PMIECONF(4)PMIECONF(4)PMIECONF(4)PMIECONF(4)NAMEpmieconf - generalized pmie rules and customizations
DESCRIPTION
The pmieconf file formats are used by the pmieconf(1) tool as a way to
generalize pmie(1) rule sets such that they can be easily configured
for different systems and different environments. There are two com‐
pletely different (although closely related) file formats discussed
here, namely ``pmieconf-rules'' and ``pmieconf-pmie''.
The directory $PCP_VAR_DIR/config/pmieconf contains information about
all the default system pmie generalized rules and variables, including
default values for all variables. These files are in the pmieconf-
rules format. Although new pmieconf-rules files can be added, the
files in this directory should never be changed. Instead, use the
pmieconf utility to change variable values in the pmie configuration
file.
The pmieconf-pmie format allows site specific customizations of the
rules contained in pmieconf-rules files and their associated variables.
The pmieconf-pmie format is generated by pmieconf and should not be
edited by hand. This generated file is in the pmie format, with some
additional information held at the head of the file - thus, the
pmieconf-pmie format is a superset of the pmie file format (extended to
hold customizations to the generalized rules, but also containing the
actual performance rules for pmie to evaluate) which can also be parsed
by pmie (all extensions are hidden within comments, and are thus mean‐
ingless to pmie itself).
The file $PCP_VAR_DIR/config/pmieconf/config.pmie contains local system
settings for pmieconf configurable variables. The variable settings in
this file replace the default values specified in $PCP_VAR_DIR/con‐
fig/pmieconf/*/*.
PMIECONF-PMIE SYNTAX
All rule customization lines in a valid pmieconf-pmie specification are
prefixed by ``//'' and are located at the head of the file - this
allows files containing a pmieconf-pmie specification to be success‐
fully parsed by pmie. A pmieconf-pmie must always have the first line
in the form:
// pmieconf-pmie version pmieconf_path
The version specifies which version of the pmieconf-pmie syntax should
be used to parse this file. Currently the only supported version is 1.
The pmieconf_path specifies the path to the pmieconf-rules files which
were used, by pmieconf, to generate this file. This is discussed in
the pmieconf(1) man page (see the -r option).
The remainder of the specification consists of one line entries for
each of the modified variables. The syntax for each line is:
// rule_version rule_name rule_variable = value
The rule_version and rule_name are used to identify the rule with which
to associate the customization. These are followed by the rule_vari‐
able name (i.e. the variable of rule rule_name which has been changed)
for which the new value is to be used.
A pmieconf-pmie specification must be terminated with the ``end'' key‐
word. This is used by pmieconf to distinguish where the customizations
ends, and the actual pmie rule component begins.
PMIECONF-PMIE EXAMPLE
The following example is a valid pmieconf-pmie format file, as gener‐
ated by pmieconf. In order to make changes by hand which are preserved
by pmieconf, see the comments contained in the generated file (below)
as to where such changes should be made.
// pmieconf-pmie 1 $PCP_VAR_DIR/config/pmieconf
// 1 memory.exhausted delta = "4 minutes"
// 1 memory.exhausted enabled = yes
// 1 memory.exhausted pcplog_action = yes
// end
//
// --- START GENERATED SECTION (do not change this section) ---
// generated by pmieconf on: [DATESTAMP]
//
// 1 memory.exhausted
delta = 4 minutes;
some_host (
( avg_sample (swap.pagesout @0..9 ) ) > 0 &&
30 %_sample swap.pagesout >= 5
) -> shell 10 min "$PCP_BINADM_DIR/pmpost Severe demand for real memory" \
" %vpgsout/s@%h";
// --- END GENERATED SECTION (changes below will be preserved) ---
To see how this all works, you can generate this file as follows:
# cat - | pmieconf-f /tmp/pmieconf.out \
-r $PCP_VAR_DIR/config/pmieconf/memory:$PCP_VAR_DIR/config/pmieconf/global
modify memory.exhausted delta "4 minutes"
modify memory.exhausted enabled yes
modify memory.exhausted pcplog_action yes
^D
#
Then verify that the generated file is a valid pmie configuration file
using:
# pmie -C /tmp/pmieconf.out
This parses the file, and then exits after reporting any syntax errors.
Now replace -C with -v (above), and watch pmie do its work!
PMIECONF-RULES SYNTAX
A pmieconf-rules specification consists of a number of separate data
objects which together form a complete rule specification (note that a
specification may span multiple files and even multiple subdirecto‐
ries). Each object must have an identifier string and a data type,
followed by an (optional) list of attributes.
The generic specification of a pmieconf-rules object is thus:
type identifier [ attribute = value ]* ;
The set of valid types is: "rule" (rule definition), "string" (arbi‐
trary, double-quote enclosed string), "double", "integer", "unsigned",
"percent" (real number between 0 and 100), "hostlist" (space separated
list of host names), "instlist" (space separated list of metric
instance names), and the four pmie action types, namely "print",
"shell", "alarm", and "syslog".
Rule names use the ``.'' character to introduce the concept of a rule
group, e.g. "memory.exhausted" associates this rule with the "memory"
group. pmieconf can operate at either the level of rule groups or
individual rules. The group name "global" is reserved and may not be
used with any rule.
Usually when an object is created it is associated with the current
rule. However, if an object's name is preceded by the reserved group
name "global", then that object is visible to all rules.
The set of valid attributes is: "help" (descriptive text about this
object), "modify" (value is yes/no, flags whether pmieconf should allow
changes), "enabled" (value is yes/no, flags whether this is on or off -
only meaningful for rules and actions), "display" (yes/no - flags
whether pmieconf should show this object), "default" (value determined
by type, and is the default value for this object), and specific to
objects of rule type are the "version", "predicate", and "enumerate"
attributes. "version" and "predicate" are fairly self explanatory
("predicate" must equate to a valid pmie rule when expanded), but "enu‐
merate" requires further discussion.
The "enumerate" clause is useful when you wish to generate multiple,
similar pmie rules from a single predicate. This is most useful for
rule definitions wishing to use the "some_inst" clause in the pmie lan‐
guage across multiple hosts. For a rule to use these together, it must
be certain that the instance list is the same on all of the monitored
hosts. This is rarely true, so the "enumerate" attribute allows us to
generate multiple rules, expanded over variables of either type
"instlist" or "hostlist". These variables make up the value for the
"enumerate" attribute - which is a space-separated list of "instlist"
or "hostlist" variable names.
Objects can be incorporated into other object definitions using the
$identifier$ syntax. See the example later for more insight into how
this is useful.
When pmieconf is generating the pmie configuration file, it looks at
each enabled rule with N enabled actions (where N > 0) and expands the
string:
// "version" identifier
delta = $delta$;
"predicate" -> $threshold$ $action1$ & ... & $actionN$ ;
The delta, threshold, and action variables are defined globally (using
the "global" keyword) for all rules, but can, of course, be changed at
the level of an individual rule or rule group.
PMIECONF-RULES EXAMPLE
The following is an example of a single pmieconf-rules specification,
showing a number of different aspects of the language discussed above.
The example defines a rule ("memory.exhausted") and a string ("rule").
rule memory.exhausted
default = "$rule$"
predicate =
"some_host (
( avg_sample (swap.pagesout $hosts$ @0..9 ) ) > 0 &&
$pct$ %_sample swap.pagesout $hosts$ @0..9 >= $threshold$
)"
enabled = yes
version = 1
help =
"The system is swapping modified pages out of main memory to the
swap partitions, and has been doing this on at least pct of the
last 10 evaluations of this rule.
There appears to be insufficient main memory to meet the resident
demands of the current workload.";
string rule
default = "Severe demand for real memory"
modify = no
display = no;
Note that for the above rule to be complete, "threshold" and "pct"
would also need to be defined - for the full expression of this rule,
refer to $PCP_VAR_DIR/config/pmieconf/memory/exhausted.
FILES
$PCP_VAR_DIR/config/pmieconf/*/*
generalized system resource monitoring rules
$PCP_VAR_DIR/config/pmieconf/config.pmie
default super-user settings for system resource monitoring
rules
$HOME/.pcp/pmie/config.pmie
default user settings for system resource monitoring rules
SEE ALSOpmie(1) and pmieconf(1).
Performance Co-Pilot SGI PMIECONF(4)