influence the way plugins are loaded, e.g.:
<LoadPlugin perl>
- Globals true
Interval 60
</LoadPlugin>
=head2 Plugin C<amqp>
-The I<AMQMP plugin> can be used to communicate with other instances of
+The I<AMQP plugin> can be used to communicate with other instances of
I<collectd> or third party applications using an AMQP message broker. Values
are sent to or received from the broker, which handles routing, queueing and
possibly filtering or messages.
# GraphiteSeparateInstances false
# GraphiteAlwaysAppendDS false
</Publish>
-
+
# Receive values from an AMQP broker
<Subscribe "some_name">
Host "localhost"
=head2 Plugin C<curl_json>
The B<curl_json plugin> collects values from JSON data to be parsed by
-B<libyajl> (L<http://www.lloydforge.org/projects/yajl/>) retrieved via
+B<libyajl> (L<https://lloyd.github.io/yajl/>) retrieved via
either B<libcurl> (L<http://curl.haxx.se/>) or read directly from a
unix socket. The former can be used, for example, to collect values
from CouchDB documents (which are stored JSON notation), and the
=item B<IgnoreSelected> I<true>|I<false>
-If no configuration if given, the B<traffic>-plugin will collect data from
+If no configuration if given, the B<interface>-plugin will collect data from
all interfaces. This may not be practical, especially for loopback- and
similar interfaces. Thus, you can use the B<Interface>-option to pick the
interfaces you're interested in. Sometimes, however, it's easier/preferred
B<Interface> is inverted: All selected interfaces are ignored and all
other interfaces are collected.
+It is possible to use regular expressions to match interface names, if the
+name is surrounded by I</.../> and collectd was compiled with support for
+regexps. This is useful if there's a need to collect (or ignore) data
+for a group of interfaces that are similarly named, without the need to
+explicitly list all of them (especially useful if the list is dynamic).
+Example:
+
+ Interface "lo"
+ Interface "/^veth/"
+ Interface "/^tun[0-9]+/"
+ IgnoreSelected "true"
+
+This will ignore the loopback interface, all interfaces with names starting
+with I<veth> and all interfaces with names starting with I<tun> followed by
+at least one digit.
+
+
=back
=head2 Plugin C<ipmi>
=item B<Chain> I<Table> I<Chain> [I<Comment|Number> [I<Name>]]
-Select the rules to count. If only I<Table> and I<Chain> are given, this plugin
-will collect the counters of all rules which have a comment-match. The comment
-is then used as type-instance.
+=item B<Chain6> I<Table> I<Chain> [I<Comment|Number> [I<Name>]]
+
+Select the iptables/ip6tables filter rules to count packets and bytes from.
+
+If only I<Table> and I<Chain> are given, this plugin will collect the counters
+of all rules which have a comment-match. The comment is then used as
+type-instance.
If I<Comment> or I<Number> is given, only the rule with the matching comment or
the I<n>th rule will be collected. Again, the comment (or the number) will be
=head2 Plugin C<ntpd>
+The C<ntpd> plugin collects per-peer ntpd data such as time offset and time
+dispersion.
+
+For talking to B<ntpd>, it mimics what the B<ntpdc> control program does on
+wire - using B<mode 7> specific requests. This mode is deprecated with
+newer B<ntpd> releases (4.2.7p230 and later). For the C<ntpd> plugin to work
+correctly with them, the ntp daemon must be explicitly configured to
+enable B<mode 7> (which is disabled by default). Refer to the I<ntp.conf(5)>
+manual page for details.
+
+Available configuration options for the C<ntpd> plugin:
+
=over 4
=item B<Host> I<Hostname>
amount of time will be lost, for example, if a single statement within the
transaction fails or if the database server crashes.
+=item B<Instance> I<name>
+
+Specify the plugin instance name that should be used instead of the database
+name (which is the default, if this option has not been specified). This
+allows to query multiple databases of the same name on the same host (e.g.
+when running multiple database server versions in parallel).
+
=item B<Host> I<hostname>
Specify the hostname or IP of the PostgreSQL server to connect to. If the
Specify whether to use an SSL connection when contacting the server. The
following modes are supported:
-=item B<Instance> I<name>
-
-Specify the plugin instance name that should be used instead of the database
-name (which is the default, if this option has not been specified). This
-allows to query multiple databases of the same name on the same host (e.g.
-when running multiple database server versions in parallel).
-
=over 4
=item I<disable>
Use I<Password> to authenticate when connecting to I<Redis>.
-=item B<Timeout> I<Timeout in miliseconds>
+=item B<Timeout> I<Milliseconds>
The B<Timeout> option set the socket timeout for node response. Since the Redis
read function is blocking, you should keep this value as low as possible. Keep
Service name or port number to connect to. Defaults to C<27017>.
-=item B<Timeout> I<Timeout>
+=item B<Timeout> I<Milliseconds>
Set the timeout for each operation on I<MongoDB> to I<Timeout> milliseconds.
Setting this option to zero means no timeout, which is the default.
connections. Either a service name of a port number may be given. Please note
that numerical port numbers must be given as a string, too.
-=item B<Timeout> I<Timeout in miliseconds>
+=item B<Timeout> I<Milliseconds>
The B<Timeout> option sets the socket connection timeout, in milliseconds.
=item B<AlwaysAppendDS> B<false>|B<true>
-If set the B<true>, append the name of the I<Data Source> (DS) to the
+If set to B<true>, append the name of the I<Data Source> (DS) to the
"service", i.e. the field that, together with the "host" field, uniquely
identifies a metric in I<Riemann>. If set to B<false> (the default), this is
only done when there is more than one DS.