X-Git-Url: https://git.octo.it/?p=rrdtool.git;a=blobdiff_plain;f=doc%2Frrdcached.pod;h=b01165e81437df6ffde8a41d1c4b7b8e8f3a8419;hp=8ad37beb8f00798ad29463fba44e30fe31139f04;hb=db9842391d7f238faf7b5ad1b01059115a4f2264;hpb=ac630adec930653637199258efd99024d49325c7 diff --git a/doc/rrdcached.pod b/doc/rrdcached.pod index 8ad37be..b01165e 100644 --- a/doc/rrdcached.pod +++ b/doc/rrdcached.pod @@ -6,7 +6,7 @@ rrdcached - Data caching daemon for rrdtool =head1 SYNOPSIS -B [B<-l> I
] [B<-w> I] [B<-f> I] +B [B<-l/-L> I
] [B<-w> I] [B<-z> I] [B<-f> I] [B<-j> I] [-F] [B<-b> I [B<-B>]] =head1 DESCRIPTION @@ -34,14 +34,41 @@ socket. If I
begins with C, everything following that prefix is interpreted as the path to a UNIX domain socket. Otherwise the address or node name are resolved using L. +For network sockets, a port may be specified by using the form +CI
B<]:>I>. If the address is an IPv4 address or a fully +qualified domain name (i.Ee. the address contains at least one dot +(C<.>)), the square brackets can be omitted, resulting in the (simpler) +CB<:>I> pattern.. The default port is B<42217/udp>. + +The following formats are accepted. Please note that the address of the UNIX +domain socket B start with a slash in the second case! + + unix: + / + + []: + : + If the B<-l> option is not specified the default address, C, will be used. +=item B<-L> I
+ +Same as B<-l>, except creates a low-privilege socket. See B for more information. + =item B<-w> I Data is written to disk every I seconds. If this option is not specified the default interval of 300Eseconds will be used. +=item B<-z> I + +If specified, rrdcached will delay writing of each RRD for a random number +of seconds in the rangeE[0,I). This will avoid too many +writes being queued simultaneously. This value should be no greater than +the value specified in B<-w>. By default, there is no delay. + =item B<-f> I Every I seconds the entire cache is searched for old values which are @@ -54,6 +81,32 @@ cases. This timeout defaults to 3600Eseconds. Sets the name and location of the PID-file. If not specified, the default, C/run/rrdcached.pid> will be used. +=item B<-j> I + +Write updates to a journal in I. In the event of a program or system +crash, this will allow the daemon to write any updates that were pending +at the time of the crash. + +On startup, the daemon will check for journal files in this directory. If +found, all updates therein will be read into memory before the daemon +starts accepting new connections. + +The journal will be rotated with the same frequency as the flush timer +given by B<-f>. + +When journaling is enabled, the daemon will use a fast shutdown procedure. +Rather than flushing all files to disk, it will make sure the journal is +properly written and exit immediately. Although the RRD data files are +not fully up-to-date, no information is lost; all pending updates will be +replayed from the journal next time the daemon starts up. + +To disable fast shutdown, use the B<-F> option. + +=item B<-F> + +ALWAYS flush all updates to the RRD data files when the daemon is shut +down, regardless of journal setting. + =item B<-b> I The daemon will change into a specific directory at startup. All files passed @@ -72,9 +125,15 @@ used. updated by the daemon, assuming the base directory "/tmp". +=item B<-B> + +Only permit writes into the base directory specified in B<-b> (and any +sub-directories). This does B detect symbolic links. Paths +containing C<../> will also be blocked. + =back -=head1 EFFECTED RRDTOOL COMMANDS +=head1 AFFECTED RRDTOOL COMMANDS The following commands may be made aware of the B using the command line argument B<--daemon> or the environment variable B: @@ -108,6 +167,15 @@ the disk itself. All other commands can send a B command (see below) to the daemon before accessing the files, so they work with up-to-date data even if the cache timeout is large. +=head1 ERROR REPORTING + +The daemon reports errors in one of two ways: During startup, error messages +are printed to C. One of the steps when starting up is to fork to the +background and closing C - after this writing directly to the user is +no longer possible. Once this has happened, the daemon will send log messages +to the system logging daemon using L. The facility used it +C. + =head1 HOW IT WORKS When receiving an update, B does not write to disk but looks for an @@ -143,9 +211,8 @@ The downside of caching values is that they won't show up in graphs generated from the RRDEfiles. To get around this, the daemon provides the "flush command" to flush specific files. This means that the file is inserted at the B of the update queue or moved there if it is already enqueued. The flush -command will return after the update thread has dequeued the file, so there is -a good chance that the file has been updated by the time the client receives -the response from the daemon, but there is no guarantee. +command will return only after the file's pending updates have been written +to disk. +------+ +------+ +------+ ! head ! ! root ! ! tail ! @@ -158,7 +225,8 @@ the response from the daemon, but there is no guarantee. +---+----+---+ +------+-----+ +---+----+---+ ! File: foo ! ! File: bar ! ! File: qux ! ! First: 101 ! ! First: 119 ! ! First: 180 ! - ! Next: ---+--->! Next: ---+---> ... --->! Next: - ! + ! Next:&bar -+--->! Next:&... -+---> ... --->! Next:NULL ! + | Prev:NULL !<---+-Prev:&foo !<--- ... ----+-Prev: &... ! +============+ +============+ +============+ ! Time: 100 ! ! Time: 120 ! ! Time: 180 ! ! Value: 10 ! ! Value: 0.1 ! ! Value: 2,2 ! @@ -204,15 +272,32 @@ ASCII art rocks. =head1 SECURITY CONSIDERATIONS -This daemon is meant to improve IOEperformance for setups with thousands -of RRDEfile to be updated. So security measures built into the daemon can -be summarized easily: B +The client/server protocol does not have any authentication or +authorization mechanism. Therefore, take care to restrict which users can +connect to the daemon. + +Control sockets are divided into high-privilege (B<-l>) and low-privilege +(B<-L>) sockets. High-privilege sockets accept all commands, whereas +low-privilege sockets accept only B, B, and B. + +For a multi-user environment where only certain users require read/write +access, the recommended configuration uses two sockets as follows: + +=over + +=item B<-l> I + +Create a high-privilege unix-domain socket. This should be protected with +the same Unix permissions that are used to protect the RRD files. Updates +should be directed to this socket. + +=item B<-L> I<127.0.0.1> + +Create a low-privilege TCP socket listening on localhost. All users on +the local system may use this to trigger FLUSH of individual files. Users +with read-only access should be directed to this socket. -There is no authentication and authorization, so B will have to take care -that only authorized clients can talk to the daemon. Since we assume that graph -collection is done on a dedicated machine, i.Ee. the box doesn't do -anything else and especially does not have any interactive logins other than -root, a UNIX domain socket should take care of that. +=back If you (want to) use the network capability, i.Ee. let the daemon bind to an IPv4 or IPv6 socket, it is B job to install a packet filter or similar @@ -273,6 +358,20 @@ Causes the daemon to put I to the B of the update queue (possibly moving it there if the node is already enqueued). The answer will be sent B the node has been dequeued. +=item B + +Causes the daemon to start flushing ALL pending values to disk. This +returns immediately, even though the writes may take a long time. + +=item B I + +Shows any "pending" updates for a file, in order. The updates shown have +not yet been written to the underlying RRD file. + +=item B I + +Removes I from the cache. Any pending updates B. + =item B [I] Returns a short usage message. If no command is given, or I is @@ -293,12 +392,16 @@ name of the value, a colon, one or more spaces and the actual value. Example: - 5 Statistics follow + 9 Statistics follow QueueLength: 0 + UpdatesReceived: 30 + FlushesReceived: 2 UpdatesWritten: 13 DataSetsWritten: 390 TreeNodesNumber: 13 TreeDepth: 4 + JournalBytes: 190 + JournalRotate: 0 =item B I I [I ...] @@ -306,6 +409,39 @@ Adds more data to a filename. This is B operation the daemon was designed for, so describing the mechanism again is unnecessary. Read L above for a detailed explanation. +=item B I + +This command is written to the journal after a file is successfully +written out to disk. It is used during journal replay to determine which +updates have already been applied. It is I valid in the journal; it +is not accepted from the other command channels. + +=item B + +This command initiates the bulk load of multiple commands. This is +designed for installations with extremely high update rates, since it +permits more than one command to be issued per read() and write(). + +All commands are executed just as they would be if given individually, +except for output to the user. Messages indicating success are +suppressed, and error messages are delayed until the client is finished. + +Command processing is finished when the client sends a dot (".") on its +own line. After the client has finished, the server responds with an +error count and the list of error messages (if any). Each error messages +indicates the number of the command to which it corresponds, and the error +message itself. The first user command after B is command number one. + + client: BATCH + server: 0 Go ahead. End with dot '.' on its own line. + client: UPDATE x.rrd N:1:2:3 <--- command #1 + client: UPDATE y.rrd N:3:4:5 <--- command #2 + client: and so on... + client: . + server: 2 Errors + server: 1 message for command 1 + server: 12 message for command 12 + =back =head2 Performance Values @@ -318,18 +454,18 @@ The following counters are returned by the B command: Number of nodes currently enqueued in the update queue. -=item B I<(unsigned 64bit integer)> +=item B I<(unsigned 64bit integer)> -Depth of the tree used for fast key lookup. +Number of UPDATE commands received. -=item B I<(unsigned 64bit integer)> +=item B I<(unsigned 64bit integer)> -Number of nodes in the cache. +Number of FLUSH commands received. =item B I<(unsigned 64bit integer)> -Total number of updates, i.Ee. calls to C, since the daemon -was started. +Total number of updates, i.Ee. calls to C, since the +daemon was started. =item B I<(unsigned 64bit integer)> @@ -338,6 +474,45 @@ data set is one or more values passed to the B command. For example: C is one data set with two values. The term "data set" is used to prevent confusion whether individual values or groups of values are counted. +=item B I<(unsigned 64bit integer)> + +Number of nodes in the cache. + +=item B I<(unsigned 64bit integer)> + +Depth of the tree used for fast key lookup. + +=item B I<(unsigned 64bit integer)> + +Total number of bytes written to the journal since startup. + +=item B I<(unsigned 64bit integer)> + +Number of times the journal has been rotated since startup. + +=back + +=head1 SIGNALS + +=over 4 + +=item SIGINT and SIGTERM + +The daemon exits normally on receipt of either of these signals. Pending +updates are handled in accordance with the B<-j> and B<-F> options. + +=item SIGUSR1 + +The daemon exits AFTER flushing all updates out to disk. This may take a +while. + +=item SIGUSR2 + +The daemon exits immediately, without flushing updates out to disk. +Pending updates will be replayed from the journal when the daemon starts +up again. B. + =back =head1 BUGS @@ -348,7 +523,14 @@ No known bugs at the moment. L, L -=head1 AUHOR +=head1 AUTHOR B and this manual page have been written by Florian Forster EoctoEatEverplant.orgE. + +=head1 CONTRIBUTORS + +kevin brintnall Ekbrint@rufus.netE + +=cut +