NAMEpmie - inference engine for performance metrics
SYNOPSISpmie [-bCdefVvWxz] [-A align] [-a archive] [-c filename] [-h host] [-l
logfile] [-n pmnsfile] [-O offset] [-S starttime] [-T endtime] [-t
interval] [-Z timezone] [filename ...]
DESCRIPTIONpmie accepts a collection of arithmetic, logical, and rule expressions to
be evaluated at specified frequencies. The base data for the expressions
consists of performance metrics values delivered in real-time from any
host running the Performance Metrics Collection Daemon (PMCD), or using
historical data from Performance Co-Pilot (PCP) archive logs.
As well as computing arithmetic and logical values, pmie can execute
actions (popup alarms, write system log messages, and launch programs) in
response to specified conditions. Such actions are extremely useful in
detecting, monitoring and correcting performance related problems.
The expressions to be evaluated are read from configuration files
specified by one or more filename arguments. In the absence of any
filename, expressions are read from standard input.
A description of the command line options specific to pmie follows:
-a archive is the base name of a PCP archive log written by
pmlogger(1). Multiple instances of the -a flag may appear on the
command line to specify a set of archives. In this case, it is
required that only one archive be present for any one host. Also,
any explicit host names occurring in a pmie expression must match
the host name recorded in one of the archive labels. In the case of
multiple archives, timestamps recorded in the archives are used to
ensure temporal consistency.
-b Output will be line buffered and standard output is attached to
standard error. This is most useful for background execution in
conjunction with the -l option. The -b option is always used for
pmie instances launched from pmie_check(1).
-C Parse the configuration file(s) and exit before performing any
evaluations. Any errors in the configuration file are reported.
-c An alternative to specifying filename at the end of the command
line.
-d Normally pmie would be launched as a non-interactive process to
monitor and manage the performance of one or more hosts. Given the
-d flag however, execution is interactive and the user is presented
with a menu of options. Interactive mode is useful mainly for
debugging new expressions.
-e When used with -V, -v or -W, this option forces timestamps to be
reported with each expression. The timestamps are in ctime(3)
format, enclosed in parenthesis and appear after the expression name
and before the expression value, e.g.
expr_1 (Tue Feb 6 19:55:10 2001): 12
Page 1
1
PMIE(1)PMIE(1)-f If the -l option is specified and there is no -a option (ie. real-
time monitoring) then pmie is run as a daemon in the background (in
all other cases foreground is the default). The -f option forces
pmie to be run in the foreground, independent of any other options.
-h By default performance data is fetched from the local host (in
real-time mode) or the host for the first named archive on the
command line (in archive mode). The host argument overrides this
default. It does not override hosts explicitly named in the
expressions being evaluated.
-l Standard error is sent to logfile.
-n An alternative Performance Metrics Name Space (PMNS) is loaded from
the file pmnsfile.
-t The interval argument follows the syntax described in PCPIntro(1),
and in the simplest form may be an unsigned integer (the implied
units in this case are seconds). The value is used to determine the
sample interval for expressions that do not explicitly set their
sample interval using the pmie variable delta described below. The
default is 10.0 seconds.
-v Unless one of the verbose options -V, -v or -W appears on the
command line, expressions are evaluated silently, the only output is
as a result of any actions being executed. In the verbose mode,
specified using the -v flag, the value of each expression is printed
as it is evaluated. The values are in canonical units; bytes in the
dimension of ``space'', seconds in the dimension of ``time'' and
events in the dimension of ``count''. See pmLookupDesc(3) for
details of the supported dimension and scaling mechanisms for
performance metrics. The verbose mode is useful in monitoring the
value of given expressions, evaluating derived performance metrics,
passing these values on to other tools for further processing and in
debugging new expressions.
-V This option has the same effect as the -v option, except that the
name of the host and instance (if applicable) are printed as well as
expression values.
-W This option has the same effect as the -V option described above,
except that for boolean expressions, only those names and values
that make the expression true are printed. These are the same names
and values accessible to rule actions as the %h, %i and %v bindings,
as described below.
-x Execute in domain agent mode. This mode is used within the
Performance Co-Pilot product to derive values for summary metrics,
see pmdasummary(1). Only restricted functionality is available in
this mode (expressions with actions may not be used).
Page 2
PMIE(1)PMIE(1)-Z Change the reporting timezone to timezone in the format of the
environment variable TZ as described in environ(5).
-z Change the reporting timezone to the timezone of the host that is
the source of the performance metrics, as identified via either the
-h option or the first named archive (as described above for the -a
option).
The -S, -T, -O, and -A options may be used to define a time window to
restrict the samples retrieved, set an initial origin within the time
window, or specify a ``natural'' alignment of the sample times; refer to
PCPIntro(1) for a complete description of these options.
Output from pmie is directed to standard output and standard error as
follows:
stdout
Expression values printed in the verbose -v mode and the output of
print actions.
stderr
Error and warning messages for any syntactic or semantic problems
during expression parsing, and any semantic or performance metrics
availability problems during expression evaluation.
EXAMPLES
The following example expressions demonstrate some of the capabilities of
the inference engine.
The directory $PCP_DEMOS_DIR/pmie contains a number of other annotated
examples of pmie expressions.
The variable delta controls expression evaluation frequency. Specify
that subsequent expressions be evaluated once a second, until further
notice:
delta = 1 sec;
If total syscall rate exceeds 5000 per second per CPU, then display an
alarm notifier:
kernel.all.syscall / hinv.ncpu > 5000 count/sec
-> alarm "high syscall rate";
If the high syscall rate is sustained for 10 consecutive samples, then
launch top(1) in an xwsh(1G) window to monitor processes, but do this at
most once every 5 minutes:
all_sample (
kernel.all.syscall @0..9 > 5000 count/sec * hinv.ncpu
) -> shell 5 min "xwsh -e 'top'";
Page 3
PMIE(1)PMIE(1)
The following rules are evaluated once every 20 seconds:
delta = 20 sec;
If any disk is performing more than 60 I/Os per second, then print a
message identifying the busy disk to standard output and launch dkvis(1):
some_inst (
disk.dev.total > 60 count/sec
) -> print "disk %i busy " &
shell 5 min "dkvis";
Refine the preceding rule to apply only between the hours of 9am and 5pm,
and to require 3 of 4 consecutive samples to exceed the threshold before
executing the action:
$hour >= 9 && $hour <= 17 &&
some_inst (
75 %_sample (
disk.dev.total @0..3 > 60 count/sec
)
) -> print "disk %i busy ";
The following rules are evaluated once every 10 minutes:
delta = 10 min;
If either the / or the /usr filesystem is more than 95% full, display an
alarm popup, but not if it has already been displayed during the last 4
hours:
filesys.free #'/dev/root' /
filesys.capacity #'/dev/root' < 0.05
-> alarm 4 hour "root filesystem (almost) full";
filesys.free #'/dev/usr' /
filesys.capacity #'/dev/usr' < 0.05
-> alarm 4 hour "/usr filesystem (almost) full";
The following rule requires a machine that supports the PCP environment
metrics. If the machine environment temperature rises more than 2
degrees over a 10 minute interval, write an entry in the system log:
environ.temp @0 - environ.temp @1 > 2
-> alarm "temperature rising fast" &
syslog "machine room temperature rise alarm";
And last, something interesting if you have performance problems with
your Oracle database:
Page 4
PMIE(1)PMIE(1)
db = "oracle.ptg1";
host = ":moomba.melbourne.sgi.com";
lru = "#'cache buffers lru chain'";
gets = "$db.latch.gets $host $lru";
total = "$db.latch.gets $host $lru +
$db.latch.misses $host $lru +
$db.latch.immisses $host $lru";
$total > 100 && $gets / $total < 0.2
-> alarm "high lru latch contention";
QUICK START
The pmie specification language is powerful and large.
To expedite rapid development of pmie rules, the pmieconf(1) tool
provides a facility for generating a pmie configuration file from a set
of generalized pmie rules. The supplied set of rules covers a wide range
of performance scenarios.
The pmrules(1) tool provides a GUI-based facility for generating pmie
rules from parametrized templates. The supplied templates cover a wide
range of performance scenarios.
The development efforts of the PCP engineering team are focused on
pmieconf rather than pmrules, and thus pmieconf is the recommended tool
for quickly deploying useful pmie rules.
The Performance Co-Pilot User's and Administrator's Guide provides a
detailed tutorial-style chapter covering pmie.
The PCP Tutorial from the pcp.man.tutorial subsystem includes a pmie
tutorial. Access the URLs file:$PCP_DOC_DIR/Tutorial/pmie.html and
file:$PCP_DOC_DIR/Tutorial/lab-pmie.html from your web browser.
EXPRESSION SYNTAX
This description is terse and informal. For a more comprehensive
description see the Performance Co-Pilot User's and Administrator's
Guide.
A pmie specification is a sequence of semicolon terminated expressions.
Basic operators are modeled on the arithmetic, relational and Boolean
operators of the C programming language. Precedence rules are as
expected, although the use of parentheses is encouraged to enhance
readability and remove ambiguity.
Operands are performance metric names (see pmns(4)) and the normal
literal constants.
Operands involving performance metrics may produce sets of values, as a
result of enumeration in the dimensions of hosts, instances and time.
Special qualifiers may appear after a performance metric name to define
Page 5
PMIE(1)PMIE(1)
the enumeration in each dimension. For example,
kernel.percpu.cpu.user :foo :bar #cpu0 @0..2
defines 6 values corresponding to the time spent executing in user mode
on CPU 0 on the hosts ``foo'' and ``bar'' over the last 3 consecutive
samples. The default interpretation in the absence of : (host), #
(instance) and @ (time) qualifiers is all instances at the most recent
sample time for the default source of PCP performance metrics.
Host and instance names that do not follow the rules for variables in
programming languages, ie. alphabetic optionally followed by
alphanumerics, should be enclosed in single quotes.
Expression evaluation follows the law of ``least surprises''. Where
performance metrics have the semantics of a counter, pmie will
automatically convert to a rate based upon consecutive samples and the
time interval between these samples. All expressions are evaluated in
double precision, and where appropriate, automatically scaled into
canonical units of ``bytes'', ``seconds'' and ``counts''.
A rule is a special form of expression that specifies a condition or
logical expression, a special operator (->) and actions to be performed
when the condition is found to be true.
The following table summarizes the basic pmie operators:
______________________________________________________________
Operators Explanation
______________________________________________________________
+ - * / Arithmetic
< <= == >= > != Relational (value comparison)
! && || Boolean
-> Rule
rising Boolean, false to true transition
falling Boolean, true to false transition
rate Explicit rate conversion (rarely required)
______________________________________________________________
|
|
|
Aggregate operators may be used to aggregate or summarize along one
dimension of a set-valued expression. The following aggregate operators
map from a logical expression to a logical expression of lower dimension.
Page 6
PMIE(1)PMIE(1)
___________________________________________________________________
Operators Type Explanation
___________________________________________________________________
some_inst
some_host
some_sample
True if at least one set
member is true in the
associated dimension
Existential
___________________________________________________________________
all_inst
all_host
all_sample
True if all set members
are true in the
associated dimension
Universal
___________________________________________________________________
N%_inst
N%_host
N%_sample
True if at least N
percent of set members
are true in the
associated dimension
Percentile
___________________________________________________________________
|
|
|
|
The following instantial operators may be used filter or limit a a set-
valued logical expression, based on regular expression matching of
instance names. The logical expression must be a set involving the
dimension of instances, and the regular expression is of the form used by
egrep(1) or the Extended Regular Expressions of regcomp(3G).
_________________________________________________________
Operators Explanation
_________________________________________________________
For each value of the logical expression
that is ``true'', the result is ``true''
if the associated instance name matches
the regular expression. Otherwise the
result is ``false''.
match_inst
_________________________________________________________
For each value of the logical expression
that is ``true'', the result is ``true''
if the associated instance name does not
match the regular expression. Otherwise
the result is ``false''.
nomatch_inst
_________________________________________________________
|
|
|
For example, the expression below will be ``true'' for disks attached to
controllers 2 or 3 performing more than 20 operations per second:
match_inst "^dks[23]d" disk.dev.total > 20;
The following aggregate operators map from an arithmetic expression to an
arithmetic expression of lower dimension.
Page 7
PMIE(1)PMIE(1)
_________________________________________________________________
Operators Type Explanation
_________________________________________________________________
min_inst
min_host
min_sample
Minimum value across all
set members in the
associated dimension
Extrema
_________________________________________________________________
max_inst
max_host
max_sample
Maximum value across all
set members in the
associated dimension
Extrema
_________________________________________________________________
sum_inst
sum_host
sum_sample
Sum of values across all
set members in the
associated dimension
Aggregate
_________________________________________________________________
avg_inst
avg_host
avg_sample
Average value across all
set members in the
associated dimension
Aggregate
_________________________________________________________________
|
|
|
|
The aggregate operators count_inst, count_host and count_sample map from
a logical expression to an arithmetic expression of lower dimension by
counting the number of set members for which the expression is true in
the associated dimension.
For action rules, the following actions are defined:
____________________________________________________
Operators Explanation
____________________________________________________
print Display on standard output
shell Execute with sh(1)
alarm Raise a visible alarm with xconfirm(1)
syslog Append to /var/adm/SYSLOG
____________________________________________________
|
|
|
Multiple actions may be separated by the & and | operators to specify
respectively sequential execution (both actions are executed) and
alternate execution (the second action will only be executed if the
execution of the first action returns a non-zero error status.
Arguments to actions are an optional suppression time, and then one or
more expressions (a string is an expression in this context). Strings
appearing as arguments to an action may include the following special
selectors that will be replaced at the time the action is executed.
%h Host(s) that make the left-most top-level expression in the condition
true.
%i Instance(s) that make the left-most top-level expression in the
condition true.
Page 8
PMIE(1)PMIE(1)
%v Values(s) from the left-most top-level expression in the condition
subject to the host and instance assignments that make the condition
true.
Note that expansion of the special selectors is done by repeating the
whole argument once for each unique binding to any of the qualifying
special selectors. For example if a rule were true for the host mumble
with instances grunt and snort, and for host fumble the instance puff
makes the rule true, then the action
...
-> shell myscript "Warning: %h-%i busy ";
will execute myscript with the argument string "Warning: mumble-grunt
busy Warning: mumble-snort busy Warning: fumble-puff busy".
By comparison, if the action
...
-> shell myscript "'Warning! busy:" " %i@%h" "'";
were executed under the same circumstances, then myscript would be
executed with the argument string '"Warning! busy: grunt@mumble
snort@mumble puff@fumble"'.
The semantics of the expansion of the special selectors leads to a common
usage, where one argument is a constant (contains no special selectors)
the second argument contains the desired special selectors with minimal
separator characters, and an optional third argument provides a constant
postscript (e.g. to terminate any argument quoting from the first
argument). If necessary post-processing (eg. in myscript) can provide
the necessary enumeration over each unique expansion of the string
containing just the special selectors.
For complex conditions, the bindings to these selectors is not obvious.
It is strongly recommended that pmie be used in the debugging mode
(specify the -W command line option in particular) during rule
development.
SCALE FACTORS
Scale factors may be appended to arithmetic expressions and force linear
scaling of the value to canonical units. Simple scale factors are
constructed from the keywords: nanosecond, nanosec, nsec, microsecond,
microsec, usec, millisecond, millisec, msec, second, sec, minute, min,
hour, byte, Kbyte, Mbyte, Gbyte, Tbyte, count, Kcount, Mcount, Gcount and
Tcount, and the operator /, for example ``Kbytes / hour''.
MACROS
Macros are defined using expressions of the form:
name = constexpr;
Where name follows the normal rules for variables in programming
languages, ie. alphabetic optionally followed by alphanumerics.
constexpr must be a constant expression, either a string (enclosed in
double quotes) or an arithmetic expression optionally followed by a scale
Page 9
PMIE(1)PMIE(1)
factor.
Macros are expanded when their name, prefixed by a dollar ($) appears in
an expression, and macros may be nested within a constexpr string.
The following reserved macro names are understood.
minute Current minute of the hour.
hour Current hour of the day, in the range 0 to 23.
day Current day of the month, in the range 1 to 31.
month Current month of the year, in the range 0 (January) to 11
(December).
year Current year.
day_of_week
Current day of the week, in the range 0 (Sunday) to 6
(Saturday).
delta Sample interval in effect for this expression.
Dates and times are presented in the reporting time zone (see description
of -Z and -z command line options above).
AUTOMATIC RESTART
It is often useful for pmie processes to be started and stopped when the
local host is booted or shutdown, or when they have been detected as no
longer running (when they have unexpectedly exited for some reason).
Refer to pmie_check(1) for details on automating this process.
FILES
$PCP_DEMOS_DIR/pmie/*
annotated example rules
$PCP_VAR_DIR/pmns/*
default PMNS specification files
$PCP_TMP_DIR/pmie
pmie maintains files in this directory to identify the running
pmie instances and to export runtime information about each
instance - this data forms the basis of the pmcd.pmie
performance metrics
$PCP_VAR_DIR/config/pmie/control
the default set of pmie instances to start at boot time - refer
to pmie_check(1) for details
$PCP_VAR_DIR/config/pmie/*
the predefined alarm action scripts (email, log, popup and
syslog), the example action script (sample)and the concurrent
action control file (control.master, see also pmrules(1)).
Page 10
PMIE(1)PMIE(1)
/usr/pcp/lib/pmie-common
common shell procedures for the predefined alarm action scripts
/etc/config/pmie
chkconfig(1M) control flag, to control launching of pmie from
/etc/init.d/pmie - see also pmie_check(1)BUGS
The lexical scanner and parser will attempt to recover after an error in
the input expressions. Parsing resumes after skipping input up to the
next semi-colon (;), however during this skipping process the scanner is
ignorant of comments and strings, so an embedded semi-colon may cause
parsing to resume at an unexpected place. This behavior is largely
benign, as until the initial syntax error is corrected, pmie will not
attempt any expression evaluation.
PCP ENVIRONMENT
Environment variables with the prefix PCP_ are used to parameterize the
file and directory names used by PCP. On each installation, the file
/etc/pcp.conf contains the local values for these variables. The
$PCP_CONF variable may be used to specify an alternative configuration
file, as described in pcp.conf(4).
SEE ALSOPCPIntro(1), pmcd(1), pmdumplog(1), pmieconf(1), pmie_check(1),
pminfo(1), pmlogger(1), pmval(1), PMAPI(3), pcp.conf(4) and pcp.env(4).
TUTORIAL AND USER GUIDE
Relevant information is also available from the on-line PCP Tutorial.
Provided the pcp.man.tutorial subsystem from the PCP images has been
installed, access the URLs file:$PCP_DOC_DIR/Tutorial/pmie.html and
file:$PCP_DOC_DIR/Tutorial/lab-pmie.html from your web browser.
For a more complete description of the pmie language, refer to the
Performance Co-Pilot Users and Administrators Guide. This is distributed
in insight(1) format as part of the pcp.books subsystem, or in HTML
format from:
http://techpubs.sgi.com/library/tpl/cgi-bin/getdoc.cgi?\
db=bks&fname=/SGI_Admin/PCP_UAG/
CAVEAT
The example rules in $PCP_DEMOS_DIR/pmie are part of the pcp.sw.demo
subsystem and are not installed by default, they must be explicitly
installed using inst(1) or swmgr(1).
Page 11