X-Git-Url: https://git.octo.it/?a=blobdiff_plain;f=src%2Fcollectd.conf.pod;h=c1c9a253c31a3ce7d53fdfef28726158735d314e;hb=853b3da5d4c6614d7db4093f57b1ca4f57b6c485;hp=01f0f824374b5199953e330f07a90d2317345ac5;hpb=9a3479d538c92e5a98b14574acd2cc4ee3a3e440;p=collectd.git diff --git a/src/collectd.conf.pod b/src/collectd.conf.pod index 01f0f824..c1c9a253 100644 --- a/src/collectd.conf.pod +++ b/src/collectd.conf.pod @@ -57,6 +57,33 @@ directory for the daemon. Loads the plugin I. There must be at least one such line or B will be mostly useless. +Starting with collectd 4.9, this may also be a block in which further options +affecting the behavior of B may be specified. The following +options are allowed inside a B block: + + + Globals true + + +=over 4 + +=item B B + +If enabled, collectd will export all global symbols of the plugin (and of all +libraries loaded as dependencies of the plugin) and, thus, makes those symbols +available for resolving unresolved symbols in subsequently loaded plugins if +that is supported by your system. By default, this is disabled. + +This is useful (or possibly even required), e.Eg., when loading a plugin +that embeds some scripting language into the daemon (e.Eg. the C +or C plugins). Scripting languages usually provide means to load +extensions written in C. Those extensions require symbols provided by the +interpreter, which is loaded as a dependency of the respective collectd +plugin. See the documentation of those plugins (e.Eg., +L or L) for details. + +=back + =item B I If I points to a file, includes that file. If I points to a @@ -102,6 +129,10 @@ Configures the interval in which to query the read plugins. Obviously smaller values lead to a higher system load produced by collectd, while higher values lead to more coarse statistics. +B You should set this once and then never touch it again. If you do, +I or know some serious RRDtool +magic! (Assuming you're using the I or I plugin.) + =item B I Consider a value list "missing" when no update has been read or received for @@ -154,6 +185,143 @@ A list of all plugins and a short summary for each plugin can be found in the F file shipped with the sourcecode and hopefully binary packets as well. +=head2 Plugin C + +The I can be used to communicate with other instances of +I 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. + + + # Send values to an AMQP broker + + Host "localhost" + Port "5672" + VHost "/" + User "guest" + Password "guest" + Exchange "amq.fanout" + # ExchangeType "fanout" + # RoutingKey "collectd" + # Persistent false + # Format "command" + # StoreRates false + + + # Receive values from an AMQP broker + + Host "localhost" + Port "5672" + VHost "/" + User "guest" + Password "guest" + Exchange "amq.fanout" + # ExchangeType "fanout" + # Queue "queue_name" + # RoutingKey "collectd.#" + + + +The plugin's configuration consists of a number of I and I +blocks, which configure sending and receiving of values respectively. The two +blocks are very similar, so unless otherwise noted, an option can be used in +either block. The name given in the blocks starting tag is only used for +reporting messages, but may be used to support I of certain +I blocks in the future. + +=over 4 + +=item B I + +Hostname or IP-address of the AMQP broker. Defaults to the default behavior of +the underlying communications library, I, which is "localhost". + +=item B I + +Service name or port number on which the AMQP broker accepts connections. This +argument must be a string, even if the numeric form is used. Defaults to +"5672". + +=item B I + +Name of the I on the AMQP broker to use. Defaults to "/". + +=item B I + +=item B I + +Credentials used to authenticate to the AMQP broker. By default "guest"/"guest" +is used. + +=item B I + +In I blocks, this option specifies the I to send values to. +By default, "amq.fanout" will be used. + +In I blocks this option is optional. If given, a I between +the given exchange and the I is created, using the I if +configured. See the B and B options below. + +=item B I + +If given, the plugin will try to create the configured I with this +I after connecting. When in a I block, the I will then +be bound to this exchange. + +=item B I (Subscribe only) + +Configures the I name to subscribe to. If no queue name was configures +explicitly, a unique queue name will be created by the broker. + +=item B I + +In I blocks, this configures the routing key to set on all outgoing +messages. If not given, the routing key will be computed from the I +of the value. The host, plugin, type and the two instances are concatenated +together using dots as the separator and all containing dots replaced with +slashes. For example "collectd.host/example/com.cpu.0.cpu.user". This makes it +possible to receive only specific values using a "topic" exchange. + +In I blocks, configures the I used when creating a +I between an I and the I. The usual wildcards can be +used to filter messages when using a "topic" exchange. If you're only +interested in CPU statistics, you could use the routing key "collectd.*.cpu.#" +for example. + +=item B B|B (Publish only) + +Selects the I to use. If set to B, the I +mode will be used, i.e. delivery is guaranteed. If set to B (the +default), the I delivery mode will be used, i.e. messages may be +lost due to high load, overflowing queues or similar issues. + +=item B B|B (Publish only) + +Selects the format in which messages are sent to the broker. If set to +B (the default), values are sent as C commands which are +identical to the syntax used by the I and I. In this +case, the C header field will be set to C. + +If set to B, the values are encoded in the I, +an easy and straight forward exchange format. The C header field +will be set to C. + +A subscribing client I use the C header field to +determine how to decode the values. Currently, the I itself can +only decode the B format. + +=item B B|B (Publish only) + +Determines whether or not C, C and C data sources +are converted to a I (i.e. a C value). If set to B (the +default), no conversion is performed. Otherwise the conversion is performed +using the internal value cache. + +Please note that currently this option is only used if the B option has +been set to B. + +=back + =head2 Plugin C To configure the C-plugin you first need to configure the Apache @@ -172,7 +340,25 @@ Since its C module is very similar to Apache's, B is also supported. It introduces a new field, called C, to count the number of currently connected clients. This field is also supported. -The following options are accepted by the C-plugin: +The configuration of the I plugin consists of one or more +CInstanceE/E> blocks. Each block requires one string argument +as the instance name. For example: + + + + URL "http://www1.example.com/mod_status?auto" + + + URL "http://www2.example.com/mod_status?auto" + + + +The instance name will be used as the I. To emulate the old +(versionE4) behavior, you can use an empty string (""). In order for the +plugin to work correctly, each instance name must be unique. This is not +enforced by the plugin and it is your responsibility to ensure it. + +The following options are accepted within each I block: =over 4 @@ -180,7 +366,7 @@ The following options are accepted by the C-plugin: Sets the URL of the C output. This needs to be the output generated by C and it needs to be the machine readable output -generated by appending the C argument. +generated by appending the C argument. This option is I. =item B I @@ -1568,8 +1754,8 @@ debugging support. Sets the file to write log messages to. The special strings B and B can be used to write to the standard output and standard error -channels, respectively. This, of course, only makes much sense when collectd is -running in foreground- or non-daemon-mode. +channels, respectively. This, of course, only makes much sense when I +is running in foreground- or non-daemon-mode. =item B B|B @@ -1586,6 +1772,33 @@ B: There is no need to notify the daemon after moving or removing the log file (e.Eg. when rotating the logs). The plugin reopens the file for each line it writes. +=head2 Plugin C + +The I reads CPU statistics of I, a +virtualization technique for IBM POWER processors. It takes into account CPU +time stolen from or donated to a partition, in addition to the usual user, +system, I/O statistics. + +The following configuration options are available: + +=over 4 + +=item B B|B + +When enabled, statistics about the processor pool are read, too. The partition +needs to have pool authority in order to be able to acquire this information. +Defaults to false. + +=item B B|B + +If enabled, the serial of the physical machine the partition is currently +running on is reported as I and the logical hostname of the machine +is reported in the I. Otherwise, the logical hostname will be +used (just like other plugins) and the I will be empty. +Defaults to false. + +=back + =head2 Plugin C The C uses mbmon to retrieve temperature, voltage, etc. @@ -2581,7 +2794,7 @@ operating systems. =item B I<1024-65535> Set the maximum size for datagrams received over the network. Packets larger -than this will be truncated. +than this will be truncated. Defaults to 1452Ebytes. =item B I @@ -3225,11 +3438,6 @@ allowed as long as a single non-empty command has been specified only. The returned lines will be handled separately one after another. -=item B I - -This is a deprecated synonym for B. It will be removed in version 5 -of collectd. - =item B I|I|I|I Specify the parameters which should be passed to the SQL query. The parameters @@ -3305,21 +3513,6 @@ This option is required inside a B block and may be specified multiple times. If multiple B options are specified, the columns are read in the given order. -=item B I [I] - -This is a deprecated alternative to a B block. It will be removed in -version 5 of collectd. It is equivalent to the following B block: - - - Type I - InstancePrefix I - ValuesFrom I - - -The order of the B options defines which columns of the query result -should be used. The first option specifies the data found in the first column, -the second option that of the second column, and so on. - =item B I =item B I @@ -3334,13 +3527,6 @@ The I has to be specified as the concatenation of the major, minor and patch-level versions, each represented as two-decimal-digit numbers. For example, version 8.2.3 will become 80203. -=item B I - -=item B I - -These are deprecated synonyms for B and B -respectively. They will be removed in version 5 of collectd. - =back The following predefined queries are available (the definitions can be found @@ -3751,6 +3937,52 @@ Defaults to B. =back +=head2 Plugin C + +The I connects to one or more Redis servers and gathers +information about each server's state. For each server there is a I block +which configures the connection parameters for this node. + + + + Host "localhost" + Port "6379" + Timeout 2000 + + + +The information shown in the synopsis above is the I +which is used by the plugin if no configuration is present. + +=over 4 + +=item B I + +The B block identifies a new Redis node, that is a new Redis instance +running in an specified host and port. The name for node is a canonical +identifier which is used as I. It is limited to +64Echaracters in length. + +=item B I + +The B option is the hostname or IP-address where the Redis instance is +running on. + +=item B I + +The B option is the TCP port on which the Redis instance accepts +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 I + +The B 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 +in mind that the sum of all B values for all B should be lower +than B defined globally. + +=back + =head2 Plugin C The C plugin uses the RRDtool accelerator daemon, L, @@ -4147,25 +4379,37 @@ Use the last number found. =item B -The matched number is a counter. Simply sets the internal counter to this -value. +=item B + +=item B + +The matched number is a counter. Simply I the internal counter to this +value. Variants exist for C, C, and C data sources. =item B -Add the matched value to the internal counter. +=item B + +Add the matched value to the internal counter. In case of B, the +matched number may be negative, which will effectively subtract from the +internal counter. =item B -Increase the internal counter by one. This B is the only one that does -not use the matched subexpression, but simply counts the number of matched +=item B + +Increase the internal counter by one. These B are the only ones that do +not use the matched subexpression, but simply count the number of matched lines. Thus, you may use a regular expression without submatch in this case. =back As you'd expect the B types interpret the submatch as a floating point -number, using L. The B and B interpret the -submatch as an integer using L. B does not use the -submatch at all and it may be omitted in this case. +number, using L. The B and B types interpret +the submatch as an unsigned integer using L. The B types +interpret the submatch as a signed integer using L. B +and B do not use the submatch at all and it may be omitted in this +case. =item B I @@ -4345,6 +4589,13 @@ Change the file permissions of the UNIX-socket after it has been created. The permissions must be given as a numeric, octal value as you would pass to L. Defaults to B<0770>. +=item B B|B + +If set to B, delete the socket file before calling L, if a file +with the given name already exists. If I crashes a socket file may be +left over, preventing the daemon from opening a new socket when restarted. +Since this is potentially dangerous, this defaults to B. + =back =head2 Plugin C