pmevent(1)

NAME

   pmval, pmevent - arbitrary performance metrics value dumper

SYNOPSIS

   pmval [-dgLrvz] [-A align] [-a archive] [-f N] [-h host] [-i instances]
   [-K spec] [-n pmnsfile]  [-O  offset]  [-p  port]  [-S  starttime]  [-s
   samples]  [-T  endtime]  [-t  interval]  [-U  archive]  [-w  width] [-x
   pattern] [-Z timezone] metricname

DESCRIPTION

   pmval prints current or archived values for the  nominated  performance
   metric.   The  metric  of interest is named in the metricname argument,
   subject to instance qualification with the -i flag as described below.

   Unless directed to another host by the  -h  option,  or  to  a  set  of
   archives  by  the  -a or -U options, pmval will contact the Performance
   Metrics Collector Daemon  (PMCD)  on  the  local  host  to  obtain  the
   required information.

   The  metricname  argument may also be given in the metric specification
   syntax, as described in  PCPIntro(1),  where  the  source,  metric  and
   instance    may    all    be   included   in   the   metricname,   e.g.
   thathost:kernel.all.load["1 minute"].  When this format is  used,  none
   of the -h or -a or -U options may be specified.

   When  using  the  metric  specification  syntax,  the ``hostname'' @ is
   treated specially and causes pmval to use a local  context  to  collect
   metrics  from  PMDAs on the local host without PMCD.  Only some metrics
   are available in this mode.

   When processing a set of archives, pmval may relinquish its own  timing
   control,  and operate as a ``slave'' of a pmtime(1) process that uses a
   GUI dialog to provide timing control.  In  this  case,  either  the  -g
   option  should  be  used  to  start  pmval  as  the sole slave of a new
   pmtime(1) instance, or -p should be used to attach pmval to an existing
   pmtime(1) instance via the IPC channel identified by the port argument.

   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.

   The other options which control the source, timing and  layout  of  the
   information reported by pmval are as follows:

   -a   Performance   metric   values   are  retrieved  from  the  set  of
        Performance Co-Pilot (PCP) archive logs identified.  The  argument
        is  a comma-separated list of names, each of which may be the base
        name of an archive or the name of a directory  containing  one  or
        more archives. See also -U.

   -d   When  replaying  from a set of archives, this option requests that
        the prevailing real-time delay be applied between samples (see -t)
        to  effect a pause, rather than the default behaviour of replaying
        at full speed.

   -f   Numbers are reported in ``fixed point'' notation, rather than  the
        default scientific notation.  Each number will be up to the column
        width determined by the default heuristics, else the -w option  if
        specified,  and include N digits after the decimal point.  So, the
        options -f 3 -w 8 would produce numbers of the form  9999.999.   A
        value  of  zero  for  N omits the decimal point and any fractional
        digits.

   -g   Start pmval as the slave of a new pmtime(1) process for replay  of
        archived  performance  data  using  the  pmtime(1)  graphical user
        interface.

   -h   Current performance metric values are retrieved from the nominated
        host machine.

   -i   instances  is  a  list  of  one  or  more  instance  names for the
        nominated performance  metric  -  just  these  instances  will  be
        retrieved  and  reported (the default is to report all instances).
        The list must be a single argument,  with  elements  of  the  list
        separated by commas and/or white space.

        The  instance  name  may  be  quoted with single (') or double (")
        quotes for those cases where  the  instance  name  contains  white
        space or commas.

        Multiple   -i  options  are  allowed  as  an  alternative  way  of
        specifying more than one instance of interest.

        As an example, the following are all equivalent:

             $ pmval -i "'1 minute','5 minute'" kernel.all.load
             $ pmval -i '"1 minute","5 minute"' kernel.all.load
             $ pmval -i "'1 minute' '5 minute'" kernel.all.load
             $ pmval -i "'1 minute'" -i "'5 minute'" kernel.all.load
             $ pmval 'localhost:kernel.all.load["1 minute","5 minute"]'

   -K   When fetching metrics from a local context, the -K option  may  be
        used to control the DSO PMDAs that should be made accessible.  The
        spec   argument   conforms   to   the    syntax    described    in
        __pmSpecLocalPMDA(3).  More than one -K option may be used.

   -n   Normally  pmval  operates  on the default Performance Metrics Name
        Space (PMNS), however if the -n option is specified an alternative
        namespace is loaded from the file pmnsfile.

   -p   Attach  pmval  to  an  existing  pmtime(1)  time  control  process
        instance via the IPC channel  identified  by  the  port  argument.
        This   option   is   normally  only  used  by  other  tools,  e.g.
        pmchart(1), when they launch pmval with synchronized time control.

   -r   Print  raw  values  for  cumulative  counter  metrics.    Normally
        cumulative  counter  metrics are converted to rates.  For example,
        disk transfers are reported as number of disk transfers per second
        during the preceding sample interval, rather than the raw value of
        number of disk transfers since the machine  was  booted.   If  you
        specify this option, the raw metric values are printed.

   -s   The argument samples defines the number of samples to be retrieved
        and reported.  If samples is 0 or -s is not specified, pmval  will
        sample  and  report  continuously (in real time mode) or until the
        end of the set of PCP archives (in archive mode).

   -t   The default update interval may be set to something other than the
        default  1  second.   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).

   -U   Performance   metric   values   are  retrieved  from  the  set  of
        Performance Co-Pilot (PCP) archive logs identified.  The  argument
        is  a comma-separated list of names, each of which may be the base
        name of an archive or the name of a directory  containing  one  or
        more  archives.   However,  unlike  -a every recorded value in the
        archive for the selected metric and instances is reported  (so  no
        interpolation  mode,  and  the  sample  interval  (-t  option)  is
        ignored. See also -a.

        At most one of the options -a and -U may be specified.

   -w   Set the width of each column of output to be  width  columns.   If
        not  specified  columns are wide enough to accommodate the largest
        value of the type being printed.

   -x   The given pattern is sent to the performance metric  domain  agent
        for  the  requested  metricname  before  any values are requested.
        This serves two purposes.  Firstly, it provides  a  mechanism  for
        server-side  event  filtering  that is customisable for individual
        event streams.   In  addition,  some  performance  metrics  domain
        agents  also  use  the  PMCD  store  mechanism  to provide a basic
        security model (e.g. for sensitive log files, only a  client  host
        with pmStore(3) access would be able to access the event stream).

        As pattern may be processed by regcomp(3) it should be a non-empty
        string.  Use . (dot) for a "match all" pattern.

   -Z   By default, pmval reports the time of day according to  the  local
        timezone  on the system where pmval is run.  The -Z option changes
        the timezone to timezone in the format of the environment variable
        TZ as described in environ(7).

   -z   Change  the  reporting  timezone to the local timezone at the host
        that is the source of the performance metrics, as  identified  via
        either the metricname or the -h or -a or -U options.

   The  following  symbols  may  occasionally appear, in place of a metric
   value, in pmval output:  A question mark symbol (?)  indicates  that  a
   value  is no longer available for that metric instance.  An exclamation
   mark (!)  indicates that a 64-bit counter wrapped during the sample.

   The output from pmval is directed to standard output.

FILES

   $PCP_VAR_DIR/pmns/*
             default PMNS specification files

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(5).

SEE ALSO

   PCPIntro(1),   pmcd(1),   pmchart(1),   pmdumplog(1),    pmdumptext(1),
   pminfo(1),  pmlogger(1),  pmrep(1),  pmtime(1),  PMAPI(3),  pmStore(3),
   __pmSpecLocalPMDA(3), pcp.conf(5) and pcp.env(5).

DIAGNOSTICS

   All are generated on standard  error  and  are  intended  to  be  self-
   explanatory.

CAVEATS

   By  default,  pmval attempts to display non-integer numeric values in a
   way that does not distort the inherent precision (rarely  more  than  4
   significant  digits),  and  tries  to  maintain a tabular format in the
   output.  These goals are sometimes in conflict.

   In the absence of the -f option (described above), the following  table
   describes  the  formats used for different ranges of numeric values for
   any metric that is of type  PM_TYPE_FLOAT  or  PM_TYPE_DOUBLE,  or  any
   metric that has the semantics of a counter (for which pmval reports the
   rate converted value):

                     
                      Format        Value Range      
                     
                             !  No values available  
                     9.999E-99  < 0.1                
                        0.0     0                    
                        9.9999  > 0 and <= 0.9999    
                        9.999   > 0.9999 and < 9.999 
                       99.99    > 9.999 and < 99.99  
                      999.9     > 99.99 and < 999.9  
                     9999.      > 999.9 and < 9999   
                     9.999E+99  > 9999               
                     



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