pmparsetimewindow(3)

NAME

   pmParseTimeWindow - parse time window command line arguments

C SYNOPSIS

   #include <pcp/pmapi.h>

   int pmParseTimeWindow(const char *swStart, const char *swEnd,
           const char *swAlign, const char *swOffset,
           const struct timeval *logStart, const struct timeval *logEnd,
           struct timeval *rsltStart, struct timeval *rsltEnd,
           struct timeval *rsltOffset, char **errMsg);

   cc ... -lpcp

DESCRIPTION

   pmParseTimeWindow  is designed to encapsulate the interpretation of the
   -S, -T, -A and -O command line options  used  by  Performance  Co-Pilot
   (PCP)  applications  to  define  a  time  window of interest.  The time
   window is defined by a start time and an end time that  constrains  the
   time  interval  during  which  the  PCP  application  will retrieve and
   display performance metrics.  In the absence of the -O and  -A  options
   to  specify  an  initial  sample  time  origin  and time alignment (see
   below), the PCP application will retrieve the first sample at the start
   of the time window.

   The  syntax  and  meaning  of  the  various  argument formats for these
   options is described in PCPIntro(1).

USAGE

   pmParseTimeWindow expects to be called with  the  argument  of  the  -S
   option as swStart, the argument of the -T option as swEnd, the argument
   of the -A option as swAlign, and the  argument  of  the  -O  option  as
   swOffset.   Any or all of these parameters may be NULL to indicate that
   the corresponding command line option was not present.

   If the application is using a set of PCP archive logs as the source  of
   performance  metrics,  you  also  need  to supply the time of the first
   archive log entry as logStart, and the time of  the  last  archive  log
   entry  as  logEnd.  See pmGetArchiveLabel(3) and pmGetArchiveEnd(3) for
   how to obtain values for these times.

   If the application is manipulating multiple  concurrent  archive  logs,
   then  the  caller  must  resolve  how  the default time window is to be
   defined (the union of the time intervals  in  all  archive  logs  is  a
   likely interpretation).

   If  the  application is using a live feed of performance data, logStart
   should be the current time (but could be aligned on the next second for
   example), while logEnd should have its tv_sec component set to INT_MAX.

   The  rsltStart,  rsltEnd  and  rsltOffset  structures must be allocated
   before calling pmParseTimeWindow.

   You also need to set the current PCP reporting time zone  to  correctly
   reflect   the   -z  and  -Z  command  line  parameters  before  calling
   pmParseTimeWindow.  See pmUseZone(3) and friends for information on how
   this is done.

SEE ALSO

   PMAPI(3),           pmGetArchiveEnd(3),           pmGetArchiveLabel(3),
   pmNewContextZone(3), pmNewZone(3), pmParseInterval(3) and pmUseZone(3).

DIAGNOSTICS

   If the conversion is successful, pmParseTimeWindow returns 1 and  fills
   in  rsltStart,  rsltEnd  and rsltOffset with the start, end, and offset
   times for the time window defined by the input parameters.  The  errMsg
   parameter is not changed when pmParseTimeWindow returns 1.

   If  the conversion is successful, but the requested alignment could not
   be performed (e.g. the set of  PCP  archive  logs  is  too  short)  the
   alignment  is  ignored, rsltStart, rsltEnd and rsltOffset are filled in
   and pmParseTimeWindow returns 0.  In this case, errMsg will point to  a
   warning  message  in an internal static buffer.  This buffer should not
   be freed.

   If the argument strings could not be parsed, pmParseTimeWindow  returns
   -1.   In  this  case, errMsg will point to an error message in a static
   internal buffer.



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