuration options for the C<chrony> plugin:
1398 =item B<Host> I<Hostname>
1400 Hostname of the host running B<chronyd>. Defaults to B<localhost>.
1402 =item B<Port> I<Port>
1404 UDP-Port to connect to. Defaults to B<323>.
1406 =item B<Timeout> I<Timeout>
1408 Connection timeout in seconds. Defaults to B<2>.
1412 =head2 Plugin C<conntrack>
1414 This plugin collects IP conntrack statistics.
1420 Assume the B<conntrack_count> and B<conntrack_max> files to be found in
1421 F</proc/sys/net/ipv4/netfilter> instead of F</proc/sys/net/netfilter/>.
1425 =head2 Plugin C<cpu>
1427 The I<CPU plugin> collects CPU usage metrics. By default, CPU usage is reported
1428 as Jiffies, using the C<cpu> type. Two aggregations are available:
1434 Sum, per-state, over all CPUs installed in the system; and
1438 Sum, per-CPU, over all non-idle states of a CPU, creating an "active" state.
1442 The two aggregations can be combined, leading to I<collectd> only emitting a
1443 single "active" metric for the entire system. As soon as one of these
1444 aggregations (or both) is enabled, the I<cpu plugin> will report a percentage,
1445 rather than Jiffies. In addition, you can request individual, per-state,
1446 per-CPU metrics to be reported as percentage.
1448 The following configuration options are available:
1452 =item B<ReportByState> B<true>|B<false>
1454 When set to B<true>, the default, reports per-state metrics, e.g. "system",
1456 When set to B<false>, aggregates (sums) all I<non-idle> states into one
1459 =item B<ReportByCpu> B<true>|B<false>
1461 When set to B<true>, the default, reports per-CPU (per-core) metrics.
1462 When set to B<false>, instead of reporting metrics for individual CPUs, only a
1463 global sum of CPU states is emitted.
1465 =item B<ValuesPercentage> B<false>|B<true>
1467 This option is only considered when both, B<ReportByCpu> and B<ReportByState>
1468 are set to B<true>. In this case, by default, metrics will be reported as
1469 Jiffies. By setting this option to B<true>, you can request percentage values
1470 in the un-aggregated (per-CPU, per-state) mode as well.
1472 =item B<ReportNumCpu> B<false>|B<true>
1474 When set to B<true>, reports the number of available CPUs.
1475 Defaults to B<false>.
1479 =head2 Plugin C<cpufreq>
1481 This plugin doesn't have any options. It reads
1482 F</sys/devices/system/cpu/cpu0/cpufreq/scaling_cur_freq> (for the first CPU
1483 installed) to get the current CPU frequency. If this file does not exist make
1484 sure B<cpufreqd> (L<http://cpufreqd.sourceforge.net/>) or a similar tool is
1485 installed and an "cpu governor" (that's a kernel module) is loaded.
1487 =head2 Plugin C<cpusleep>
1489 This plugin doesn't have any options. It reads CLOCK_BOOTTIME and
1490 CLOCK_MONOTONIC and reports the difference between these clocks. Since
1491 BOOTTIME clock increments while device is suspended and MONOTONIC
1492 clock does not, the derivative of the difference between these clocks
1493 gives the relative amount of time the device has spent in suspend
1494 state. The recorded value is in milliseconds of sleep per seconds of
1497 =head2 Plugin C<csv>
1501 =item B<DataDir> I<Directory>
1503 Set the directory to store CSV-files under. Per default CSV-files are generated
1504 beneath the daemon's working directory, i.E<nbsp>e. the B<BaseDir>.
1505 The special strings B<stdout> and B<stderr> can be used to write to the standard
1506 output and standard error channels, respectively. This, of course, only makes
1507 much sense when collectd is running in foreground- or non-daemon-mode.
1509 =item B<StoreRates> B<true|false>
1511 If set to B<true>, convert counter values to rates. If set to B<false> (the
1512 default) counter values are stored as is, i.E<nbsp>e. as an increasing integer
1517 =head2 cURL Statistics
1519 All cURL-based plugins support collection of generic, request-based
1520 statistics. These are disabled by default and can be enabled selectively for
1521 each page or URL queried from the curl, curl_json, or curl_xml plugins. See
1522 the documentation of those plugins for specific information. This section
1523 describes the available metrics that can be configured for each plugin. All
1524 options are disabled by default.
1526 See L<http://curl.haxx.se/libcurl/c/curl_easy_getinfo.html> for more details.
1530 =item B<TotalTime> B<true|false>
1532 Total time of the transfer, including name resolving, TCP connect, etc.
1534 =item B<NamelookupTime> B<true|false>
1536 Time it took from the start until name resolving was completed.
1538 =item B<ConnectTime> B<true|false>
1540 Time it took from the start until the connect to the remote host (or proxy)
1543 =item B<AppconnectTime> B<true|false>
1545 Time it took from the start until the SSL/SSH connect/handshake to the remote
1548 =item B<PretransferTime> B<true|false>
1550 Time it took from the start until just before the transfer begins.
1552 =item B<StarttransferTime> B<true|false>
1554 Time it took from the start until the first byte was received.
1556 =item B<RedirectTime> B<true|false>
1558 Time it took for all redirection steps include name lookup, connect,
1559 pre-transfer and transfer before final transaction was started.
1561 =item B<RedirectCount> B<true|false>
1563 The total number of redirections that were actually followed.
1565 =item B<SizeUpload> B<true|false>
1567 The total amount of bytes that were uploaded.
1569 =item B<SizeDownload> B<true|false>
1571 The total amount of bytes that were downloaded.
1573 =item B<SpeedDownload> B<true|false>
1575 The average download speed that curl measured for the complete download.
1577 =item B<SpeedUpload> B<true|false>
1579 The average upload speed that curl measured for the complete upload.
1581 =item B<HeaderSize> B<true|false>
1583 The total size of all the headers received.
1585 =item B<RequestSize> B<true|false>
1587 The total size of the issued requests.
1589 =item B<ContentLengthDownload> B<true|false>
1591 The content-length of the download.
1593 =item B<ContentLengthUpload> B<true|false>
1595 The specified size of the upload.
1597 =item B<NumConnects> B<true|false>
1599 The number of new connections that were created to achieve the transfer.
1603 =head2 Plugin C<curl>
1605 The curl plugin uses the B<libcurl> (L<http://curl.haxx.se/>) to read web pages
1606 and the match infrastructure (the same code used by the tail plugin) to use
1607 regular expressions with the received data.
1609 The following example will read the current value of AMD stock from Google's
1610 finance page and dispatch the value to collectd.
1613 <Page "stock_quotes">
1614 URL "http://finance.google.com/finance?q=NYSE%3AAMD"
1620 CACert "/path/to/ca.crt"
1621 Header "X-Custom-Header: foobar"
1624 MeasureResponseTime false
1625 MeasureResponseCode false
1628 Regex "<span +class=\"pr\"[^>]*> *([0-9]*\\.[0-9]+) *</span>"
1629 DSType "GaugeAverage"
1630 # Note: `stock_value' is not a standard type.
1637 In the B<Plugin> block, there may be one or more B<Page> blocks, each defining
1638 a web page and one or more "matches" to be performed on the returned data. The
1639 string argument to the B<Page> block is used as plugin instance.
1641 The following options are valid within B<Page> blocks:
1647 URL of the web site to retrieve. Since a regular expression will be used to
1648 extract information from this data, non-binary data is a big plus here ;)
1650 =item B<User> I<Name>
1652 Username to use if authorization is required to read the page.
1654 =item B<Password> I<Password>
1656 Password to use if authorization is required to read the page.
1658 =item B<Digest> B<true>|B<false>
1660 Enable HTTP digest authentication.
1662 =item B<VerifyPeer> B<true>|B<false>
1664 Enable or disable peer SSL certificate verification. See
1665 L<http://curl.haxx.se/docs/sslcerts.html> for details. Enabled by default.
1667 =item B<VerifyHost> B<true>|B<false>
1669 Enable or disable peer host name verification. If enabled, the plugin checks if
1670 the C<Common Name> or a C<Subject Alternate Name> field of the SSL certificate
1671 matches the host name provided by the B<URL> option. If this identity check
1672 fails, the connection is aborted. Obviously, only works when connecting to a
1673 SSL enabled server. Enabled by default.
1675 =item B<CACert> I<file>
1677 File that holds one or more SSL certificates. If you want to use HTTPS you will
1678 possibly need this option. What CA certificates come bundled with C<libcurl>
1679 and are checked by default depends on the distribution you use.
1681 =item B<Header> I<Header>
1683 A HTTP header to add to the request. Multiple headers are added if this option
1684 is specified more than once.
1686 =item B<Post> I<Body>
1688 Specifies that the HTTP operation should be a POST instead of a GET. The
1689 complete data to be posted is given as the argument. This option will usually
1690 need to be accompanied by a B<Header> option to set an appropriate
1691 C<Content-Type> for the post body (e.g. to
1692 C<application/x-www-form-urlencoded>).
1694 =item B<MeasureResponseTime> B<true>|B<false>
1696 Measure response time for the request. If this setting is enabled, B<Match>
1697 blocks (see below) are optional. Disabled by default.
1699 Beware that requests will get aborted if they take too long to complete. Adjust
1700 B<Timeout> accordingly if you expect B<MeasureResponseTime> to report such slow
1703 This option is similar to enabling the B<TotalTime> statistic but it's
1704 measured by collectd instead of cURL.
1706 =item B<MeasureResponseCode> B<true>|B<false>
1708 Measure response code for the request. If this setting is enabled, B<Match>
1709 blocks (see below) are optional. Disabled by default.
1711 =item B<E<lt>StatisticsE<gt>>
1713 One B<Statistics> block can be used to specify cURL statistics to be collected
1714 for each request to the remote web site. See the section "cURL Statistics"
1715 above for details. If this setting is enabled, B<Match> blocks (see below) are
1718 =item B<E<lt>MatchE<gt>>
1720 One or more B<Match> blocks that define how to match information in the data
1721 returned by C<libcurl>. The C<curl> plugin uses the same infrastructure that's
1722 used by the C<tail> plugin, so please see the documentation of the C<tail>
1723 plugin below on how matches are defined. If the B<MeasureResponseTime> or
1724 B<MeasureResponseCode> options are set to B<true>, B<Match> blocks are
1727 =item B<Timeout> I<Milliseconds>
1729 The B<Timeout> option sets the overall timeout for HTTP requests to B<URL>, in
1730 milliseconds. By default, the configured B<Interval> is used to set the
1731 timeout. Prior to version 5.5.0, there was no timeout and requests could hang
1732 indefinitely. This legacy behaviour can be achieved by setting the value of
1735 If B<Timeout> is 0 or bigger than the B<Interval>, keep in mind that each slow
1736 network connection will stall one read thread. Adjust the B<ReadThreads> global
1737 setting accordingly to prevent this from blocking other plugins.
1741 =head2 Plugin C<curl_json>
1743 The B<curl_json plugin> collects values from JSON data to be parsed by
1744 B<libyajl> (L<https://lloyd.github.io/yajl/>) retrieved via
1745 either B<libcurl> (L<http://curl.haxx.se/>) or read directly from a
1746 unix socket. The former can be used, for example, to collect values
1747 from CouchDB documents (which are stored JSON notation), and the
1748 latter to collect values from a uWSGI stats socket.
1750 The following example will collect several values from the built-in
1751 C<_stats> runtime statistics module of I<CouchDB>
1752 (L<http://wiki.apache.org/couchdb/Runtime_Statistics>).
1755 <URL "http://localhost:5984/_stats">
1757 <Key "httpd/requests/count">
1758 Type "http_requests"
1761 <Key "httpd_request_methods/*/count">
1762 Type "http_request_methods"
1765 <Key "httpd_status_codes/*/count">
1766 Type "http_response_codes"
1771 This example will collect data directly from a I<uWSGI> "Stats Server" socket.
1774 <Sock "/var/run/uwsgi.stats.sock">
1776 <Key "workers/*/requests">
1777 Type "http_requests"
1780 <Key "workers/*/apps/*/requests">
1781 Type "http_requests"
1786 In the B<Plugin> block, there may be one or more B<URL> blocks, each
1787 defining a URL to be fetched via HTTP (using libcurl) or B<Sock>
1788 blocks defining a unix socket to read JSON from directly. Each of
1789 these blocks may have one or more B<Key> blocks.
1791 The B<Key> string argument must be in a path format. Each component is
1792 used to match the key from a JSON map or the index of an JSON
1793 array. If a path component of a B<Key> is a I<*>E<nbsp>wildcard, the
1794 values for all map keys or array indices will be collectd.
1796 The following options are valid within B<URL> blocks:
1800 =item B<Host> I<Name>
1802 Use I<Name> as the host name when submitting values. Defaults to the global
1805 =item B<Instance> I<Instance>
1807 Sets the plugin instance to I<Instance>.
1809 =item B<Interval> I<Interval>
1811 Sets the interval (in seconds) in which the values will be collected from this
1812 URL. By default the global B<Interval> setting will be used.
1814 =item B<User> I<Name>
1816 =item B<Password> I<Password>
1818 =item B<Digest> B<true>|B<false>
1820 =item B<VerifyPeer> B<true>|B<false>
1822 =item B<VerifyHost> B<true>|B<false>
1824 =item B<CACert> I<file>
1826 =item B<Header> I<Header>
1828 =item B<Post> I<Body>
1830 =item B<Timeout> I<Milliseconds>
1832 These options behave exactly equivalent to the appropriate options of the
1833 I<cURL> plugin. Please see there for a detailed description.
1835 =item B<E<lt>StatisticsE<gt>>
1837 One B<Statistics> block can be used to specify cURL statistics to be collected
1838 for each request to the remote URL. See the section "cURL Statistics" above
1843 The following options are valid within B<Key> blocks:
1847 =item B<Type> I<Type>
1849 Sets the type used to dispatch the values to the daemon. Detailed information
1850 about types and their configuration can be found in L<types.db(5)>. This
1851 option is mandatory.
1853 =item B<Instance> I<Instance>
1855 Type-instance to use. Defaults to the current map key or current string array element value.
1859 =head2 Plugin C<curl_xml>
1861 The B<curl_xml plugin> uses B<libcurl> (L<http://curl.haxx.se/>) and B<libxml2>
1862 (L<http://xmlsoft.org/>) to retrieve XML data via cURL.
1865 <URL "http://localhost/stats.xml">
1867 Instance "some_instance"
1872 CACert "/path/to/ca.crt"
1873 Header "X-Custom-Header: foobar"
1876 <XPath "table[@id=\"magic_level\"]/tr">
1878 #InstancePrefix "prefix-"
1879 InstanceFrom "td[1]"
1880 ValuesFrom "td[2]/span[@class=\"level\"]"
1885 In the B<Plugin> block, there may be one or more B<URL> blocks, each defining a
1886 URL to be fetched using libcurl. Within each B<URL> block there are
1887 options which specify the connection parameters, for example authentication
1888 information, and one or more B<XPath> blocks.
1890 Each B<XPath> block specifies how to get one type of information. The
1891 string argument must be a valid XPath expression which returns a list
1892 of "base elements". One value is dispatched for each "base element". The
1893 I<type instance> and values are looked up using further I<XPath> expressions
1894 that should be relative to the base element.
1896 Within the B<URL> block the following options are accepted:
1900 =item B<Host> I<Name>
1902 Use I<Name> as the host name when submitting values. Defaults to the global
1905 =item B<Instance> I<Instance>
1907 Use I<Instance> as the plugin instance when submitting values. Defaults to an
1908 empty string (no plugin instance).
1910 =item B<Namespace> I<Prefix> I<URL>
1912 If an XPath expression references namespaces, they must be specified
1913 with this option. I<Prefix> is the "namespace prefix" used in the XML document.
1914 I<URL> is the "namespace name", an URI reference uniquely identifying the
1915 namespace. The option can be repeated to register multiple namespaces.
1919 Namespace "s" "http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/soap/envelope/"
1920 Namespace "m" "http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML"
1922 =item B<User> I<User>
1924 =item B<Password> I<Password>
1926 =item B<Digest> B<true>|B<false>
1928 =item B<VerifyPeer> B<true>|B<false>
1930 =item B<VerifyHost> B<true>|B<false>
1932 =item B<CACert> I<CA Cert File>
1934 =item B<Header> I<Header>
1936 =item B<Post> I<Body>
1938 =item B<Timeout> I<Milliseconds>
1940 These options behave exactly equivalent to the appropriate options of the
1941 I<cURL plugin>. Please see there for a detailed description.
1943 =item B<E<lt>StatisticsE<gt>>
1945 One B<Statistics> block can be used to specify cURL statistics to be collected
1946 for each request to the remote URL. See the section "cURL Statistics" above
1949 =item E<lt>B<XPath> I<XPath-expression>E<gt>
1951 Within each B<URL> block, there must be one or more B<XPath> blocks. Each
1952 B<XPath> block specifies how to get one type of information. The string
1953 argument must be a valid XPath expression which returns a list of "base
1954 elements". One value is dispatched for each "base element".
1956 Within the B<XPath> block the following options are accepted:
1960 =item B<Type> I<Type>
1962 Specifies the I<Type> used for submitting patches. This determines the number
1963 of values that are required / expected and whether the strings are parsed as
1964 signed or unsigned integer or as double values. See L<types.db(5)> for details.
1965 This option is required.
1967 =item B<InstancePrefix> I<InstancePrefix>
1969 Prefix the I<type instance> with I<InstancePrefix>. The values are simply
1970 concatenated together without any separator.
1971 This option is optional.
1973 =item B<InstanceFrom> I<InstanceFrom>
1975 Specifies a XPath expression to use for determining the I<type instance>. The
1976 XPath expression must return exactly one element. The element's value is then
1977 used as I<type instance>, possibly prefixed with I<InstancePrefix> (see above).
1979 This value is required. As a special exception, if the "base XPath expression"
1980 (the argument to the B<XPath> block) returns exactly one argument, then this
1981 option may be omitted.
1983 =item B<ValuesFrom> I<ValuesFrom> [I<ValuesFrom> ...]
1985 Specifies one or more XPath expression to use for reading the values. The
1986 number of XPath expressions must match the number of data sources in the
1987 I<type> specified with B<Type> (see above). Each XPath expression must return
1988 exactly one element. The element's value is then parsed as a number and used as
1989 value for the appropriate value in the value list dispatched to the daemon.
1995 =head2 Plugin C<dbi>
1997 This plugin uses the B<dbi> library (L<http://libdbi.sourceforge.net/>) to
1998 connect to various databases, execute I<SQL> statements and read back the
1999 results. I<dbi> is an acronym for "database interface" in case you were
2000 wondering about the name. You can configure how each column is to be
2001 interpreted and the plugin will generate one or more data sets from each row
2002 returned according to these rules.
2004 Because the plugin is very generic, the configuration is a little more complex
2005 than those of other plugins. It usually looks something like this:
2008 <Query "out_of_stock">
2009 Statement "SELECT category, COUNT(*) AS value FROM products WHERE in_stock = 0 GROUP BY category"
2010 # Use with MySQL 5.0.0 or later
2014 InstancePrefix "out_of_stock"
2015 InstancesFrom "category"
2019 <Database "product_information">
2022 DriverOption "host" "localhost"
2023 DriverOption "username" "collectd"
2024 DriverOption "password" "aZo6daiw"
2025 DriverOption "dbname" "prod_info"
2026 SelectDB "prod_info"
2027 Query "out_of_stock"
2031 The configuration above defines one query with one result and one database. The
2032 query is then linked to the database with the B<Query> option I<within> the
2033 B<E<lt>DatabaseE<gt>> block. You can have any number of queries and databases
2034 and you can also use the B<Include> statement to split up the configuration
2035 file in multiple, smaller files. However, the B<E<lt>QueryE<gt>> block I<must>
2036 precede the B<E<lt>DatabaseE<gt>> blocks, because the file is interpreted from
2039 The following is a complete list of options:
2041 =head3 B<Query> blocks
2043 Query blocks define I<SQL> statements and how the returned data should be
2044 interpreted. They are identified by the name that is given in the opening line
2045 of the block. Thus the name needs to be unique. Other than that, the name is
2046 not used in collectd.
2048 In each B<Query> block, there is one or more B<Result> blocks. B<Result> blocks
2049 define which column holds which value or instance information. You can use
2050 multiple B<Result> blocks to create multiple values from one returned row. This
2051 is especially useful, when queries take a long time and sending almost the same
2052 query again and again is not desirable.
2056 <Query "environment">
2057 Statement "select station, temperature, humidity from environment"
2060 # InstancePrefix "foo"
2061 InstancesFrom "station"
2062 ValuesFrom "temperature"
2066 InstancesFrom "station"
2067 ValuesFrom "humidity"
2071 The following options are accepted:
2075 =item B<Statement> I<SQL>
2077 Sets the statement that should be executed on the server. This is B<not>
2078 interpreted by collectd, but simply passed to the database server. Therefore,
2079 the SQL dialect that's used depends on the server collectd is connected to.
2081 The query has to return at least two columns, one for the instance and one
2082 value. You cannot omit the instance, even if the statement is guaranteed to
2083 always return exactly one line. In that case, you can usually specify something
2086 Statement "SELECT \"instance\", COUNT(*) AS value FROM table"
2088 (That works with MySQL but may not be valid SQL according to the spec. If you
2089 use a more strict database server, you may have to select from a dummy table or
2092 Please note that some databases, for example B<Oracle>, will fail if you
2093 include a semicolon at the end of the statement.
2095 =item B<MinVersion> I<Version>
2097 =item B<MaxVersion> I<Value>
2099 Only use this query for the specified database version. You can use these
2100 options to provide multiple queries with the same name but with a slightly
2101 different syntax. The plugin will use only those queries, where the specified
2102 minimum and maximum versions fit the version of the database in use.
2104 The database version is determined by C<dbi_conn_get_engine_version>, see the
2105 L<libdbi documentation|http://libdbi.sourceforge.net/docs/programmers-guide/reference-conn.html#DBI-CONN-GET-ENGINE-VERSION>
2106 for details. Basically, each part of the version is assumed to be in the range
2107 from B<00> to B<99> and all dots are removed. So version "4.1.2" becomes
2108 "40102", version "5.0.42" becomes "50042".
2110 B<Warning:> The plugin will use B<all> matching queries, so if you specify
2111 multiple queries with the same name and B<overlapping> ranges, weird stuff will
2112 happen. Don't to it! A valid example would be something along these lines:
2123 In the above example, there are three ranges that don't overlap. The last one
2124 goes from version "5.1.0" to infinity, meaning "all later versions". Versions
2125 before "4.0.0" are not specified.
2127 =item B<Type> I<Type>
2129 The B<type> that's used for each line returned. See L<types.db(5)> for more
2130 details on how types are defined. In short: A type is a predefined layout of
2131 data and the number of values and type of values has to match the type
2134 If you specify "temperature" here, you need exactly one gauge column. If you
2135 specify "if_octets", you will need two counter columns. See the B<ValuesFrom>
2138 There must be exactly one B<Type> option inside each B<Result> block.
2140 =item B<InstancePrefix> I<prefix>
2142 Prepends I<prefix> to the type instance. If B<InstancesFrom> (see below) is not
2143 given, the string is simply copied. If B<InstancesFrom> is given, I<prefix> and
2144 all strings returned in the appropriate columns are concatenated together,
2145 separated by dashes I<("-")>.
2147 =item B<InstancesFrom> I<column0> [I<column1> ...]
2149 Specifies the columns whose values will be used to create the "type-instance"
2150 for each row. If you specify more than one column, the value of all columns
2151 will be joined together with dashes I<("-")> as separation characters.
2153 The plugin itself does not check whether or not all built instances are
2154 different. It's your responsibility to assure that each is unique. This is
2155 especially true, if you do not specify B<InstancesFrom>: B<You> have to make
2156 sure that only one row is returned in this case.
2158 If neither B<InstancePrefix> nor B<InstancesFrom> is given, the type-instance
2161 =item B<ValuesFrom> I<column0> [I<column1> ...]
2163 Names the columns whose content is used as the actual data for the data sets
2164 that are dispatched to the daemon. How many such columns you need is determined
2165 by the B<Type> setting above. If you specify too many or not enough columns,
2166 the plugin will complain about that and no data will be submitted to the
2169 The actual data type in the columns is not that important. The plugin will
2170 automatically cast the values to the right type if it know how to do that. So
2171 it should be able to handle integer an floating point types, as well as strings
2172 (if they include a number at the beginning).
2174 There must be at least one B<ValuesFrom> option inside each B<Result> block.
2176 =item B<MetadataFrom> [I<column0> I<column1> ...]
2178 Names the columns whose content is used as metadata for the data sets
2179 that are dispatched to the daemon.
2181 The actual data type in the columns is not that important. The plugin will
2182 automatically cast the values to the right type if it know how to do that. So
2183 it should be able to handle integer an floating point types, as well as strings
2184 (if they include a number at the beginning).
2188 =head3 B<Database> blocks
2190 Database blocks define a connection to a database and which queries should be
2191 sent to that database. Since the used "dbi" library can handle a wide variety
2192 of databases, the configuration is very generic. If in doubt, refer to libdbi's
2193 documentationE<nbsp>- we stick as close to the terminology used there.
2195 Each database needs a "name" as string argument in the starting tag of the
2196 block. This name will be used as "PluginInstance" in the values submitted to
2197 the daemon. Other than that, that name is not used.
2201 =item B<Interval> I<Interval>
2203 Sets the interval (in seconds) in which the values will be collected from this
2204 database. By default the global B<Interval> setting will be used.
2206 =item B<Driver> I<Driver>
2208 Specifies the driver to use to connect to the database. In many cases those
2209 drivers are named after the database they can connect to, but this is not a
2210 technical necessity. These drivers are sometimes referred to as "DBD",
2211 B<D>ataB<B>ase B<D>river, and some distributions ship them in separate
2212 packages. Drivers for the "dbi" library are developed by the B<libdbi-drivers>
2213 project at L<http://libdbi-drivers.sourceforge.net/>.
2215 You need to give the driver name as expected by the "dbi" library here. You
2216 should be able to find that in the documentation for each driver. If you
2217 mistype the driver name, the plugin will dump a list of all known driver names
2220 =item B<DriverOption> I<Key> I<Value>
2222 Sets driver-specific options. What option a driver supports can be found in the
2223 documentation for each driver, somewhere at
2224 L<http://libdbi-drivers.sourceforge.net/>. However, the options "host",
2225 "username", "password", and "dbname" seem to be deE<nbsp>facto standards.
2227 DBDs can register two types of options: String options and numeric options. The
2228 plugin will use the C<dbi_conn_set_option> function when the configuration
2229 provides a string and the C<dbi_conn_require_option_numeric> function when the
2230 configuration provides a number. So these two lines will actually result in
2231 different calls being used:
2233 DriverOption "Port" 1234 # numeric
2234 DriverOption "Port" "1234" # string
2236 Unfortunately, drivers are not too keen to report errors when an unknown option
2237 is passed to them, so invalid settings here may go unnoticed. This is not the
2238 plugin's fault, it will report errors if it gets them from the libraryE<nbsp>/
2239 the driver. If a driver complains about an option, the plugin will dump a
2240 complete list of all options understood by that driver to the log. There is no
2241 way to programmatically find out if an option expects a string or a numeric
2242 argument, so you will have to refer to the appropriate DBD's documentation to
2243 find this out. Sorry.
2245 =item B<SelectDB> I<Database>
2247 In some cases, the database name you connect with is not the database name you
2248 want to use for querying data. If this option is set, the plugin will "select"
2249 (switch to) that database after the connection is established.
2251 =item B<Query> I<QueryName>
2253 Associates the query named I<QueryName> with this database connection. The
2254 query needs to be defined I<before> this statement, i.E<nbsp>e. all query
2255 blocks you want to refer to must be placed above the database block you want to
2258 =item B<Host> I<Hostname>
2260 Sets the B<host> field of I<value lists> to I<Hostname> when dispatching
2261 values. Defaults to the global hostname setting.
2269 =item B<Device> I<Device>
2271 Select partitions based on the devicename.
2273 See F</"IGNORELISTS"> for details.
2275 =item B<MountPoint> I<Directory>
2277 Select partitions based on the mountpoint.
2279 See F</"IGNORELISTS"> for details.
2281 =item B<FSType> I<FSType>
2283 Select partitions based on the filesystem type.
2285 See F</"IGNORELISTS"> for details.
2287 =item B<IgnoreSelected> B<true>|B<false>
2289 Invert the selection: If set to true, all partitions B<except> the ones that
2290 match any one of the criteria are collected. By default only selected
2291 partitions are collected if a selection is made. If no selection is configured
2292 at all, B<all> partitions are selected.
2294 =item B<ReportByDevice> B<true>|B<false>
2296 Report using the device name rather than the mountpoint. i.e. with this I<false>,
2297 (the default), it will report a disk as "root", but with it I<true>, it will be
2298 "sda1" (or whichever).
2300 =item B<ReportInodes> B<true>|B<false>
2302 Enables or disables reporting of free, reserved and used inodes. Defaults to
2303 inode collection being disabled.
2305 Enable this option if inodes are a scarce resource for you, usually because
2306 many small files are stored on the disk. This is a usual scenario for mail
2307 transfer agents and web caches.
2309 =item B<ValuesAbsolute> B<true>|B<false>
2311 Enables or disables reporting of free and used disk space in 1K-blocks.
2312 Defaults to B<true>.
2314 =item B<ValuesPercentage> B<false>|B<true>
2316 Enables or disables reporting of free and used disk space in percentage.
2317 Defaults to B<false>.
2319 This is useful for deploying I<collectd> on the cloud, where machines with
2320 different disk size may exist. Then it is more practical to configure
2321 thresholds based on relative disk size.
2325 =head2 Plugin C<disk>
2327 The C<disk> plugin collects information about the usage of physical disks and
2328 logical disks (partitions). Values collected are the number of octets written
2329 to and read from a disk or partition, the number of read/write operations
2330 issued to the disk and a rather complex "time" it took for these commands to be
2333 Using the following two options you can ignore some disks or configure the
2334 collection only of specific disks.
2338 =item B<Disk> I<Name>
2340 Select the disk I<Name>. Whether it is collected or ignored depends on the
2341 B<IgnoreSelected> setting, see below. As with other plugins that use the
2342 daemon's ignorelist functionality, a string that starts and ends with a slash
2343 is interpreted as a regular expression. Examples:
2348 See F</"IGNORELISTS"> for details.
2350 =item B<IgnoreSelected> B<true>|B<false>
2352 Sets whether selected disks, i.E<nbsp>e. the ones matches by any of the B<Disk>
2353 statements, are ignored or if all other disks are ignored. The behavior
2354 (hopefully) is intuitive: If no B<Disk> option is configured, all disks are
2355 collected. If at least one B<Disk> option is given and no B<IgnoreSelected> or
2356 set to B<false>, B<only> matching disks will be collected. If B<IgnoreSelected>
2357 is set to B<true>, all disks are collected B<except> the ones matched.
2359 =item B<UseBSDName> B<true>|B<false>
2361 Whether to use the device's "BSD Name", on MacE<nbsp>OSE<nbsp>X, instead of the
2362 default major/minor numbers. Requires collectd to be built with Apple's
2365 =item B<UdevNameAttr> I<Attribute>
2367 Attempt to override disk instance name with the value of a specified udev
2368 attribute when built with B<libudev>. If the attribute is not defined for the
2369 given device, the default name is used. Example:
2371 UdevNameAttr "DM_NAME"
2375 =head2 Plugin C<dns>
2379 =item B<Interface> I<Interface>
2381 The dns plugin uses B<libpcap> to capture dns traffic and analyzes it. This
2382 option sets the interface that should be used. If this option is not set, or
2383 set to "any", the plugin will try to get packets from B<all> interfaces. This
2384 may not work on certain platforms, such as MacE<nbsp>OSE<nbsp>X.
2386 =item B<IgnoreSource> I<IP-address>
2388 Ignore packets that originate from this address.
2390 =item B<SelectNumericQueryTypes> B<true>|B<false>
2392 Enabled by default, collects unknown (and thus presented as numeric only) query types.
2396 =head2 Plugin C<dpdkevents>
2398 The I<dpdkevents plugin> collects events from DPDK such as link status of
2399 network ports and Keep Alive status of DPDK logical cores.
2400 In order to get Keep Alive events following requirements must be met:
2402 - support for Keep Alive implemented in DPDK application. More details can
2403 be found here: http://dpdk.org/doc/guides/sample_app_ug/keep_alive.html
2407 <Plugin "dpdkevents">
2411 ProcessType "secondary"
2414 <Event "link_status">
2415 SendEventsOnUpdate true
2416 EnabledPortMask 0xffff
2417 PortName "interface1"
2418 PortName "interface2"
2419 SendNotification false
2421 <Event "keep_alive">
2422 SendEventsOnUpdate true
2424 KeepAliveShmName "/dpdk_keepalive_shm_name"
2425 SendNotification false
2432 =head3 The EAL block
2436 =item B<Coremask> I<Mask>
2438 =item B<Memorychannels> I<Channels>
2440 Number of memory channels per processor socket.
2442 =item B<ProcessType> I<type>
2444 The type of DPDK process instance.
2446 =item B<FilePrefix> I<File>
2448 The prefix text used for hugepage filenames. The filename will be set to
2449 /var/run/.<prefix>_config where prefix is what is passed in by the user.
2453 =head3 The Event block
2455 The B<Event> block defines configuration for specific event. It accepts a
2456 single argument which specifies the name of the event.
2458 =head4 Link Status event
2462 =item B<SendEventOnUpdate> I<true|false>
2464 If set to true link status value will be dispatched only when it is
2465 different from previously read value. This is an optional argument - default
2468 =item B<EnabledPortMask> I<Mask>
2470 A hexidecimal bit mask of the DPDK ports which should be enabled. A mask
2471 of 0x0 means that all ports will be disabled. A bitmask of all F's means
2472 that all ports will be enabled. This is an optional argument - by default
2473 all ports are enabled.
2475 =item B<PortName> I<Name>
2477 A string containing an optional name for the enabled DPDK ports. Each PortName
2478 option should contain only one port name; specify as many PortName options as
2479 desired. Default naming convention will be used if PortName is blank. If there
2480 are less PortName options than there are enabled ports, the default naming
2481 convention will be used for the additional ports.
2483 =item B<SendNotification> I<true|false>
2485 If set to true, link status notifications are sent, instead of link status
2486 being collected as a statistic. This is an optional argument - default
2491 =head4 Keep Alive event
2495 =item B<SendEventOnUpdate> I<true|false>
2497 If set to true keep alive value will be dispatched only when it is
2498 different from previously read value. This is an optional argument - default
2501 =item B<LCoreMask> I<Mask>
2503 An hexadecimal bit mask of the logical cores to monitor keep alive state.
2505 =item B<KeepAliveShmName> I<Name>
2507 Shared memory name identifier that is used by secondary process to monitor
2508 the keep alive cores state.
2510 =item B<SendNotification> I<true|false>
2512 If set to true, keep alive notifications are sent, instead of keep alive
2513 information being collected as a statistic. This is an optional
2514 argument - default value is false.
2518 =head2 Plugin C<dpdkstat>
2520 The I<dpdkstat plugin> collects information about DPDK interfaces using the
2521 extended NIC stats API in DPDK.
2529 ProcessType "secondary"
2533 SharedMemObj "dpdk_collectd_stats_0"
2534 EnabledPortMask 0xffff
2535 PortName "interface1"
2536 PortName "interface2"
2541 =head3 The EAL block
2545 =item B<Coremask> I<Mask>
2547 A string containing an hexadecimal bit mask of the cores to run on. Note that
2548 core numbering can change between platforms and should be determined beforehand.
2550 =item B<Memorychannels> I<Channels>
2552 A string containing a number of memory channels per processor socket.
2554 =item B<ProcessType> I<type>
2556 A string containing the type of DPDK process instance.
2558 =item B<FilePrefix> I<File>
2560 The prefix text used for hugepage filenames. The filename will be set to
2561 /var/run/.<prefix>_config where prefix is what is passed in by the user.
2563 =item B<SocketMemory> I<MB>
2565 A string containing amount of Memory to allocate from hugepages on specific
2566 sockets in MB. This is an optional value.
2572 =item B<SharedMemObj> I<Mask>
2573 A string containing the name of the shared memory object that should be used to
2574 share stats from the DPDK secondary process to the collectd dpdkstat plugin.
2575 Defaults to dpdk_collectd_stats if no other value is configured.
2577 =item B<EnabledPortMask> I<Mask>
2579 A hexidecimal bit mask of the DPDK ports which should be enabled. A mask
2580 of 0x0 means that all ports will be disabled. A bitmask of all Fs means
2581 that all ports will be enabled. This is an optional argument - default
2582 is all ports enabled.
2584 =item B<PortName> I<Name>
2586 A string containing an optional name for the enabled DPDK ports. Each PortName
2587 option should contain only one port name; specify as many PortName options as
2588 desired. Default naming convention will be used if PortName is blank. If there
2589 are less PortName options than there are enabled ports, the default naming
2590 convention will be used for the additional ports.
2594 =head2 Plugin C<email>
2598 =item B<SocketFile> I<Path>
2600 Sets the socket-file which is to be created.
2602 =item B<SocketGroup> I<Group>
2604 If running as root change the group of the UNIX-socket after it has been
2605 created. Defaults to B<collectd>.
2607 =item B<SocketPerms> I<Permissions>
2609 Change the file permissions of the UNIX-socket after it has been created. The
2610 permissions must be given as a numeric, octal value as you would pass to
2611 L<chmod(1)>. Defaults to B<0770>.
2613 =item B<MaxConns> I<Number>
2615 Sets the maximum number of connections that can be handled in parallel. Since
2616 this many threads will be started immediately setting this to a very high
2617 value will waste valuable resources. Defaults to B<5> and will be forced to be
2618 at most B<16384> to prevent typos and dumb mistakes.
2622 =head2 Plugin C<ethstat>
2624 The I<ethstat plugin> collects information about network interface cards (NICs)
2625 by talking directly with the underlying kernel driver using L<ioctl(2)>.
2631 Map "rx_csum_offload_errors" "if_rx_errors" "checksum_offload"
2632 Map "multicast" "if_multicast"
2639 =item B<Interface> I<Name>
2641 Collect statistical information about interface I<Name>.
2643 =item B<Map> I<Name> I<Type> [I<TypeInstance>]
2645 By default, the plugin will submit values as type C<derive> and I<type
2646 instance> set to I<Name>, the name of the metric as reported by the driver. If
2647 an appropriate B<Map> option exists, the given I<Type> and, optionally,
2648 I<TypeInstance> will be used.
2650 =item B<MappedOnly> B<true>|B<false>
2652 When set to B<true>, only metrics that can be mapped to a I<type> will be
2653 collected, all other metrics will be ignored. Defaults to B<false>.
2657 =head2 Plugin C<exec>
2659 Please make sure to read L<collectd-exec(5)> before using this plugin. It
2660 contains valuable information on when the executable is executed and the
2661 output that is expected from it.
2665 =item B<Exec> I<User>[:[I<Group>]] I<Executable> [I<E<lt>argE<gt>> [I<E<lt>argE<gt>> ...]]
2667 =item B<NotificationExec> I<User>[:[I<Group>]] I<Executable> [I<E<lt>argE<gt>> [I<E<lt>argE<gt>> ...]]
2669 Execute the executable I<Executable> as user I<User>. If the user name is
2670 followed by a colon and a group name, the effective group is set to that group.
2671 The real group and saved-set group will be set to the default group of that
2672 user. If no group is given the effective group ID will be the same as the real
2675 Please note that in order to change the user and/or group the daemon needs
2676 superuser privileges. If the daemon is run as an unprivileged user you must
2677 specify the same user/group here. If the daemon is run with superuser
2678 privileges, you must supply a non-root user here.
2680 The executable may be followed by optional arguments that are passed to the
2681 program. Please note that due to the configuration parsing numbers and boolean
2682 values may be changed. If you want to be absolutely sure that something is
2683 passed as-is please enclose it in quotes.
2685 The B<Exec> and B<NotificationExec> statements change the semantics of the
2686 programs executed, i.E<nbsp>e. the data passed to them and the response
2687 expected from them. This is documented in great detail in L<collectd-exec(5)>.
2691 =head2 Plugin C<fhcount>
2693 The C<fhcount> plugin provides statistics about used, unused and total number of
2694 file handles on Linux.
2696 The I<fhcount plugin> provides the following configuration options:
2700 =item B<ValuesAbsolute> B<true>|B<false>
2702 Enables or disables reporting of file handles usage in absolute numbers,
2703 e.g. file handles used. Defaults to B<true>.
2705 =item B<ValuesPercentage> B<false>|B<true>
2707 Enables or disables reporting of file handles usage in percentages, e.g.
2708 percent of file handles used. Defaults to B<false>.
2712 =head2 Plugin C<filecount>
2714 The C<filecount> plugin counts the number of files in a certain directory (and
2715 its subdirectories) and their combined size. The configuration is very straight
2718 <Plugin "filecount">
2719 <Directory "/var/qmail/queue/mess">
2720 Instance "qmail-message"
2722 <Directory "/var/qmail/queue/todo">
2723 Instance "qmail-todo"
2725 <Directory "/var/lib/php5">
2726 Instance "php5-sessions"
2731 The example above counts the number of files in QMail's queue directories and
2732 the number of PHP5 sessions. Jfiy: The "todo" queue holds the messages that
2733 QMail has not yet looked at, the "message" queue holds the messages that were
2734 classified into "local" and "remote".
2736 As you can see, the configuration consists of one or more C<Directory> blocks,
2737 each of which specifies a directory in which to count the files. Within those
2738 blocks, the following options are recognized:
2742 =item B<Instance> I<Instance>
2744 Sets the plugin instance to I<Instance>. That instance name must be unique, but
2745 it's your responsibility, the plugin doesn't check for that. If not given, the
2746 instance is set to the directory name with all slashes replaced by underscores
2747 and all leading underscores removed.
2749 =item B<Name> I<Pattern>
2751 Only count files that match I<Pattern>, where I<Pattern> is a shell-like
2752 wildcard as understood by L<fnmatch(3)>. Only the B<filename> is checked
2753 against the pattern, not the entire path. In case this makes it easier for you:
2754 This option has been named after the B<-name> parameter to L<find(1)>.
2756 =item B<MTime> I<Age>
2758 Count only files of a specific age: If I<Age> is greater than zero, only files
2759 that haven't been touched in the last I<Age> seconds are counted. If I<Age> is
2760 a negative number, this is inversed. For example, if B<-60> is specified, only
2761 files that have been modified in the last minute will be counted.
2763 The number can also be followed by a "multiplier" to easily specify a larger
2764 timespan. When given in this notation, the argument must in quoted, i.E<nbsp>e.
2765 must be passed as string. So the B<-60> could also be written as B<"-1m"> (one
2766 minute). Valid multipliers are C<s> (second), C<m> (minute), C<h> (hour), C<d>
2767 (day), C<w> (week), and C<y> (year). There is no "month" multiplier. You can
2768 also specify fractional numbers, e.E<nbsp>g. B<"0.5d"> is identical to
2771 =item B<Size> I<Size>
2773 Count only files of a specific size. When I<Size> is a positive number, only
2774 files that are at least this big are counted. If I<Size> is a negative number,
2775 this is inversed, i.E<nbsp>e. only files smaller than the absolute value of
2776 I<Size> are counted.
2778 As with the B<MTime> option, a "multiplier" may be added. For a detailed
2779 description see above. Valid multipliers here are C<b> (byte), C<k> (kilobyte),
2780 C<m> (megabyte), C<g> (gigabyte), C<t> (terabyte), and C<p> (petabyte). Please
2781 note that there are 1000 bytes in a kilobyte, not 1024.
2783 =item B<Recursive> I<true>|I<false>
2785 Controls whether or not to recurse into subdirectories. Enabled by default.
2787 =item B<IncludeHidden> I<true>|I<false>
2789 Controls whether or not to include "hidden" files and directories in the count.
2790 "Hidden" files and directories are those, whose name begins with a dot.
2791 Defaults to I<false>, i.e. by default hidden files and directories are ignored.
2795 =head2 Plugin C<GenericJMX>
2797 The I<GenericJMX plugin> is written in I<Java> and therefore documented in
2798 L<collectd-java(5)>.
2800 =head2 Plugin C<gmond>
2802 The I<gmond> plugin received the multicast traffic sent by B<gmond>, the
2803 statistics collection daemon of Ganglia. Mappings for the standard "metrics"
2804 are built-in, custom mappings may be added via B<Metric> blocks, see below.
2809 MCReceiveFrom "239.2.11.71" "8649"
2810 <Metric "swap_total">
2812 TypeInstance "total"
2815 <Metric "swap_free">
2822 The following metrics are built-in:
2828 load_one, load_five, load_fifteen
2832 cpu_user, cpu_system, cpu_idle, cpu_nice, cpu_wio
2836 mem_free, mem_shared, mem_buffers, mem_cached, mem_total
2848 Available configuration options:
2852 =item B<MCReceiveFrom> I<MCGroup> [I<Port>]
2854 Sets sets the multicast group and UDP port to which to subscribe.
2856 Default: B<239.2.11.71>E<nbsp>/E<nbsp>B<8649>
2858 =item E<lt>B<Metric> I<Name>E<gt>
2860 These blocks add a new metric conversion to the internal table. I<Name>, the
2861 string argument to the B<Metric> block, is the metric name as used by Ganglia.
2865 =item B<Type> I<Type>
2867 Type to map this metric to. Required.
2869 =item B<TypeInstance> I<Instance>
2871 Type-instance to use. Optional.
2873 =item B<DataSource> I<Name>
2875 Data source to map this metric to. If the configured type has exactly one data
2876 source, this is optional. Otherwise the option is required.
2882 =head2 Plugin C<gps>
2884 The C<gps plugin> connects to gpsd on the host machine.
2885 The host, port, timeout and pause are configurable.
2887 This is useful if you run an NTP server using a GPS for source and you want to
2890 Mind your GPS must send $--GSA for having the data reported!
2892 The following elements are collected:
2898 Number of satellites used for fix (type instance "used") and in view (type
2899 instance "visible"). 0 means no GPS satellites are visible.
2901 =item B<dilution_of_precision>
2903 Vertical and horizontal dilution (type instance "horizontal" or "vertical").
2904 It should be between 0 and 3.
2905 Look at the documentation of your GPS to know more.
2913 # Connect to localhost on gpsd regular port:
2918 # PauseConnect of 5 sec. between connection attempts.
2922 Available configuration options:
2926 =item B<Host> I<Host>
2928 The host on which gpsd daemon runs. Defaults to B<localhost>.
2930 =item B<Port> I<Port>
2932 Port to connect to gpsd on the host machine. Defaults to B<2947>.
2934 =item B<Timeout> I<Seconds>
2936 Timeout in seconds (default 0.015 sec).
2938 The GPS data stream is fetch by the plugin form the daemon.
2939 It waits for data to be available, if none arrives it times out
2940 and loop for another reading.
2941 Mind to put a low value gpsd expects value in the micro-seconds area
2942 (recommended is 500 us) since the waiting function is blocking.
2943 Value must be between 500 us and 5 sec., if outside that range the
2944 default value is applied.
2946 This only applies from gpsd release-2.95.
2948 =item B<PauseConnect> I<Seconds>
2950 Pause to apply between attempts of connection to gpsd in seconds (default 5 sec).
2954 =head2 Plugin C<grpc>
2956 The I<grpc> plugin provides an RPC interface to submit values to or query
2957 values from collectd based on the open source gRPC framework. It exposes an
2958 end-point for dispatching values to the daemon.
2960 The B<gRPC> homepage can be found at L<https://grpc.io/>.
2964 =item B<Server> I<Host> I<Port>
2966 The B<Server> statement sets the address of a server to which to send metrics
2967 via the C<DispatchValues> function.
2969 The argument I<Host> may be a hostname, an IPv4 address, or an IPv6 address.
2971 Optionally, B<Server> may be specified as a configuration block which supports
2972 the following options:
2976 =item B<EnableSSL> B<false>|B<true>
2978 Whether to require SSL for outgoing connections. Default: false.
2980 =item B<SSLCACertificateFile> I<Filename>
2982 =item B<SSLCertificateFile> I<Filename>
2984 =item B<SSLCertificateKeyFile> I<Filename>
2986 Filenames specifying SSL certificate and key material to be used with SSL
2991 =item B<Listen> I<Host> I<Port>
2993 The B<Listen> statement sets the network address to bind to. When multiple
2994 statements are specified, the daemon will bind to all of them. If none are
2995 specified, it defaults to B<0.0.0.0:50051>.
2997 The argument I<Host> may be a hostname, an IPv4 address, or an IPv6 address.
2999 Optionally, B<Listen> may be specified as a configuration block which
3000 supports the following options:
3004 =item B<EnableSSL> I<true>|I<false>
3006 Whether to enable SSL for incoming connections. Default: false.
3008 =item B<SSLCACertificateFile> I<Filename>
3010 =item B<SSLCertificateFile> I<Filename>
3012 =item B<SSLCertificateKeyFile> I<Filename>
3014 Filenames specifying SSL certificate and key material to be used with SSL
3021 =head2 Plugin C<hddtemp>
3023 To get values from B<hddtemp> collectd connects to B<localhost> (127.0.0.1),
3024 port B<7634/tcp>. The B<Host> and B<Port> options can be used to change these
3025 default values, see below. C<hddtemp> has to be running to work correctly. If
3026 C<hddtemp> is not running timeouts may appear which may interfere with other
3029 The B<hddtemp> homepage can be found at
3030 L<http://www.guzu.net/linux/hddtemp.php>.
3034 =item B<Host> I<Hostname>
3036 Hostname to connect to. Defaults to B<127.0.0.1>.
3038 =item B<Port> I<Port>
3040 TCP-Port to connect to. Defaults to B<7634>.
3044 =head2 Plugin C<hugepages>
3046 To collect B<hugepages> information, collectd reads directories
3047 "/sys/devices/system/node/*/hugepages" and
3048 "/sys/kernel/mm/hugepages".
3049 Reading of these directories can be disabled by the following
3050 options (default is enabled).
3054 =item B<ReportPerNodeHP> B<true>|B<false>
3056 If enabled, information will be collected from the hugepage
3057 counters in "/sys/devices/system/node/*/hugepages".
3058 This is used to check the per-node hugepage statistics on
3061 =item B<ReportRootHP> B<true>|B<false>
3063 If enabled, information will be collected from the hugepage
3064 counters in "/sys/kernel/mm/hugepages".
3065 This can be used on both NUMA and non-NUMA systems to check
3066 the overall hugepage statistics.
3068 =item B<ValuesPages> B<true>|B<false>
3070 Whether to report hugepages metrics in number of pages.
3071 Defaults to B<true>.
3073 =item B<ValuesBytes> B<false>|B<true>
3075 Whether to report hugepages metrics in bytes.
3076 Defaults to B<false>.
3078 =item B<ValuesPercentage> B<false>|B<true>
3080 Whether to report hugepages metrics as percentage.
3081 Defaults to B<false>.
3085 =head2 Plugin C<intel_rdt>
3087 The I<intel_rdt> plugin collects information provided by monitoring features of
3088 Intel Resource Director Technology (Intel(R) RDT) like Cache Monitoring
3089 Technology (CMT), Memory Bandwidth Monitoring (MBM). These features provide
3090 information about utilization of shared resources. CMT monitors last level cache
3091 occupancy (LLC). MBM supports two types of events reporting local and remote
3092 memory bandwidth. Local memory bandwidth (MBL) reports the bandwidth of
3093 accessing memory associated with the local socket. Remote memory bandwidth (MBR)
3094 reports the bandwidth of accessing the remote socket. Also this technology
3095 allows to monitor instructions per clock (IPC).
3096 Monitor events are hardware dependant. Monitoring capabilities are detected on
3097 plugin initialization and only supported events are monitored.
3099 B<Note:> I<intel_rdt> plugin is using model-specific registers (MSRs), which
3100 require an additional capability to be enabled if collectd is run as a service.
3101 Please refer to I<contrib/systemd.collectd.service> file for more details.
3105 <Plugin "intel_rdt">
3106 Cores "0-2" "3,4,6" "8-10,15"
3113 =item B<Interval> I<seconds>
3115 The interval within which to retrieve statistics on monitored events in seconds.
3116 For milliseconds divide the time by 1000 for example if the desired interval
3117 is 50ms, set interval to 0.05. Due to limited capacity of counters it is not
3118 recommended to set interval higher than 1 sec.
3120 =item B<Cores> I<cores groups>
3122 All events are reported on a per core basis. Monitoring of the events can be
3123 configured for group of cores (aggregated statistics). This field defines groups
3124 of cores on which to monitor supported events. The field is represented as list
3125 of strings with core group values. Each string represents a list of cores in a
3126 group. Allowed formats are:
3131 If an empty string is provided as value for this field default cores
3132 configuration is applied - a separate group is created for each core.
3136 B<Note:> By default global interval is used to retrieve statistics on monitored
3137 events. To configure a plugin specific interval use B<Interval> option of the
3138 intel_rdt <LoadPlugin> block. For milliseconds divide the time by 1000 for
3139 example if the desired interval is 50ms, set interval to 0.05.
3140 Due to limited capacity of counters it is not recommended to set interval higher
3143 =head2 Plugin C<interface>
3147 =item B<Interface> I<Interface>
3149 Select this interface. By default these interfaces will then be collected. For
3150 a more detailed description see B<IgnoreSelected> below.
3152 See F</"IGNORELISTS"> for details.
3154 =item B<IgnoreSelected> I<true>|I<false>
3156 If no configuration if given, the B<interface>-plugin will collect data from
3157 all interfaces. This may not be practical, especially for loopback- and
3158 similar interfaces. Thus, you can use the B<Interface>-option to pick the
3159 interfaces you're interested in. Sometimes, however, it's easier/preferred
3160 to collect all interfaces I<except> a few ones. This option enables you to
3161 do that: By setting B<IgnoreSelected> to I<true> the effect of
3162 B<Interface> is inverted: All selected interfaces are ignored and all
3163 other interfaces are collected.
3165 It is possible to use regular expressions to match interface names, if the
3166 name is surrounded by I</.../> and collectd was compiled with support for
3167 regexps. This is useful if there's a need to collect (or ignore) data
3168 for a group of interfaces that are similarly named, without the need to
3169 explicitly list all of them (especially useful if the list is dynamic).
3174 Interface "/^tun[0-9]+/"
3175 IgnoreSelected "true"
3177 This will ignore the loopback interface, all interfaces with names starting
3178 with I<veth> and all interfaces with names starting with I<tun> followed by
3181 =item B<ReportInactive> I<true>|I<false>
3183 When set to I<false>, only interfaces with non-zero traffic will be
3184 reported. Note that the check is done by looking into whether a
3185 package was sent at any time from boot and the corresponding counter
3186 is non-zero. So, if the interface has been sending data in the past
3187 since boot, but not during the reported time-interval, it will still
3190 The default value is I<true> and results in collection of the data
3191 from all interfaces that are selected by B<Interface> and
3192 B<IgnoreSelected> options.
3194 =item B<UniqueName> I<true>|I<false>
3196 Interface name is not unique on Solaris (KSTAT), interface name is unique
3197 only within a module/instance. Following tuple is considered unique:
3198 (ks_module, ks_instance, ks_name)
3199 If this option is set to true, interface name contains above three fields
3200 separated by an underscore. For more info on KSTAT, visit
3201 L<http://docs.oracle.com/cd/E23824_01/html/821-1468/kstat-3kstat.html#REFMAN3Ekstat-3kstat>
3203 This option is only available on Solaris.
3207 =head2 Plugin C<ipmi>
3211 =item B<Sensor> I<Sensor>
3213 Selects sensors to collect or to ignore, depending on B<IgnoreSelected>.
3215 See F</"IGNORELISTS"> for details.
3217 =item B<IgnoreSelected> I<true>|I<false>
3219 If no configuration if given, the B<ipmi> plugin will collect data from all
3220 sensors found of type "temperature", "voltage", "current" and "fanspeed".
3221 This option enables you to do that: By setting B<IgnoreSelected> to I<true>
3222 the effect of B<Sensor> is inverted: All selected sensors are ignored and
3223 all other sensors are collected.
3225 =item B<NotifySensorAdd> I<true>|I<false>
3227 If a sensor appears after initialization time of a minute a notification
3230 =item B<NotifySensorRemove> I<true>|I<false>
3232 If a sensor disappears a notification is sent.
3234 =item B<NotifySensorNotPresent> I<true>|I<false>
3236 If you have for example dual power supply and one of them is (un)plugged then
3237 a notification is sent.
3241 =head2 Plugin C<iptables>
3245 =item B<Chain> I<Table> I<Chain> [I<Comment|Number> [I<Name>]]
3247 =item B<Chain6> I<Table> I<Chain> [I<Comment|Number> [I<Name>]]
3249 Select the iptables/ip6tables filter rules to count packets and bytes from.
3251 If only I<Table> and I<Chain> are given, this plugin will collect the counters
3252 of all rules which have a comment-match. The comment is then used as
3255 If I<Comment> or I<Number> is given, only the rule with the matching comment or
3256 the I<n>th rule will be collected. Again, the comment (or the number) will be
3257 used as the type-instance.
3259 If I<Name> is supplied, it will be used as the type-instance instead of the
3260 comment or the number.
3264 =head2 Plugin C<irq>
3270 Select this irq. By default these irqs will then be collected. For a more
3271 detailed description see B<IgnoreSelected> below.
3273 See F</"IGNORELISTS"> for details.
3275 =item B<IgnoreSelected> I<true>|I<false>
3277 If no configuration if given, the B<irq>-plugin will collect data from all
3278 irqs. This may not be practical, especially if no interrupts happen. Thus, you
3279 can use the B<Irq>-option to pick the interrupt you're interested in.
3280 Sometimes, however, it's easier/preferred to collect all interrupts I<except> a
3281 few ones. This option enables you to do that: By setting B<IgnoreSelected> to
3282 I<true> the effect of B<Irq> is inverted: All selected interrupts are ignored
3283 and all other interrupts are collected.
3287 =head2 Plugin C<java>
3289 The I<Java> plugin makes it possible to write extensions for collectd in Java.
3290 This section only discusses the syntax and semantic of the configuration
3291 options. For more in-depth information on the I<Java> plugin, please read
3292 L<collectd-java(5)>.
3297 JVMArg "-verbose:jni"
3298 JVMArg "-Djava.class.path=/opt/collectd/lib/collectd/bindings/java"
3299 LoadPlugin "org.collectd.java.Foobar"
3300 <Plugin "org.collectd.java.Foobar">
3301 # To be parsed by the plugin
3305 Available configuration options:
3309 =item B<JVMArg> I<Argument>
3311 Argument that is to be passed to the I<Java Virtual Machine> (JVM). This works
3312 exactly the way the arguments to the I<java> binary on the command line work.
3313 Execute C<javaE<nbsp>--help> for details.
3315 Please note that B<all> these options must appear B<before> (i.E<nbsp>e. above)
3316 any other options! When another option is found, the JVM will be started and
3317 later options will have to be ignored!
3319 =item B<LoadPlugin> I<JavaClass>
3321 Instantiates a new I<JavaClass> object. The constructor of this object very
3322 likely then registers one or more callback methods with the server.
3324 See L<collectd-java(5)> for details.
3326 When the first such option is found, the virtual machine (JVM) is created. This
3327 means that all B<JVMArg> options must appear before (i.E<nbsp>e. above) all
3328 B<LoadPlugin> options!
3330 =item B<Plugin> I<Name>
3332 The entire block is passed to the Java plugin as an
3333 I<org.collectd.api.OConfigItem> object.
3335 For this to work, the plugin has to register a configuration callback first,
3336 see L<collectd-java(5)/"config callback">. This means, that the B<Plugin> block
3337 must appear after the appropriate B<LoadPlugin> block. Also note, that I<Name>
3338 depends on the (Java) plugin registering the callback and is completely
3339 independent from the I<JavaClass> argument passed to B<LoadPlugin>.
3343 =head2 Plugin C<load>
3345 The I<Load plugin> collects the system load. These numbers give a rough overview
3346 over the utilization of a machine. The system load is defined as the number of
3347 runnable tasks in the run-queue and is provided by many operating systems as a
3348 one, five or fifteen minute average.
3350 The following configuration options are available:
3354 =item B<ReportRelative> B<false>|B<true>
3356 When enabled, system load divided by number of available CPU cores is reported
3357 for intervals 1 min, 5 min and 15 min. Defaults to false.
3362 =head2 Plugin C<logfile>
3366 =item B<LogLevel> B<debug|info|notice|warning|err>
3368 Sets the log-level. If, for example, set to B<notice>, then all events with
3369 severity B<notice>, B<warning>, or B<err> will be written to the logfile.
3371 Please note that B<debug> is only available if collectd has been compiled with
3374 =item B<File> I<File>
3376 Sets the file to write log messages to. The special strings B<stdout> and
3377 B<stderr> can be used to write to the standard output and standard error
3378 channels, respectively. This, of course, only makes much sense when I<collectd>
3379 is running in foreground- or non-daemon-mode.
3381 =item B<Timestamp> B<true>|B<false>
3383 Prefix all lines printed by the current time. Defaults to B<true>.
3385 =item B<PrintSeverity> B<true>|B<false>
3387 When enabled, all lines are prefixed by the severity of the log message, for
3388 example "warning". Defaults to B<false>.
3392 B<Note>: There is no need to notify the daemon after moving or removing the
3393 log file (e.E<nbsp>g. when rotating the logs). The plugin reopens the file
3394 for each line it writes.
3396 =head2 Plugin C<log_logstash>
3398 The I<log logstash plugin> behaves like the logfile plugin but formats
3399 messages as JSON events for logstash to parse and input.
3403 =item B<LogLevel> B<debug|info|notice|warning|err>
3405 Sets the log-level. If, for example, set to B<notice>, then all events with
3406 severity B<notice>, B<warning>, or B<err> will be written to the logfile.
3408 Please note that B<debug> is only available if collectd has been compiled with
3411 =item B<File> I<File>
3413 Sets the file to write log messages to. The special strings B<stdout> and
3414 B<stderr> can be used to write to the standard output and standard error
3415 channels, respectively. This, of course, only makes much sense when I<collectd>
3416 is running in foreground- or non-daemon-mode.
3420 B<Note>: There is no need to notify the daemon after moving or removing the
3421 log file (e.E<nbsp>g. when rotating the logs). The plugin reopens the file
3422 for each line it writes.
3424 =head2 Plugin C<lpar>
3426 The I<LPAR plugin> reads CPU statistics of I<Logical Partitions>, a
3427 virtualization technique for IBM POWER processors. It takes into account CPU
3428 time stolen from or donated to a partition, in addition to the usual user,
3429 system, I/O statistics.
3431 The following configuration options are available:
3435 =item B<CpuPoolStats> B<false>|B<true>
3437 When enabled, statistics about the processor pool are read, too. The partition
3438 needs to have pool authority in order to be able to acquire this information.
3441 =item B<ReportBySerial> B<false>|B<true>
3443 If enabled, the serial of the physical machine the partition is currently
3444 running on is reported as I<hostname> and the logical hostname of the machine
3445 is reported in the I<plugin instance>. Otherwise, the logical hostname will be
3446 used (just like other plugins) and the I<plugin instance> will be empty.
3451 =head2 Plugin C<lua>
3453 This plugin embeds a Lua interpreter into collectd and provides an interface
3454 to collectd's plugin system. See L<collectd-lua(5)> for its documentation.
3457 =head2 Plugin C<mbmon>
3459 The C<mbmon plugin> uses mbmon to retrieve temperature, voltage, etc.
3461 Be default collectd connects to B<localhost> (127.0.0.1), port B<411/tcp>. The
3462 B<Host> and B<Port> options can be used to change these values, see below.
3463 C<mbmon> has to be running to work correctly. If C<mbmon> is not running
3464 timeouts may appear which may interfere with other statistics..
3466 C<mbmon> must be run with the -r option ("print TAG and Value format");
3467 Debian's F</etc/init.d/mbmon> script already does this, other people
3468 will need to ensure that this is the case.
3472 =item B<Host> I<Hostname>
3474 Hostname to connect to. Defaults to B<127.0.0.1>.
3476 =item B<Port> I<Port>
3478 TCP-Port to connect to. Defaults to B<411>.
3482 =head2 Plugin C<mcelog>
3484 The C<mcelog plugin> uses mcelog to retrieve machine check exceptions.
3486 By default the plugin connects to B<"/var/run/mcelog-client"> to check if the
3487 mcelog server is running. When the server is running, the plugin will tail the
3488 specified logfile to retrieve machine check exception information and send a
3489 notification with the details from the logfile. The plugin will use the mcelog
3490 client protocol to retrieve memory related machine check exceptions.
3494 =item B<McelogClientSocket> I<Path>
3495 Connect to the mcelog client socket using the UNIX domain socket at I<Path>.
3496 Defaults to B<"/var/run/mcelog-client">.
3498 =item B<McelogLogfile> I<Path>
3500 The mcelog file to parse. Defaults to B<"/var/log/mcelog">.
3506 The C<md plugin> collects information from Linux Software-RAID devices (md).
3508 All reported values are of the type C<md_disks>. Reported type instances are
3509 I<active>, I<failed> (present but not operational), I<spare> (hot stand-by) and
3510 I<missing> (physically absent) disks.
3514 =item B<Device> I<Device>
3516 Select md devices based on device name. The I<device name> is the basename of
3517 the device, i.e. the name of the block device without the leading C</dev/>.
3518 See B<IgnoreSelected> for more details.
3520 See F</"IGNORELISTS"> for details.
3522 =item B<IgnoreSelected> B<true>|B<false>
3524 Invert device selection: If set to B<true>, all md devices B<except> those
3525 listed using B<Device> are collected. If B<false> (the default), only those
3526 listed are collected. If no configuration is given, the B<md> plugin will
3527 collect data from all md devices.
3531 =head2 Plugin C<memcachec>
3533 The C<memcachec plugin> connects to a memcached server, queries one or more
3534 given I<pages> and parses the returned data according to user specification.
3535 The I<matches> used are the same as the matches used in the C<curl> and C<tail>
3538 In order to talk to the memcached server, this plugin uses the I<libmemcached>
3539 library. Please note that there is another library with a very similar name,
3540 libmemcache (notice the missing `d'), which is not applicable.
3542 Synopsis of the configuration:
3544 <Plugin "memcachec">
3545 <Page "plugin_instance">
3549 Regex "(\\d+) bytes sent"
3552 Instance "type_instance"
3557 The configuration options are:
3561 =item E<lt>B<Page> I<Name>E<gt>
3563 Each B<Page> block defines one I<page> to be queried from the memcached server.
3564 The block requires one string argument which is used as I<plugin instance>.
3566 =item B<Server> I<Address>
3568 Sets the server address to connect to when querying the page. Must be inside a
3573 When connected to the memcached server, asks for the page I<Key>.
3575 =item E<lt>B<Match>E<gt>
3577 Match blocks define which strings to look for and how matches substrings are
3578 interpreted. For a description of match blocks, please see L<"Plugin tail">.
3582 =head2 Plugin C<memcached>
3584 The B<memcached plugin> connects to a memcached server and queries statistics
3585 about cache utilization, memory and bandwidth used.
3586 L<http://memcached.org/>
3588 <Plugin "memcached">
3590 #Host "memcache.example.com"
3596 The plugin configuration consists of one or more B<Instance> blocks which
3597 specify one I<memcached> connection each. Within the B<Instance> blocks, the
3598 following options are allowed:
3602 =item B<Host> I<Hostname>
3604 Sets the B<host> field of dispatched values. Defaults to the global hostname
3606 For backwards compatibility, values are also dispatched with the global
3607 hostname when B<Host> is set to B<127.0.0.1> or B<localhost> and B<Address> is
3610 =item B<Address> I<Address>
3612 Hostname or IP to connect to. For backwards compatibility, defaults to the
3613 value of B<Host> or B<127.0.0.1> if B<Host> is unset.
3615 =item B<Port> I<Port>
3617 TCP port to connect to. Defaults to B<11211>.
3619 =item B<Socket> I<Path>
3621 Connect to I<memcached> using the UNIX domain socket at I<Path>. If this
3622 setting is given, the B<Address> and B<Port> settings are ignored.
3626 =head2 Plugin C<mic>
3628 The B<mic plugin> gathers CPU statistics, memory usage and temperatures from
3629 Intel's Many Integrated Core (MIC) systems.
3638 ShowTemperatures true
3641 IgnoreSelectedTemperature true
3646 IgnoreSelectedPower true
3649 The following options are valid inside the B<PluginE<nbsp>mic> block:
3653 =item B<ShowCPU> B<true>|B<false>
3655 If enabled (the default) a sum of the CPU usage across all cores is reported.
3657 =item B<ShowCPUCores> B<true>|B<false>
3659 If enabled (the default) per-core CPU usage is reported.
3661 =item B<ShowMemory> B<true>|B<false>
3663 If enabled (the default) the physical memory usage of the MIC system is
3666 =item B<ShowTemperatures> B<true>|B<false>
3668 If enabled (the default) various temperatures of the MIC system are reported.
3670 =item B<Temperature> I<Name>
3672 This option controls which temperatures are being reported. Whether matching
3673 temperatures are being ignored or I<only> matching temperatures are reported
3674 depends on the B<IgnoreSelectedTemperature> setting below. By default I<all>
3675 temperatures are reported.
3677 =item B<IgnoreSelectedTemperature> B<false>|B<true>
3679 Controls the behavior of the B<Temperature> setting above. If set to B<false>
3680 (the default) only temperatures matching a B<Temperature> option are reported
3681 or, if no B<Temperature> option is specified, all temperatures are reported. If
3682 set to B<true>, matching temperatures are I<ignored> and all other temperatures
3685 Known temperature names are:
3719 =item B<ShowPower> B<true>|B<false>
3721 If enabled (the default) various temperatures of the MIC system are reported.
3723 =item B<Power> I<Name>
3725 This option controls which power readings are being reported. Whether matching
3726 power readings are being ignored or I<only> matching power readings are reported
3727 depends on the B<IgnoreSelectedPower> setting below. By default I<all>
3728 power readings are reported.
3730 =item B<IgnoreSelectedPower> B<false>|B<true>
3732 Controls the behavior of the B<Power> setting above. If set to B<false>
3733 (the default) only power readings matching a B<Power> option are reported
3734 or, if no B<Power> option is specified, all power readings are reported. If
3735 set to B<true>, matching power readings are I<ignored> and all other power readings
3738 Known power names are:
3744 Total power utilization averaged over Time Window 0 (uWatts).
3748 Total power utilization averaged over Time Window 0 (uWatts).
3752 Instantaneous power (uWatts).
3756 Max instantaneous power (uWatts).
3760 PCI-E connector power (uWatts).
3764 2x3 connector power (uWatts).
3768 2x4 connector power (uWatts).
3776 Uncore rail (uVolts).
3780 Memory subsystem rail (uVolts).
3786 =head2 Plugin C<memory>
3788 The I<memory plugin> provides the following configuration options:
3792 =item B<ValuesAbsolute> B<true>|B<false>
3794 Enables or disables reporting of physical memory usage in absolute numbers,
3795 i.e. bytes. Defaults to B<true>.
3797 =item B<ValuesPercentage> B<false>|B<true>
3799 Enables or disables reporting of physical memory usage in percentages, e.g.
3800 percent of physical memory used. Defaults to B<false>.
3802 This is useful for deploying I<collectd> in a heterogeneous environment in
3803 which the sizes of physical memory vary.
3807 =head2 Plugin C<modbus>
3809 The B<modbus plugin> connects to a Modbus "slave" via Modbus/TCP or Modbus/RTU and
3810 reads register values. It supports reading single registers (unsigned 16E<nbsp>bit
3811 values), large integer values (unsigned 32E<nbsp>bit values) and floating point
3812 values (two registers interpreted as IEEE floats in big endian notation).
3816 <Data "voltage-input-1">
3819 RegisterCmd ReadHolding
3824 <Data "voltage-input-2">
3827 RegisterCmd ReadHolding
3832 <Data "supply-temperature-1">
3835 RegisterCmd ReadHolding
3840 <Host "modbus.example.com">
3841 Address "192.168.0.42"
3846 Instance "power-supply"
3847 Collect "voltage-input-1"
3848 Collect "voltage-input-2"
3853 Device "/dev/ttyUSB0"
3858 Instance "temperature"
3859 Collect "supply-temperature-1"
3865 =item E<lt>B<Data> I<Name>E<gt> blocks
3867 Data blocks define a mapping between register numbers and the "types" used by
3870 Within E<lt>DataE<nbsp>/E<gt> blocks, the following options are allowed:
3874 =item B<RegisterBase> I<Number>
3876 Configures the base register to read from the device. If the option
3877 B<RegisterType> has been set to B<Uint32> or B<Float>, this and the next
3878 register will be read (the register number is increased by one).
3880 =item B<RegisterType> B<Int16>|B<Int32>|B<Uint16>|B<Uint32>|B<Float>
3882 Specifies what kind of data is returned by the device. If the type is B<Int32>,
3883 B<Uint32> or B<Float>, two 16E<nbsp>bit registers will be read and the data is
3884 combined into one value. Defaults to B<Uint16>.
3886 =item B<RegisterCmd> B<ReadHolding>|B<ReadInput>
3888 Specifies register type to be collected from device. Works only with libmodbus
3889 2.9.2 or higher. Defaults to B<ReadHolding>.
3891 =item B<Type> I<Type>
3893 Specifies the "type" (data set) to use when dispatching the value to
3894 I<collectd>. Currently, only data sets with exactly one data source are
3897 =item B<Instance> I<Instance>
3899 Sets the type instance to use when dispatching the value to I<collectd>. If
3900 unset, an empty string (no type instance) is used.
3904 =item E<lt>B<Host> I<Name>E<gt> blocks
3906 Host blocks are used to specify to which hosts to connect and what data to read
3907 from their "slaves". The string argument I<Name> is used as hostname when
3908 dispatching the values to I<collectd>.
3910 Within E<lt>HostE<nbsp>/E<gt> blocks, the following options are allowed:
3914 =item B<Address> I<Hostname>
3916 For Modbus/TCP, specifies the node name (the actual network address) used to
3917 connect to the host. This may be an IP address or a hostname. Please note that
3918 the used I<libmodbus> library only supports IPv4 at the moment.
3920 =item B<Port> I<Service>
3922 for Modbus/TCP, specifies the port used to connect to the host. The port can
3923 either be given as a number or as a service name. Please note that the
3924 I<Service> argument must be a string, even if ports are given in their numerical
3925 form. Defaults to "502".
3927 =item B<Device> I<Devicenode>
3929 For Modbus/RTU, specifies the path to the serial device being used.
3931 =item B<Baudrate> I<Baudrate>
3933 For Modbus/RTU, specifies the baud rate of the serial device.
3934 Note, connections currently support only 8/N/1.
3936 =item B<Interval> I<Interval>
3938 Sets the interval (in seconds) in which the values will be collected from this
3939 host. By default the global B<Interval> setting will be used.
3941 =item E<lt>B<Slave> I<ID>E<gt>
3943 Over each connection, multiple Modbus devices may be reached. The slave ID
3944 is used to specify which device should be addressed. For each device you want
3945 to query, one B<Slave> block must be given.
3947 Within E<lt>SlaveE<nbsp>/E<gt> blocks, the following options are allowed:
3951 =item B<Instance> I<Instance>
3953 Specify the plugin instance to use when dispatching the values to I<collectd>.
3954 By default "slave_I<ID>" is used.
3956 =item B<Collect> I<DataName>
3958 Specifies which data to retrieve from the device. I<DataName> must be the same
3959 string as the I<Name> argument passed to a B<Data> block. You can specify this
3960 option multiple times to collect more than one value from a slave. At least one
3961 B<Collect> option is mandatory.
3969 =head2 Plugin C<mqtt>
3971 The I<MQTT plugin> can send metrics to MQTT (B<Publish> blocks) and receive
3972 values from MQTT (B<Subscribe> blocks).
3978 Host "mqtt.example.com"
3982 Host "mqtt.example.com"
3987 The plugin's configuration is in B<Publish> and/or B<Subscribe> blocks,
3988 configuring the sending and receiving direction respectively. The plugin will
3989 register a write callback named C<mqtt/I<name>> where I<name> is the string
3990 argument given to the B<Publish> block. Both types of blocks share many but not
3991 all of the following options. If an option is valid in only one of the blocks,
3992 it will be mentioned explicitly.
3998 =item B<Host> I<Hostname>
4000 Hostname of the MQTT broker to connect to.
4002 =item B<Port> I<Service>
4004 Port number or service name of the MQTT broker to connect to.
4006 =item B<User> I<UserName>
4008 Username used when authenticating to the MQTT broker.
4010 =item B<Password> I<Password>
4012 Password used when authenticating to the MQTT broker.
4014 =item B<ClientId> I<ClientId>
4016 MQTT client ID to use. Defaults to the hostname used by I<collectd>.
4018 =item B<QoS> [B<0>-B<2>]
4020 Sets the I<Quality of Service>, with the values C<0>, C<1> and C<2> meaning:
4038 In B<Publish> blocks, this option determines the QoS flag set on outgoing
4039 messages and defaults to B<0>. In B<Subscribe> blocks, determines the maximum
4040 QoS setting the client is going to accept and defaults to B<2>. If the QoS flag
4041 on a message is larger than the maximum accepted QoS of a subscriber, the
4042 message's QoS will be downgraded.
4044 =item B<Prefix> I<Prefix> (Publish only)
4046 This plugin will use one topic per I<value list> which will looks like a path.
4047 I<Prefix> is used as the first path element and defaults to B<collectd>.
4049 An example topic name would be:
4051 collectd/cpu-0/cpu-user
4053 =item B<Retain> B<false>|B<true> (Publish only)
4055 Controls whether the MQTT broker will retain (keep a copy of) the last message
4056 sent to each topic and deliver it to new subscribers. Defaults to B<false>.
4058 =item B<StoreRates> B<true>|B<false> (Publish only)
4060 Controls whether C<DERIVE> and C<COUNTER> metrics are converted to a I<rate>
4061 before sending. Defaults to B<true>.
4063 =item B<CleanSession> B<true>|B<false> (Subscribe only)
4065 Controls whether the MQTT "cleans" the session up after the subscriber
4066 disconnects or if it maintains the subscriber's subscriptions and all messages
4067 that arrive while the subscriber is disconnected. Defaults to B<true>.
4069 =item B<Topic> I<TopicName> (Subscribe only)
4071 Configures the topic(s) to subscribe to. You can use the single level C<+> and
4072 multi level C<#> wildcards. Defaults to B<collectd/#>, i.e. all topics beneath
4073 the B<collectd> branch.
4075 =item B<CACert> I<file>
4077 Path to the PEM-encoded CA certificate file. Setting this option enables TLS
4078 communication with the MQTT broker, and as such, B<Port> should be the TLS-enabled
4079 port of the MQTT broker.
4080 A valid TLS configuration requires B<CACert>, B<CertificateFile> and B<CertificateKeyFile>.
4082 =item B<CertificateFile> I<file>
4084 Path to the PEM-encoded certificate file to use as client certificate when
4085 connecting to the MQTT broker.
4086 A valid TLS configuration requires B<CACert>, B<CertificateFile> and B<CertificateKeyFile>.
4088 =item B<CertificateKeyFile> I<file>
4090 Path to the unencrypted PEM-encoded key file corresponding to B<CertificateFile>.
4091 A valid TLS configuration requires B<CACert>, B<CertificateFile> and B<CertificateKeyFile>.
4093 =item B<TLSProtocol> I<protocol>
4095 If configured, this specifies the string protocol version (e.g. C<tlsv1>,
4096 C<tlsv1.2>) to use for the TLS connection to the broker. If not set a default
4097 version is used which depends on the version of OpenSSL the Mosquitto library
4100 =item B<CipherSuite> I<ciphersuite>
4102 A string describing the ciphers available for use. See L<ciphers(1)> and the
4103 C<openssl ciphers> utility for more information. If unset, the default ciphers
4109 =head2 Plugin C<mysql>
4111 The C<mysql plugin> requires B<mysqlclient> to be installed. It connects to
4112 one or more databases when started and keeps the connection up as long as
4113 possible. When the connection is interrupted for whatever reason it will try
4114 to re-connect. The plugin will complain loudly in case anything goes wrong.
4116 This plugin issues the MySQL C<SHOW STATUS> / C<SHOW GLOBAL STATUS> command
4117 and collects information about MySQL network traffic, executed statements,
4118 requests, the query cache and threads by evaluating the
4119 C<Bytes_{received,sent}>, C<Com_*>, C<Handler_*>, C<Qcache_*> and C<Threads_*>
4120 return values. Please refer to the B<MySQL reference manual>, I<5.1.6. Server
4121 Status Variables> for an explanation of these values.
4123 Optionally, master and slave statistics may be collected in a MySQL
4124 replication setup. In that case, information about the synchronization state
4125 of the nodes are collected by evaluating the C<Position> return value of the
4126 C<SHOW MASTER STATUS> command and the C<Seconds_Behind_Master>,
4127 C<Read_Master_Log_Pos> and C<Exec_Master_Log_Pos> return values of the
4128 C<SHOW SLAVE STATUS> command. See the B<MySQL reference manual>,
4129 I<12.5.5.21 SHOW MASTER STATUS Syntax> and
4130 I<12.5.5.31 SHOW SLAVE STATUS Syntax> for details.
4142 SSLKey "/path/to/key.pem"
4143 SSLCert "/path/to/cert.pem"
4144 SSLCA "/path/to/ca.pem"
4145 SSLCAPath "/path/to/cas/"
4146 SSLCipher "DHE-RSA-AES256-SHA"
4152 Socket "/var/run/mysql/mysqld.sock"
4154 SlaveNotifications true
4160 Socket "/var/run/mysql/mysqld.sock"
4165 A B<Database> block defines one connection to a MySQL database. It accepts a
4166 single argument which specifies the name of the database. None of the other
4167 options are required. MySQL will use default values as documented in the
4168 "mysql_real_connect()" and "mysql_ssl_set()" sections in the
4169 B<MySQL reference manual>.
4173 =item B<Alias> I<Alias>
4175 Alias to use as sender instead of hostname when reporting. This may be useful
4176 when having cryptic hostnames.
4178 =item B<Host> I<Hostname>
4180 Hostname of the database server. Defaults to B<localhost>.
4182 =item B<User> I<Username>
4184 Username to use when connecting to the database. The user does not have to be
4185 granted any privileges (which is synonym to granting the C<USAGE> privilege),
4186 unless you want to collectd replication statistics (see B<MasterStats> and
4187 B<SlaveStats> below). In this case, the user needs the C<REPLICATION CLIENT>
4188 (or C<SUPER>) privileges. Else, any existing MySQL user will do.
4190 =item B<Password> I<Password>
4192 Password needed to log into the database.
4194 =item B<Database> I<Database>
4196 Select this database. Defaults to I<no database> which is a perfectly reasonable
4197 option for what this plugin does.
4199 =item B<Port> I<Port>
4201 TCP-port to connect to. The port must be specified in its numeric form, but it
4202 must be passed as a string nonetheless. For example:
4206 If B<Host> is set to B<localhost> (the default), this setting has no effect.
4207 See the documentation for the C<mysql_real_connect> function for details.
4209 =item B<Socket> I<Socket>
4211 Specifies the path to the UNIX domain socket of the MySQL server. This option
4212 only has any effect, if B<Host> is set to B<localhost> (the default).
4213 Otherwise, use the B<Port> option above. See the documentation for the
4214 C<mysql_real_connect> function for details.
4216 =item B<InnodbStats> I<true|false>
4218 If enabled, metrics about the InnoDB storage engine are collected.
4219 Disabled by default.
4221 =item B<MasterStats> I<true|false>
4223 =item B<SlaveStats> I<true|false>
4225 Enable the collection of master / slave statistics in a replication setup. In
4226 order to be able to get access to these statistics, the user needs special
4227 privileges. See the B<User> documentation above. Defaults to B<false>.
4229 =item B<SlaveNotifications> I<true|false>
4231 If enabled, the plugin sends a notification if the replication slave I/O and /
4232 or SQL threads are not running. Defaults to B<false>.
4234 =item B<WsrepStats> I<true|false>
4236 Enable the collection of wsrep plugin statistics, used in Master-Master
4237 replication setups like in MySQL Galera/Percona XtraDB Cluster.
4238 User needs only privileges to execute 'SHOW GLOBAL STATUS'
4240 =item B<ConnectTimeout> I<Seconds>
4242 Sets the connect timeout for the MySQL client.
4244 =item B<SSLKey> I<Path>
4246 If provided, the X509 key in PEM format.
4248 =item B<SSLCert> I<Path>
4250 If provided, the X509 cert in PEM format.
4252 =item B<SSLCA> I<Path>
4254 If provided, the CA file in PEM format (check OpenSSL docs).
4256 =item B<SSLCAPath> I<Path>
4258 If provided, the CA directory (check OpenSSL docs).
4260 =item B<SSLCipher> I<String>
4262 If provided, the SSL cipher to use.
4266 =head2 Plugin C<netapp>
4268 The netapp plugin can collect various performance and capacity information
4269 from a NetApp filer using the NetApp API.
4271 Please note that NetApp has a wide line of products and a lot of different
4272 software versions for each of these products. This plugin was developed for a
4273 NetApp FAS3040 running OnTap 7.2.3P8 and tested on FAS2050 7.3.1.1L1,
4274 FAS3140 7.2.5.1 and FAS3020 7.2.4P9. It I<should> work for most combinations of
4275 model and software version but it is very hard to test this.
4276 If you have used this plugin with other models and/or software version, feel
4277 free to send us a mail to tell us about the results, even if it's just a short
4280 To collect these data collectd will log in to the NetApp via HTTP(S) and HTTP
4281 basic authentication.
4283 B<Do not use a regular user for this!> Create a special collectd user with just
4284 the minimum of capabilities needed. The user only needs the "login-http-admin"
4285 capability as well as a few more depending on which data will be collected.
4286 Required capabilities are documented below.
4291 <Host "netapp1.example.com">
4315 IgnoreSelectedIO false
4317 IgnoreSelectedOps false
4318 GetLatency "volume0"
4319 IgnoreSelectedLatency false
4326 IgnoreSelectedCapacity false
4329 IgnoreSelectedSnapshot false
4357 The netapp plugin accepts the following configuration options:
4361 =item B<Host> I<Name>
4363 A host block defines one NetApp filer. It will appear in collectd with the name
4364 you specify here which does not have to be its real name nor its hostname (see
4365 the B<Address> option below).
4367 =item B<VFiler> I<Name>
4369 A B<VFiler> block may only be used inside a host block. It accepts all the
4370 same options as the B<Host> block (except for cascaded B<VFiler> blocks) and
4371 will execute all NetApp API commands in the context of the specified
4372 VFiler(R). It will appear in collectd with the name you specify here which
4373 does not have to be its real name. The VFiler name may be specified using the
4374 B<VFilerName> option. If this is not specified, it will default to the name
4377 The VFiler block inherits all connection related settings from the surrounding
4378 B<Host> block (which appear before the B<VFiler> block) but they may be
4379 overwritten inside the B<VFiler> block.
4381 This feature is useful, for example, when using a VFiler as SnapVault target
4382 (supported since OnTap 8.1). In that case, the SnapVault statistics are not
4383 available in the host filer (vfiler0) but only in the respective VFiler
4386 =item B<Protocol> B<httpd>|B<http>
4388 The protocol collectd will use to query this host.
4396 Valid options: http, https
4398 =item B<Address> I<Address>
4400 The hostname or IP address of the host.
4406 Default: The "host" block's name.
4408 =item B<Port> I<Port>
4410 The TCP port to connect to on the host.
4416 Default: 80 for protocol "http", 443 for protocol "https"
4418 =item B<User> I<User>
4420 =item B<Password> I<Password>
4422 The username and password to use to login to the NetApp.
4428 =item B<VFilerName> I<Name>
4430 The name of the VFiler in which context to execute API commands. If not
4431 specified, the name provided to the B<VFiler> block will be used instead.
4437 Default: name of the B<VFiler> block
4439 B<Note:> This option may only be used inside B<VFiler> blocks.
4441 =item B<Interval> I<Interval>
4447 The following options decide what kind of data will be collected. You can
4448 either use them as a block and fine tune various parameters inside this block,
4449 use them as a single statement to just accept all default values, or omit it to
4450 not collect any data.
4452 The following options are valid inside all blocks:
4456 =item B<Interval> I<Seconds>
4458 Collect the respective statistics every I<Seconds> seconds. Defaults to the
4459 host specific setting.
4463 =head3 The System block
4465 This will collect various performance data about the whole system.
4467 B<Note:> To get this data the collectd user needs the
4468 "api-perf-object-get-instances" capability.
4472 =item B<Interval> I<Seconds>
4474 Collect disk statistics every I<Seconds> seconds.
4476 =item B<GetCPULoad> B<true>|B<false>
4478 If you set this option to true the current CPU usage will be read. This will be
4479 the average usage between all CPUs in your NetApp without any information about
4482 B<Note:> These are the same values that the NetApp CLI command "sysstat"
4483 returns in the "CPU" field.
4491 Result: Two value lists of type "cpu", and type instances "idle" and "system".
4493 =item B<GetInterfaces> B<true>|B<false>
4495 If you set this option to true the current traffic of the network interfaces
4496 will be read. This will be the total traffic over all interfaces of your NetApp
4497 without any information about individual interfaces.
4499 B<Note:> This is the same values that the NetApp CLI command "sysstat" returns
4500 in the "Net kB/s" field.
4510 Result: One value list of type "if_octects".
4512 =item B<GetDiskIO> B<true>|B<false>
4514 If you set this option to true the current IO throughput will be read. This
4515 will be the total IO of your NetApp without any information about individual
4516 disks, volumes or aggregates.
4518 B<Note:> This is the same values that the NetApp CLI command "sysstat" returns
4519 in the "DiskE<nbsp>kB/s" field.
4527 Result: One value list of type "disk_octets".
4529 =item B<GetDiskOps> B<true>|B<false>
4531 If you set this option to true the current number of HTTP, NFS, CIFS, FCP,
4532 iSCSI, etc. operations will be read. This will be the total number of
4533 operations on your NetApp without any information about individual volumes or
4536 B<Note:> These are the same values that the NetApp CLI command "sysstat"
4537 returns in the "NFS", "CIFS", "HTTP", "FCP" and "iSCSI" fields.
4545 Result: A variable number of value lists of type "disk_ops_complex". Each type
4546 of operation will result in one value list with the name of the operation as
4551 =head3 The WAFL block
4553 This will collect various performance data about the WAFL file system. At the
4554 moment this just means cache performance.
4556 B<Note:> To get this data the collectd user needs the
4557 "api-perf-object-get-instances" capability.
4559 B<Note:> The interface to get these values is classified as "Diagnostics" by
4560 NetApp. This means that it is not guaranteed to be stable even between minor
4565 =item B<Interval> I<Seconds>
4567 Collect disk statistics every I<Seconds> seconds.
4569 =item B<GetNameCache> B<true>|B<false>
4577 Result: One value list of type "cache_ratio" and type instance
4580 =item B<GetDirCache> B<true>|B<false>
4588 Result: One value list of type "cache_ratio" and type instance "find_dir_hit".
4590 =item B<GetInodeCache> B<true>|B<false>
4598 Result: One value list of type "cache_ratio" and type instance
4601 =item B<GetBufferCache> B<true>|B<false>
4603 B<Note:> This is the same value that the NetApp CLI command "sysstat" returns
4604 in the "Cache hit" field.
4612 Result: One value list of type "cache_ratio" and type instance "buf_hash_hit".
4616 =head3 The Disks block
4618 This will collect performance data about the individual disks in the NetApp.
4620 B<Note:> To get this data the collectd user needs the
4621 "api-perf-object-get-instances" capability.
4625 =item B<Interval> I<Seconds>
4627 Collect disk statistics every I<Seconds> seconds.
4629 =item B<GetBusy> B<true>|B<false>
4631 If you set this option to true the busy time of all disks will be calculated
4632 and the value of the busiest disk in the system will be written.
4634 B<Note:> This is the same values that the NetApp CLI command "sysstat" returns
4635 in the "Disk util" field. Probably.
4643 Result: One value list of type "percent" and type instance "disk_busy".
4647 =head3 The VolumePerf block
4649 This will collect various performance data about the individual volumes.
4651 You can select which data to collect about which volume using the following
4652 options. They follow the standard ignorelist semantic.
4654 B<Note:> To get this data the collectd user needs the
4655 I<api-perf-object-get-instances> capability.
4659 =item B<Interval> I<Seconds>
4661 Collect volume performance data every I<Seconds> seconds.
4663 =item B<GetIO> I<Volume>
4665 =item B<GetOps> I<Volume>
4667 =item B<GetLatency> I<Volume>
4669 Select the given volume for IO, operations or latency statistics collection.
4670 The argument is the name of the volume without the C</vol/> prefix.
4672 Since the standard ignorelist functionality is used here, you can use a string
4673 starting and ending with a slash to specify regular expression matching: To
4674 match the volumes "vol0", "vol2" and "vol7", you can use this regular
4677 GetIO "/^vol[027]$/"
4679 If no regular expression is specified, an exact match is required. Both,
4680 regular and exact matching are case sensitive.
4682 If no volume was specified at all for either of the three options, that data
4683 will be collected for all available volumes.
4685 See F</"IGNORELISTS"> for details.
4687 =item B<IgnoreSelectedIO> B<true>|B<false>
4689 =item B<IgnoreSelectedOps> B<true>|B<false>
4691 =item B<IgnoreSelectedLatency> B<true>|B<false>
4693 When set to B<true>, the volumes selected for IO, operations or latency
4694 statistics collection will be ignored and the data will be collected for all
4697 When set to B<false>, data will only be collected for the specified volumes and
4698 all other volumes will be ignored.
4700 If no volumes have been specified with the above B<Get*> options, all volumes
4701 will be collected regardless of the B<IgnoreSelected*> option.
4703 Defaults to B<false>
4707 =head3 The VolumeUsage block
4709 This will collect capacity data about the individual volumes.
4711 B<Note:> To get this data the collectd user needs the I<api-volume-list-info>
4716 =item B<Interval> I<Seconds>
4718 Collect volume usage statistics every I<Seconds> seconds.
4720 =item B<GetCapacity> I<VolumeName>
4722 The current capacity of the volume will be collected. This will result in two
4723 to four value lists, depending on the configuration of the volume. All data
4724 sources are of type "df_complex" with the name of the volume as
4727 There will be type_instances "used" and "free" for the number of used and
4728 available bytes on the volume. If the volume has some space reserved for
4729 snapshots, a type_instance "snap_reserved" will be available. If the volume
4730 has SIS enabled, a type_instance "sis_saved" will be available. This is the
4731 number of bytes saved by the SIS feature.
4733 B<Note:> The current NetApp API has a bug that results in this value being
4734 reported as a 32E<nbsp>bit number. This plugin tries to guess the correct
4735 number which works most of the time. If you see strange values here, bug
4736 NetApp support to fix this.
4738 Repeat this option to specify multiple volumes.
4740 =item B<IgnoreSelectedCapacity> B<true>|B<false>
4742 Specify whether to collect only the volumes selected by the B<GetCapacity>
4743 option or to ignore those volumes. B<IgnoreSelectedCapacity> defaults to
4744 B<false>. However, if no B<GetCapacity> option is specified at all, all
4745 capacities will be selected anyway.
4747 =item B<GetSnapshot> I<VolumeName>
4749 Select volumes from which to collect snapshot information.
4751 Usually, the space used for snapshots is included in the space reported as
4752 "used". If snapshot information is collected as well, the space used for
4753 snapshots is subtracted from the used space.
4755 To make things even more interesting, it is possible to reserve space to be
4756 used for snapshots. If the space required for snapshots is less than that
4757 reserved space, there is "reserved free" and "reserved used" space in addition
4758 to "free" and "used". If the space required for snapshots exceeds the reserved
4759 space, that part allocated in the normal space is subtracted from the "used"
4762 Repeat this option to specify multiple volumes.
4764 =item B<IgnoreSelectedSnapshot>
4766 Specify whether to collect only the volumes selected by the B<GetSnapshot>
4767 option or to ignore those volumes. B<IgnoreSelectedSnapshot> defaults to
4768 B<false>. However, if no B<GetSnapshot> option is specified at all, all
4769 capacities will be selected anyway.
4773 =head3 The Quota block
4775 This will collect (tree) quota statistics (used disk space and number of used
4776 files). This mechanism is useful to get usage information for single qtrees.
4777 In case the quotas are not used for any other purpose, an entry similar to the
4778 following in C</etc/quotas> would be sufficient:
4780 /vol/volA/some_qtree tree - - - - -
4782 After adding the entry, issue C<quota on -w volA> on the NetApp filer.
4786 =item B<Interval> I<Seconds>
4788 Collect SnapVault(R) statistics every I<Seconds> seconds.
4792 =head3 The SnapVault block
4794 This will collect statistics about the time and traffic of SnapVault(R)
4799 =item B<Interval> I<Seconds>
4801 Collect SnapVault(R) statistics every I<Seconds> seconds.
4805 =head2 Plugin C<netlink>
4807 The C<netlink> plugin uses a netlink socket to query the Linux kernel about
4808 statistics of various interface and routing aspects.
4812 =item B<Interface> I<Interface>
4814 =item B<VerboseInterface> I<Interface>
4816 Instruct the plugin to collect interface statistics. This is basically the same
4817 as the statistics provided by the C<interface> plugin (see above) but
4818 potentially much more detailed.
4820 When configuring with B<Interface> only the basic statistics will be collected,
4821 namely octets, packets, and errors. These statistics are collected by
4822 the C<interface> plugin, too, so using both at the same time is no benefit.
4824 When configured with B<VerboseInterface> all counters B<except> the basic ones,
4825 so that no data needs to be collected twice if you use the C<interface> plugin.
4826 This includes dropped packets, received multicast packets, collisions and a
4827 whole zoo of differentiated RX and TX errors. You can try the following command
4828 to get an idea of what awaits you:
4832 If I<Interface> is B<All>, all interfaces will be selected.
4834 =item B<QDisc> I<Interface> [I<QDisc>]
4836 =item B<Class> I<Interface> [I<Class>]
4838 =item B<Filter> I<Interface> [I<Filter>]
4840 Collect the octets and packets that pass a certain qdisc, class or filter.
4842 QDiscs and classes are identified by their type and handle (or classid).
4843 Filters don't necessarily have a handle, therefore the parent's handle is used.
4844 The notation used in collectd differs from that used in tc(1) in that it
4845 doesn't skip the major or minor number if it's zero and doesn't print special
4846 ids by their name. So, for example, a qdisc may be identified by
4847 C<pfifo_fast-1:0> even though the minor number of B<all> qdiscs is zero and
4848 thus not displayed by tc(1).
4850 If B<QDisc>, B<Class>, or B<Filter> is given without the second argument,
4851 i.E<nbsp>.e. without an identifier, all qdiscs, classes, or filters that are
4852 associated with that interface will be collected.
4854 Since a filter itself doesn't necessarily have a handle, the parent's handle is
4855 used. This may lead to problems when more than one filter is attached to a
4856 qdisc or class. This isn't nice, but we don't know how this could be done any
4857 better. If you have a idea, please don't hesitate to tell us.
4859 As with the B<Interface> option you can specify B<All> as the interface,
4860 meaning all interfaces.
4862 Here are some examples to help you understand the above text more easily:
4865 VerboseInterface "All"
4866 QDisc "eth0" "pfifo_fast-1:0"
4868 Class "ppp0" "htb-1:10"
4869 Filter "ppp0" "u32-1:0"
4872 See F</"IGNORELISTS"> for details.
4874 =item B<IgnoreSelected>
4876 The behavior is the same as with all other similar plugins: If nothing is
4877 selected at all, everything is collected. If some things are selected using the
4878 options described above, only these statistics are collected. If you set
4879 B<IgnoreSelected> to B<true>, this behavior is inverted, i.E<nbsp>e. the
4880 specified statistics will not be collected.
4884 =head2 Plugin C<network>
4886 The Network plugin sends data to a remote instance of collectd, receives data
4887 from a remote instance, or both at the same time. Data which has been received
4888 from the network is usually not transmitted again, but this can be activated, see
4889 the B<Forward> option below.
4891 The default IPv6 multicast group is C<ff18::efc0:4a42>. The default IPv4
4892 multicast group is C<239.192.74.66>. The default I<UDP> port is B<25826>.
4894 Both, B<Server> and B<Listen> can be used as single option or as block. When
4895 used as block, given options are valid for this socket only. The following
4896 example will export the metrics twice: Once to an "internal" server (without
4897 encryption and signing) and one to an external server (with cryptographic
4901 # Export to an internal server
4902 # (demonstrates usage without additional options)
4903 Server "collectd.internal.tld"
4905 # Export to an external server
4906 # (demonstrates usage with signature options)
4907 <Server "collectd.external.tld">
4908 SecurityLevel "sign"
4909 Username "myhostname"
4916 =item B<E<lt>Server> I<Host> [I<Port>]B<E<gt>>
4918 The B<Server> statement/block sets the server to send datagrams to. The
4919 statement may occur multiple times to send each datagram to multiple
4922 The argument I<Host> may be a hostname, an IPv4 address or an IPv6 address. The
4923 optional second argument specifies a port number or a service name. If not
4924 given, the default, B<25826>, is used.
4926 The following options are recognized within B<Server> blocks:
4930 =item B<SecurityLevel> B<Encrypt>|B<Sign>|B<None>
4932 Set the security you require for network communication. When the security level
4933 has been set to B<Encrypt>, data sent over the network will be encrypted using
4934 I<AES-256>. The integrity of encrypted packets is ensured using I<SHA-1>. When
4935 set to B<Sign>, transmitted data is signed using the I<HMAC-SHA-256> message
4936 authentication code. When set to B<None>, data is sent without any security.
4938 This feature is only available if the I<network> plugin was linked with
4941 =item B<Username> I<Username>
4943 Sets the username to transmit. This is used by the server to lookup the
4944 password. See B<AuthFile> below. All security levels except B<None> require
4947 This feature is only available if the I<network> plugin was linked with
4950 =item B<Password> I<Password>
4952 Sets a password (shared secret) for this socket. All security levels except
4953 B<None> require this setting.
4955 This feature is only available if the I<network> plugin was linked with
4958 =item B<Interface> I<Interface name>
4960 Set the outgoing interface for IP packets. This applies at least
4961 to IPv6 packets and if possible to IPv4. If this option is not applicable,
4962 undefined or a non-existent interface name is specified, the default
4963 behavior is to let the kernel choose the appropriate interface. Be warned
4964 that the manual selection of an interface for unicast traffic is only
4965 necessary in rare cases.
4967 =item B<ResolveInterval> I<Seconds>
4969 Sets the interval at which to re-resolve the DNS for the I<Host>. This is
4970 useful to force a regular DNS lookup to support a high availability setup. If
4971 not specified, re-resolves are never attempted.
4975 =item B<E<lt>Listen> I<Host> [I<Port>]B<E<gt>>
4977 The B<Listen> statement sets the interfaces to bind to. When multiple
4978 statements are found the daemon will bind to multiple interfaces.
4980 The argument I<Host> may be a hostname, an IPv4 address or an IPv6 address. If
4981 the argument is a multicast address the daemon will join that multicast group.
4982 The optional second argument specifies a port number or a service name. If not
4983 given, the default, B<25826>, is used.
4985 The following options are recognized within C<E<lt>ListenE<gt>> blocks:
4989 =item B<SecurityLevel> B<Encrypt>|B<Sign>|B<None>
4991 Set the security you require for network communication. When the security level
4992 has been set to B<Encrypt>, only encrypted data will be accepted. The integrity
4993 of encrypted packets is ensured using I<SHA-1>. When set to B<Sign>, only
4994 signed and encrypted data is accepted. When set to B<None>, all data will be
4995 accepted. If an B<AuthFile> option was given (see below), encrypted data is
4996 decrypted if possible.
4998 This feature is only available if the I<network> plugin was linked with
5001 =item B<AuthFile> I<Filename>
5003 Sets a file in which usernames are mapped to passwords. These passwords are
5004 used to verify signatures and to decrypt encrypted network packets. If
5005 B<SecurityLevel> is set to B<None>, this is optional. If given, signed data is
5006 verified and encrypted packets are decrypted. Otherwise, signed data is
5007 accepted without checking the signature and encrypted data cannot be decrypted.
5008 For the other security levels this option is mandatory.
5010 The file format is very simple: Each line consists of a username followed by a
5011 colon and any number of spaces followed by the password. To demonstrate, an
5012 example file could look like this:
5017 Each time a packet is received, the modification time of the file is checked
5018 using L<stat(2)>. If the file has been changed, the contents is re-read. While
5019 the file is being read, it is locked using L<fcntl(2)>.
5021 =item B<Interface> I<Interface name>
5023 Set the incoming interface for IP packets explicitly. This applies at least
5024 to IPv6 packets and if possible to IPv4. If this option is not applicable,
5025 undefined or a non-existent interface name is specified, the default
5026 behavior is, to let the kernel choose the appropriate interface. Thus incoming
5027 traffic gets only accepted, if it arrives on the given interface.
5031 =item B<TimeToLive> I<1-255>
5033 Set the time-to-live of sent packets. This applies to all, unicast and
5034 multicast, and IPv4 and IPv6 packets. The default is to not change this value.
5035 That means that multicast packets will be sent with a TTL of C<1> (one) on most
5038 =item B<MaxPacketSize> I<1024-65535>
5040 Set the maximum size for datagrams received over the network. Packets larger
5041 than this will be truncated. Defaults to 1452E<nbsp>bytes, which is the maximum
5042 payload size that can be transmitted in one Ethernet frame using IPv6E<nbsp>/
5045 On the server side, this limit should be set to the largest value used on
5046 I<any> client. Likewise, the value on the client must not be larger than the
5047 value on the server, or data will be lost.
5049 B<Compatibility:> Versions prior to I<versionE<nbsp>4.8> used a fixed sized
5050 buffer of 1024E<nbsp>bytes. Versions I<4.8>, I<4.9> and I<4.10> used a default
5051 value of 1024E<nbsp>bytes to avoid problems when sending data to an older
5054 =item B<Forward> I<true|false>
5056 If set to I<true>, write packets that were received via the network plugin to
5057 the sending sockets. This should only be activated when the B<Listen>- and
5058 B<Server>-statements differ. Otherwise packets may be send multiple times to
5059 the same multicast group. While this results in more network traffic than
5060 necessary it's not a huge problem since the plugin has a duplicate detection,
5061 so the values will not loop.
5063 =item B<ReportStats> B<true>|B<false>
5065 The network plugin cannot only receive and send statistics, it can also create
5066 statistics about itself. Collectd data included the number of received and
5067 sent octets and packets, the length of the receive queue and the number of
5068 values handled. When set to B<true>, the I<Network plugin> will make these
5069 statistics available. Defaults to B<false>.
5073 =head2 Plugin C<nginx>
5075 This plugin collects the number of connections and requests handled by the
5076 C<nginx daemon> (speak: engineE<nbsp>X), a HTTP and mail server/proxy. It
5077 queries the page provided by the C<ngx_http_stub_status_module> module, which
5078 isn't compiled by default. Please refer to
5079 L<http://wiki.codemongers.com/NginxStubStatusModule> for more information on
5080 how to compile and configure nginx and this module.
5082 The following options are accepted by the C<nginx plugin>:
5086 =item B<URL> I<http://host/nginx_status>
5088 Sets the URL of the C<ngx_http_stub_status_module> output.
5090 =item B<User> I<Username>
5092 Optional user name needed for authentication.
5094 =item B<Password> I<Password>
5096 Optional password needed for authentication.
5098 =item B<VerifyPeer> B<true|false>
5100 Enable or disable peer SSL certificate verification. See
5101 L<http://curl.haxx.se/docs/sslcerts.html> for details. Enabled by default.
5103 =item B<VerifyHost> B<true|false>
5105 Enable or disable peer host name verification. If enabled, the plugin checks
5106 if the C<Common Name> or a C<Subject Alternate Name> field of the SSL
5107 certificate matches the host name provided by the B<URL> option. If this
5108 identity check fails, the connection is aborted. Obviously, only works when
5109 connecting to a SSL enabled server. Enabled by default.
5111 =item B<CACert> I<File>
5113 File that holds one or more SSL certificates. If you want to use HTTPS you will
5114 possibly need this option. What CA certificates come bundled with C<libcurl>
5115 and are checked by default depends on the distribution you use.
5117 =item B<Timeout> I<Milliseconds>
5119 The B<Timeout> option sets the overall timeout for HTTP requests to B<URL>, in
5120 milliseconds. By default, the configured B<Interval> is used to set the
5125 =head2 Plugin C<notify_desktop>
5127 This plugin sends a desktop notification to a notification daemon, as defined
5128 in the Desktop Notification Specification. To actually display the
5129 notifications, B<notification-daemon> is required and B<collectd> has to be
5130 able to access the X server (i.E<nbsp>e., the C<DISPLAY> and C<XAUTHORITY>
5131 environment variables have to be set correctly) and the D-Bus message bus.
5133 The Desktop Notification Specification can be found at
5134 L<http://www.galago-project.org/specs/notification/>.
5138 =item B<OkayTimeout> I<timeout>
5140 =item B<WarningTimeout> I<timeout>
5142 =item B<FailureTimeout> I<timeout>
5144 Set the I<timeout>, in milliseconds, after which to expire the notification
5145 for C<OKAY>, C<WARNING> and C<FAILURE> severities respectively. If zero has
5146 been specified, the displayed notification will not be closed at all - the
5147 user has to do so herself. These options default to 5000. If a negative number
5148 has been specified, the default is used as well.
5152 =head2 Plugin C<notify_email>
5154 The I<notify_email> plugin uses the I<ESMTP> library to send notifications to a
5155 configured email address.
5157 I<libESMTP> is available from L<http://www.stafford.uklinux.net/libesmtp/>.
5159 Available configuration options:
5163 =item B<From> I<Address>
5165 Email address from which the emails should appear to come from.
5167 Default: C<root@localhost>
5169 =item B<Recipient> I<Address>
5171 Configures the email address(es) to which the notifications should be mailed.
5172 May be repeated to send notifications to multiple addresses.
5174 At least one B<Recipient> must be present for the plugin to work correctly.
5176 =item B<SMTPServer> I<Hostname>
5178 Hostname of the SMTP server to connect to.
5180 Default: C<localhost>
5182 =item B<SMTPPort> I<Port>
5184 TCP port to connect to.
5188 =item B<SMTPUser> I<Username>
5190 Username for ASMTP authentication. Optional.
5192 =item B<SMTPPassword> I<Password>
5194 Password for ASMTP authentication. Optional.
5196 =item B<Subject> I<Subject>
5198 Subject-template to use when sending emails. There must be exactly two
5199 string-placeholders in the subject, given in the standard I<printf(3)> syntax,
5200 i.E<nbsp>e. C<%s>. The first will be replaced with the severity, the second
5203 Default: C<Collectd notify: %s@%s>
5207 =head2 Plugin C<notify_nagios>
5209 The I<notify_nagios> plugin writes notifications to Nagios' I<command file> as
5210 a I<passive service check result>.
5212 Available configuration options:
5216 =item B<CommandFile> I<Path>
5218 Sets the I<command file> to write to. Defaults to F</usr/local/nagios/var/rw/nagios.cmd>.
5222 =head2 Plugin C<ntpd>
5224 The C<ntpd> plugin collects per-peer ntp data such as time offset and time
5227 For talking to B<ntpd>, it mimics what the B<ntpdc> control program does on
5228 the wire - using B<mode 7> specific requests. This mode is deprecated with
5229 newer B<ntpd> releases (4.2.7p230 and later). For the C<ntpd> plugin to work
5230 correctly with them, the ntp daemon must be explicitly configured to
5231 enable B<mode 7> (which is disabled by default). Refer to the I<ntp.conf(5)>
5232 manual page for details.
5234 Available configuration options for the C<ntpd> plugin:
5238 =item B<Host> I<Hostname>
5240 Hostname of the host running B<ntpd>. Defaults to B<localhost>.
5242 =item B<Port> I<Port>
5244 UDP-Port to connect to. Defaults to B<123>.
5246 =item B<ReverseLookups> B<true>|B<false>
5248 Sets whether or not to perform reverse lookups on peers. Since the name or
5249 IP-address may be used in a filename it is recommended to disable reverse
5250 lookups. The default is to do reverse lookups to preserve backwards
5251 compatibility, though.
5253 =item B<IncludeUnitID> B<true>|B<false>
5255 When a peer is a refclock, include the unit ID in the I<type instance>.
5256 Defaults to B<false> for backward compatibility.
5258 If two refclock peers use the same driver and this is B<false>, the plugin will
5259 try to write simultaneous measurements from both to the same type instance.
5260 This will result in error messages in the log and only one set of measurements
5265 =head2 Plugin C<nut>
5269 =item B<UPS> I<upsname>B<@>I<hostname>[B<:>I<port>]
5271 Add a UPS to collect data from. The format is identical to the one accepted by
5274 =item B<ForceSSL> B<true>|B<false>
5276 Stops connections from falling back to unsecured if an SSL connection
5277 cannot be established. Defaults to false if undeclared.
5279 =item B<VerifyPeer> I<true>|I<false>
5281 If set to true, requires a CAPath be provided. Will use the CAPath to find
5282 certificates to use as Trusted Certificates to validate a upsd server certificate.
5283 If validation of the upsd server certificate fails, the connection will not be
5284 established. If ForceSSL is undeclared or set to false, setting VerifyPeer to true
5285 will override and set ForceSSL to true.
5287 =item B<CAPath> I/path/to/certs/folder
5289 If VerifyPeer is set to true, this is required. Otherwise this is ignored.
5290 The folder pointed at must contain certificate(s) named according to their hash.
5291 Ex: XXXXXXXX.Y where X is the hash value of a cert and Y is 0. If name collisions
5292 occur because two different certs have the same hash value, Y can be incremented
5293 in order to avoid conflict. To create a symbolic link to a certificate the following
5294 command can be used from within the directory where the cert resides:
5296 C<ln -s some.crt ./$(openssl x509 -hash -noout -in some.crt).0>
5298 Alternatively, the package openssl-perl provides a command C<c_rehash> that will
5299 generate links like the one described above for ALL certs in a given folder.
5301 C<c_rehash /path/to/certs/folder>
5305 =head2 Plugin C<olsrd>
5307 The I<olsrd> plugin connects to the TCP port opened by the I<txtinfo> plugin of
5308 the Optimized Link State Routing daemon and reads information about the current
5309 state of the meshed network.
5311 The following configuration options are understood:
5315 =item B<Host> I<Host>
5317 Connect to I<Host>. Defaults to B<"localhost">.
5319 =item B<Port> I<Port>
5321 Specifies the port to connect to. This must be a string, even if you give the
5322 port as a number rather than a service name. Defaults to B<"2006">.
5324 =item B<CollectLinks> B<No>|B<Summary>|B<Detail>
5326 Specifies what information to collect about links, i.E<nbsp>e. direct
5327 connections of the daemon queried. If set to B<No>, no information is
5328 collected. If set to B<Summary>, the number of links and the average of all
5329 I<link quality> (LQ) and I<neighbor link quality> (NLQ) values is calculated.
5330 If set to B<Detail> LQ and NLQ are collected per link.
5332 Defaults to B<Detail>.
5334 =item B<CollectRoutes> B<No>|B<Summary>|B<Detail>
5336 Specifies what information to collect about routes of the daemon queried. If
5337 set to B<No>, no information is collected. If set to B<Summary>, the number of
5338 routes and the average I<metric> and I<ETX> is calculated. If set to B<Detail>
5339 metric and ETX are collected per route.
5341 Defaults to B<Summary>.
5343 =item B<CollectTopology> B<No>|B<Summary>|B<Detail>
5345 Specifies what information to collect about the global topology. If set to
5346 B<No>, no information is collected. If set to B<Summary>, the number of links
5347 in the entire topology and the average I<link quality> (LQ) is calculated.
5348 If set to B<Detail> LQ and NLQ are collected for each link in the entire topology.
5350 Defaults to B<Summary>.
5354 =head2 Plugin C<onewire>
5356 B<EXPERIMENTAL!> See notes below.
5358 The C<onewire> plugin uses the B<owcapi> library from the B<owfs> project
5359 L<http://owfs.org/> to read sensors connected via the onewire bus.
5361 It can be used in two possible modes - standard or advanced.
5363 In the standard mode only temperature sensors (sensors with the family code
5364 C<10>, C<22> and C<28> - e.g. DS1820, DS18S20, DS1920) can be read. If you have
5365 other sensors you would like to have included, please send a sort request to
5366 the mailing list. You can select sensors to be read or to be ignored depending
5367 on the option B<IgnoreSelected>). When no list is provided the whole bus is
5368 walked and all sensors are read.
5370 Hubs (the DS2409 chips) are working, but read the note, why this plugin is
5371 experimental, below.
5373 In the advanced mode you can configure any sensor to be read (only numerical
5374 value) using full OWFS path (e.g. "/uncached/10.F10FCA000800/temperature").
5375 In this mode you have to list all the sensors. Neither default bus walk nor
5376 B<IgnoreSelected> are used here. Address and type (file) is extracted from
5377 the path automatically and should produce compatible structure with the "standard"
5378 mode (basically the path is expected as for example
5379 "/uncached/10.F10FCA000800/temperature" where it would extract address part
5380 "F10FCA000800" and the rest after the slash is considered the type - here
5382 There are two advantages to this mode - you can access virtually any sensor
5383 (not just temperature), select whether to use cached or directly read values
5384 and it is slighlty faster. The downside is more complex configuration.
5386 The two modes are distinguished automatically by the format of the address.
5387 It is not possible to mix the two modes. Once a full path is detected in any
5388 B<Sensor> then the whole addressing (all sensors) is considered to be this way
5389 (and as standard addresses will fail parsing they will be ignored).
5393 =item B<Device> I<Device>
5395 Sets the device to read the values from. This can either be a "real" hardware
5396 device, such as a serial port or an USB port, or the address of the
5397 L<owserver(1)> socket, usually B<localhost:4304>.
5399 Though the documentation claims to automatically recognize the given address
5400 format, with versionE<nbsp>2.7p4 we had to specify the type explicitly. So
5401 with that version, the following configuration worked for us:
5404 Device "-s localhost:4304"
5407 This directive is B<required> and does not have a default value.
5409 =item B<Sensor> I<Sensor>
5411 In the standard mode selects sensors to collect or to ignore
5412 (depending on B<IgnoreSelected>, see below). Sensors are specified without
5413 the family byte at the beginning, so you have to use for example C<F10FCA000800>,
5414 and B<not> include the leading C<10.> family byte and point.
5415 When no B<Sensor> is configured the whole Onewire bus is walked and all supported
5416 sensors (see above) are read.
5418 In the advanced mode the B<Sensor> specifies full OWFS path - e.g.
5419 C</uncached/10.F10FCA000800/temperature> (or when cached values are OK
5420 C</10.F10FCA000800/temperature>). B<IgnoreSelected> is not used.
5422 As there can be multiple devices on the bus you can list multiple sensor (use
5423 multiple B<Sensor> elements).
5425 See F</"IGNORELISTS"> for details.
5427 =item B<IgnoreSelected> I<true>|I<false>
5429 If no configuration is given, the B<onewire> plugin will collect data from all
5430 sensors found. This may not be practical, especially if sensors are added and
5431 removed regularly. Sometimes, however, it's easier/preferred to collect only
5432 specific sensors or all sensors I<except> a few specified ones. This option
5433 enables you to do that: By setting B<IgnoreSelected> to I<true> the effect of
5434 B<Sensor> is inverted: All selected interfaces are ignored and all other
5435 interfaces are collected.
5437 Used only in the standard mode - see above.
5439 =item B<Interval> I<Seconds>
5441 Sets the interval in which all sensors should be read. If not specified, the
5442 global B<Interval> setting is used.
5446 B<EXPERIMENTAL!> The C<onewire> plugin is experimental, because it doesn't yet
5447 work with big setups. It works with one sensor being attached to one
5448 controller, but as soon as you throw in a couple more senors and maybe a hub
5449 or two, reading all values will take more than ten seconds (the default
5450 interval). We will probably add some separate thread for reading the sensors
5451 and some cache or something like that, but it's not done yet. We will try to
5452 maintain backwards compatibility in the future, but we can't promise. So in
5453 short: If it works for you: Great! But keep in mind that the config I<might>
5454 change, though this is unlikely. Oh, and if you want to help improving this
5455 plugin, just send a short notice to the mailing list. ThanksE<nbsp>:)
5457 =head2 Plugin C<openldap>
5459 To use the C<openldap> plugin you first need to configure the I<OpenLDAP>
5460 server correctly. The backend database C<monitor> needs to be loaded and
5461 working. See slapd-monitor(5) for the details.
5463 The configuration of the C<openldap> plugin consists of one or more B<Instance>
5464 blocks. Each block requires one string argument as the instance name. For
5469 URL "ldap://localhost/"
5472 URL "ldaps://localhost/"
5476 The instance name will be used as the I<plugin instance>. To emulate the old
5477 (versionE<nbsp>4) behavior, you can use an empty string (""). In order for the
5478 plugin to work correctly, each instance name must be unique. This is not
5479 enforced by the plugin and it is your responsibility to ensure it is.
5481 The following options are accepted within each B<Instance> block:
5485 =item B<URL> I<ldap://host/binddn>
5487 Sets the URL to use to connect to the I<OpenLDAP> server. This option is
5490 =item B<BindDN> I<BindDN>
5492 Name in the form of an LDAP distinguished name intended to be used for
5493 authentication. Defaults to empty string to establish an anonymous authorization.
5495 =item B<Password> I<Password>
5497 Password for simple bind authentication. If this option is not set,
5498 unauthenticated bind operation is used.
5500 =item B<StartTLS> B<true|false>
5502 Defines whether TLS must be used when connecting to the I<OpenLDAP> server.
5503 Disabled by default.
5505 =item B<VerifyHost> B<true|false>
5507 Enables or disables peer host name verification. If enabled, the plugin checks
5508 if the C<Common Name> or a C<Subject Alternate Name> field of the SSL
5509 certificate matches the host name provided by the B<URL> option. If this
5510 identity check fails, the connection is aborted. Enabled by default.
5512 =item B<CACert> I<File>
5514 File that holds one or more SSL certificates. If you want to use TLS/SSL you
5515 may possibly need this option. What CA certificates are checked by default
5516 depends on the distribution you use and can be changed with the usual ldap
5517 client configuration mechanisms. See ldap.conf(5) for the details.
5519 =item B<Timeout> I<Seconds>
5521 Sets the timeout value for ldap operations, in seconds. By default, the
5522 configured B<Interval> is used to set the timeout. Use B<-1> to disable
5525 =item B<Version> I<Version>
5527 An integer which sets the LDAP protocol version number to use when connecting
5528 to the I<OpenLDAP> server. Defaults to B<3> for using I<LDAPv3>.
5532 =head2 Plugin C<openvpn>
5534 The OpenVPN plugin reads a status file maintained by OpenVPN and gathers
5535 traffic statistics about connected clients.
5537 To set up OpenVPN to write to the status file periodically, use the
5538 B<--status> option of OpenVPN. Since OpenVPN can write two different formats,
5539 you need to set the required format, too. This is done by setting
5540 B<--status-version> to B<2>.
5542 So, in a nutshell you need:
5544 openvpn $OTHER_OPTIONS \
5545 --status "/var/run/openvpn-status" 10 \
5552 =item B<StatusFile> I<File>
5554 Specifies the location of the status file.
5556 =item B<ImprovedNamingSchema> B<true>|B<false>
5558 When enabled, the filename of the status file will be used as plugin instance
5559 and the client's "common name" will be used as type instance. This is required
5560 when reading multiple status files. Enabling this option is recommended, but to
5561 maintain backwards compatibility this option is disabled by default.
5563 =item B<CollectCompression> B<true>|B<false>
5565 Sets whether or not statistics about the compression used by OpenVPN should be
5566 collected. This information is only available in I<single> mode. Enabled by
5569 =item B<CollectIndividualUsers> B<true>|B<false>
5571 Sets whether or not traffic information is collected for each connected client
5572 individually. If set to false, currently no traffic data is collected at all
5573 because aggregating this data in a save manner is tricky. Defaults to B<true>.
5575 =item B<CollectUserCount> B<true>|B<false>
5577 When enabled, the number of currently connected clients or users is collected.
5578 This is especially interesting when B<CollectIndividualUsers> is disabled, but
5579 can be configured independently from that option. Defaults to B<false>.
5583 =head2 Plugin C<oracle>
5585 The "oracle" plugin uses the Oracle® Call Interface I<(OCI)> to connect to an
5586 Oracle® Database and lets you execute SQL statements there. It is very similar
5587 to the "dbi" plugin, because it was written around the same time. See the "dbi"
5588 plugin's documentation above for details.
5591 <Query "out_of_stock">
5592 Statement "SELECT category, COUNT(*) AS value FROM products WHERE in_stock = 0 GROUP BY category"
5595 # InstancePrefix "foo"
5596 InstancesFrom "category"
5600 <Database "product_information">
5604 Query "out_of_stock"
5608 =head3 B<Query> blocks
5610 The Query blocks are handled identically to the Query blocks of the "dbi"
5611 plugin. Please see its documentation above for details on how to specify
5614 =head3 B<Database> blocks
5616 Database blocks define a connection to a database and which queries should be
5617 sent to that database. Each database needs a "name" as string argument in the
5618 starting tag of the block. This name will be used as "PluginInstance" in the
5619 values submitted to the daemon. Other than that, that name is not used.
5623 =item B<ConnectID> I<ID>
5625 Defines the "database alias" or "service name" to connect to. Usually, these
5626 names are defined in the file named C<$ORACLE_HOME/network/admin/tnsnames.ora>.
5628 =item B<Host> I<Host>
5630 Hostname to use when dispatching values for this database. Defaults to using
5631 the global hostname of the I<collectd> instance.
5633 =item B<Username> I<Username>
5635 Username used for authentication.
5637 =item B<Password> I<Password>
5639 Password used for authentication.
5641 =item B<Query> I<QueryName>
5643 Associates the query named I<QueryName> with this database connection. The
5644 query needs to be defined I<before> this statement, i.E<nbsp>e. all query
5645 blocks you want to refer to must be placed above the database block you want to
5650 =head2 Plugin C<ovs_events>
5652 The I<ovs_events> plugin monitors the link status of I<Open vSwitch> (OVS)
5653 connected interfaces, dispatches the values to collectd and sends the
5654 notification whenever the link state change occurs. This plugin uses OVS
5655 database to get a link state change notification.
5659 <Plugin "ovs_events">
5662 Socket "/var/run/openvswitch/db.sock"
5663 Interfaces "br0" "veth0"
5664 SendNotification true
5665 DispatchValues false
5668 The plugin provides the following configuration options:
5672 =item B<Address> I<node>
5674 The address of the OVS DB server JSON-RPC interface used by the plugin. To
5675 enable the interface, OVS DB daemon should be running with C<--remote=ptcp:>
5676 option. See L<ovsdb-server(1)> for more details. The option may be either
5677 network hostname, IPv4 numbers-and-dots notation or IPv6 hexadecimal string
5678 format. Defaults to B<'localhost'>.
5680 =item B<Port> I<service>
5682 TCP-port to connect to. Either a service name or a port number may be given.
5683 Defaults to B<6640>.
5685 =item B<Socket> I<path>
5687 The UNIX domain socket path of OVS DB server JSON-RPC interface used by the
5688 plugin. To enable the interface, the OVS DB daemon should be running with
5689 C<--remote=punix:> option. See L<ovsdb-server(1)> for more details. If this
5690 option is set, B<Address> and B<Port> options are ignored.
5692 =item B<Interfaces> [I<ifname> ...]
5694 List of interface names to be monitored by this plugin. If this option is not
5695 specified or is empty then all OVS connected interfaces on all bridges are
5698 Default: empty (all interfaces on all bridges are monitored)
5700 =item B<SendNotification> I<true|false>
5702 If set to true, OVS link notifications (interface status and OVS DB connection
5703 terminate) are sent to collectd. Default value is true.
5705 =item B<DispatchValues> I<true|false>
5707 Dispatch the OVS DB interface link status value with configured plugin interval.
5708 Defaults to false. Please note, if B<SendNotification> and B<DispatchValues>
5709 options are false, no OVS information will be provided by the plugin.
5713 B<Note:> By default, the global interval setting is used within which to
5714 retrieve the OVS link status. To configure a plugin-specific interval, please
5715 use B<Interval> option of the OVS B<LoadPlugin> block settings. For milliseconds
5716 simple divide the time by 1000 for example if the desired interval is 50ms, set
5719 =head2 Plugin C<ovs_stats>
5721 The I<ovs_stats> plugin collects statistics of OVS connected interfaces.
5722 This plugin uses OVSDB management protocol (RFC7047) monitor mechanism to get
5723 statistics from OVSDB
5727 <Plugin "ovs_stats">
5730 Socket "/var/run/openvswitch/db.sock"
5731 Bridges "br0" "br_ext"
5734 The plugin provides the following configuration options:
5738 =item B<Address> I<node>
5740 The address of the OVS DB server JSON-RPC interface used by the plugin. To
5741 enable the interface, OVS DB daemon should be running with C<--remote=ptcp:>
5742 option. See L<ovsdb-server(1)> for more details. The option may be either
5743 network hostname, IPv4 numbers-and-dots notation or IPv6 hexadecimal string
5744 format. Defaults to B<'localhost'>.
5746 =item B<Port> I<service>
5748 TCP-port to connect to. Either a service name or a port number may be given.
5749 Defaults to B<6640>.
5751 =item B<Socket> I<path>
5753 The UNIX domain socket path of OVS DB server JSON-RPC interface used by the
5754 plugin. To enable the interface, the OVS DB daemon should be running with
5755 C<--remote=punix:> option. See L<ovsdb-server(1)> for more details. If this
5756 option is set, B<Address> and B<Port> options are ignored.
5758 =item B<Bridges> [I<brname> ...]
5760 List of OVS bridge names to be monitored by this plugin. If this option is
5761 omitted or is empty then all OVS bridges will be monitored.
5763 Default: empty (monitor all bridges)
5767 =head2 Plugin C<perl>
5769 This plugin embeds a Perl-interpreter into collectd and provides an interface
5770 to collectd's plugin system. See L<collectd-perl(5)> for its documentation.
5772 =head2 Plugin C<pinba>
5774 The I<Pinba plugin> receives profiling information from I<Pinba>, an extension
5775 for the I<PHP> interpreter. At the end of executing a script, i.e. after a
5776 PHP-based webpage has been delivered, the extension will send a UDP packet
5777 containing timing information, peak memory usage and so on. The plugin will
5778 wait for such packets, parse them and account the provided information, which
5779 is then dispatched to the daemon once per interval.
5786 # Overall statistics for the website.
5788 Server "www.example.com"
5790 # Statistics for www-a only
5792 Host "www-a.example.com"
5793 Server "www.example.com"
5795 # Statistics for www-b only
5797 Host "www-b.example.com"
5798 Server "www.example.com"
5802 The plugin provides the following configuration options:
5806 =item B<Address> I<Node>
5808 Configures the address used to open a listening socket. By default, plugin will
5809 bind to the I<any> address C<::0>.
5811 =item B<Port> I<Service>
5813 Configures the port (service) to bind to. By default the default Pinba port
5814 "30002" will be used. The option accepts service names in addition to port
5815 numbers and thus requires a I<string> argument.
5817 =item E<lt>B<View> I<Name>E<gt> block
5819 The packets sent by the Pinba extension include the hostname of the server, the
5820 server name (the name of the virtual host) and the script that was executed.
5821 Using B<View> blocks it is possible to separate the data into multiple groups
5822 to get more meaningful statistics. Each packet is added to all matching groups,
5823 so that a packet may be accounted for more than once.
5827 =item B<Host> I<Host>
5829 Matches the hostname of the system the webserver / script is running on. This
5830 will contain the result of the L<gethostname(2)> system call. If not
5831 configured, all hostnames will be accepted.
5833 =item B<Server> I<Server>
5835 Matches the name of the I<virtual host>, i.e. the contents of the
5836 C<$_SERVER["SERVER_NAME"]> variable when within PHP. If not configured, all
5837 server names will be accepted.
5839 =item B<Script> I<Script>
5841 Matches the name of the I<script name>, i.e. the contents of the
5842 C<$_SERVER["SCRIPT_NAME"]> variable when within PHP. If not configured, all
5843 script names will be accepted.
5849 =head2 Plugin C<ping>
5851 The I<Ping> plugin starts a new thread which sends ICMP "ping" packets to the
5852 configured hosts periodically and measures the network latency. Whenever the
5853 C<read> function of the plugin is called, it submits the average latency, the
5854 standard deviation and the drop rate for each host.
5856 Available configuration options:
5860 =item B<Host> I<IP-address>
5862 Host to ping periodically. This option may be repeated several times to ping
5865 =item B<Interval> I<Seconds>
5867 Sets the interval in which to send ICMP echo packets to the configured hosts.
5868 This is B<not> the interval in which metrics are read from the plugin but the
5869 interval in which the hosts are "pinged". Therefore, the setting here should be
5870 smaller than or equal to the global B<Interval> setting. Fractional times, such
5871 as "1.24" are allowed.
5875 =item B<Timeout> I<Seconds>
5877 Time to wait for a response from the host to which an ICMP packet had been
5878 sent. If a reply was not received after I<Seconds> seconds, the host is assumed
5879 to be down or the packet to be dropped. This setting must be smaller than the
5880 B<Interval> setting above for the plugin to work correctly. Fractional
5881 arguments are accepted.
5885 =item B<TTL> I<0-255>
5887 Sets the Time-To-Live of generated ICMP packets.
5889 =item B<Size> I<size>
5891 Sets the size of the data payload in ICMP packet to specified I<size> (it
5892 will be filled with regular ASCII pattern). If not set, default 56 byte
5893 long string is used so that the packet size of an ICMPv4 packet is exactly
5894 64 bytes, similar to the behaviour of normal ping(1) command.
5896 =item B<SourceAddress> I<host>
5898 Sets the source address to use. I<host> may either be a numerical network
5899 address or a network hostname.
5901 =item B<Device> I<name>
5903 Sets the outgoing network device to be used. I<name> has to specify an
5904 interface name (e.E<nbsp>g. C<eth0>). This might not be supported by all
5907 =item B<MaxMissed> I<Packets>
5909 Trigger a DNS resolve after the host has not replied to I<Packets> packets. This
5910 enables the use of dynamic DNS services (like dyndns.org) with the ping plugin.
5912 Default: B<-1> (disabled)
5916 =head2 Plugin C<postgresql>
5918 The C<postgresql> plugin queries statistics from PostgreSQL databases. It
5919 keeps a persistent connection to all configured databases and tries to
5920 reconnect if the connection has been interrupted. A database is configured by
5921 specifying a B<Database> block as described below. The default statistics are
5922 collected from PostgreSQL's B<statistics collector> which thus has to be
5923 enabled for this plugin to work correctly. This should usually be the case by
5924 default. See the section "The Statistics Collector" of the B<PostgreSQL
5925 Documentation> for details.
5927 By specifying custom database queries using a B<Query> block as described
5928 below, you may collect any data that is available from some PostgreSQL
5929 database. This way, you are able to access statistics of external daemons
5930 which are available in a PostgreSQL database or use future or special
5931 statistics provided by PostgreSQL without the need to upgrade your collectd
5934 Starting with version 5.2, the C<postgresql> plugin supports writing data to
5935 PostgreSQL databases as well. This has been implemented in a generic way. You
5936 need to specify an SQL statement which will then be executed by collectd in
5937 order to write the data (see below for details). The benefit of that approach
5938 is that there is no fixed database layout. Rather, the layout may be optimized
5939 for the current setup.
5941 The B<PostgreSQL Documentation> manual can be found at
5942 L<http://www.postgresql.org/docs/manuals/>.
5946 Statement "SELECT magic FROM wizard WHERE host = $1;"
5950 InstancePrefix "magic"
5955 <Query rt36_tickets>
5956 Statement "SELECT COUNT(type) AS count, type \
5958 WHEN resolved = 'epoch' THEN 'open' \
5959 ELSE 'resolved' END AS type \
5960 FROM tickets) type \
5964 InstancePrefix "rt36_tickets"
5965 InstancesFrom "type"
5971 Statement "SELECT collectd_insert($1, $2, $3, $4, $5, $6, $7, $8, $9);"
5981 KRBSrvName "kerberos_service_name"
5987 Service "service_name"
5988 Query backend # predefined
5999 The B<Query> block defines one database query which may later be used by a
6000 database definition. It accepts a single mandatory argument which specifies
6001 the name of the query. The names of all queries have to be unique (see the
6002 B<MinVersion> and B<MaxVersion> options below for an exception to this
6005 In each B<Query> block, there is one or more B<Result> blocks. Multiple
6006 B<Result> blocks may be used to extract multiple values from a single query.
6008 The following configuration options are available to define the query:
6012 =item B<Statement> I<sql query statement>
6014 Specify the I<sql query statement> which the plugin should execute. The string
6015 may contain the tokens B<$1>, B<$2>, etc. which are used to reference the
6016 first, second, etc. parameter. The value of the parameters is specified by the
6017 B<Param> configuration option - see below for details. To include a literal
6018 B<$> character followed by a number, surround it with single quotes (B<'>).
6020 Any SQL command which may return data (such as C<SELECT> or C<SHOW>) is
6021 allowed. Note, however, that only a single command may be used. Semicolons are
6022 allowed as long as a single non-empty command has been specified only.
6024 The returned lines will be handled separately one after another.
6026 =item B<Param> I<hostname>|I<database>|I<instance>|I<username>|I<interval>
6028 Specify the parameters which should be passed to the SQL query. The parameters
6029 are referred to in the SQL query as B<$1>, B<$2>, etc. in the same order as
6030 they appear in the configuration file. The value of the parameter is
6031 determined depending on the value of the B<Param> option as follows:
6037 The configured hostname of the database connection. If a UNIX domain socket is
6038 used, the parameter expands to "localhost".
6042 The name of the database of the current connection.
6046 The name of the database plugin instance. See the B<Instance> option of the
6047 database specification below for details.
6051 The username used to connect to the database.
6055 The interval with which this database is queried (as specified by the database
6056 specific or global B<Interval> options).
6060 Please note that parameters are only supported by PostgreSQL's protocol
6061 version 3 and above which was introduced in version 7.4 of PostgreSQL.
6063 =item B<PluginInstanceFrom> I<column>
6065 Specify how to create the "PluginInstance" for reporting this query results.
6066 Only one column is supported. You may concatenate fields and string values in
6067 the query statement to get the required results.
6069 =item B<MinVersion> I<version>
6071 =item B<MaxVersion> I<version>
6073 Specify the minimum or maximum version of PostgreSQL that this query should be
6074 used with. Some statistics might only be available with certain versions of
6075 PostgreSQL. This allows you to specify multiple queries with the same name but
6076 which apply to different versions, thus allowing you to use the same
6077 configuration in a heterogeneous environment.
6079 The I<version> has to be specified as the concatenation of the major, minor
6080 and patch-level versions, each represented as two-decimal-digit numbers. For
6081 example, version 8.2.3 will become 80203.
6085 The B<Result> block defines how to handle the values returned from the query.
6086 It defines which column holds which value and how to dispatch that value to
6091 =item B<Type> I<type>
6093 The I<type> name to be used when dispatching the values. The type describes
6094 how to handle the data and where to store it. See L<types.db(5)> for more
6095 details on types and their configuration. The number and type of values (as
6096 selected by the B<ValuesFrom> option) has to match the type of the given name.
6098 This option is mandatory.
6100 =item B<InstancePrefix> I<prefix>
6102 =item B<InstancesFrom> I<column0> [I<column1> ...]
6104 Specify how to create the "TypeInstance" for each data set (i.E<nbsp>e. line).
6105 B<InstancePrefix> defines a static prefix that will be prepended to all type
6106 instances. B<InstancesFrom> defines the column names whose values will be used
6107 to create the type instance. Multiple values will be joined together using the
6108 hyphen (C<->) as separation character.
6110 The plugin itself does not check whether or not all built instances are
6111 different. It is your responsibility to assure that each is unique.
6113 Both options are optional. If none is specified, the type instance will be
6116 =item B<ValuesFrom> I<column0> [I<column1> ...]
6118 Names the columns whose content is used as the actual data for the data sets
6119 that are dispatched to the daemon. How many such columns you need is
6120 determined by the B<Type> setting as explained above. If you specify too many
6121 or not enough columns, the plugin will complain about that and no data will be
6122 submitted to the daemon.
6124 The actual data type, as seen by PostgreSQL, is not that important as long as
6125 it represents numbers. The plugin will automatically cast the values to the
6126 right type if it know how to do that. For that, it uses the L<strtoll(3)> and
6127 L<strtod(3)> functions, so anything supported by those functions is supported
6128 by the plugin as well.
6130 This option is required inside a B<Result> block and may be specified multiple
6131 times. If multiple B<ValuesFrom> options are specified, the columns are read
6136 The following predefined queries are available (the definitions can be found
6137 in the F<postgresql_default.conf> file which, by default, is available at
6138 C<I<prefix>/share/collectd/>):
6144 This query collects the number of backends, i.E<nbsp>e. the number of
6147 =item B<transactions>
6149 This query collects the numbers of committed and rolled-back transactions of
6154 This query collects the numbers of various table modifications (i.E<nbsp>e.
6155 insertions, updates, deletions) of the user tables.
6157 =item B<query_plans>
6159 This query collects the numbers of various table scans and returned tuples of
6162 =item B<table_states>
6164 This query collects the numbers of live and dead rows in the user tables.
6168 This query collects disk block access counts for user tables.
6172 This query collects the on-disk size of the database in bytes.
6176 In addition, the following detailed queries are available by default. Please
6177 note that each of those queries collects information B<by table>, thus,
6178 potentially producing B<a lot> of data. For details see the description of the
6179 non-by_table queries above.
6183 =item B<queries_by_table>
6185 =item B<query_plans_by_table>
6187 =item B<table_states_by_table>
6189 =item B<disk_io_by_table>
6193 The B<Writer> block defines a PostgreSQL writer backend. It accepts a single
6194 mandatory argument specifying the name of the writer. This will then be used
6195 in the B<Database> specification in order to activate the writer instance. The
6196 names of all writers have to be unique. The following options may be
6201 =item B<Statement> I<sql statement>
6203 This mandatory option specifies the SQL statement that will be executed for
6204 each submitted value. A single SQL statement is allowed only. Anything after
6205 the first semicolon will be ignored.
6207 Nine parameters will be passed to the statement and should be specified as
6208 tokens B<$1>, B<$2>, through B<$9> in the statement string. The following
6209 values are made available through those parameters:
6215 The timestamp of the queried value as an RFC 3339-formatted local time.
6219 The hostname of the queried value.
6223 The plugin name of the queried value.
6227 The plugin instance of the queried value. This value may be B<NULL> if there
6228 is no plugin instance.
6232 The type of the queried value (cf. L<types.db(5)>).
6236 The type instance of the queried value. This value may be B<NULL> if there is
6241 An array of names for the submitted values (i.E<nbsp>e., the name of the data
6242 sources of the submitted value-list).
6246 An array of types for the submitted values (i.E<nbsp>e., the type of the data
6247 sources of the submitted value-list; C<counter>, C<gauge>, ...). Note, that if
6248 B<StoreRates> is enabled (which is the default, see below), all types will be
6253 An array of the submitted values. The dimensions of the value name and value
6258 In general, it is advisable to create and call a custom function in the
6259 PostgreSQL database for this purpose. Any procedural language supported by
6260 PostgreSQL will do (see chapter "Server Programming" in the PostgreSQL manual
6263 =item B<StoreRates> B<false>|B<true>
6265 If set to B<true> (the default), convert counter values to rates. If set to
6266 B<false> counter values are stored as is, i.E<nbsp>e. as an increasing integer
6271 The B<Database> block defines one PostgreSQL database for which to collect
6272 statistics. It accepts a single mandatory argument which specifies the
6273 database name. None of the other options are required. PostgreSQL will use
6274 default values as documented in the section "CONNECTING TO A DATABASE" in the
6275 L<psql(1)> manpage. However, be aware that those defaults may be influenced by
6276 the user collectd is run as and special environment variables. See the manpage
6281 =item B<Interval> I<seconds>
6283 Specify the interval with which the database should be queried. The default is
6284 to use the global B<Interval> setting.
6286 =item B<CommitInterval> I<seconds>
6288 This option may be used for database connections which have "writers" assigned
6289 (see above). If specified, it causes a writer to put several updates into a
6290 single transaction. This transaction will last for the specified amount of
6291 time. By default, each update will be executed in a separate transaction. Each
6292 transaction generates a fair amount of overhead which can, thus, be reduced by
6293 activating this option. The draw-back is, that data covering the specified
6294 amount of time will be lost, for example, if a single statement within the
6295 transaction fails or if the database server crashes.
6297 =item B<Instance> I<name>
6299 Specify the plugin instance name that should be used instead of the database
6300 name (which is the default, if this option has not been specified). This
6301 allows one to query multiple databases of the same name on the same host (e.g.
6302 when running multiple database server versions in parallel).
6303 The plugin instance name can also be set from the query result using
6304 the B<PluginInstanceFrom> option in B<Query> block.
6306 =item B<Host> I<hostname>
6308 Specify the hostname or IP of the PostgreSQL server to connect to. If the
6309 value begins with a slash, it is interpreted as the directory name in which to
6310 look for the UNIX domain socket.
6312 This option is also used to determine the hostname that is associated with a
6313 collected data set. If it has been omitted or either begins with with a slash
6314 or equals B<localhost> it will be replaced with the global hostname definition
6315 of collectd. Any other value will be passed literally to collectd when
6316 dispatching values. Also see the global B<Hostname> and B<FQDNLookup> options.
6318 =item B<Port> I<port>
6320 Specify the TCP port or the local UNIX domain socket file extension of the
6323 =item B<User> I<username>
6325 Specify the username to be used when connecting to the server.
6327 =item B<Password> I<password>
6329 Specify the password to be used when connecting to the server.
6331 =item B<ExpireDelay> I<delay>
6333 Skip expired values in query output.
6335 =item B<SSLMode> I<disable>|I<allow>|I<prefer>|I<require>
6337 Specify whether to use an SSL connection when contacting the server. The
6338 following modes are supported:
6344 Do not use SSL at all.
6348 First, try to connect without using SSL. If that fails, try using SSL.
6350 =item I<prefer> (default)
6352 First, try to connect using SSL. If that fails, try without using SSL.
6360 =item B<Instance> I<name>
6362 Specify the plugin instance name that should be used instead of the database
6363 name (which is the default, if this option has not been specified). This
6364 allows one to query multiple databases of the same name on the same host (e.g.
6365 when running multiple database server versions in parallel).
6367 =item B<KRBSrvName> I<kerberos_service_name>
6369 Specify the Kerberos service name to use when authenticating with Kerberos 5
6370 or GSSAPI. See the sections "Kerberos authentication" and "GSSAPI" of the
6371 B<PostgreSQL Documentation> for details.
6373 =item B<Service> I<service_name>
6375 Specify the PostgreSQL service name to use for additional parameters. That
6376 service has to be defined in F<pg_service.conf> and holds additional
6377 connection parameters. See the section "The Connection Service File" in the
6378 B<PostgreSQL Documentation> for details.
6380 =item B<Query> I<query>
6382 Specifies a I<query> which should be executed in the context of the database
6383 connection. This may be any of the predefined or user-defined queries. If no
6384 such option is given, it defaults to "backends", "transactions", "queries",
6385 "query_plans", "table_states", "disk_io" and "disk_usage" (unless a B<Writer>
6386 has been specified). Else, the specified queries are used only.
6388 =item B<Writer> I<writer>
6390 Assigns the specified I<writer> backend to the database connection. This
6391 causes all collected data to be send to the database using the settings
6392 defined in the writer configuration (see the section "FILTER CONFIGURATION"
6393 below for details on how to selectively send data to certain plugins).
6395 Each writer will register a flush callback which may be used when having long
6396 transactions enabled (see the B<CommitInterval> option above). When issuing
6397 the B<FLUSH> command (see L<collectd-unixsock(5)> for details) the current
6398 transaction will be committed right away. Two different kinds of flush
6399 callbacks are available with the C<postgresql> plugin:
6405 Flush all writer backends.
6407 =item B<postgresql->I<database>
6409 Flush all writers of the specified I<database> only.
6415 =head2 Plugin C<powerdns>
6417 The C<powerdns> plugin queries statistics from an authoritative PowerDNS
6418 nameserver and/or a PowerDNS recursor. Since both offer a wide variety of
6419 values, many of which are probably meaningless to most users, but may be useful
6420 for some. So you may chose which values to collect, but if you don't, some
6421 reasonable defaults will be collected.
6424 <Server "server_name">
6426 Collect "udp-answers" "udp-queries"
6427 Socket "/var/run/pdns.controlsocket"
6429 <Recursor "recursor_name">
6431 Collect "cache-hits" "cache-misses"
6432 Socket "/var/run/pdns_recursor.controlsocket"
6434 LocalSocket "/opt/collectd/var/run/collectd-powerdns"
6439 =item B<Server> and B<Recursor> block
6441 The B<Server> block defines one authoritative server to query, the B<Recursor>
6442 does the same for an recursing server. The possible options in both blocks are
6443 the same, though. The argument defines a name for the serverE<nbsp>/ recursor
6448 =item B<Collect> I<Field>
6450 Using the B<Collect> statement you can select which values to collect. Here,
6451 you specify the name of the values as used by the PowerDNS servers, e.E<nbsp>g.
6452 C<dlg-only-drops>, C<answers10-100>.
6454 The method of getting the values differs for B<Server> and B<Recursor> blocks:
6455 When querying the server a C<SHOW *> command is issued in any case, because
6456 that's the only way of getting multiple values out of the server at once.
6457 collectd then picks out the values you have selected. When querying the
6458 recursor, a command is generated to query exactly these values. So if you
6459 specify invalid fields when querying the recursor, a syntax error may be
6460 returned by the daemon and collectd may not collect any values at all.
6462 If no B<Collect> statement is given, the following B<Server> values will be
6469 =item packetcache-hit
6471 =item packetcache-miss
6473 =item packetcache-size
6475 =item query-cache-hit
6477 =item query-cache-miss
6479 =item recursing-answers
6481 =item recursing-questions
6493 The following B<Recursor> values will be collected by default:
6497 =item noerror-answers
6499 =item nxdomain-answers
6501 =item servfail-answers
6519 Please note that up to that point collectd doesn't know what values are
6520 available on the server and values that are added do not need a change of the
6521 mechanism so far. However, the values must be mapped to collectd's naming
6522 scheme, which is done using a lookup table that lists all known values. If
6523 values are added in the future and collectd does not know about them, you will
6524 get an error much like this:
6526 powerdns plugin: submit: Not found in lookup table: foobar = 42
6528 In this case please file a bug report with the collectd team.
6530 =item B<Socket> I<Path>
6532 Configures the path to the UNIX domain socket to be used when connecting to the
6533 daemon. By default C<${localstatedir}/run/pdns.controlsocket> will be used for
6534 an authoritative server and C<${localstatedir}/run/pdns_recursor.controlsocket>
6535 will be used for the recursor.
6539 =item B<LocalSocket> I<Path>
6541 Querying the recursor is done using UDP. When using UDP over UNIX domain
6542 sockets, the client socket needs a name in the file system, too. You can set
6543 this local name to I<Path> using the B<LocalSocket> option. The default is
6544 C<I<prefix>/var/run/collectd-powerdns>.
6548 =head2 Plugin C<processes>
6552 =item B<Process> I<Name>
6554 Select more detailed statistics of processes matching this name. The statistics
6555 collected for these selected processes are:
6556 - size of the resident segment size (RSS)
6557 - user- and system-time used
6558 - number of processes
6560 - number of open files (under Linux)
6561 - io data (where available)
6562 - context switches (under Linux)
6563 - minor and major pagefaults.
6565 Some platforms have a limit on the length of process names. I<Name> must stay
6568 =item B<ProcessMatch> I<name> I<regex>
6570 Similar to the B<Process> option this allows one to select more detailed
6571 statistics of processes matching the specified I<regex> (see L<regex(7)> for
6572 details). The statistics of all matching processes are summed up and
6573 dispatched to the daemon using the specified I<name> as an identifier. This
6574 allows one to "group" several processes together. I<name> must not contain
6577 =item B<CollectContextSwitch> I<Boolean>
6579 Collect context switch of the process.
6583 =head2 Plugin C<protocols>
6585 Collects a lot of information about various network protocols, such as I<IP>,
6586 I<TCP>, I<UDP>, etc.
6588 Available configuration options:
6592 =item B<Value> I<Selector>
6594 Selects whether or not to select a specific value. The string being matched is
6595 of the form "I<Protocol>:I<ValueName>", where I<Protocol> will be used as the
6596 plugin instance and I<ValueName> will be used as type instance. An example of
6597 the string being used would be C<Tcp:RetransSegs>.
6599 You can use regular expressions to match a large number of values with just one
6600 configuration option. To select all "extended" I<TCP> values, you could use the
6601 following statement:
6605 Whether only matched values are selected or all matched values are ignored
6606 depends on the B<IgnoreSelected>. By default, only matched values are selected.
6607 If no value is configured at all, all values will be selected.
6609 See F</"IGNORELISTS"> for details.
6611 =item B<IgnoreSelected> B<true>|B<false>
6613 If set to B<true>, inverts the selection made by B<Value>, i.E<nbsp>e. all
6614 matching values will be ignored.
6618 =head2 Plugin C<python>
6620 This plugin embeds a Python-interpreter into collectd and provides an interface
6621 to collectd's plugin system. See L<collectd-python(5)> for its documentation.
6623 =head2 Plugin C<routeros>
6625 The C<routeros> plugin connects to a device running I<RouterOS>, the
6626 Linux-based operating system for routers by I<MikroTik>. The plugin uses
6627 I<librouteros> to connect and reads information about the interfaces and
6628 wireless connections of the device. The configuration supports querying
6633 Host "router0.example.com"
6636 CollectInterface true
6641 Host "router1.example.com"
6644 CollectInterface true
6645 CollectRegistrationTable true
6651 As you can see above, the configuration of the I<routeros> plugin consists of
6652 one or more B<E<lt>RouterE<gt>> blocks. Within each block, the following
6653 options are understood:
6657 =item B<Host> I<Host>
6659 Hostname or IP-address of the router to connect to.
6661 =item B<Port> I<Port>
6663 Port name or port number used when connecting. If left unspecified, the default
6664 will be chosen by I<librouteros>, currently "8728". This option expects a
6665 string argument, even when a numeric port number is given.
6667 =item B<User> I<User>
6669 Use the user name I<User> to authenticate. Defaults to "admin".
6671 =item B<Password> I<Password>
6673 Set the password used to authenticate.
6675 =item B<CollectInterface> B<true>|B<false>
6677 When set to B<true>, interface statistics will be collected for all interfaces
6678 present on the device. Defaults to B<false>.
6680 =item B<CollectRegistrationTable> B<true>|B<false>
6682 When set to B<true>, information about wireless LAN connections will be
6683 collected. Defaults to B<false>.
6685 =item B<CollectCPULoad> B<true>|B<false>
6687 When set to B<true>, information about the CPU usage will be collected. The
6688 number is a dimensionless value where zero indicates no CPU usage at all.
6689 Defaults to B<false>.
6691 =item B<CollectMemory> B<true>|B<false>
6693 When enabled, the amount of used and free memory will be collected. How used
6694 memory is calculated is unknown, for example whether or not caches are counted
6696 Defaults to B<false>.
6698 =item B<CollectDF> B<true>|B<false>
6700 When enabled, the amount of used and free disk space will be collected.
6701 Defaults to B<false>.
6703 =item B<CollectDisk> B<true>|B<false>
6705 When enabled, the number of sectors written and bad blocks will be collected.
6706 Defaults to B<false>.
6710 =head2 Plugin C<redis>
6712 The I<Redis plugin> connects to one or more Redis servers and gathers
6713 information about each server's state. For each server there is a I<Node> block
6714 which configures the connection parameters for this node.
6721 <Query "LLEN myqueue">
6728 The information shown in the synopsis above is the I<default configuration>
6729 which is used by the plugin if no configuration is present.
6733 =item B<Node> I<Nodename>
6735 The B<Node> block identifies a new Redis node, that is a new Redis instance
6736 running in an specified host and port. The name for node is a canonical
6737 identifier which is used as I<plugin instance>. It is limited to
6738 64E<nbsp>characters in length.
6740 =item B<Host> I<Hostname>
6742 The B<Host> option is the hostname or IP-address where the Redis instance is
6745 =item B<Port> I<Port>
6747 The B<Port> option is the TCP port on which the Redis instance accepts
6748 connections. Either a service name of a port number may be given. Please note
6749 that numerical port numbers must be given as a string, too.
6751 =item B<Password> I<Password>
6753 Use I<Password> to authenticate when connecting to I<Redis>.
6755 =item B<Timeout> I<Milliseconds>
6757 The B<Timeout> option set the socket timeout for node response. Since the Redis
6758 read function is blocking, you should keep this value as low as possible. Keep
6759 in mind that the sum of all B<Timeout> values for all B<Nodes> should be lower
6760 than B<Interval> defined globally.
6762 =item B<Query> I<Querystring>
6764 The B<Query> block identifies a query to execute against the redis server.
6765 There may be an arbitrary number of queries to execute.
6767 =item B<Type> I<Collectd type>
6769 Within a query definition, a valid collectd type to use as when submitting
6770 the result of the query. When not supplied, will default to B<gauge>.
6772 =item B<Instance> I<Type instance>
6774 Within a query definition, an optional type instance to use when submitting
6775 the result of the query. When not supplied will default to the escaped
6776 command, up to 64 chars.
6780 =head2 Plugin C<rrdcached>
6782 The C<rrdcached> plugin uses the RRDtool accelerator daemon, L<rrdcached(1)>,
6783 to store values to RRD files in an efficient manner. The combination of the
6784 C<rrdcached> B<plugin> and the C<rrdcached> B<daemon> is very similar to the
6785 way the C<rrdtool> plugin works (see below). The added abstraction layer
6786 provides a number of benefits, though: Because the cache is not within
6787 C<collectd> anymore, it does not need to be flushed when C<collectd> is to be
6788 restarted. This results in much shorter (if any) gaps in graphs, especially
6789 under heavy load. Also, the C<rrdtool> command line utility is aware of the
6790 daemon so that it can flush values to disk automatically when needed. This
6791 allows one to integrate automated flushing of values into graphing solutions
6794 There are disadvantages, though: The daemon may reside on a different host, so
6795 it may not be possible for C<collectd> to create the appropriate RRD files
6796 anymore. And even if C<rrdcached> runs on the same host, it may run in a
6797 different base directory, so relative paths may do weird stuff if you're not
6800 So the B<recommended configuration> is to let C<collectd> and C<rrdcached> run
6801 on the same host, communicating via a UNIX domain socket. The B<DataDir>
6802 setting should be set to an absolute path, so that a changed base directory
6803 does not result in RRD files being createdE<nbsp>/ expected in the wrong place.
6807 =item B<DaemonAddress> I<Address>
6809 Address of the daemon as understood by the C<rrdc_connect> function of the RRD
6810 library. See L<rrdcached(1)> for details. Example:
6812 <Plugin "rrdcached">
6813 DaemonAddress "unix:/var/run/rrdcached.sock"
6816 =item B<DataDir> I<Directory>
6818 Set the base directory in which the RRD files reside. If this is a relative
6819 path, it is relative to the working base directory of the C<rrdcached> daemon!
6820 Use of an absolute path is recommended.
6822 =item B<CreateFiles> B<true>|B<false>
6824 Enables or disables the creation of RRD files. If the daemon is not running
6825 locally, or B<DataDir> is set to a relative path, this will not work as
6826 expected. Default is B<true>.
6828 =item B<CreateFilesAsync> B<false>|B<true>
6830 When enabled, new RRD files are enabled asynchronously, using a separate thread
6831 that runs in the background. This prevents writes to block, which is a problem
6832 especially when many hundreds of files need to be created at once. However,
6833 since the purpose of creating the files asynchronously is I<not> to block until
6834 the file is available, values before the file is available will be discarded.
6835 When disabled (the default) files are created synchronously, blocking for a
6836 short while, while the file is being written.
6838 =item B<StepSize> I<Seconds>
6840 B<Force> the stepsize of newly created RRD-files. Ideally (and per default)
6841 this setting is unset and the stepsize is set to the interval in which the data
6842 is collected. Do not use this option unless you absolutely have to for some
6843 reason. Setting this option may cause problems with the C<snmp plugin>, the
6844 C<exec plugin> or when the daemon is set up to receive data from other hosts.
6846 =item B<HeartBeat> I<Seconds>
6848 B<Force> the heartbeat of newly created RRD-files. This setting should be unset
6849 in which case the heartbeat is set to twice the B<StepSize> which should equal
6850 the interval in which data is collected. Do not set this option unless you have
6851 a very good reason to do so.
6853 =item B<RRARows> I<NumRows>
6855 The C<rrdtool plugin> calculates the number of PDPs per CDP based on the
6856 B<StepSize>, this setting and a timespan. This plugin creates RRD-files with
6857 three times five RRAs, i. e. five RRAs with the CFs B<MIN>, B<AVERAGE>, and
6858 B<MAX>. The five RRAs are optimized for graphs covering one hour, one day, one
6859 week, one month, and one year.
6861 So for each timespan, it calculates how many PDPs need to be consolidated into
6862 one CDP by calculating:
6863 number of PDPs = timespan / (stepsize * rrarows)
6865 Bottom line is, set this no smaller than the width of you graphs in pixels. The
6868 =item B<RRATimespan> I<Seconds>
6870 Adds an RRA-timespan, given in seconds. Use this option multiple times to have
6871 more then one RRA. If this option is never used, the built-in default of (3600,
6872 86400, 604800, 2678400, 31622400) is used.
6874 For more information on how RRA-sizes are calculated see B<RRARows> above.
6876 =item B<XFF> I<Factor>
6878 Set the "XFiles Factor". The default is 0.1. If unsure, don't set this option.
6879 I<Factor> must be in the range C<[0.0-1.0)>, i.e. between zero (inclusive) and
6882 =item B<CollectStatistics> B<false>|B<true>
6884 When set to B<true>, various statistics about the I<rrdcached> daemon will be
6885 collected, with "rrdcached" as the I<plugin name>. Defaults to B<false>.
6887 Statistics are read via I<rrdcached>s socket using the STATS command.
6888 See L<rrdcached(1)> for details.
6892 =head2 Plugin C<rrdtool>
6894 You can use the settings B<StepSize>, B<HeartBeat>, B<RRARows>, and B<XFF> to
6895 fine-tune your RRD-files. Please read L<rrdcreate(1)> if you encounter problems
6896 using these settings. If you don't want to dive into the depths of RRDtool, you
6897 can safely ignore these settings.
6901 =item B<DataDir> I<Directory>
6903 Set the directory to store RRD files under. By default RRD files are generated
6904 beneath the daemon's working directory, i.e. the B<BaseDir>.
6906 =item B<CreateFilesAsync> B<false>|B<true>
6908 When enabled, new RRD files are enabled asynchronously, using a separate thread
6909 that runs in the background. This prevents writes to block, which is a problem
6910 especially when many hundreds of files need to be created at once. However,
6911 since the purpose of creating the files asynchronously is I<not> to block until
6912 the file is available, values before the file is available will be discarded.
6913 When disabled (the default) files are created synchronously, blocking for a
6914 short while, while the file is being written.
6916 =item B<StepSize> I<Seconds>
6918 B<Force> the stepsize of newly created RRD-files. Ideally (and per default)
6919 this setting is unset and the stepsize is set to the interval in which the data
6920 is collected. Do not use this option unless you absolutely have to for some
6921 reason. Setting this option may cause problems with the C<snmp plugin>, the
6922 C<exec plugin> or when the daemon is set up to receive data from other hosts.
6924 =item B<HeartBeat> I<Seconds>
6926 B<Force> the heartbeat of newly created RRD-files. This setting should be unset
6927 in which case the heartbeat is set to twice the B<StepSize> which should equal
6928 the interval in which data is collected. Do not set this option unless you have
6929 a very good reason to do so.
6931 =item B<RRARows> I<NumRows>
6933 The C<rrdtool plugin> calculates the number of PDPs per CDP based on the
6934 B<StepSize>, this setting and a timespan. This plugin creates RRD-files with
6935 three times five RRAs, i.e. five RRAs with the CFs B<MIN>, B<AVERAGE>, and
6936 B<MAX>. The five RRAs are optimized for graphs covering one hour, one day, one
6937 week, one month, and one year.
6939 So for each timespan, it calculates how many PDPs need to be consolidated into
6940 one CDP by calculating:
6941 number of PDPs = timespan / (stepsize * rrarows)
6943 Bottom line is, set this no smaller than the width of you graphs in pixels. The
6946 =item B<RRATimespan> I<Seconds>
6948 Adds an RRA-timespan, given in seconds. Use this option multiple times to have
6949 more then one RRA. If this option is never used, the built-in default of (3600,
6950 86400, 604800, 2678400, 31622400) is used.
6952 For more information on how RRA-sizes are calculated see B<RRARows> above.
6954 =item B<XFF> I<Factor>
6956 Set the "XFiles Factor". The default is 0.1. If unsure, don't set this option.
6957 I<Factor> must be in the range C<[0.0-1.0)>, i.e. between zero (inclusive) and
6960 =item B<CacheFlush> I<Seconds>
6962 When the C<rrdtool> plugin uses a cache (by setting B<CacheTimeout>, see below)
6963 it writes all values for a certain RRD-file if the oldest value is older than
6964 (or equal to) the number of seconds specified. If some RRD-file is not updated
6965 anymore for some reason (the computer was shut down, the network is broken,
6966 etc.) some values may still be in the cache. If B<CacheFlush> is set, then the
6967 entire cache is searched for entries older than B<CacheTimeout> seconds and
6968 written to disk every I<Seconds> seconds. Since this is kind of expensive and
6969 does nothing under normal circumstances, this value should not be too small.
6970 900 seconds might be a good value, though setting this to 7200 seconds doesn't
6971 normally do much harm either.
6973 =item B<CacheTimeout> I<Seconds>
6975 If this option is set to a value greater than zero, the C<rrdtool plugin> will
6976 save values in a cache, as described above. Writing multiple values at once
6977 reduces IO-operations and thus lessens the load produced by updating the files.
6978 The trade off is that the graphs kind of "drag behind" and that more memory is
6981 =item B<WritesPerSecond> I<Updates>
6983 When collecting many statistics with collectd and the C<rrdtool> plugin, you
6984 will run serious performance problems. The B<CacheFlush> setting and the
6985 internal update queue assert that collectd continues to work just fine even
6986 under heavy load, but the system may become very unresponsive and slow. This is
6987 a problem especially if you create graphs from the RRD files on the same
6988 machine, for example using the C<graph.cgi> script included in the
6989 C<contrib/collection3/> directory.
6991 This setting is designed for very large setups. Setting this option to a value
6992 between 25 and 80 updates per second, depending on your hardware, will leave
6993 the server responsive enough to draw graphs even while all the cached values
6994 are written to disk. Flushed values, i.E<nbsp>e. values that are forced to disk
6995 by the B<FLUSH> command, are B<not> effected by this limit. They are still
6996 written as fast as possible, so that web frontends have up to date data when
6999 For example: If you have 100,000 RRD files and set B<WritesPerSecond> to 30
7000 updates per second, writing all values to disk will take approximately
7001 56E<nbsp>minutes. Together with the flushing ability that's integrated into
7002 "collection3" you'll end up with a responsive and fast system, up to date
7003 graphs and basically a "backup" of your values every hour.
7005 =item B<RandomTimeout> I<Seconds>
7007 When set, the actual timeout for each value is chosen randomly between
7008 I<CacheTimeout>-I<RandomTimeout> and I<CacheTimeout>+I<RandomTimeout>. The
7009 intention is to avoid high load situations that appear when many values timeout
7010 at the same time. This is especially a problem shortly after the daemon starts,
7011 because all values were added to the internal cache at roughly the same time.
7015 =head2 Plugin C<sensors>
7017 The I<Sensors plugin> uses B<lm_sensors> to retrieve sensor-values. This means
7018 that all the needed modules have to be loaded and lm_sensors has to be
7019 configured (most likely by editing F</etc/sensors.conf>. Read
7020 L<sensors.conf(5)> for details.
7022 The B<lm_sensors> homepage can be found at
7023 L<http://secure.netroedge.com/~lm78/>.
7027 =item B<SensorConfigFile> I<File>
7029 Read the I<lm_sensors> configuration from I<File>. When unset (recommended),
7030 the library's default will be used.
7032 =item B<Sensor> I<chip-bus-address/type-feature>
7034 Selects the name of the sensor which you want to collect or ignore, depending
7035 on the B<IgnoreSelected> below. For example, the option "B<Sensor>
7036 I<it8712-isa-0290/voltage-in1>" will cause collectd to gather data for the
7037 voltage sensor I<in1> of the I<it8712> on the isa bus at the address 0290.
7039 See F</"IGNORELISTS"> for details.
7041 =item B<IgnoreSelected> I<true>|I<false>
7043 If no configuration if given, the B<sensors>-plugin will collect data from all
7044 sensors. This may not be practical, especially for uninteresting sensors.
7045 Thus, you can use the B<Sensor>-option to pick the sensors you're interested
7046 in. Sometimes, however, it's easier/preferred to collect all sensors I<except> a
7047 few ones. This option enables you to do that: By setting B<IgnoreSelected> to
7048 I<true> the effect of B<Sensor> is inverted: All selected sensors are ignored
7049 and all other sensors are collected.
7051 =item B<UseLabels> I<true>|I<false>
7053 Configures how sensor readings are reported. When set to I<true>, sensor
7054 readings are reported using their descriptive label (e.g. "VCore"). When set to
7055 I<false> (the default) the sensor name is used ("in0").
7059 =head2 Plugin C<sigrok>
7061 The I<sigrok plugin> uses I<libsigrok> to retrieve measurements from any device
7062 supported by the L<sigrok|http://sigrok.org/> project.
7068 <Device "AC Voltage">
7073 <Device "Sound Level">
7074 Driver "cem-dt-885x"
7081 =item B<LogLevel> B<0-5>
7083 The I<sigrok> logging level to pass on to the I<collectd> log, as a number
7084 between B<0> and B<5> (inclusive). These levels correspond to C<None>,
7085 C<Errors>, C<Warnings>, C<Informational>, C<Debug >and C<Spew>, respectively.
7086 The default is B<2> (C<Warnings>). The I<sigrok> log messages, regardless of
7087 their level, are always submitted to I<collectd> at its INFO log level.
7089 =item E<lt>B<Device> I<Name>E<gt>
7091 A sigrok-supported device, uniquely identified by this section's options. The
7092 I<Name> is passed to I<collectd> as the I<plugin instance>.
7094 =item B<Driver> I<DriverName>
7096 The sigrok driver to use for this device.
7098 =item B<Conn> I<ConnectionSpec>
7100 If the device cannot be auto-discovered, or more than one might be discovered
7101 by the driver, I<ConnectionSpec> specifies the connection string to the device.
7102 It can be of the form of a device path (e.g.E<nbsp>C</dev/ttyUSB2>), or, in
7103 case of a non-serial USB-connected device, the USB I<VendorID>B<.>I<ProductID>
7104 separated by a period (e.g.E<nbsp>C<0403.6001>). A USB device can also be
7105 specified as I<Bus>B<.>I<Address> (e.g.E<nbsp>C<1.41>).
7107 =item B<SerialComm> I<SerialSpec>
7109 For serial devices with non-standard port settings, this option can be used
7110 to specify them in a form understood by I<sigrok>, e.g.E<nbsp>C<9600/8n1>.
7111 This should not be necessary; drivers know how to communicate with devices they
7114 =item B<MinimumInterval> I<Seconds>
7116 Specifies the minimum time between measurement dispatches to I<collectd>, in
7117 seconds. Since some I<sigrok> supported devices can acquire measurements many
7118 times per second, it may be necessary to throttle these. For example, the
7119 I<RRD plugin> cannot process writes more than once per second.
7121 The default B<MinimumInterval> is B<0>, meaning measurements received from the
7122 device are always dispatched to I<collectd>. When throttled, unused
7123 measurements are discarded.
7127 =head2 Plugin C<smart>
7129 The C<smart> plugin collects SMART information from physical
7130 disks. Values collectd include temperature, power cycle count, poweron
7131 time and bad sectors. Also, all SMART attributes are collected along
7132 with the normalized current value, the worst value, the threshold and
7133 a human readable value.
7135 Using the following two options you can ignore some disks or configure the
7136 collection only of specific disks.
7140 =item B<Disk> I<Name>
7142 Select the disk I<Name>. Whether it is collected or ignored depends on the
7143 B<IgnoreSelected> setting, see below. As with other plugins that use the
7144 daemon's ignorelist functionality, a string that starts and ends with a slash
7145 is interpreted as a regular expression. Examples:
7150 See F</"IGNORELISTS"> for details.
7152 =item B<IgnoreSelected> B<true>|B<false>
7154 Sets whether selected disks, i.E<nbsp>e. the ones matches by any of the B<Disk>
7155 statements, are ignored or if all other disks are ignored. The behavior
7156 (hopefully) is intuitive: If no B<Disk> option is configured, all disks are
7157 collected. If at least one B<Disk> option is given and no B<IgnoreSelected> or
7158 set to B<false>, B<only> matching disks will be collected. If B<IgnoreSelected>
7159 is set to B<true>, all disks are collected B<except> the ones matched.
7161 =item B<IgnoreSleepMode> B<true>|B<false>
7163 Normally, the C<smart> plugin will ignore disks that are reported to be asleep.
7164 This option disables the sleep mode check and allows the plugin to collect data
7165 from these disks anyway. This is useful in cases where libatasmart mistakenly
7166 reports disks as asleep because it has not been updated to incorporate support
7167 for newer idle states in the ATA spec.
7169 =item B<UseSerial> B<true>|B<false>
7171 A disk's kernel name (e.g., sda) can change from one boot to the next. If this
7172 option is enabled, the C<smart> plugin will use the disk's serial number (e.g.,
7173 HGST_HUH728080ALE600_2EJ8VH8X) instead of the kernel name as the key for
7174 storing data. This ensures that the data for a given disk will be kept together
7175 even if the kernel name changes.
7179 =head2 Plugin C<snmp>
7181 Since the configuration of the C<snmp plugin> is a little more complicated than
7182 other plugins, its documentation has been moved to an own manpage,
7183 L<collectd-snmp(5)>. Please see there for details.
7185 =head2 Plugin C<snmp_agent>
7187 The I<snmp_agent> plugin is an AgentX subagent that receives and handles queries
7188 from SNMP master agent and returns the data collected by read plugins.
7189 The I<snmp_agent> plugin handles requests only for OIDs specified in
7190 configuration file. To handle SNMP queries the plugin gets data from collectd
7191 and translates requested values from collectd's internal format to SNMP format.
7192 This plugin is a generic plugin and cannot work without configuration.
7193 For more details on AgentX subagent see
7194 <http://www.net-snmp.org/tutorial/tutorial-5/toolkit/demon/>
7199 <Data "memAvailReal">
7203 OIDs "1.3.6.1.4.1.2021.4.6.0"
7206 IndexOID "IF-MIB::ifIndex"
7207 SizeOID "IF-MIB::ifNumber"
7211 OIDs "IF-MIB::ifDescr"
7217 OIDs "IF-MIB::ifInOctets" "IF-MIB::ifOutOctets"
7222 There are two types of blocks that can be contained in the
7223 C<E<lt>PluginE<nbsp> snmp_agentE<gt>> block: B<Data> and B<Table>:
7225 =head3 The B<Data> block
7227 The B<Data> block defines a list OIDs that are to be handled. This block can
7228 define scalar or table OIDs. If B<Data> block is defined inside of B<Table>
7229 block it reperesents table OIDs.
7230 The following options can be set:
7234 =item B<Instance> I<true|false>
7236 When B<Instance> is set to B<true>, the value for requested OID is copied from
7237 plugin instance field of corresponding collectd value. If B<Data> block defines
7238 scalar data type B<Instance> has no effect and can be omitted.
7240 =item B<Plugin> I<String>
7242 Read plugin name whose collected data will be mapped to specified OIDs.
7244 =item B<Type> I<String>
7246 Collectd's type that is to be used for specified OID, e.E<nbsp>g. "if_octets"
7247 for example. The types are read from the B<TypesDB> (see L<collectd.conf(5)>).
7249 =item B<TypeInstance> I<String>
7251 Collectd's type-instance that is to be used for specified OID.
7253 =item B<OIDs> I<OID> [I<OID> ...]
7255 Configures the OIDs to be handled by I<snmp_agent> plugin. Values for these OIDs
7256 are taken from collectd data type specified by B<Plugin>, B<Type>,
7257 B<TypeInstance> fields of this B<Data> block. Number of the OIDs configured
7258 should correspond to number of values in specified B<Type>.
7259 For example two OIDs "IF-MIB::ifInOctets" "IF-MIB::ifOutOctets" can be mapped to
7260 "rx" and "tx" values of "if_octets" type.
7262 =item B<Scale> I<Value>
7264 The values taken from collectd are multiplied by I<Value>. The field is optional
7265 and the default is B<1.0>.
7267 =item B<Shift> I<Value>
7269 I<Value> is added to values from collectd after they have been multiplied by
7270 B<Scale> value. The field is optional and the default value is B<0.0>.
7274 =head3 The B<Table> block
7276 The B<Table> block defines a collection of B<Data> blocks that belong to one
7277 snmp table. In addition to multiple B<Data> blocks the following options can be
7282 =item B<IndexOID> I<OID>
7284 OID that is handled by the plugin and is mapped to numerical index value that is
7285 generated by the plugin for each table record.
7287 =item B<SizeOID> I<OID>
7289 OID that is handled by the plugin. Returned value is the number of records in
7290 the table. The field is optional.
7294 =head2 Plugin C<statsd>
7296 The I<statsd plugin> listens to a UDP socket, reads "events" in the statsd
7297 protocol and dispatches rates or other aggregates of these numbers
7300 The plugin implements the I<Counter>, I<Timer>, I<Gauge> and I<Set> types which
7301 are dispatched as the I<collectd> types C<derive>, C<latency>, C<gauge> and
7302 C<objects> respectively.
7304 The following configuration options are valid:
7308 =item B<Host> I<Host>
7310 Bind to the hostname / address I<Host>. By default, the plugin will bind to the
7311 "any" address, i.e. accept packets sent to any of the hosts addresses.
7313 =item B<Port> I<Port>
7315 UDP port to listen to. This can be either a service name or a port number.
7316 Defaults to C<8125>.
7318 =item B<DeleteCounters> B<false>|B<true>
7320 =item B<DeleteTimers> B<false>|B<true>
7322 =item B<DeleteGauges> B<false>|B<true>
7324 =item B<DeleteSets> B<false>|B<true>
7326 These options control what happens if metrics are not updated in an interval.
7327 If set to B<False>, the default, metrics are dispatched unchanged, i.e. the
7328 rate of counters and size of sets will be zero, timers report C<NaN> and gauges
7329 are unchanged. If set to B<True>, the such metrics are not dispatched and
7330 removed from the internal cache.
7332 =item B<CounterSum> B<false>|B<true>
7334 When enabled, creates a C<count> metric which reports the change since the last
7335 read. This option primarily exists for compatibility with the I<statsd>
7336 implementation by Etsy.
7338 =item B<TimerPercentile> I<Percent>
7340 Calculate and dispatch the configured percentile, i.e. compute the latency, so
7341 that I<Percent> of all reported timers are smaller than or equal to the
7342 computed latency. This is useful for cutting off the long tail latency, as it's
7343 often done in I<Service Level Agreements> (SLAs).
7345 Different percentiles can be calculated by setting this option several times.
7346 If none are specified, no percentiles are calculated / dispatched.
7348 =item B<TimerLower> B<false>|B<true>
7350 =item B<TimerUpper> B<false>|B<true>
7352 =item B<TimerSum> B<false>|B<true>
7354 =item B<TimerCount> B<false>|B<true>
7356 Calculate and dispatch various values out of I<Timer> metrics received during
7357 an interval. If set to B<False>, the default, these values aren't calculated /
7362 =head2 Plugin C<swap>
7364 The I<Swap plugin> collects information about used and available swap space. On
7365 I<Linux> and I<Solaris>, the following options are available:
7369 =item B<ReportByDevice> B<false>|B<true>
7371 Configures how to report physical swap devices. If set to B<false> (the
7372 default), the summary over all swap devices is reported only, i.e. the globally
7373 used and available space over all devices. If B<true> is configured, the used
7374 and available space of each device will be reported separately.
7376 This option is only available if the I<Swap plugin> can read C</proc/swaps>
7377 (under Linux) or use the L<swapctl(2)> mechanism (under I<Solaris>).
7379 =item B<ReportBytes> B<false>|B<true>
7381 When enabled, the I<swap I/O> is reported in bytes. When disabled, the default,
7382 I<swap I/O> is reported in pages. This option is available under Linux only.
7384 =item B<ValuesAbsolute> B<true>|B<false>
7386 Enables or disables reporting of absolute swap metrics, i.e. number of I<bytes>
7387 available and used. Defaults to B<true>.
7389 =item B<ValuesPercentage> B<false>|B<true>
7391 Enables or disables reporting of relative swap metrics, i.e. I<percent>
7392 available and free. Defaults to B<false>.
7394 This is useful for deploying I<collectd> in a heterogeneous environment, where
7395 swap sizes differ and you want to specify generic thresholds or similar.
7399 =head2 Plugin C<syslog>
7403 =item B<LogLevel> B<debug|info|notice|warning|err>
7405 Sets the log-level. If, for example, set to B<notice>, then all events with
7406 severity B<notice>, B<warning>, or B<err> will be submitted to the
7409 Please note that B<debug> is only available if collectd has been compiled with
7412 =item B<NotifyLevel> B<OKAY>|B<WARNING>|B<FAILURE>
7414 Controls which notifications should be sent to syslog. The default behaviour is
7415 not to send any. Less severe notifications always imply logging more severe
7416 notifications: Setting this to B<OKAY> means all notifications will be sent to
7417 syslog, setting this to B<WARNING> will send B<WARNING> and B<FAILURE>
7418 notifications but will dismiss B<OKAY> notifications. Setting this option to
7419 B<FAILURE> will only send failures to syslog.
7423 =head2 Plugin C<table>
7425 The C<table plugin> provides generic means to parse tabular data and dispatch
7426 user specified values. Values are selected based on column numbers. For
7427 example, this plugin may be used to get values from the Linux L<proc(5)>
7428 filesystem or CSV (comma separated values) files.
7431 <Table "/proc/slabinfo">
7436 InstancePrefix "active_objs"
7442 InstancePrefix "objperslab"
7449 The configuration consists of one or more B<Table> blocks, each of which
7450 configures one file to parse. Within each B<Table> block, there are one or
7451 more B<Result> blocks, which configure which data to select and how to
7454 The following options are available inside a B<Table> block:
7458 =item B<Instance> I<instance>
7460 If specified, I<instance> is used as the plugin instance. So, in the above
7461 example, the plugin name C<table-slabinfo> would be used. If omitted, the
7462 filename of the table is used instead, with all special characters replaced
7463 with an underscore (C<_>).
7465 =item B<Separator> I<string>
7467 Any character of I<string> is interpreted as a delimiter between the different
7468 columns of the table. A sequence of two or more contiguous delimiters in the
7469 table is considered to be a single delimiter, i.E<nbsp>e. there cannot be any
7470 empty columns. The plugin uses the L<strtok_r(3)> function to parse the lines
7471 of a table - see its documentation for more details. This option is mandatory.
7473 A horizontal tab, newline and carriage return may be specified by C<\\t>,
7474 C<\\n> and C<\\r> respectively. Please note that the double backslashes are
7475 required because of collectd's config parsing.
7479 The following options are available inside a B<Result> block:
7483 =item B<Type> I<type>
7485 Sets the type used to dispatch the values to the daemon. Detailed information
7486 about types and their configuration can be found in L<types.db(5)>. This
7487 option is mandatory.
7489 =item B<InstancePrefix> I<prefix>
7491 If specified, prepend I<prefix> to the type instance. If omitted, only the
7492 B<InstancesFrom> option is considered for the type instance.
7494 =item B<InstancesFrom> I<column0> [I<column1> ...]
7496 If specified, the content of the given columns (identified by the column
7497 number starting at zero) will be used to create the type instance for each
7498 row. Multiple values (and the instance prefix) will be joined together with
7499 dashes (I<->) as separation character. If omitted, only the B<InstancePrefix>
7500 option is considered for the type instance.
7502 The plugin itself does not check whether or not all built instances are
7503 different. It’s your responsibility to assure that each is unique. This is
7504 especially true, if you do not specify B<InstancesFrom>: B<You> have to make
7505 sure that the table only contains one row.
7507 If neither B<InstancePrefix> nor B<InstancesFrom> is given, the type instance
7510 =item B<ValuesFrom> I<column0> [I<column1> ...]
7512 Specifies the columns (identified by the column numbers starting at zero)
7513 whose content is used as the actual data for the data sets that are dispatched
7514 to the daemon. How many such columns you need is determined by the B<Type>
7515 setting above. If you specify too many or not enough columns, the plugin will
7516 complain about that and no data will be submitted to the daemon. The plugin
7517 uses L<strtoll(3)> and L<strtod(3)> to parse counter and gauge values
7518 respectively, so anything supported by those functions is supported by the
7519 plugin as well. This option is mandatory.
7523 =head2 Plugin C<tail>
7525 The C<tail plugin> follows logfiles, just like L<tail(1)> does, parses
7526 each line and dispatches found values. What is matched can be configured by the
7527 user using (extended) regular expressions, as described in L<regex(7)>.
7530 <File "/var/log/exim4/mainlog">
7534 Regex "S=([1-9][0-9]*)"
7540 Regex "\\<R=local_user\\>"
7541 ExcludeRegex "\\<R=local_user\\>.*mail_spool defer"
7544 Instance "local_user"
7547 Regex "l=([0-9]*\\.[0-9]*)"
7548 <DSType "Distribution">
7558 The config consists of one or more B<File> blocks, each of which configures one
7559 logfile to parse. Within each B<File> block, there are one or more B<Match>
7560 blocks, which configure a regular expression to search for.
7562 The B<Instance> option in the B<File> block may be used to set the plugin
7563 instance. So in the above example the plugin name C<tail-foo> would be used.
7564 This plugin instance is for all B<Match> blocks that B<follow> it, until the
7565 next B<Instance> option. This way you can extract several plugin instances from
7566 one logfile, handy when parsing syslog and the like.
7568 The B<Interval> option allows you to define the length of time between reads. If
7569 this is not set, the default Interval will be used.
7571 Each B<Match> block has the following options to describe how the match should
7576 =item B<Regex> I<regex>
7578 Sets the regular expression to use for matching against a line. The first
7579 subexpression has to match something that can be turned into a number by
7580 L<strtoll(3)> or L<strtod(3)>, depending on the value of C<CounterAdd>, see
7581 below. Because B<extended> regular expressions are used, you do not need to use
7582 backslashes for subexpressions! If in doubt, please consult L<regex(7)>. Due to
7583 collectd's config parsing you need to escape backslashes, though. So if you
7584 want to match literal parentheses you need to do the following:
7586 Regex "SPAM \\(Score: (-?[0-9]+\\.[0-9]+)\\)"
7588 =item B<ExcludeRegex> I<regex>
7590 Sets an optional regular expression to use for excluding lines from the match.
7591 An example which excludes all connections from localhost from the match:
7593 ExcludeRegex "127\\.0\\.0\\.1"
7595 =item B<DSType> I<Type>
7597 Sets how the values are cumulated. I<Type> is one of:
7601 =item B<GaugeAverage>
7603 Calculate the average.
7607 Use the smallest number only.
7611 Use the greatest number only.
7615 Use the last number found.
7617 =item B<GaugePersist>
7619 Use the last number found. The number is not reset at the end of an interval.
7620 It is continously reported until another number is matched. This is intended
7621 for cases in which only state changes are reported, for example a thermometer
7622 that only reports the temperature when it changes.
7628 =item B<AbsoluteSet>
7630 The matched number is a counter. Simply I<sets> the internal counter to this
7631 value. Variants exist for C<COUNTER>, C<DERIVE>, and C<ABSOLUTE> data sources.
7639 Add the matched value to the internal counter. In case of B<DeriveAdd>, the
7640 matched number may be negative, which will effectively subtract from the
7649 Increase the internal counter by one. These B<DSType> are the only ones that do
7650 not use the matched subexpression, but simply count the number of matched
7651 lines. Thus, you may use a regular expression without submatch in this case.
7653 =item B<Distribution>
7655 Type to do calculations based on the distribution of values, primarily
7656 calculating percentiles. This is primarily geared towards latency, but can be
7657 used for other metrics as well. The range of values tracked with this setting
7658 must be in the range (0–2^34) and can be fractional. Please note that neither
7659 zero nor 2^34 are inclusive bounds, i.e. zero I<cannot> be handled by a
7662 This option must be used together with the B<Percentile> and/or B<Bucket>
7667 <DSType "Distribution">
7674 =item B<Percentile> I<Percent>
7676 Calculate and dispatch the configured percentile, i.e. compute the value, so
7677 that I<Percent> of all matched values are smaller than or equal to the computed
7680 Metrics are reported with the I<type> B<Type> (the value of the above option)
7681 and the I<type instance> C<[E<lt>InstanceE<gt>-]E<lt>PercentE<gt>>.
7683 This option may be repeated to calculate more than one percentile.
7685 =item B<Bucket> I<lower_bound> I<upper_bound>
7687 Export the number of values (a C<DERIVE>) falling within the given range. Both,
7688 I<lower_bound> and I<upper_bound> may be a fractional number, such as B<0.5>.
7689 Each B<Bucket> option specifies an interval C<(I<lower_bound>,
7690 I<upper_bound>]>, i.e. the range I<excludes> the lower bound and I<includes>
7691 the upper bound. I<lower_bound> and I<upper_bound> may be zero, meaning no
7694 To export the entire (0–inf) range without overlap, use the upper bound of the
7695 previous range as the lower bound of the following range. In other words, use
7696 the following schema:
7706 Metrics are reported with the I<type> C<bucket> and the I<type instance>
7707 C<E<lt>TypeE<gt>[-E<lt>InstanceE<gt>]-E<lt>lower_boundE<gt>_E<lt>upper_boundE<gt>>.
7709 This option may be repeated to calculate more than one rate.
7715 The B<Gauge*> and B<Distribution> types interpret the submatch as a floating
7716 point number, using L<strtod(3)>. The B<Counter*> and B<AbsoluteSet> types
7717 interpret the submatch as an unsigned integer using L<strtoull(3)>. The
7718 B<Derive*> types interpret the submatch as a signed integer using
7719 L<strtoll(3)>. B<CounterInc> and B<DeriveInc> do not use the submatch at all
7720 and it may be omitted in this case.
7722 =item B<Type> I<Type>
7724 Sets the type used to dispatch this value. Detailed information about types and
7725 their configuration can be found in L<types.db(5)>.
7727 =item B<Instance> I<TypeInstance>
7729 This optional setting sets the type instance to use.
7733 =head2 Plugin C<tail_csv>
7735 The I<tail_csv plugin> reads files in the CSV format, e.g. the statistics file
7736 written by I<Snort>.
7741 <Metric "snort-dropped">
7746 <File "/var/log/snort/snort.stats">
7747 Instance "snort-eth0"
7749 Collect "snort-dropped"
7753 The configuration consists of one or more B<Metric> blocks that define an index
7754 into the line of the CSV file and how this value is mapped to I<collectd's>
7755 internal representation. These are followed by one or more B<Instance> blocks
7756 which configure which file to read, in which interval and which metrics to
7761 =item E<lt>B<Metric> I<Name>E<gt>
7763 The B<Metric> block configures a new metric to be extracted from the statistics
7764 file and how it is mapped on I<collectd's> data model. The string I<Name> is
7765 only used inside the B<Instance> blocks to refer to this block, so you can use
7766 one B<Metric> block for multiple CSV files.
7770 =item B<Type> I<Type>
7772 Configures which I<Type> to use when dispatching this metric. Types are defined
7773 in the L<types.db(5)> file, see the appropriate manual page for more
7774 information on specifying types. Only types with a single I<data source> are
7775 supported by the I<tail_csv plugin>. The information whether the value is an
7776 absolute value (i.e. a C<GAUGE>) or a rate (i.e. a C<DERIVE>) is taken from the
7777 I<Type's> definition.
7779 =item B<Instance> I<TypeInstance>
7781 If set, I<TypeInstance> is used to populate the type instance field of the
7782 created value lists. Otherwise, no type instance is used.
7784 =item B<ValueFrom> I<Index>
7786 Configure to read the value from the field with the zero-based index I<Index>.
7787 If the value is parsed as signed integer, unsigned integer or double depends on
7788 the B<Type> setting, see above.
7792 =item E<lt>B<File> I<Path>E<gt>
7794 Each B<File> block represents one CSV file to read. There must be at least one
7795 I<File> block but there can be multiple if you have multiple CSV files.
7799 =item B<Instance> I<PluginInstance>
7801 Sets the I<plugin instance> used when dispatching the values.
7803 =item B<Collect> I<Metric>
7805 Specifies which I<Metric> to collect. This option must be specified at least
7806 once, and you can use this option multiple times to specify more than one
7807 metric to be extracted from this statistic file.
7809 =item B<Interval> I<Seconds>
7811 Configures the interval in which to read values from this instance / file.
7812 Defaults to the plugin's default interval.
7814 =item B<TimeFrom> I<Index>
7816 Rather than using the local time when dispatching a value, read the timestamp
7817 from the field with the zero-based index I<Index>. The value is interpreted as
7818 seconds since epoch. The value is parsed as a double and may be factional.
7824 =head2 Plugin C<teamspeak2>
7826 The C<teamspeak2 plugin> connects to the query port of a teamspeak2 server and
7827 polls interesting global and virtual server data. The plugin can query only one
7828 physical server but unlimited virtual servers. You can use the following
7829 options to configure it:
7833 =item B<Host> I<hostname/ip>
7835 The hostname or ip which identifies the physical server.
7838 =item B<Port> I<port>
7840 The query port of the physical server. This needs to be a string.
7843 =item B<Server> I<port>
7845 This option has to be added once for every virtual server the plugin should
7846 query. If you want to query the virtual server on port 8767 this is what the
7847 option would look like:
7851 This option, although numeric, needs to be a string, i.E<nbsp>e. you B<must>
7852 use quotes around it! If no such statement is given only global information
7857 =head2 Plugin C<ted>
7859 The I<TED> plugin connects to a device of "The Energy Detective", a device to
7860 measure power consumption. These devices are usually connected to a serial
7861 (RS232) or USB port. The plugin opens a configured device and tries to read the
7862 current energy readings. For more information on TED, visit
7863 L<http://www.theenergydetective.com/>.
7865 Available configuration options:
7869 =item B<Device> I<Path>
7871 Path to the device on which TED is connected. collectd will need read and write
7872 permissions on that file.
7874 Default: B</dev/ttyUSB0>
7876 =item B<Retries> I<Num>
7878 Apparently reading from TED is not that reliable. You can therefore configure a
7879 number of retries here. You only configure the I<retries> here, to if you
7880 specify zero, one reading will be performed (but no retries if that fails); if
7881 you specify three, a maximum of four readings are performed. Negative values
7888 =head2 Plugin C<tcpconns>
7890 The C<tcpconns plugin> counts the number of currently established TCP
7891 connections based on the local port and/or the remote port. Since there may be
7892 a lot of connections the default if to count all connections with a local port,
7893 for which a listening socket is opened. You can use the following options to
7894 fine-tune the ports you are interested in:
7898 =item B<ListeningPorts> I<true>|I<false>
7900 If this option is set to I<true>, statistics for all local ports for which a
7901 listening socket exists are collected. The default depends on B<LocalPort> and
7902 B<RemotePort> (see below): If no port at all is specifically selected, the
7903 default is to collect listening ports. If specific ports (no matter if local or
7904 remote ports) are selected, this option defaults to I<false>, i.E<nbsp>e. only
7905 the selected ports will be collected unless this option is set to I<true>
7908 =item B<LocalPort> I<Port>
7910 Count the connections to a specific local port. This can be used to see how
7911 many connections are handled by a specific daemon, e.E<nbsp>g. the mailserver.
7912 You have to specify the port in numeric form, so for the mailserver example
7913 you'd need to set B<25>.
7915 =item B<RemotePort> I<Port>
7917 Count the connections to a specific remote port. This is useful to see how
7918 much a remote service is used. This is most useful if you want to know how many
7919 connections a local service has opened to remote services, e.E<nbsp>g. how many
7920 connections a mail server or news server has to other mail or news servers, or
7921 how many connections a web proxy holds to web servers. You have to give the
7922 port in numeric form.
7924 =item B<AllPortsSummary> I<true>|I<false>
7926 If this option is set to I<true> a summary of statistics from all connections
7927 are collected. This option defaults to I<false>.
7931 =head2 Plugin C<thermal>
7935 =item B<ForceUseProcfs> I<true>|I<false>
7937 By default, the I<Thermal plugin> tries to read the statistics from the Linux
7938 C<sysfs> interface. If that is not available, the plugin falls back to the
7939 C<procfs> interface. By setting this option to I<true>, you can force the
7940 plugin to use the latter. This option defaults to I<false>.
7942 =item B<Device> I<Device>
7944 Selects the name of the thermal device that you want to collect or ignore,
7945 depending on the value of the B<IgnoreSelected> option. This option may be
7946 used multiple times to specify a list of devices.
7948 See F</"IGNORELISTS"> for details.
7950 =item B<IgnoreSelected> I<true>|I<false>
7952 Invert the selection: If set to true, all devices B<except> the ones that
7953 match the device names specified by the B<Device> option are collected. By
7954 default only selected devices are collected if a selection is made. If no
7955 selection is configured at all, B<all> devices are selected.
7959 =head2 Plugin C<threshold>
7961 The I<Threshold plugin> checks values collected or received by I<collectd>
7962 against a configurable I<threshold> and issues I<notifications> if values are
7965 Documentation for this plugin is available in the L<collectd-threshold(5)>
7968 =head2 Plugin C<tokyotyrant>
7970 The I<TokyoTyrant plugin> connects to a TokyoTyrant server and collects a
7971 couple metrics: number of records, and database size on disk.
7975 =item B<Host> I<Hostname/IP>
7977 The hostname or IP which identifies the server.
7978 Default: B<127.0.0.1>
7980 =item B<Port> I<Service/Port>
7982 The query port of the server. This needs to be a string, even if the port is
7983 given in its numeric form.
7988 =head2 Plugin C<turbostat>
7990 The I<Turbostat plugin> reads CPU frequency and C-state residency on modern
7991 Intel processors by using I<Model Specific Registers>.
7995 =item B<CoreCstates> I<Bitmask(Integer)>
7997 Bit mask of the list of core C-states supported by the processor.
7998 This option should only be used if the automated detection fails.
7999 Default value extracted from the CPU model and family.
8001 Currently supported C-states (by this plugin): 3, 6, 7
8005 All states (3, 6 and 7):
8006 (1<<3) + (1<<6) + (1<<7) = 392
8008 =item B<PackageCstates> I<Bitmask(Integer)>
8010 Bit mask of the list of packages C-states supported by the processor. This
8011 option should only be used if the automated detection fails. Default value
8012 extracted from the CPU model and family.
8014 Currently supported C-states (by this plugin): 2, 3, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10
8018 States 2, 3, 6 and 7:
8019 (1<<2) + (1<<3) + (1<<6) + (1<<7) = 396
8021 =item B<SystemManagementInterrupt> I<true>|I<false>
8023 Boolean enabling the collection of the I/O System-Management Interrupt counter.
8024 This option should only be used if the automated detection fails or if you want
8025 to disable this feature.
8027 =item B<DigitalTemperatureSensor> I<true>|I<false>
8029 Boolean enabling the collection of the temperature of each core. This option
8030 should only be used if the automated detection fails or if you want to disable
8033 =item B<TCCActivationTemp> I<Temperature>
8035 I<Thermal Control Circuit Activation Temperature> of the installed CPU. This
8036 temperature is used when collecting the temperature of cores or packages. This
8037 option should only be used if the automated detection fails. Default value
8038 extracted from B<MSR_IA32_TEMPERATURE_TARGET>.
8040 =item B<RunningAveragePowerLimit> I<Bitmask(Integer)>
8042 Bit mask of the list of elements to be thermally monitored. This option should
8043 only be used if the automated detection fails or if you want to disable some
8044 collections. The different bits of this bit mask accepted by this plugin are:
8048 =item 0 ('1'): Package
8052 =item 2 ('4'): Cores
8054 =item 3 ('8'): Embedded graphic device
8058 =item B<LogicalCoreNames> I<true>|I<false>
8060 Boolean enabling the use of logical core numbering for per core statistics.
8061 When enabled, C<cpuE<lt>nE<gt>> is used as plugin instance, where I<n> is a
8062 sequential number assigned by the kernel. Otherwise, C<coreE<lt>nE<gt>> is used
8063 where I<n> is the n-th core of the socket, causing name conflicts when there is
8064 more than one socket.
8068 =head2 Plugin C<unixsock>
8072 =item B<SocketFile> I<Path>
8074 Sets the socket-file which is to be created.
8076 =item B<SocketGroup> I<Group>
8078 If running as root change the group of the UNIX-socket after it has been
8079 created. Defaults to B<collectd>.
8081 =item B<SocketPerms> I<Permissions>
8083 Change the file permissions of the UNIX-socket after it has been created. The
8084 permissions must be given as a numeric, octal value as you would pass to
8085 L<chmod(1)>. Defaults to B<0770>.
8087 =item B<DeleteSocket> B<false>|B<true>
8089 If set to B<true>, delete the socket file before calling L<bind(2)>, if a file
8090 with the given name already exists. If I<collectd> crashes a socket file may be
8091 left over, preventing the daemon from opening a new socket when restarted.
8092 Since this is potentially dangerous, this defaults to B<false>.
8096 =head2 Plugin C<uuid>
8098 This plugin, if loaded, causes the Hostname to be taken from the machine's
8099 UUID. The UUID is a universally unique designation for the machine, usually
8100 taken from the machine's BIOS. This is most useful if the machine is running in
8101 a virtual environment such as Xen, in which case the UUID is preserved across
8102 shutdowns and migration.
8104 The following methods are used to find the machine's UUID, in order:
8110 Check I</etc/uuid> (or I<UUIDFile>).
8114 Check for UUID from HAL (L<http://www.freedesktop.org/wiki/Software/hal>) if
8119 Check for UUID from C<dmidecode> / SMBIOS.
8123 Check for UUID from Xen hypervisor.
8127 If no UUID can be found then the hostname is not modified.
8131 =item B<UUIDFile> I<Path>
8133 Take the UUID from the given file (default I</etc/uuid>).
8137 =head2 Plugin C<varnish>
8139 The I<varnish plugin> collects information about Varnish, an HTTP accelerator.
8140 It collects a subset of the values displayed by L<varnishstat(1)>, and
8141 organizes them in categories which can be enabled or disabled. Currently only
8142 metrics shown in L<varnishstat(1)>'s I<MAIN> section are collected. The exact
8143 meaning of each metric can be found in L<varnish-counters(7)>.
8148 <Instance "example">
8152 CollectConnections true
8153 CollectDirectorDNS false
8157 CollectObjects false
8159 CollectSession false
8169 CollectWorkers false
8173 The configuration consists of one or more E<lt>B<Instance>E<nbsp>I<Name>E<gt>
8174 blocks. I<Name> is the parameter passed to "varnishd -n". If left empty, it
8175 will collectd statistics from the default "varnishd" instance (this should work
8176 fine in most cases).
8178 Inside each E<lt>B<Instance>E<gt> blocks, the following options are recognized:
8182 =item B<CollectBackend> B<true>|B<false>
8184 Back-end connection statistics, such as successful, reused,
8185 and closed connections. True by default.
8187 =item B<CollectBan> B<true>|B<false>
8189 Statistics about ban operations, such as number of bans added, retired, and
8190 number of objects tested against ban operations. Only available with Varnish
8191 3.x and above. False by default.
8193 =item B<CollectCache> B<true>|B<false>
8195 Cache hits and misses. True by default.
8197 =item B<CollectConnections> B<true>|B<false>
8199 Number of client connections received, accepted and dropped. True by default.
8201 =item B<CollectDirectorDNS> B<true>|B<false>
8203 DNS director lookup cache statistics. Only available with Varnish 3.x. False by
8206 =item B<CollectESI> B<true>|B<false>
8208 Edge Side Includes (ESI) parse statistics. False by default.
8210 =item B<CollectFetch> B<true>|B<false>
8212 Statistics about fetches (HTTP requests sent to the backend). False by default.
8214 =item B<CollectHCB> B<true>|B<false>
8216 Inserts and look-ups in the crit bit tree based hash. Look-ups are
8217 divided into locked and unlocked look-ups. False by default.
8219 =item B<CollectObjects> B<true>|B<false>
8221 Statistics on cached objects: number of objects expired, nuked (prematurely
8222 expired), saved, moved, etc. False by default.
8224 =item B<CollectPurge> B<true>|B<false>
8226 Statistics about purge operations, such as number of purges added, retired, and
8227 number of objects tested against purge operations. Only available with Varnish
8228 2.x. False by default.
8230 =item B<CollectSession> B<true>|B<false>
8232 Client session statistics. Number of past and current sessions, session herd and
8233 linger counters, etc. False by default. Note that if using Varnish 4.x, some
8234 metrics found in the Connections and Threads sections with previous versions of
8235 Varnish have been moved here.
8237 =item B<CollectSHM> B<true>|B<false>
8239 Statistics about the shared memory log, a memory region to store
8240 log messages which is flushed to disk when full. True by default.
8242 =item B<CollectSMA> B<true>|B<false>
8244 malloc or umem (umem_alloc(3MALLOC) based) storage statistics. The umem storage
8245 component is Solaris specific. Only available with Varnish 2.x. False by
8248 =item B<CollectSMS> B<true>|B<false>
8250 synth (synthetic content) storage statistics. This storage
8251 component is used internally only. False by default.
8253 =item B<CollectSM> B<true>|B<false>
8255 file (memory mapped file) storage statistics. Only available with Varnish 2.x.
8258 =item B<CollectStruct> B<true>|B<false>
8260 Current varnish internal state statistics. Number of current sessions, objects
8261 in cache store, open connections to backends (with Varnish 2.x), etc. False by
8264 =item B<CollectTotals> B<true>|B<false>
8266 Collects overview counters, such as the number of sessions created,
8267 the number of requests and bytes transferred. False by default.
8269 =item B<CollectUptime> B<true>|B<false>
8271 Varnish uptime. Only available with Varnish 3.x and above. False by default.
8273 =item B<CollectVCL> B<true>|B<false>
8275 Number of total (available + discarded) VCL (config files). False by default.
8277 =item B<CollectVSM> B<true>|B<false>
8279 Collect statistics about Varnish's shared memory usage (used by the logging and
8280 statistics subsystems). Only available with Varnish 4.x. False by default.
8282 =item B<CollectWorkers> B<true>|B<false>
8284 Collect statistics about worker threads. False by default.
8288 =head2 Plugin C<virt>
8290 This plugin allows CPU, disk, network load and other metrics to be collected for
8291 virtualized guests on the machine. The statistics are collected through libvirt
8292 API (L<http://libvirt.org/>). Majority of metrics can be gathered without
8293 installing any additional software on guests, especially I<collectd>, which runs
8294 only on the host system.
8296 Only I<Connection> is required.
8300 =item B<Connection> I<uri>
8302 Connect to the hypervisor given by I<uri>. For example if using Xen use:
8304 Connection "xen:///"
8306 Details which URIs allowed are given at L<http://libvirt.org/uri.html>.
8308 =item B<RefreshInterval> I<seconds>
8310 Refresh the list of domains and devices every I<seconds>. The default is 60
8311 seconds. Setting this to be the same or smaller than the I<Interval> will cause
8312 the list of domains and devices to be refreshed on every iteration.
8314 Refreshing the devices in particular is quite a costly operation, so if your
8315 virtualization setup is static you might consider increasing this. If this
8316 option is set to 0, refreshing is disabled completely.
8318 =item B<Domain> I<name>
8320 =item B<BlockDevice> I<name:dev>
8322 =item B<InterfaceDevice> I<name:dev>
8324 =item B<IgnoreSelected> B<true>|B<false>
8326 Select which domains and devices are collected.
8328 If I<IgnoreSelected> is not given or B<false> then only the listed domains and
8329 disk/network devices are collected.
8331 If I<IgnoreSelected> is B<true> then the test is reversed and the listed
8332 domains and disk/network devices are ignored, while the rest are collected.
8334 The domain name and device names may use a regular expression, if the name is
8335 surrounded by I</.../> and collectd was compiled with support for regexps.
8337 The default is to collect statistics for all domains and all their devices.
8341 BlockDevice "/:hdb/"
8342 IgnoreSelected "true"
8344 Ignore all I<hdb> devices on any domain, but other block devices (eg. I<hda>)
8347 =item B<BlockDeviceFormat> B<target>|B<source>
8349 If I<BlockDeviceFormat> is set to B<target>, the default, then the device name
8350 seen by the guest will be used for reporting metrics.
8351 This corresponds to the C<E<lt>targetE<gt>> node in the XML definition of the
8354 If I<BlockDeviceFormat> is set to B<source>, then metrics will be reported
8355 using the path of the source, e.g. an image file.
8356 This corresponds to the C<E<lt>sourceE<gt>> node in the XML definition of the
8361 If the domain XML have the following device defined:
8363 <disk type='block' device='disk'>
8364 <driver name='qemu' type='raw' cache='none' io='native' discard='unmap'/>
8365 <source dev='/var/lib/libvirt/images/image1.qcow2'/>
8366 <target dev='sda' bus='scsi'/>
8368 <address type='drive' controller='0' bus='0' target='0' unit='0'/>
8371 Setting C<BlockDeviceFormat target> will cause the I<type instance> to be set
8373 Setting C<BlockDeviceFormat source> will cause the I<type instance> to be set
8374 to C<var_lib_libvirt_images_image1.qcow2>.
8376 =item B<BlockDeviceFormatBasename> B<false>|B<true>
8378 The B<BlockDeviceFormatBasename> controls whether the full path or the
8379 L<basename(1)> of the source is being used as the I<type instance> when
8380 B<BlockDeviceFormat> is set to B<source>. Defaults to B<false>.
8384 Assume the device path (source tag) is C</var/lib/libvirt/images/image1.qcow2>.
8385 Setting C<BlockDeviceFormatBasename false> will cause the I<type instance> to
8386 be set to C<var_lib_libvirt_images_image1.qcow2>.
8387 Setting C<BlockDeviceFormatBasename true> will cause the I<type instance> to be
8388 set to C<image1.qcow2>.
8390 =item B<HostnameFormat> B<name|uuid|hostname|...>
8392 When the virt plugin logs data, it sets the hostname of the collected data
8393 according to this setting. The default is to use the guest name as provided by
8394 the hypervisor, which is equal to setting B<name>.
8396 B<uuid> means use the guest's UUID. This is useful if you want to track the
8397 same guest across migrations.
8399 B<hostname> means to use the global B<Hostname> setting, which is probably not
8400 useful on its own because all guests will appear to have the same name.
8402 You can also specify combinations of these fields. For example B<name uuid>
8403 means to concatenate the guest name and UUID (with a literal colon character
8404 between, thus I<"foo:1234-1234-1234-1234">).
8406 At the moment of writing (collectd-5.5), hostname string is limited to 62
8407 characters. In case when combination of fields exceeds 62 characters,
8408 hostname will be truncated without a warning.
8410 =item B<InterfaceFormat> B<name>|B<address>
8412 When the virt plugin logs interface data, it sets the name of the collected
8413 data according to this setting. The default is to use the path as provided by
8414 the hypervisor (the "dev" property of the target node), which is equal to
8417 B<address> means use the interface's mac address. This is useful since the
8418 interface path might change between reboots of a guest or across migrations.
8420 =item B<PluginInstanceFormat> B<name|uuid|none>
8422 When the virt plugin logs data, it sets the plugin_instance of the collected
8423 data according to this setting. The default is to not set the plugin_instance.
8425 B<name> means use the guest's name as provided by the hypervisor.
8426 B<uuid> means use the guest's UUID.
8428 You can also specify combinations of the B<name> and B<uuid> fields.
8429 For example B<name uuid> means to concatenate the guest name and UUID
8430 (with a literal colon character between, thus I<"foo:1234-1234-1234-1234">).
8432 =item B<Instances> B<integer>
8434 How many read instances you want to use for this plugin. The default is one,
8435 and the sensible setting is a multiple of the B<ReadThreads> value.
8436 If you are not sure, just use the default setting.
8438 =item B<ExtraStats> B<string>
8440 Report additional extra statistics. The default is no extra statistics, preserving
8441 the previous behaviour of the plugin. If unsure, leave the default. If enabled,
8442 allows the plugin to reported more detailed statistics about the behaviour of
8443 Virtual Machines. The argument is a space-separated list of selectors.
8445 Currently supported selectors are:
8449 =item B<cpu_util>: report CPU utilization per domain in percentage.
8451 =item B<disk>: report extra statistics like number of flush operations and total
8452 service time for read, write and flush operations. Requires libvirt API version
8455 =item B<disk_err>: report disk errors if any occured. Requires libvirt API version
8458 =item B<domain_state>: report domain state and reason in human-readable format as
8459 a notification. If libvirt API version I<0.9.2> or later is available, domain
8460 reason will be included in notification.
8462 =item B<fs_info>: report file system information as a notification. Requires
8463 libvirt API version I<1.2.11> or later. Can be collected only if I<Guest Agent>
8464 is installed and configured inside VM. Make sure that installed I<Guest Agent>
8465 version supports retrieving file system information.
8467 =item B<job_stats_background>: report statistics about progress of a background
8468 job on a domain. Only one type of job statistics can be collected at the same time.
8469 Requires libvirt API version I<1.2.9> or later.
8471 =item B<job_stats_completed>: report statistics about a recently completed job on
8472 a domain. Only one type of job statistics can be collected at the same time.
8473 Requires libvirt API version I<1.2.9> or later.
8475 =item B<pcpu>: report the physical user/system cpu time consumed by the hypervisor, per-vm.
8476 Requires libvirt API version I<0.9.11> or later.
8478 =item B<perf>: report performance monitoring events. To collect performance
8479 metrics they must be enabled for domain and supported by the platform. Requires
8480 libvirt API version I<1.3.3> or later.
8481 B<Note>: I<perf> metrics can't be collected if I<intel_rdt> plugin is enabled.
8483 =item B<vcpupin>: report pinning of domain VCPUs to host physical CPUs.
8489 =head2 Plugin C<vmem>
8491 The C<vmem> plugin collects information about the usage of virtual memory.
8492 Since the statistics provided by the Linux kernel are very detailed, they are
8493 collected very detailed. However, to get all the details, you have to switch
8494 them on manually. Most people just want an overview over, such as the number of
8495 pages read from swap space.
8499 =item B<Verbose> B<true>|B<false>
8501 Enables verbose collection of information. This will start collecting page
8502 "actions", e.E<nbsp>g. page allocations, (de)activations, steals and so on.
8503 Part of these statistics are collected on a "per zone" basis.
8507 =head2 Plugin C<vserver>
8509 This plugin doesn't have any options. B<VServer> support is only available for
8510 Linux. It cannot yet be found in a vanilla kernel, though. To make use of this
8511 plugin you need a kernel that has B<VServer> support built in, i.E<nbsp>e. you
8512 need to apply the patches and compile your own kernel, which will then provide
8513 the F</proc/virtual> filesystem that is required by this plugin.
8515 The B<VServer> homepage can be found at L<http://linux-vserver.org/>.
8517 B<Note>: The traffic collected by this plugin accounts for the amount of
8518 traffic passing a socket which might be a lot less than the actual on-wire
8519 traffic (e.E<nbsp>g. due to headers and retransmission). If you want to
8520 collect on-wire traffic you could, for example, use the logging facilities of
8521 iptables to feed data for the guest IPs into the iptables plugin.
8523 =head2 Plugin C<write_graphite>
8525 The C<write_graphite> plugin writes data to I<Graphite>, an open-source metrics
8526 storage and graphing project. The plugin connects to I<Carbon>, the data layer
8527 of I<Graphite>, via I<TCP> or I<UDP> and sends data via the "line based"
8528 protocol (per default using portE<nbsp>2003). The data will be sent in blocks
8529 of at most 1428 bytes to minimize the number of network packets.
8533 <Plugin write_graphite>
8543 The configuration consists of one or more E<lt>B<Node>E<nbsp>I<Name>E<gt>
8544 blocks. Inside the B<Node> blocks, the following options are recognized:
8548 =item B<Host> I<Address>
8550 Hostname or address to connect to. Defaults to C<localhost>.
8552 =item B<Port> I<Service>
8554 Service name or port number to connect to. Defaults to C<2003>.
8556 =item B<Protocol> I<String>
8558 Protocol to use when connecting to I<Graphite>. Defaults to C<tcp>.
8560 =item B<ReconnectInterval> I<Seconds>
8562 When set to non-zero, forces the connection to the Graphite backend to be
8563 closed and re-opend periodically. This behavior is desirable in environments
8564 where the connection to the Graphite backend is done through load balancers,
8565 for example. When set to zero, the default, the connetion is kept open for as
8568 =item B<LogSendErrors> B<false>|B<true>
8570 If set to B<true> (the default), logs errors when sending data to I<Graphite>.
8571 If set to B<false>, it will not log the errors. This is especially useful when
8572 using Protocol UDP since many times we want to use the "fire-and-forget"
8573 approach and logging errors fills syslog with unneeded messages.
8575 =item B<Prefix> I<String>
8577 When set, I<String> is added in front of the host name. Dots and whitespace are
8578 I<not> escaped in this string (see B<EscapeCharacter> below).
8580 =item B<Postfix> I<String>
8582 When set, I<String> is appended to the host name. Dots and whitespace are
8583 I<not> escaped in this string (see B<EscapeCharacter> below).
8585 =item B<EscapeCharacter> I<Char>
8587 I<Carbon> uses the dot (C<.>) as escape character and doesn't allow whitespace
8588 in the identifier. The B<EscapeCharacter> option determines which character
8589 dots, whitespace and control characters are replaced with. Defaults to
8592 =item B<StoreRates> B<false>|B<true>
8594 If set to B<true> (the default), convert counter values to rates. If set to
8595 B<false> counter values are stored as is, i.E<nbsp>e. as an increasing integer
8598 =item B<SeparateInstances> B<false>|B<true>
8600 If set to B<true>, the plugin instance and type instance will be in their own
8601 path component, for example C<host.cpu.0.cpu.idle>. If set to B<false> (the
8602 default), the plugin and plugin instance (and likewise the type and type
8603 instance) are put into one component, for example C<host.cpu-0.cpu-idle>.
8605 =item B<AlwaysAppendDS> B<false>|B<true>
8607 If set to B<true>, append the name of the I<Data Source> (DS) to the "metric"
8608 identifier. If set to B<false> (the default), this is only done when there is
8611 =item B<PreserveSeparator> B<false>|B<true>
8613 If set to B<false> (the default) the C<.> (dot) character is replaced with
8614 I<EscapeCharacter>. Otherwise, if set to B<true>, the C<.> (dot) character
8615 is preserved, i.e. passed through.
8617 =item B<DropDuplicateFields> B<false>|B<true>
8619 If set to B<true>, detect and remove duplicate components in Graphite metric
8620 names. For example, the metric name C<host.load.load.shortterm> will
8621 be shortened to C<host.load.shortterm>.
8625 =head2 Plugin C<write_log>
8627 The C<write_log> plugin writes metrics as INFO log messages.
8629 This plugin supports two output formats: I<Graphite> and I<JSON>.
8639 =item B<Format> I<Format>
8641 The output format to use. Can be one of C<Graphite> or C<JSON>.
8645 =head2 Plugin C<write_tsdb>
8647 The C<write_tsdb> plugin writes data to I<OpenTSDB>, a scalable open-source
8648 time series database. The plugin connects to a I<TSD>, a masterless, no shared
8649 state daemon that ingests metrics and stores them in HBase. The plugin uses
8650 I<TCP> over the "line based" protocol with a default port 4242. The data will
8651 be sent in blocks of at most 1428 bytes to minimize the number of network
8660 Host "tsd-1.my.domain"
8662 HostTags "status=production"
8666 The configuration consists of one or more E<lt>B<Node>E<nbsp>I<Name>E<gt>
8667 blocks and global directives.
8669 Global directives are:
8673 =item B<ResolveInterval> I<seconds>
8675 =item B<ResolveJitter> I<seconds>
8677 When I<collectd> connects to a TSDB node, it will request the hostname from
8678 DNS. This can become a problem if the TSDB node is unavailable or badly
8679 configured because collectd will request DNS in order to reconnect for every
8680 metric, which can flood your DNS. So you can cache the last value for
8681 I<ResolveInterval> seconds.
8682 Defaults to the I<Interval> of the I<write_tsdb plugin>, e.g. 10E<nbsp>seconds.
8684 You can also define a jitter, a random interval to wait in addition to
8685 I<ResolveInterval>. This prevents all your collectd servers to resolve the
8686 hostname at the same time when the connection fails.
8687 Defaults to the I<Interval> of the I<write_tsdb plugin>, e.g. 10E<nbsp>seconds.
8689 B<Note:> If the DNS resolution has already been successful when the socket
8690 closes, the plugin will try to reconnect immediately with the cached
8691 information. DNS is queried only when the socket is closed for a longer than
8692 I<ResolveInterval> + I<ResolveJitter> seconds.
8696 Inside the B<Node> blocks, the following options are recognized:
8700 =item B<Host> I<Address>
8702 Hostname or address to connect to. Defaults to C<localhost>.
8704 =item B<Port> I<Service>
8706 Service name or port number to connect to. Defaults to C<4242>.
8709 =item B<HostTags> I<String>
8711 When set, I<HostTags> is added to the end of the metric. It is intended to be
8712 used for name=value pairs that the TSD will tag the metric with. Dots and
8713 whitespace are I<not> escaped in this string.
8715 =item B<StoreRates> B<false>|B<true>
8717 If set to B<true>, convert counter values to rates. If set to B<false>
8718 (the default) counter values are stored as is, as an increasing
8721 =item B<AlwaysAppendDS> B<false>|B<true>
8723 If set the B<true>, append the name of the I<Data Source> (DS) to the "metric"
8724 identifier. If set to B<false> (the default), this is only done when there is
8729 =head2 Plugin C<write_mongodb>
8731 The I<write_mongodb plugin> will send values to I<MongoDB>, a schema-less
8736 <Plugin "write_mongodb">
8745 The plugin can send values to multiple instances of I<MongoDB> by specifying
8746 one B<Node> block for each instance. Within the B<Node> blocks, the following
8747 options are available:
8751 =item B<Host> I<Address>
8753 Hostname or address to connect to. Defaults to C<localhost>.
8755 =item B<Port> I<Service>
8757 Service name or port number to connect to. Defaults to C<27017>.
8759 =item B<Timeout> I<Milliseconds>
8761 Set the timeout for each operation on I<MongoDB> to I<Timeout> milliseconds.
8762 Setting this option to zero means no timeout, which is the default.
8764 =item B<StoreRates> B<false>|B<true>
8766 If set to B<true> (the default), convert counter values to rates. If set to
8767 B<false> counter values are stored as is, i.e. as an increasing integer
8770 =item B<Database> I<Database>
8772 =item B<User> I<User>
8774 =item B<Password> I<Password>
8776 Sets the information used when authenticating to a I<MongoDB> database. The
8777 fields are optional (in which case no authentication is attempted), but if you
8778 want to use authentication all three fields must be set.
8782 =head2 Plugin C<write_prometheus>
8784 The I<write_prometheus plugin> implements a tiny webserver that can be scraped
8785 using I<Prometheus>.
8791 =item B<Port> I<Port>
8793 Port the embedded webserver should listen on. Defaults to B<9103>.
8795 =item B<StalenessDelta> I<Seconds>
8797 Time in seconds after which I<Prometheus> considers a metric "stale" if it
8798 hasn't seen any update for it. This value must match the setting in Prometheus.
8799 It defaults to B<300> seconds (5 minutes), same as Prometheus.
8803 I<Prometheus> has a global setting, C<StalenessDelta>, which controls after
8804 which time a metric without updates is considered "stale". This setting
8805 effectively puts an upper limit on the interval in which metrics are reported.
8807 When the I<write_prometheus plugin> encounters a metric with an interval
8808 exceeding this limit, it will inform you, the user, and provide the metric to
8809 I<Prometheus> B<without> a timestamp. That causes I<Prometheus> to consider the
8810 metric "fresh" each time it is scraped, with the time of the scrape being
8811 considered the time of the update. The result is that there appear more
8812 datapoints in I<Prometheus> than were actually created, but at least the metric
8813 doesn't disappear periodically.
8817 =head2 Plugin C<write_http>
8819 This output plugin submits values to an HTTP server using POST requests and
8820 encoding metrics with JSON or using the C<PUTVAL> command described in
8821 L<collectd-unixsock(5)>.
8825 <Plugin "write_http">
8827 URL "http://example.com/post-collectd"
8834 The plugin can send values to multiple HTTP servers by specifying one
8835 E<lt>B<Node>E<nbsp>I<Name>E<gt> block for each server. Within each B<Node>
8836 block, the following options are available:
8842 URL to which the values are submitted to. Mandatory.
8844 =item B<User> I<Username>
8846 Optional user name needed for authentication.
8848 =item B<Password> I<Password>
8850 Optional password needed for authentication.
8852 =item B<VerifyPeer> B<true>|B<false>
8854 Enable or disable peer SSL certificate verification. See
8855 L<http://curl.haxx.se/docs/sslcerts.html> for details. Enabled by default.
8857 =item B<VerifyHost> B<true|false>
8859 Enable or disable peer host name verification. If enabled, the plugin checks if
8860 the C<Common Name> or a C<Subject Alternate Name> field of the SSL certificate
8861 matches the host name provided by the B<URL> option. If this identity check
8862 fails, the connection is aborted. Obviously, only works when connecting to a
8863 SSL enabled server. Enabled by default.
8865 =item B<CACert> I<File>
8867 File that holds one or more SSL certificates. If you want to use HTTPS you will
8868 possibly need this option. What CA certificates come bundled with C<libcurl>
8869 and are checked by default depends on the distribution you use.
8871 =item B<CAPath> I<Directory>
8873 Directory holding one or more CA certificate files. You can use this if for
8874 some reason all the needed CA certificates aren't in the same file and can't be
8875 pointed to using the B<CACert> option. Requires C<libcurl> to be built against
8878 =item B<ClientKey> I<File>
8880 File that holds the private key in PEM format to be used for certificate-based
8883 =item B<ClientCert> I<File>
8885 File that holds the SSL certificate to be used for certificate-based
8888 =item B<ClientKeyPass> I<Password>
8890 Password required to load the private key in B<ClientKey>.
8892 =item B<Header> I<Header>
8894 A HTTP header to add to the request. Multiple headers are added if this option is specified more than once. Example:
8896 Header "X-Custom-Header: custom_value"
8898 =item B<SSLVersion> B<SSLv2>|B<SSLv3>|B<TLSv1>|B<TLSv1_0>|B<TLSv1_1>|B<TLSv1_2>
8900 Define which SSL protocol version must be used. By default C<libcurl> will
8901 attempt to figure out the remote SSL protocol version. See
8902 L<curl_easy_setopt(3)> for more details.
8904 =item B<Format> B<Command>|B<JSON>|B<KAIROSDB>
8906 Format of the output to generate. If set to B<Command>, will create output that
8907 is understood by the I<Exec> and I<UnixSock> plugins. When set to B<JSON>, will
8908 create output in the I<JavaScript Object Notation> (JSON). When set to KAIROSDB
8909 , will create output in the KairosDB format.
8911 Defaults to B<Command>.
8913 =item B<Attribute> I<String> I<String>
8915 Only available for the KAIROSDB output format.
8917 Consider the two given strings to be the key and value of an additional tag for
8918 each metric being sent out.
8920 You can add multiple B<Attribute>.
8924 Only available for the KAIROSDB output format.
8926 Sets the Cassandra ttl for the data points.
8928 Please refer to L<http://kairosdb.github.io/docs/build/html/restapi/AddDataPoints.html?highlight=ttl>
8930 =item B<Metrics> B<true>|B<false>
8932 Controls whether I<metrics> are POSTed to this location. Defaults to B<true>.
8934 =item B<Notifications> B<false>|B<true>
8936 Controls whether I<notifications> are POSTed to this location. Defaults to B<false>.
8938 =item B<StoreRates> B<true|false>
8940 If set to B<true>, convert counter values to rates. If set to B<false> (the
8941 default) counter values are stored as is, i.e. as an increasing integer number.
8943 =item B<BufferSize> I<Bytes>
8945 Sets the send buffer size to I<Bytes>. By increasing this buffer, less HTTP
8946 requests will be generated, but more metrics will be batched / metrics are
8947 cached for longer before being sent, introducing additional delay until they
8948 are available on the server side. I<Bytes> must be at least 1024 and cannot
8949 exceed the size of an C<int>, i.e. 2E<nbsp>GByte.
8950 Defaults to C<4096>.
8952 =item B<LowSpeedLimit> I<Bytes per Second>
8954 Sets the minimal transfer rate in I<Bytes per Second> below which the
8955 connection with the HTTP server will be considered too slow and aborted. All
8956 the data submitted over this connection will probably be lost. Defaults to 0,
8957 which means no minimum transfer rate is enforced.
8959 =item B<Timeout> I<Timeout>
8961 Sets the maximum time in milliseconds given for HTTP POST operations to
8962 complete. When this limit is reached, the POST operation will be aborted, and
8963 all the data in the current send buffer will probably be lost. Defaults to 0,
8964 which means the connection never times out.
8966 =item B<LogHttpError> B<false>|B<true>
8968 Enables printing of HTTP error code to log. Turned off by default.
8970 The C<write_http> plugin regularly submits the collected values to the HTTP
8971 server. How frequently this happens depends on how much data you are collecting
8972 and the size of B<BufferSize>. The optimal value to set B<Timeout> to is
8973 slightly below this interval, which you can estimate by monitoring the network
8974 traffic between collectd and the HTTP server.
8978 =head2 Plugin C<write_kafka>
8980 The I<write_kafka plugin> will send values to a I<Kafka> topic, a distributed
8984 <Plugin "write_kafka">
8985 Property "metadata.broker.list" "broker1:9092,broker2:9092"
8991 The following options are understood by the I<write_kafka plugin>:
8995 =item E<lt>B<Topic> I<Name>E<gt>
8997 The plugin's configuration consists of one or more B<Topic> blocks. Each block
8998 is given a unique I<Name> and specifies one kafka producer.
8999 Inside the B<Topic> block, the following per-topic options are
9004 =item B<Property> I<String> I<String>
9006 Configure the named property for the current topic. Properties are
9007 forwarded to the kafka producer library B<librdkafka>.
9009 =item B<Key> I<String>
9011 Use the specified string as a partitioning key for the topic. Kafka breaks
9012 topic into partitions and guarantees that for a given topology, the same
9013 consumer will be used for a specific key. The special (case insensitive)
9014 string B<Random> can be used to specify that an arbitrary partition should
9017 =item B<Format> B<Command>|B<JSON>|B<Graphite>
9019 Selects the format in which messages are sent to the broker. If set to
9020 B<Command> (the default), values are sent as C<PUTVAL> commands which are
9021 identical to the syntax used by the I<Exec> and I<UnixSock plugins>.
9023 If set to B<JSON>, the values are encoded in the I<JavaScript Object Notation>,
9024 an easy and straight forward exchange format.
9026 If set to B<Graphite>, values are encoded in the I<Graphite> format, which is
9027 C<E<lt>metricE<gt> E<lt>valueE<gt> E<lt>timestampE<gt>\n>.
9029 =item B<StoreRates> B<true>|B<false>
9031 Determines whether or not C<COUNTER>, C<DERIVE> and C<ABSOLUTE> data sources
9032 are converted to a I<rate> (i.e. a C<GAUGE> value). If set to B<false> (the
9033 default), no conversion is performed. Otherwise the conversion is performed
9034 using the internal value cache.
9036 Please note that currently this option is only used if the B<Format> option has
9037 been set to B<JSON>.
9039 =item B<GraphitePrefix> (B<Format>=I<Graphite> only)
9041 A prefix can be added in the metric name when outputting in the I<Graphite>
9042 format. It's added before the I<Host> name.
9044 C<E<lt>prefixE<gt>E<lt>hostE<gt>E<lt>postfixE<gt>E<lt>pluginE<gt>E<lt>typeE<gt>E<lt>nameE<gt>>
9046 =item B<GraphitePostfix> (B<Format>=I<Graphite> only)
9048 A postfix can be added in the metric name when outputting in the I<Graphite>
9049 format. It's added after the I<Host> name.
9051 C<E<lt>prefixE<gt>E<lt>hostE<gt>E<lt>postfixE<gt>E<lt>pluginE<gt>E<lt>typeE<gt>E<lt>nameE<gt>>
9053 =item B<GraphiteEscapeChar> (B<Format>=I<Graphite> only)
9055 Specify a character to replace dots (.) in the host part of the metric name.
9056 In I<Graphite> metric name, dots are used as separators between different
9057 metric parts (host, plugin, type).
9058 Default is C<_> (I<Underscore>).
9060 =item B<GraphiteSeparateInstances> B<false>|B<true>
9062 If set to B<true>, the plugin instance and type instance will be in their own
9063 path component, for example C<host.cpu.0.cpu.idle>. If set to B<false> (the
9064 default), the plugin and plugin instance (and likewise the type and type
9065 instance) are put into one component, for example C<host.cpu-0.cpu-idle>.
9067 =item B<GraphiteAlwaysAppendDS> B<true>|B<false>
9069 If set to B<true>, append the name of the I<Data Source> (DS) to the "metric"
9070 identifier. If set to B<false> (the default), this is only done when there is
9073 =item B<GraphitePreserveSeparator> B<false>|B<true>
9075 If set to B<false> (the default) the C<.> (dot) character is replaced with
9076 I<GraphiteEscapeChar>. Otherwise, if set to B<true>, the C<.> (dot) character
9077 is preserved, i.e. passed through.
9079 =item B<StoreRates> B<true>|B<false>
9081 If set to B<true> (the default), convert counter values to rates. If set to
9082 B<false> counter values are stored as is, i.e. as an increasing integer number.
9084 This will be reflected in the C<ds_type> tag: If B<StoreRates> is enabled,
9085 converted values will have "rate" appended to the data source type, e.g.
9086 C<ds_type:derive:rate>.
9090 =item B<Property> I<String> I<String>
9092 Configure the kafka producer through properties, you almost always will
9093 want to set B<metadata.broker.list> to your Kafka broker list.
9097 =head2 Plugin C<write_redis>
9099 The I<write_redis plugin> submits values to I<Redis>, a data structure server.
9103 <Plugin "write_redis">
9115 Values are submitted to I<Sorted Sets>, using the metric name as the key, and
9116 the timestamp as the score. Retrieving a date range can then be done using the
9117 C<ZRANGEBYSCORE> I<Redis> command. Additionally, all the identifiers of these
9118 I<Sorted Sets> are kept in a I<Set> called C<collectd/values> (or
9119 C<${prefix}/values> if the B<Prefix> option was specified) and can be retrieved
9120 using the C<SMEMBERS> I<Redis> command. You can specify the database to use
9121 with the B<Database> parameter (default is C<0>). See
9122 L<http://redis.io/commands#sorted_set> and L<http://redis.io/commands#set> for
9125 The information shown in the synopsis above is the I<default configuration>
9126 which is used by the plugin if no configuration is present.
9128 The plugin can send values to multiple instances of I<Redis> by specifying
9129 one B<Node> block for each instance. Within the B<Node> blocks, the following
9130 options are available:
9134 =item B<Node> I<Nodename>
9136 The B<Node> block identifies a new I<Redis> node, that is a new I<Redis>
9137 instance running on a specified host and port. The node name is a
9138 canonical identifier which is used as I<plugin instance>. It is limited to
9139 51E<nbsp>characters in length.
9141 =item B<Host> I<Hostname>
9143 The B<Host> option is the hostname or IP-address where the I<Redis> instance is
9146 =item B<Port> I<Port>
9148 The B<Port> option is the TCP port on which the Redis instance accepts
9149 connections. Either a service name of a port number may be given. Please note
9150 that numerical port numbers must be given as a string, too.
9152 =item B<Timeout> I<Milliseconds>
9154 The B<Timeout> option sets the socket connection timeout, in milliseconds.
9156 =item B<Prefix> I<Prefix>
9158 Prefix used when constructing the name of the I<Sorted Sets> and the I<Set>
9159 containing all metrics. Defaults to C<collectd/>, so metrics will have names
9160 like C<collectd/cpu-0/cpu-user>. When setting this to something different, it
9161 is recommended but not required to include a trailing slash in I<Prefix>.
9163 =item B<Database> I<Index>
9165 This index selects the redis database to use for writing operations. Defaults
9168 =item B<MaxSetSize> I<Items>
9170 The B<MaxSetSize> option limits the number of items that the I<Sorted Sets> can
9171 hold. Negative values for I<Items> sets no limit, which is the default behavior.
9173 =item B<StoreRates> B<true>|B<false>
9175 If set to B<true> (the default), convert counter values to rates. If set to
9176 B<false> counter values are stored as is, i.e. as an increasing integer number.
9180 =head2 Plugin C<write_riemann>
9182 The I<write_riemann plugin> will send values to I<Riemann>, a powerful stream
9183 aggregation and monitoring system. The plugin sends I<Protobuf> encoded data to
9184 I<Riemann> using UDP packets.
9188 <Plugin "write_riemann">
9194 AlwaysAppendDS false
9198 Attribute "foo" "bar"
9201 The following options are understood by the I<write_riemann plugin>:
9205 =item E<lt>B<Node> I<Name>E<gt>
9207 The plugin's configuration consists of one or more B<Node> blocks. Each block
9208 is given a unique I<Name> and specifies one connection to an instance of
9209 I<Riemann>. Indise the B<Node> block, the following per-connection options are
9214 =item B<Host> I<Address>
9216 Hostname or address to connect to. Defaults to C<localhost>.
9218 =item B<Port> I<Service>
9220 Service name or port number to connect to. Defaults to C<5555>.
9222 =item B<Protocol> B<UDP>|B<TCP>|B<TLS>
9224 Specify the protocol to use when communicating with I<Riemann>. Defaults to
9227 =item B<TLSCertFile> I<Path>
9229 When using the B<TLS> protocol, path to a PEM certificate to present
9232 =item B<TLSCAFile> I<Path>
9234 When using the B<TLS> protocol, path to a PEM CA certificate to
9235 use to validate the remote hosts's identity.
9237 =item B<TLSKeyFile> I<Path>
9239 When using the B<TLS> protocol, path to a PEM private key associated
9240 with the certificate defined by B<TLSCertFile>.
9242 =item B<Batch> B<true>|B<false>
9244 If set to B<true> and B<Protocol> is set to B<TCP>,
9245 events will be batched in memory and flushed at
9246 regular intervals or when B<BatchMaxSize> is exceeded.
9248 Notifications are not batched and sent as soon as possible.
9250 When enabled, it can occur that events get processed by the Riemann server
9251 close to or after their expiration time. Tune the B<TTLFactor> and
9252 B<BatchMaxSize> settings according to the amount of values collected, if this
9257 =item B<BatchMaxSize> I<size>
9259 Maximum payload size for a riemann packet. Defaults to 8192
9261 =item B<BatchFlushTimeout> I<seconds>
9263 Maximum amount of seconds to wait in between to batch flushes.
9264 No timeout by default.
9266 =item B<StoreRates> B<true>|B<false>
9268 If set to B<true> (the default), convert counter values to rates. If set to
9269 B<false> counter values are stored as is, i.e. as an increasing integer number.
9271 This will be reflected in the C<ds_type> tag: If B<StoreRates> is enabled,
9272 converted values will have "rate" appended to the data source type, e.g.
9273 C<ds_type:derive:rate>.
9275 =item B<AlwaysAppendDS> B<false>|B<true>
9277 If set to B<true>, append the name of the I<Data Source> (DS) to the
9278 "service", i.e. the field that, together with the "host" field, uniquely
9279 identifies a metric in I<Riemann>. If set to B<false> (the default), this is
9280 only done when there is more than one DS.
9282 =item B<TTLFactor> I<Factor>
9284 I<Riemann> events have a I<Time to Live> (TTL) which specifies how long each
9285 event is considered active. I<collectd> populates this field based on the
9286 metrics interval setting. This setting controls the factor with which the
9287 interval is multiplied to set the TTL. The default value is B<2.0>. Unless you
9288 know exactly what you're doing, you should only increase this setting from its
9291 =item B<Notifications> B<false>|B<true>
9293 If set to B<true>, create riemann events for notifications. This is B<true>
9294 by default. When processing thresholds from write_riemann, it might prove
9295 useful to avoid getting notification events.
9297 =item B<CheckThresholds> B<false>|B<true>
9299 If set to B<true>, attach state to events based on thresholds defined
9300 in the B<Threshold> plugin. Defaults to B<false>.
9302 =item B<EventServicePrefix> I<String>
9304 Add the given string as a prefix to the event service name.
9305 If B<EventServicePrefix> not set or set to an empty string (""),
9306 no prefix will be used.
9310 =item B<Tag> I<String>
9312 Add the given string as an additional tag to the metric being sent to
9315 =item B<Attribute> I<String> I<String>
9317 Consider the two given strings to be the key and value of an additional
9318 attribute for each metric being sent out to I<Riemann>.
9322 =head2 Plugin C<write_sensu>
9324 The I<write_sensu plugin> will send values to I<Sensu>, a powerful stream
9325 aggregation and monitoring system. The plugin sends I<JSON> encoded data to
9326 a local I<Sensu> client using a TCP socket.
9328 At the moment, the I<write_sensu plugin> does not send over a collectd_host
9329 parameter so it is not possible to use one collectd instance as a gateway for
9330 others. Each collectd host must pair with one I<Sensu> client.
9334 <Plugin "write_sensu">
9339 AlwaysAppendDS false
9340 MetricHandler "influx"
9341 MetricHandler "default"
9342 NotificationHandler "flapjack"
9343 NotificationHandler "howling_monkey"
9347 Attribute "foo" "bar"
9350 The following options are understood by the I<write_sensu plugin>:
9354 =item E<lt>B<Node> I<Name>E<gt>
9356 The plugin's configuration consists of one or more B<Node> blocks. Each block
9357 is given a unique I<Name> and specifies one connection to an instance of
9358 I<Sensu>. Inside the B<Node> block, the following per-connection options are
9363 =item B<Host> I<Address>
9365 Hostname or address to connect to. Defaults to C<localhost>.
9367 =item B<Port> I<Service>
9369 Service name or port number to connect to. Defaults to C<3030>.
9371 =item B<StoreRates> B<true>|B<false>
9373 If set to B<true> (the default), convert counter values to rates. If set to
9374 B<false> counter values are stored as is, i.e. as an increasing integer number.
9376 This will be reflected in the C<collectd_data_source_type> tag: If
9377 B<StoreRates> is enabled, converted values will have "rate" appended to the
9378 data source type, e.g. C<collectd_data_source_type:derive:rate>.
9380 =item B<AlwaysAppendDS> B<false>|B<true>
9382 If set the B<true>, append the name of the I<Data Source> (DS) to the
9383 "service", i.e. the field that, together with the "host" field, uniquely
9384 identifies a metric in I<Sensu>. If set to B<false> (the default), this is
9385 only done when there is more than one DS.
9387 =item B<Notifications> B<false>|B<true>
9389 If set to B<true>, create I<Sensu> events for notifications. This is B<false>
9390 by default. At least one of B<Notifications> or B<Metrics> should be enabled.
9392 =item B<Metrics> B<false>|B<true>
9394 If set to B<true>, create I<Sensu> events for metrics. This is B<false>
9395 by default. At least one of B<Notifications> or B<Metrics> should be enabled.
9398 =item B<Separator> I<String>
9400 Sets the separator for I<Sensu> metrics name or checks. Defaults to "/".
9402 =item B<MetricHandler> I<String>
9404 Add a handler that will be set when metrics are sent to I<Sensu>. You can add
9405 several of them, one per line. Defaults to no handler.
9407 =item B<NotificationHandler> I<String>
9409 Add a handler that will be set when notifications are sent to I<Sensu>. You can
9410 add several of them, one per line. Defaults to no handler.
9412 =item B<EventServicePrefix> I<String>
9414 Add the given string as a prefix to the event service name.
9415 If B<EventServicePrefix> not set or set to an empty string (""),
9416 no prefix will be used.
9420 =item B<Tag> I<String>
9422 Add the given string as an additional tag to the metric being sent to
9425 =item B<Attribute> I<String> I<String>
9427 Consider the two given strings to be the key and value of an additional
9428 attribute for each metric being sent out to I<Sensu>.
9432 =head2 Plugin C<xencpu>
9434 This plugin collects metrics of hardware CPU load for machine running Xen
9435 hypervisor. Load is calculated from 'idle time' value, provided by Xen.
9436 Result is reported using the C<percent> type, for each CPU (core).
9438 This plugin doesn't have any options (yet).
9440 =head2 Plugin C<zookeeper>
9442 The I<zookeeper plugin> will collect statistics from a I<Zookeeper> server
9443 using the mntr command. It requires Zookeeper 3.4.0+ and access to the
9448 <Plugin "zookeeper">
9455 =item B<Host> I<Address>
9457 Hostname or address to connect to. Defaults to C<localhost>.
9459 =item B<Port> I<Service>
9461 Service name or port number to connect to. Defaults to C<2181>.
9465 =head1 THRESHOLD CONFIGURATION
9467 Starting with version C<4.3.0> collectd has support for B<monitoring>. By that
9468 we mean that the values are not only stored or sent somewhere, but that they
9469 are judged and, if a problem is recognized, acted upon. The only action
9470 collectd takes itself is to generate and dispatch a "notification". Plugins can
9471 register to receive notifications and perform appropriate further actions.
9473 Since systems and what you expect them to do differ a lot, you can configure
9474 B<thresholds> for your values freely. This gives you a lot of flexibility but
9475 also a lot of responsibility.
9477 Every time a value is out of range a notification is dispatched. This means
9478 that the idle percentage of your CPU needs to be less then the configured
9479 threshold only once for a notification to be generated. There's no such thing
9480 as a moving average or similar - at least not now.
9482 Also, all values that match a threshold are considered to be relevant or
9483 "interesting". As a consequence collectd will issue a notification if they are
9484 not received for B<Timeout> iterations. The B<Timeout> configuration option is
9485 explained in section L<"GLOBAL OPTIONS">. If, for example, B<Timeout> is set to
9486 "2" (the default) and some hosts sends it's CPU statistics to the server every
9487 60 seconds, a notification will be dispatched after about 120 seconds. It may
9488 take a little longer because the timeout is checked only once each B<Interval>
9491 When a value comes within range again or is received after it was missing, an
9492 "OKAY-notification" is dispatched.
9494 Here is a configuration example to get you started. Read below for more
9507 <Plugin "interface">
9524 WarningMin 100000000
9530 There are basically two types of configuration statements: The C<Host>,
9531 C<Plugin>, and C<Type> blocks select the value for which a threshold should be
9532 configured. The C<Plugin> and C<Type> blocks may be specified further using the
9533 C<Instance> option. You can combine the block by nesting the blocks, though
9534 they must be nested in the above order, i.E<nbsp>e. C<Host> may contain either
9535 C<Plugin> and C<Type> blocks, C<Plugin> may only contain C<Type> blocks and
9536 C<Type> may not contain other blocks. If multiple blocks apply to the same
9537 value the most specific block is used.
9539 The other statements specify the threshold to configure. They B<must> be
9540 included in a C<Type> block. Currently the following statements are recognized:
9544 =item B<FailureMax> I<Value>
9546 =item B<WarningMax> I<Value>
9548 Sets the upper bound of acceptable values. If unset defaults to positive
9549 infinity. If a value is greater than B<FailureMax> a B<FAILURE> notification
9550 will be created. If the value is greater than B<WarningMax> but less than (or
9551 equal to) B<FailureMax> a B<WARNING> notification will be created.
9553 =item B<FailureMin> I<Value>
9555 =item B<WarningMin> I<Value>
9557 Sets the lower bound of acceptable values. If unset defaults to negative
9558 infinity. If a value is less than B<FailureMin> a B<FAILURE> notification will
9559 be created. If the value is less than B<WarningMin> but greater than (or equal
9560 to) B<FailureMin> a B<WARNING> notification will be created.
9562 =item B<DataSource> I<DSName>
9564 Some data sets have more than one "data source". Interesting examples are the
9565 C<if_octets> data set, which has received (C<rx>) and sent (C<tx>) bytes and
9566 the C<disk_ops> data set, which holds C<read> and C<write> operations. The
9567 system load data set, C<load>, even has three data sources: C<shortterm>,
9568 C<midterm>, and C<longterm>.
9570 Normally, all data sources are checked against a configured threshold. If this
9571 is undesirable, or if you want to specify different limits for each data
9572 source, you can use the B<DataSource> option to have a threshold apply only to
9575 =item B<Invert> B<true>|B<false>
9577 If set to B<true> the range of acceptable values is inverted, i.E<nbsp>e.
9578 values between B<FailureMin> and B<FailureMax> (B<WarningMin> and
9579 B<WarningMax>) are not okay. Defaults to B<false>.
9581 =item B<Persist> B<true>|B<false>
9583 Sets how often notifications are generated. If set to B<true> one notification
9584 will be generated for each value that is out of the acceptable range. If set to
9585 B<false> (the default) then a notification is only generated if a value is out
9586 of range but the previous value was okay.
9588 This applies to missing values, too: If set to B<true> a notification about a
9589 missing value is generated once every B<Interval> seconds. If set to B<false>
9590 only one such notification is generated until the value appears again.
9592 =item B<Percentage> B<true>|B<false>
9594 If set to B<true>, the minimum and maximum values given are interpreted as
9595 percentage value, relative to the other data sources. This is helpful for
9596 example for the "df" type, where you may want to issue a warning when less than
9597 5E<nbsp>% of the total space is available. Defaults to B<false>.
9599 =item B<Hits> I<Number>
9601 Delay creating the notification until the threshold has been passed I<Number>
9602 times. When a notification has been generated, or when a subsequent value is
9603 inside the threshold, the counter is reset. If, for example, a value is
9604 collected once every 10E<nbsp>seconds and B<Hits> is set to 3, a notification
9605 will be dispatched at most once every 30E<nbsp>seconds.
9607 This is useful when short bursts are not a problem. If, for example, 100% CPU
9608 usage for up to a minute is normal (and data is collected every
9609 10E<nbsp>seconds), you could set B<Hits> to B<6> to account for this.
9611 =item B<Hysteresis> I<Number>
9613 When set to non-zero, a hysteresis value is applied when checking minimum and
9614 maximum bounds. This is useful for values that increase slowly and fluctuate a
9615 bit while doing so. When these values come close to the threshold, they may
9616 "flap", i.e. switch between failure / warning case and okay case repeatedly.
9618 If, for example, the threshold is configures as
9623 then a I<Warning> notification is created when the value exceeds I<101> and the
9624 corresponding I<Okay> notification is only created once the value falls below
9625 I<99>, thus avoiding the "flapping".
9629 =head1 FILTER CONFIGURATION
9631 Starting with collectd 4.6 there is a powerful filtering infrastructure
9632 implemented in the daemon. The concept has mostly been copied from
9633 I<ip_tables>, the packet filter infrastructure for Linux. We'll use a similar
9634 terminology, so that users that are familiar with iptables feel right at home.
9638 The following are the terms used in the remainder of the filter configuration
9639 documentation. For an ASCII-art schema of the mechanism, see
9640 L<"General structure"> below.
9646 A I<match> is a criteria to select specific values. Examples are, of course, the
9647 name of the value or it's current value.
9649 Matches are implemented in plugins which you have to load prior to using the
9650 match. The name of such plugins starts with the "match_" prefix.
9654 A I<target> is some action that is to be performed with data. Such actions
9655 could, for example, be to change part of the value's identifier or to ignore
9656 the value completely.
9658 Some of these targets are built into the daemon, see L<"Built-in targets">
9659 below. Other targets are implemented in plugins which you have to load prior to
9660 using the target. The name of such plugins starts with the "target_" prefix.
9664 The combination of any number of matches and at least one target is called a
9665 I<rule>. The target actions will be performed for all values for which B<all>
9666 matches apply. If the rule does not have any matches associated with it, the
9667 target action will be performed for all values.
9671 A I<chain> is a list of rules and possibly default targets. The rules are tried
9672 in order and if one matches, the associated target will be called. If a value
9673 is handled by a rule, it depends on the target whether or not any subsequent
9674 rules are considered or if traversal of the chain is aborted, see
9675 L<"Flow control"> below. After all rules have been checked, the default targets
9680 =head2 General structure
9682 The following shows the resulting structure:
9689 +---------+ +---------+ +---------+ +---------+
9690 ! Rule !->! Match !->! Match !->! Target !
9691 +---------+ +---------+ +---------+ +---------+
9694 +---------+ +---------+ +---------+
9695 ! Rule !->! Target !->! Target !
9696 +---------+ +---------+ +---------+
9703 +---------+ +---------+ +---------+
9704 ! Rule !->! Match !->! Target !
9705 +---------+ +---------+ +---------+
9715 There are four ways to control which way a value takes through the filter
9722 The built-in B<jump> target can be used to "call" another chain, i.E<nbsp>e.
9723 process the value with another chain. When the called chain finishes, usually
9724 the next target or rule after the jump is executed.
9728 The stop condition, signaled for example by the built-in target B<stop>, causes
9729 all processing of the value to be stopped immediately.
9733 Causes processing in the current chain to be aborted, but processing of the
9734 value generally will continue. This means that if the chain was called via
9735 B<Jump>, the next target or rule after the jump will be executed. If the chain
9736 was not called by another chain, control will be returned to the daemon and it
9737 may pass the value to another chain.
9741 Most targets will signal the B<continue> condition, meaning that processing
9742 should continue normally. There is no special built-in target for this
9749 The configuration reflects this structure directly:
9751 PostCacheChain "PostCache"
9753 <Rule "ignore_mysql_show">
9756 Type "^mysql_command$"
9757 TypeInstance "^show_"
9767 The above configuration example will ignore all values where the plugin field
9768 is "mysql", the type is "mysql_command" and the type instance begins with
9769 "show_". All other values will be sent to the C<rrdtool> write plugin via the
9770 default target of the chain. Since this chain is run after the value has been
9771 added to the cache, the MySQL C<show_*> command statistics will be available
9772 via the C<unixsock> plugin.
9774 =head2 List of configuration options
9778 =item B<PreCacheChain> I<ChainName>
9780 =item B<PostCacheChain> I<ChainName>
9782 Configure the name of the "pre-cache chain" and the "post-cache chain". The
9783 argument is the name of a I<chain> that should be executed before and/or after
9784 the values have been added to the cache.
9786 To understand the implications, it's important you know what is going on inside
9787 I<collectd>. The following diagram shows how values are passed from the
9788 read-plugins to the write-plugins:
9794 + - - - - V - - - - +
9795 : +---------------+ :
9798 : +-------+-------+ :
9801 : +-------+-------+ : +---------------+
9802 : ! Cache !--->! Value Cache !
9803 : ! insert ! : +---+---+-------+
9804 : +-------+-------+ : ! !
9805 : ! ,------------' !
9807 : +-------+---+---+ : +-------+-------+
9808 : ! Post-Cache +--->! Write-Plugins !
9809 : ! Chain ! : +---------------+
9810 : +---------------+ :
9813 + - - - - - - - - - +
9815 After the values are passed from the "read" plugins to the dispatch functions,
9816 the pre-cache chain is run first. The values are added to the internal cache
9817 afterwards. The post-cache chain is run after the values have been added to the
9818 cache. So why is it such a huge deal if chains are run before or after the
9819 values have been added to this cache?
9821 Targets that change the identifier of a value list should be executed before
9822 the values are added to the cache, so that the name in the cache matches the
9823 name that is used in the "write" plugins. The C<unixsock> plugin, too, uses
9824 this cache to receive a list of all available values. If you change the
9825 identifier after the value list has been added to the cache, this may easily
9826 lead to confusion, but it's not forbidden of course.
9828 The cache is also used to convert counter values to rates. These rates are, for
9829 example, used by the C<value> match (see below). If you use the rate stored in
9830 the cache B<before> the new value is added, you will use the old, B<previous>
9831 rate. Write plugins may use this rate, too, see the C<csv> plugin, for example.
9832 The C<unixsock> plugin uses these rates too, to implement the C<GETVAL>
9835 Last but not last, the B<stop> target makes a difference: If the pre-cache
9836 chain returns the stop condition, the value will not be added to the cache and
9837 the post-cache chain will not be run.
9839 =item B<Chain> I<Name>
9841 Adds a new chain with a certain name. This name can be used to refer to a
9842 specific chain, for example to jump to it.
9844 Within the B<Chain> block, there can be B<Rule> blocks and B<Target> blocks.
9846 =item B<Rule> [I<Name>]
9848 Adds a new rule to the current chain. The name of the rule is optional and
9849 currently has no meaning for the daemon.
9851 Within the B<Rule> block, there may be any number of B<Match> blocks and there
9852 must be at least one B<Target> block.
9854 =item B<Match> I<Name>
9856 Adds a match to a B<Rule> block. The name specifies what kind of match should
9857 be performed. Available matches depend on the plugins that have been loaded.
9859 The arguments inside the B<Match> block are passed to the plugin implementing
9860 the match, so which arguments are valid here depends on the plugin being used.
9861 If you do not need any to pass any arguments to a match, you can use the
9866 Which is equivalent to:
9871 =item B<Target> I<Name>
9873 Add a target to a rule or a default target to a chain. The name specifies what
9874 kind of target is to be added. Which targets are available depends on the
9875 plugins being loaded.
9877 The arguments inside the B<Target> block are passed to the plugin implementing
9878 the target, so which arguments are valid here depends on the plugin being used.
9879 If you do not need any to pass any arguments to a target, you can use the
9884 This is the same as writing:
9891 =head2 Built-in targets
9893 The following targets are built into the core daemon and therefore need no
9894 plugins to be loaded:
9900 Signals the "return" condition, see the L<"Flow control"> section above. This
9901 causes the current chain to stop processing the value and returns control to
9902 the calling chain. The calling chain will continue processing targets and rules
9903 just after the B<jump> target (see below). This is very similar to the
9904 B<RETURN> target of iptables, see L<iptables(8)>.
9906 This target does not have any options.
9914 Signals the "stop" condition, see the L<"Flow control"> section above. This
9915 causes processing of the value to be aborted immediately. This is similar to
9916 the B<DROP> target of iptables, see L<iptables(8)>.
9918 This target does not have any options.
9926 Sends the value to "write" plugins.
9932 =item B<Plugin> I<Name>
9934 Name of the write plugin to which the data should be sent. This option may be
9935 given multiple times to send the data to more than one write plugin. If the
9936 plugin supports multiple instances, the plugin's instance(s) must also be
9941 If no plugin is explicitly specified, the values will be sent to all available
9944 Single-instance plugin example:
9950 Multi-instance plugin example:
9952 <Plugin "write_graphite">
9962 Plugin "write_graphite/foo"
9967 Starts processing the rules of another chain, see L<"Flow control"> above. If
9968 the end of that chain is reached, or a stop condition is encountered,
9969 processing will continue right after the B<jump> target, i.E<nbsp>e. with the
9970 next target or the next rule. This is similar to the B<-j> command line option
9971 of iptables, see L<iptables(8)>.
9977 =item B<Chain> I<Name>
9979 Jumps to the chain I<Name>. This argument is required and may appear only once.
9991 =head2 Available matches
9997 Matches a value using regular expressions.
10003 =item B<Host> I<Regex>
10005 =item B<Plugin> I<Regex>
10007 =item B<PluginInstance> I<Regex>
10009 =item B<Type> I<Regex>
10011 =item B<TypeInstance> I<Regex>
10013 =item B<MetaData> I<String> I<Regex>
10015 Match values where the given regular expressions match the various fields of
10016 the identifier of a value. If multiple regular expressions are given, B<all>
10017 regexen must match for a value to match.
10019 =item B<Invert> B<false>|B<true>
10021 When set to B<true>, the result of the match is inverted, i.e. all value lists
10022 where all regular expressions apply are not matched, all other value lists are
10023 matched. Defaults to B<false>.
10030 Host "customer[0-9]+"
10036 Matches values that have a time which differs from the time on the server.
10038 This match is mainly intended for servers that receive values over the
10039 C<network> plugin and write them to disk using the C<rrdtool> plugin. RRDtool
10040 is very sensitive to the timestamp used when updating the RRD files. In
10041 particular, the time must be ever increasing. If a misbehaving client sends one
10042 packet with a timestamp far in the future, all further packets with a correct
10043 time will be ignored because of that one packet. What's worse, such corrupted
10044 RRD files are hard to fix.
10046 This match lets one match all values B<outside> a specified time range
10047 (relative to the server's time), so you can use the B<stop> target (see below)
10048 to ignore the value, for example.
10054 =item B<Future> I<Seconds>
10056 Matches all values that are I<ahead> of the server's time by I<Seconds> or more
10057 seconds. Set to zero for no limit. Either B<Future> or B<Past> must be
10060 =item B<Past> I<Seconds>
10062 Matches all values that are I<behind> of the server's time by I<Seconds> or
10063 more seconds. Set to zero for no limit. Either B<Future> or B<Past> must be
10075 This example matches all values that are five minutes or more ahead of the
10076 server or one hour (or more) lagging behind.
10080 Matches the actual value of data sources against given minimumE<nbsp>/ maximum
10081 values. If a data-set consists of more than one data-source, all data-sources
10082 must match the specified ranges for a positive match.
10088 =item B<Min> I<Value>
10090 Sets the smallest value which still results in a match. If unset, behaves like
10093 =item B<Max> I<Value>
10095 Sets the largest value which still results in a match. If unset, behaves like
10098 =item B<Invert> B<true>|B<false>
10100 Inverts the selection. If the B<Min> and B<Max> settings result in a match,
10101 no-match is returned and vice versa. Please note that the B<Invert> setting
10102 only effects how B<Min> and B<Max> are applied to a specific value. Especially
10103 the B<DataSource> and B<Satisfy> settings (see below) are not inverted.
10105 =item B<DataSource> I<DSName> [I<DSName> ...]
10107 Select one or more of the data sources. If no data source is configured, all
10108 data sources will be checked. If the type handled by the match does not have a
10109 data source of the specified name(s), this will always result in no match
10110 (independent of the B<Invert> setting).
10112 =item B<Satisfy> B<Any>|B<All>
10114 Specifies how checking with several data sources is performed. If set to
10115 B<Any>, the match succeeds if one of the data sources is in the configured
10116 range. If set to B<All> the match only succeeds if all data sources are within
10117 the configured range. Default is B<All>.
10119 Usually B<All> is used for positive matches, B<Any> is used for negative
10120 matches. This means that with B<All> you usually check that all values are in a
10121 "good" range, while with B<Any> you check if any value is within a "bad" range
10122 (or outside the "good" range).
10126 Either B<Min> or B<Max>, but not both, may be unset.
10130 # Match all values smaller than or equal to 100. Matches only if all data
10131 # sources are below 100.
10137 # Match if the value of any data source is outside the range of 0 - 100.
10145 =item B<empty_counter>
10147 Matches all values with one or more data sources of type B<COUNTER> and where
10148 all counter values are zero. These counters usually I<never> increased since
10149 they started existing (and are therefore uninteresting), or got reset recently
10150 or overflowed and you had really, I<really> bad luck.
10152 Please keep in mind that ignoring such counters can result in confusing
10153 behavior: Counters which hardly ever increase will be zero for long periods of
10154 time. If the counter is reset for some reason (machine or service restarted,
10155 usually), the graph will be empty (NAN) for a long time. People may not
10160 Calculates a hash value of the host name and matches values according to that
10161 hash value. This makes it possible to divide all hosts into groups and match
10162 only values that are in a specific group. The intended use is in load
10163 balancing, where you want to handle only part of all data and leave the rest
10166 The hashing function used tries to distribute the hosts evenly. First, it
10167 calculates a 32E<nbsp>bit hash value using the characters of the hostname:
10170 for (i = 0; host[i] != 0; i++)
10171 hash_value = (hash_value * 251) + host[i];
10173 The constant 251 is a prime number which is supposed to make this hash value
10174 more random. The code then checks the group for this host according to the
10175 I<Total> and I<Match> arguments:
10177 if ((hash_value % Total) == Match)
10182 Please note that when you set I<Total> to two (i.E<nbsp>e. you have only two
10183 groups), then the least significant bit of the hash value will be the XOR of
10184 all least significant bits in the host name. One consequence is that when you
10185 have two hosts, "server0.example.com" and "server1.example.com", where the host
10186 name differs in one digit only and the digits differ by one, those hosts will
10187 never end up in the same group.
10193 =item B<Match> I<Match> I<Total>
10195 Divide the data into I<Total> groups and match all hosts in group I<Match> as
10196 described above. The groups are numbered from zero, i.E<nbsp>e. I<Match> must
10197 be smaller than I<Total>. I<Total> must be at least one, although only values
10198 greater than one really do make any sense.
10200 You can repeat this option to match multiple groups, for example:
10205 The above config will divide the data into seven groups and match groups three
10206 and five. One use would be to keep every value on two hosts so that if one
10207 fails the missing data can later be reconstructed from the second host.
10213 # Operate on the pre-cache chain, so that ignored values are not even in the
10218 # Divide all received hosts in seven groups and accept all hosts in
10222 # If matched: Return and continue.
10225 # If not matched: Return and stop.
10231 =head2 Available targets
10235 =item B<notification>
10237 Creates and dispatches a notification.
10243 =item B<Message> I<String>
10245 This required option sets the message of the notification. The following
10246 placeholders will be replaced by an appropriate value:
10254 =item B<%{plugin_instance}>
10258 =item B<%{type_instance}>
10260 These placeholders are replaced by the identifier field of the same name.
10262 =item B<%{ds:>I<name>B<}>
10264 These placeholders are replaced by a (hopefully) human readable representation
10265 of the current rate of this data source. If you changed the instance name
10266 (using the B<set> or B<replace> targets, see below), it may not be possible to
10267 convert counter values to rates.
10271 Please note that these placeholders are B<case sensitive>!
10273 =item B<Severity> B<"FAILURE">|B<"WARNING">|B<"OKAY">
10275 Sets the severity of the message. If omitted, the severity B<"WARNING"> is
10282 <Target "notification">
10283 Message "Oops, the %{type_instance} temperature is currently %{ds:value}!"
10289 Replaces parts of the identifier using regular expressions.
10295 =item B<Host> I<Regex> I<Replacement>
10297 =item B<Plugin> I<Regex> I<Replacement>
10299 =item B<PluginInstance> I<Regex> I<Replacement>
10301 =item B<TypeInstance> I<Regex> I<Replacement>
10303 =item B<MetaData> I<String> I<Regex> I<Replacement>
10305 =item B<DeleteMetaData> I<String> I<Regex>
10307 Match the appropriate field with the given regular expression I<Regex>. If the
10308 regular expression matches, that part that matches is replaced with
10309 I<Replacement>. If multiple places of the input buffer match a given regular
10310 expression, only the first occurrence will be replaced.
10312 You can specify each option multiple times to use multiple regular expressions
10320 # Replace "example.net" with "example.com"
10321 Host "\\<example.net\\>" "example.com"
10323 # Strip "www." from hostnames
10324 Host "\\<www\\." ""
10329 Sets part of the identifier of a value to a given string.
10335 =item B<Host> I<String>
10337 =item B<Plugin> I<String>
10339 =item B<PluginInstance> I<String>
10341 =item B<TypeInstance> I<String>
10343 =item B<MetaData> I<String> I<String>
10345 Set the appropriate field to the given string. The strings for plugin instance,
10346 type instance, and meta data may be empty, the strings for host and plugin may
10347 not be empty. It's currently not possible to set the type of a value this way.
10349 The following placeholders will be replaced by an appropriate value:
10357 =item B<%{plugin_instance}>
10361 =item B<%{type_instance}>
10363 These placeholders are replaced by the identifier field of the same name.
10365 =item B<%{meta:>I<name>B<}>
10367 These placeholders are replaced by the meta data value with the given name.
10371 Please note that these placeholders are B<case sensitive>!
10373 =item B<DeleteMetaData> I<String>
10375 Delete the named meta data field.
10382 PluginInstance "coretemp"
10383 TypeInstance "core3"
10388 =head2 Backwards compatibility
10390 If you use collectd with an old configuration, i.E<nbsp>e. one without a
10391 B<Chain> block, it will behave as it used to. This is equivalent to the
10392 following configuration:
10394 <Chain "PostCache">
10398 If you specify a B<PostCacheChain>, the B<write> target will not be added
10399 anywhere and you will have to make sure that it is called where appropriate. We
10400 suggest to add the above snippet as default target to your "PostCache" chain.
10404 Ignore all values, where the hostname does not contain a dot, i.E<nbsp>e. can't
10419 B<Ignorelists> are a generic framework to either ignore some metrics or report
10420 specific metircs only. Plugins usually provide one or more options to specify
10421 the items (mounts points, devices, ...) and the boolean option
10426 =item B<Select> I<String>
10428 Selects the item I<String>. This option often has a plugin specific name, e.g.
10429 B<Sensor> in the C<sensors> plugin. It is also plugin specific what this string
10430 is compared to. For example, the C<df> plugin's B<MountPoint> compares it to a
10431 mount point and the C<sensors> plugin's B<Sensor> compares it to a sensor name.
10433 By default, this option is doing a case-sensitive full-string match. The
10434 following config will match C<foo>, but not C<Foo>:
10438 If I<String> starts and ends with C</> (a slash), the string is compiled as a
10439 I<regular expression>. For example, so match all item starting with C<foo>, use
10440 could use the following syntax:
10444 The regular expression is I<not> anchored, i.e. the following config will match
10445 C<foobar>, C<barfoo> and C<AfooZ>:
10449 The B<Select> option may be repeated to select multiple items.
10451 =item B<IgnoreSelected> B<true>|B<false>
10453 If set to B<true>, matching metrics are I<ignored> and all other metrics are
10454 collected. If set to B<false>, matching metrics are I<collected> and all other
10455 metrics are ignored.
10462 L<collectd-exec(5)>,
10463 L<collectd-perl(5)>,
10464 L<collectd-unixsock(5)>,
10477 Florian Forster E<lt>octo@collectd.orgE<gt>