Batterycharge, -current and voltage of ACPI and PMU based laptop
batteries.
- - curl
- Parse statistics from websites using regular expressions.
-
- bind
Name server and resolver statistics from the `statistics-channel'
interface of BIND 9.5, 9,6 and later.
- conntrack
Number of nf_conntrack entries.
- - couchdb
- Parse statistics from CouchDB JSON documents.
+ - contextswitch
+ Number of context switches done by the operating system.
- cpu
CPU utilization: Time spent in the system, user, nice, idle, and related
- cpufreq
CPU frequency (For laptops with speed step or a similar technology)
+ - curl
+ Parse statistics from websites using regular expressions.
+
+ - curl_json
+ Retrieves JSON data via cURL and parses it according to user
+ configuration.
+
- dbi
Executes SQL statements on various databases and interprets the returned
data.
- filecount
Count the number of files in directories.
+ - fscache
+ Linux file-system based caching framework statistics.
+
- gmond
Receive multicast traffic from Ganglia instances.
- libvirt
CPU, disk and network I/O statistics from virtual machines.
+ - madwifi
+ Queries very detailed usage statistics from wireless LAN adapters and
+ interfaces that use the Atheros chipset and the MadWifi driver.
+
- mbmon
Motherboard sensors: temperature, fanspeed and voltage information,
using mbmon(1).
+ - memcachec
+ Query and parse data from a memcache daemon (memcached).
+
- memcached
Statistics of the memcached distributed caching system.
<http://www.danga.com/memcached/>
MySQL server statistics: Commands issued, handlers triggered, thread
usage, query cache utilization and traffic/octets sent and received.
+ - netapp
+ Plugin to query performance values from a NetApp storage system using the
+ “Manage ONTAP” SDK provided by NetApp.
+
- netlink
Very detailed Linux network interface and routing statistics. You can get
(detailed) information on interfaces, qdiscs, classes, and, if you can
Network UPS tools: UPS current, voltage, power, charge, utilisation,
temperature, etc. See upsd(8).
+ - olsr
+ Queries routing information from the “Optimized Link State Routing”
+ daemon.
+
- onewire (EXPERIMENTAL!)
Read onewire sensors using the owcapu library of the owfs project.
Please read in collectd.conf(5) why this plugin is experimental.
- swap
Pages swapped out onto harddisk or whatever is called `swap' by the OS..
+ - table
+ Parse table-like structured files.
+
- tail
Follows (tails) logfiles, parses them by lines and submits matched
values.
- thermal
Linux ACPI thermal zone information.
+ - tokyotyrant
+ Reads the number of records and file size from a running Tokyo Tyrant
+ server.
+
+ - uptime
+ System uptime statistics.
+
- users
Users currently logged in.
- xmms
Bitrate and frequency of music played with XMMS.
+ - zfs_arc
+ Statistics for ZFS' “Adaptive Replacement Cache” (ARC).
+
* Output can be written or send to various destinations by the following
plugins:
needed. Please read collectd-unixsock(5) for a description on how that's
done.
+ - write_http
+ Sends the values collected by collectd to a web-server using HTTP POST
+ requests. The transmitted data is either in a form understood by the
+ Exec plugin or formatted in JSON.
+
* Logging is, as everything in collectd, provided by plugins. The following
plugins keep up informed about what's going on:
* Value processing can be controlled using the "filter chain" infrastructure
and "matches" and "targets". The following plugins are available:
+ - match_empty_counter
+ Match counter values which are currently zero.
+
- match_regex
Match values by their identifier based on regular expressions.
Used by the `oracle' plugin.
* libcurl (optional)
- If you want to use the `apache', `ascent', `curl' or `nginx' plugin.
+ If you want to use the `apache', `ascent', `curl', `nginx', or `write_http'
+ plugin.
<http://curl.haxx.se/>
* libdbi (optional)
For the `notify_email' plugin.
<http://www.stafford.uklinux.net/libesmtp/>
+ * libganglia (optional)
+ Used by the `gmond' plugin to process data received from Ganglia.
+
+ * libgcrypt (optional)
+ Used by the `network' plugin for encryption and authentication.
+
* libhal (optional)
If present, the uuid plugin will check for UUID from HAL.
<http://hal.freedesktop.org/>
- * libiptc (optional, if not found a version shipped with this distribution
- can be used if the Linux kernel headers are available)
+ * libiptc (optional)
For querying iptables counters.
<http://netfilter.org/>
+ If not found on the system, a version shipped with this distribution can
+ be used. It requires some Linux headers in /usr/include/linux. You can
+ force the build system to use the shipped version by specifying
+ --with-libiptc=shipped
+ when running the configure script.
+
* libjvm (optional)
Library that encapsulates the `Java Virtual Machine' (JVM). This library is
used by the Java plugin to execute Java bytecode. See “Configuring with
libjvm” below.
+ * libmemcached (optional)
+ Used by the `memcachec' plugin to connect to a memcache daemon.
+
* libmysqlclient (optional)
Unsurprisingly used by the `mysql' plugin.
<http://dev.mysql.com/>
+ * libnatapp (optional)
+ Required for the “netapp” plugin.
+ This library is part of the “Manage ONTAP SDK” published by NetApp.
+
* libnetlink (optional)
Used, obviously, for the `netlink' plugin.
<http://www.linuxfoundation.org/en/Net:Iproute2>
For the `notify_desktop' plugin.
<http://www.galago-project.org/>
- * liboping (optional, if not found a version shipped with this distribution
- can be used)
+ * liboping (optional)
Used by the `ping' plugin to send and receive ICMP packets.
<http://verplant.org/liboping/>
<http://www.xmms.org/>
* libyajl (optional)
- Parse JSON data. This is needed for the `couchdb' plugin.
- <http://www.lloydforge.org/projects/yajl/>
+ Parse JSON data. This is needed for the `curl_json' plugin.
+ <http://github.com/lloyd/yajl>
Configuring / Compiling / Installing
------------------------------------
will be enabled). To enable a plugin, install missing dependencies (see
section `Prerequisites' above) and rerun `configure'. If you specify the
`--enable-<plugin>' configure option, the script will fail if the depen-
- dencies for the specified plugin are not met. If you specify the
- `--disable-<plugin>' configure option, the plugin will not be built. Both
- options are meant for package maintainers and should not be used in everyday
- situations.
+ dencies for the specified plugin are not met. In that case you can force the
+ plugin to be built using the `--enable-<plugin>=force' configure option.
+ This will most likely fail though unless you're working in a very unusual
+ setup and you really know what you're doing. If you specify the
+ `--disable-<plugin>' configure option, the plugin will not be built. If you
+ specify the `--enable-all-plugins' or `--disable-all-plugins' configure
+ options, all plugins will be enabled or disabled respectively by default.
+ Explicitly enabling or disabling a plugin overwrites the default for the
+ specified plugin. These options are meant for package maintainers and should
+ not be used in everyday situations.
By default, collectd will be installed into `/opt/collectd'. You can adjust
this setting by specifying the `--prefix' configure option - see INSTALL for