=back
++=head2 Plugin C<load>
+
+The I<Load plugin> collects the system load. These numbers give a rough overview
+over the utilization of a machine. The system load is defined as the number of
+runnable tasks in the run-queue and is provided by many operating systems as a
+one, five or fifteen minute average.
+
+The following configuration options are available:
+
+=over 4
+
+=item B<ReportRelative> B<false>|B<true>
+
+When enabled, system load divided by number of available CPU cores is reported
+for intervals 1 min, 5 min and 15 min. Defaults to false.
+
+=back
+
+
=head2 Plugin C<logfile>
=over 4
=back
+=head2 Plugin C<memory>
+
+The I<memory plugin> provides the following configuration options:
+
+=over 4
+
+=item B<ValuesAbsolute> B<true>|B<false>
+
+Enables or disables reporting of physical memory usage in absolute numbers,
+i.e. bytes. Defaults to B<true>.
+
+=item B<ValuesPercentage> B<false>|B<true>
+
+Enables or disables reporting of physical memory usage in percentages, e.g.
+percent of physical memory used. Defaults to B<true>.
+
+This is useful for deploying I<collectd> in a heterogeneous environment in
+which the sizes of physical memory vary.
+
+=back
+
=head2 Plugin C<modbus>
The B<modbus plugin> connects to a Modbus "slave" via Modbus/TCP and reads
<Node "example">
Host "localhost"
Port "2003"
- Protocol "udp"
+ Protocol "tcp"
LogSendErrors true
Prefix "collectd"
</Node>
TTLFactor 2.0
</Node>
Tag "foobar"
+ Attribute "foo" "bar"
</Plugin>
The following options are understood by the I<write_riemann plugin>:
Add the given string as an additional tag to the metric being sent to
I<Riemann>.
+=item B<Attribute> I<String> I<String>
+
+Consider the two given strings to be the key and value of an additional
+attribute for each metric being sent out to I<Riemann>.
+
=back
=head1 THRESHOLD CONFIGURATION
Here is a configuration example to get you started. Read below for more
information.
- <Threshold>
+ <Plugin threshold>
<Type "foo">
WarningMin 0.00
WarningMax 1000.00
</Type>
</Plugin>
</Host>
- </Threshold>
+ </Plugin>
There are basically two types of configuration statements: The C<Host>,
C<Plugin>, and C<Type> blocks select the value for which a threshold should be