Provided by: pcp-import-sheet2pcp_4.0.1-1_all bug

NAME

       sheet2pcp - import spreadsheet data and create a PCP archive

SYNOPSIS

       sheet2pcp [-h host] [-Z timezone] infile mapfile outfile

DESCRIPTION

       sheet2pcp  is  intended  to  read  a  data  spreadsheet  (infile)  translate  this  into a
       Performance Co-Pilot (PCP) archive with the basename outfile.

       The input spreadsheet can be in any of the common formats, provided the  appropriate  Perl
       modules  have  been  installed  (see  the CAVEATS section below).  The spreadsheet must be
       ``normalized'' so that each row contains data for the same time interval, and one  of  the
       columns contains the date and time for the data in each row.

       The  resultant  PCP  archive may be used with all the PCP client tools to graph subsets of
       the data using pmchart(1), perform data reduction  and  reporting,  filter  with  the  PCP
       inference engine pmie(1), etc.

       The  mapfile controls the import process and defines the data mapping from the spreadsheet
       columns onto the PCP data model.  The file is written in XML and conforms  to  the  syntax
       defined in the MAPPING CONFIGURATION section below.

       A  series  of physical files will be created with the prefix outfile.  These are outfile.0
       (the performance data), outfile.meta (the metadata that describes  the  performance  data)
       and  outfile.index  (a  temporal  index to improve efficiency of replay operations for the
       archive).  If any of these files exists already, then sheet2pcp will  not  overwrite  them
       and will exit with an error message.

       The  -h option is an alternate to the hostname attribute of the <sheet> element in mapfile
       described below.  If both are specified, the value from mapfile is used.

       The -Z option is an alternate to the timezone attribute of the <sheet> element in  mapfile
       described below.  If both are specified, the value from mapfile is used.

       sheet2pcp  is  a  Perl  script  that  uses  the PCP::LogImport Perl wrapper around the PCP
       libpcp_import library, and as such could be used as an example to  develop  new  tools  to
       import other types of performance data and create PCP archives.

MAPPING CONFIGURATION

       The mapfile contains specifications in standard XML format.

       The  whole  specification  is  wrapped  in a <sheet> ... </sheet> element.  The  sheet tag
       supports the following optional attributes:

       heading   Specifies the number of heading rows to skip at the  start  of  the  spreadsheet
                 before processing data.  Example: heading=``1''.

       hostname  Set  the  source hostname in the PCP archive (the default is to use the hostname
                 of the local host).  Example: hostname=``some.where.com''.

       timezone  Set the source timezone in the PCP archive (the default is  to  use  UTC).   The
                 timezone must have the format +HHMM (for hours and minutes East of UTC) or -HHMM
                 (for hours and minutes West of  UTC).   Note  in  particular  that  neither  the
                 zoneinfo  (aka  Olson)  format, e.g. Europe/Paris, nor the Posix TZ format, e.g.
                 EST+5 is allowed.  Example: timezone=``+1100''.

       datefmt   The format of the date imported from the  spreadsheet  may  be  specified  as  a
                 concatenation  of  values  that specify the order of the year (Y), month (M) and
                 day (D) fields in a date.  The supported variants are DMY (the default), MDY and
                 YMD.  Example: datefmt=``YMD''.

       A   <sheet>   element   contains   one   or   more   metric  specifications  of  the  form
       <metric>metricname</metric>.  The metric tag supports the following optional attributes:

       pmid      The Performance Metrics Identifier (PMID), specified as 3 numbers separated by a
                 periods  (.) to set the domain, cluster and item fields of the PMID, see PMNS(5)
                 for more details of PMIDs.  If omitted, the PMID will be automatically  assigned
                 by pmiAddMetric(3).  The value PM_ID_NULL may be used to explicitly nominate the
                 default behaviour.  Examples: pmid=``60.0.2'', pmid=``PM_ID_NULL''.

       indom     Each metric may have one or more values.  If a metric always has one  value,  it
                 is  singular  and the Instance Domain should be set to PM_INDOM_NULL.  Otherwise
                 indom should be specified as 2 numbers separated by a period  (.)   to  set  the
                 domain    and    ordinal    fields    of   the   Instance   Domain.    Examples:
                 indom=``PM_INDOM_NULL'', indom=``60.3'', indom=``PMI_DOMAIN.4''.  More than  one
                 metric  can  share the same Instance Domain when the metrics have defined values
                 over similar sets of instances, e.g. all the metrics for each network interface.
                 It is standard practice for the domain field to be the same for the pmid and the
                 indom; if the pmid attribute is missing, then the domain  field  for  the  indom
                 should  be  the  reserved  domain PMI_DOMAIN.  If the indom attribute is omitted
                 then the default Instance Domain for the metric is PM_INDOM_NULL.

       units     The scale and dimension of the metric values along the axes of space,  time  and
                 count  (events,  messages,  packets,  etc.)  is specified with a 6-tuple.  These
                 values are passed to the pmiUnits(3) function to generate a  pmUnits  structure.
                 Refer  to  pmLookupDesc(3)  for  a  full  description  of all the fields of this
                 structure.  The default is to assign no scale or dimension to the  metric,  i.e.
                 units=``0,0,0,0,0,0''.         Examples:        units=``0,1,0,0,PM_TIME_MSEC,0''
                 (milliseconds),   units=``1,-1,0,PM_SPACE_MBYTE,PM_TIME_SEC,0''    (Mbytes/sec),
                 units=``0,1,-1,0,PM_TIME_USEC,PM_COUNT_ONE'' (microseconds/event).

       type      Defines  the  data  type  for  the  metric.  Refer to pmLookupDesc(3) for a full
                 description  of  the  possible  type  values;  the  default  is   PM_TYPE_FLOAT.
                 Examples: type=``PM_TYPE_32'', type=``PM_TYPE_U64'', type=``PM_TYPE_STRING''.

       sem       Defines  the  semantics  of  the  metric.   Refer  to pmLookupDesc(3) for a full
                 description of the possible values; the default  is  PM_SEM_INSTANT.   Examples:
                 sem=``PM_SEM_COUNTER'', type=``PM_SEM_DISCRETE''.

       The  remaining  specifications  define  the  data  columns  in  order  using  exactly  one
       <datetime></datetime> element, one or more <data>metricspec</data>  elements  and  one  or
       more <skip></skip> elements.

       The  <datetime>  element defines the column in which a date and time will be found to form
       the timestamp in the PCP archive for all the data in each row of the PCP archive.

       For the <data> element, a metricspec consists of a metric name (as defined in  an  earlier
       <metric>  element),  optionally  followed  by  an instance name that is enclosed by square
       brackets, e.g. <data>hinv.ncpu</data>, <data>kernel.all.load[1 minute]</data>.

       The skip tag defines the column that should be skipped when preparing  data  for  the  PCP
       archive.

       The  order  of  the <datetime>, <data> and <skip> elements matches the order of columns in
       the spreadsheet.  If the number of elements is not the same as the  number  of  columns  a
       warning  is  issued,  and  the  extra elements or columns generate no metric values in the
       output archive.

   EXAMPLE
       The mapfile ...

           <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>     <sheet  heading="1">           <!--  simple
       example  -->           <metric  pmid="60.0.2" indom="60.0" units="0,1,0,0,PM_TIME_MSEC,0"
       type="PM_TYPE_U64"   sem="PM_SEM_COUNTER">              kernel.percpu.cpu.sys</metric>
       <datetime></datetime>                                        <skip></skip>
       <data>kernel.percpu.cpu.sys[cpu0]</data>         <data>kernel.percpu.cpu.sys[cpu1]</data>
       </sheet>

       could be used for a spreadsheet in which the first few rows are ...

             Date;"Status";"SysTime   -   0";"SysTime   -   1";        26/01/2001  14:05:22;"Some
       Busy";0.750;0.133     26/01/2001 14:05:37;"OK";0.150;0.273       26/01/2001  14:05:52;"All
       Busy";0.733;0.653

CAVEATS

       Only the first sheet from infile will be processed.

       Additional  Perl  modules  must be installed for the various spreadsheet formats, although
       these are checked for ar run-time so only the modules required for the specific  types  of
       spreadsheets you wish to process need be installed:

       *.csv Spreadsheets in the Comma Separated Values (CSV) format require Text::CSV_XS(3pm).

       *.sxc or *.ods
             OpenOffice  documents  require  Spreadsheet::ReadSXC(3pm),  which  in  turn requires
             Archive::Zip(3pm).

       *.xls Classical Microsoft Office documents require Spreadsheet::ParseExcel(3pm), which  in
             turn requires OLE::Storage_Lite(3pm).

       *.xlsx
             Microsoft  OpenXML  documents  require  Spreadsheet::XLSX(3pm).   sheet2pcp does not
             appear to work with OpenXML documents saved from OpenOffice.

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

       pmchart(1),  pmie(1),  pmlogger(1), sed(1), pmiAddMetric(3), pmLookupDesc(3), pmiUnits(3),
       Archive::Zip(3pm),     Date::Format(3pm),      Date::Parse(3pm),      PCP::LogImport(3pm),
       OLE::Storage_Lite(3pm),      Spreadsheet::ParseExcel(3pm),      Spreadsheet::ReadSXC(3pm),
       Spreadsheet::XLSX(3pm), Text::CSV_XS(3pm), XML::TokeParser(3pm) and LOGIMPORT(3).