Provided by: libpcp-pmda3-dev_4.0.1-1_amd64 bug

NAME

       pmdaCacheStore, pmdaCacheStoreKey, pmdaCacheLookup, pmdaCacheLookupName, pmdaCacheLookupKey, pmdaCacheOp,
       pmdaCachePurge, pmdaCacheResize - manage a cache of instance domain information for a PMDA

C SYNOPSIS

       #include <pcp/pmapi.h>
       #include <pcp/pmda.h>

       int pmdaCacheStore(pmInDom indom, int flags, const char *name, void *private);
       int pmdaCacheStoreKey(pmInDom indom, int flags, const char *name, int keylen, const void *key,
               void *private);
       int pmdaCacheLookup(pmInDom indom, int inst, char **name, void **private);
       int pmdaCacheLookupName(pmInDom indom, const char *name, int *inst, void **private);
       int pmdaCacheLookupKey(pmInDom indom, const char *name, int keylen, const void *key, char **oname,
               int *inst, void **private);
       int pmdaCacheOp(pmInDom indom, int op);
       int pmdaCachePurge(pmInDom indom, time_t recent);
       int pmdaCacheResize(pmInDom indom, int maximum);

       cc ... -lpcp_pmda -lpcp

DESCRIPTION

       The pmdaCache family of routines provide services to support the maintenance of complex instance  domains
       for  Performance Co-Pilot PMDAs.  There is potentially one cache of information for each instance domain,
       and for each instance the cache maintains:
       - external instance name (supplied by the PMDA)
       - internal  instance  identifier  (assigned  by  pmdaCacheStore  or  calculated  from   a   ``hint''   by
         pmdaCacheStoreKey)
       - state,  where  active  instances  are  visible  and  part  of the current instance domain, and inactive
         instances are hidden, but not forgotten; pmdaCacheStore or pmdaCacheStoreKey may be used to change  the
         state of an instance
       - an optional opaque pointer to data that is associated with the instance, but maintained by the PMDA
       - an  optional  opaque  key  that  is  used  as a ``hint'' to pmdaCacheStoreKey when guessing the initial
         internal instance identifier
       - the last time the cache was saved and the instance had been marked as active at some  point  since  the
         previous cache load or save operation

       The semantics of a PCP instance domain require a number of rules to be followed, namely:
       1. Each  internal  instance  identifier  must  be  unique  and  in the range 0 to 2^31 - 1.  This rule is
          enforced by the pmdaCache family of routines.
       2. The external instance name must be unique.  When the instance name contains a  space,  it  is  further
          constrained  such  that  the name to the left of the first space (the short name) must also be unique.
          Refer to the INSTANCE NAME MATCHING section below.  The PMDA  must  honor  this  rule,  the  pmdaCache
          family of routines will detect attempts to violate this rule.
       3. Where an external instance name corresponds to some object or entity, there is an expectation that the
          association between the name and the object is fixed, e.g. ``/dev/hda'' is always the name of the same
          disk  on  a  particular  system.   This rule is perhaps the responsibility of the PMDA, but is often a
          characteristic of the environment in which the PMDA runs.
       4. It is preferable, although not mandatory, for the association between an external instance name and an
          internal  instance  identifier  to  be  persistent.  This rule is supported by the pmdaCache family of
          routines.
       5. When opaque keys are used, the values of the keys must  be  unique  across  all  instances  within  an
          instance domain.  This rule is enforced by the pmdaCache family of routines.

       The visible interface to the cache is oriented towards the PMDA developer who is most concerned about the
       names of instances, while the details of how the rest of the  PCP  infrastructure  expects  the  internal
       instance identifiers to be managed is not relevant.

       Instances   are   updated   in  the  cache  for  instance  domain  indom  by  calling  pmdaCacheStore  or
       pmdaCacheStoreKey with the external name of the instance passed via name.  The opaque pointer private may
       be  used  to  associate additional data with the entry in the cache; if no such data is required, private
       should be NULL.  Any manipulation of the  additional  data  (including  allocation  or  freeing)  is  the
       responsibility  of  the  PMDA  caller,  as the cache simply maintains the pointer to the data (passed via
       private).

       The upper bound for identifiers allocated for any given indom cache can be optionally  reduced  from  the
       default  (2^31 - 1)  to  some lesser maximum, using pmdaCacheResize.  This maximum will then be persisted
       and restored in the usual manner, and can thus be associated permanently with a cache once set.  This has
       applications  when  using  these  interfaces as general purpose identifier caches, and is less applicable
       when using them for instance domain caching.

       For cases where the PMDA developer wishes to influence the allocation of internal  instance  identifiers,
       e.g.  for  instance  domains with more than one natural dimension, or where there is a desire to allocate
       the same instance identifier each time the PMDA is started, even on  different  hosts,  pmdaCacheStoreKey
       may  be used.  In this case, an initial ``hint'' for the instance identifier is provided as an opaque key
       via the first keylen bytes in key (which could be any sort of data,  including  binary  values)  else  if
       keylen  is  less  than  1  or  key  is NULL then name is used as the ``hint''.  The ``hint'' is hashed to
       produce an initial instance identifier in the range 0 to 2^31 - 1 (or lesser maximum, if set).   If  this
       instance  identifier  is already allocated, then the value is rehashed.  This procedure is repeated until
       an unallocated instance identifier is found, or pmdaCacheStoreKey gives up  and  returns  PM_ERR_GENERIC.
       For  each  instance  domain,  the  ``hint''  must  be unique across all instances, else pmdaCacheStoreKey
       returns PM_ERR_INST.

       The flags argument controls how the instance should be processed in the cache as follows:

       PMDA_CACHE_ADD
              Insert the entry into the cache if it is not already there and mark it active.  If  the  entry  is
              already in the cache mark it active.

       PMDA_CACHE_HIDE
              Mark  the  entry in the cache as inactive, but remember the details of the association between the
              external instance name and the internal instance identifier.  Entries that are  inactive  will  be
              hidden   from   cache  traversal  via  PMDA_CACHE_WALK_NEXT  operations,  but  remain  visible  to
              pmdaCacheLookup, pmdaCacheLookupName and pmdaCacheLookupKey requests.

       PMDA_CACHE_CULL
              Remove the entry from the cache.

       On success pmdaCacheStore or pmdaCacheStoreKey will  return  the  internal  instance  identifier  of  the
       associated  cache  entry.   Valid  instance  identifiers  are  guaranteed  to be unique and non-negative.
       Failure will be indicated by a negative value (suitable for decoding with pmErrStr(3))  and  most  likely
       PM_ERR_INST  to  indicate  the requested instance is not in the cache, or -EINVAL to indicate a potential
       violation of the short name uniqueness property (see the INSTANCE NAME MATCHING section below).

       pmdaCacheLookup is used to search the entries in the cache based  on  the  internal  instance  identifier
       inst.

       On  success the return value will be PMDA_CACHE_ACTIVE or PMDA_CACHE_INACTIVE (depending on the active or
       inactive state of the cache entry), name (if not NULL) and private (if not  NULL)  will  be  set  to  the
       external  instance  name  and  the  associate additional data area as provided when the instance was last
       activated via pmdaCacheStore or pmdaCacheStoreKey.

       pmdaCacheLookup failure is indicated by a negative return value suitable for decoding with pmErrStr(3).

       The pmdaCacheLookup  interface  is  required  by  the  PMDA's  fetch  callback  that  is  registered  via
       pmdaSetFetchCallBack(3).   Here  the  internal  instance  identifier  is  passed to the fetch callback to
       identifier for which instance a value is required.  Typical usage is shown in the code fragment below.

         static int
         foo_callback(pmdaMetric *mdesc, unsigned int inst, pmAtomValue *atom)
         {
             mydata   *mdp;
             char     *name;
             int      sts;

             sts = pmdaCacheLookup(mdesc->m_desc.indom, inst, &name, (void **)&mdp);
             /*
              * expect sts == PMDA_CACHE_ACTIVE except for cataclysmic events
              * use mdp as required, name may be useful for diagnostics
              */
             ...

       pmdaCacheLookupName is used to search the entries in the cache based on the external instance name name.

       On success the return value will be PMDA_CACHE_ACTIVE or PMDA_CACHE_INACTIVE (depending on the active  or
       inactive  state  of  the  cache  entry),  inst (if not NULL) and private (if not NULL) will be set to the
       internal instance identifier and the associate additional data area as provided  when  the  instance  was
       last activated via pmdaCacheStore or pmdaCacheStoreKey.

       pmdaCacheLookupName  failure  is  indicated  by  a  negative  return  value  suitable  for  decoding with
       pmErrStr(3).

       The pmdaCacheLookupName interface is useful for PMDAs wishing to update an instance domain based  on  the
       external instance names.

       pmdaCacheLookupKey  is  used  to  search  the  entries  in the cache based on an opaque key (or ``hint'')
       previously used in a call to pmdaCacheStoreKey.  The ``hint'' is provided via the first keylen  bytes  in
       key.   For  symmetry with pmdaCacheStoreKey, if keylen is less than 1 or key is NULL then name is used as
       the ``hint'' (although the results will be the same as calling pmdaCacheLookupName in this case).

       On success the return value will be PMDA_CACHE_ACTIVE or PMDA_CACHE_INACTIVE (depending on the active  or
       inactive  state  of  the  cache entry), oname (if not NULL), inst (if not NULL) and private (if not NULL)
       will be set to the external instance name, the internal instance identifier and the associate  additional
       data area as provided when the instance was last activated via pmdaCacheStore or pmdaCacheStoreKey.

       pmdaCacheLookupKey  failure  is  indicated  by  a  negative  return  value  suitable  for  decoding  with
       pmErrStr(3).

       To avoid a persistent cache growing without bound, pmdaCachePurge can be used to cull  all  entries  that
       have  not  been  active  in  the  last  recent  seconds.  For performance reasons, the time accounting is
       imprecise and the entries are timestamped at the time of the next cache save operation  after  the  entry
       has  been  added  or  marked  active  (refer  to  PMDA_CACHE_SAVE and PMDA_CACHE_SYNC below).  On success
       pmdaCachePurge returns the number of culled entries, else in the case of an error  the  return  value  is
       negative (and suitable for decoding with pmErrStr(3)).

       pmdaCacheOp may be used to perform additional operations on the cache as follows:

       PMDA_CACHE_LOAD
              The  cache  can  optionally  be  maintained  as a persistent external file, so that the mapping of
              instance names to instance identifiers is persistent across executions of a PMDA.  This  operation
              loads  the  cache  from the external file, and then all new cache entries are marked inactive, and
              the additional data pointer is set to NULL.  Entries loaded from the  external  file  are  checked
              against  the  current  cache contents and if the instance name and instance identifiers match then
              the state in the cache (active or inactive) is not changed.  Should  a  mismatch  be  found  (same
              instance  name  and  different  instance  identifier,  or  same  instance identifier and different
              instance name, or some but not all of the instance identifier, the instance name and the  ``hint''
              match)  then  the  entry  from  the  external  file  is ignored and a warning is issued on stderr.
              Typically a PMDA would only perform this operation once per execution.

       PMDA_CACHE_SAVE
              If any instance has  been  added  to,  or  deleted  from,  the  instance  domain  since  the  last
              PMDA_CACHE_LOAD,  PMDA_CACHE_SAVE or PMDA_CACHE_SYNC operation, the entire cache is written to the
              external file as a bulk operation.  This operation is provided for PMDAs that are  not  interested
              in  using  pmdaCachePurge  and simply want the external file to reflect the set of known instances
              without accurate details of when they were last marked active.

              Returns the number of instances saved to the external file,  else  0  if  the  external  file  was
              already up to date.

       PMDA_CACHE_STRINGS
              Annotates  this  cache  as  being  a special-purpose cache used for string de-duplication in PMDAs
              exporting large numbers of string valued metrics.  This can be used to reduce the memory footprint
              of  the PMDA (duplicate strings hash to the same bucket, and are stored in memory once only).  Key
              comparisons are not terminated at the first space  but  rather  the  entire  string  is  used  for
              matching.  These are specialised caches not useful for general purpose instance domain handling.

       PMDA_CACHE_SYNC
              Within  an  instance  domain, if any instance has been added to, or deleted from, or marked active
              since the last PMDA_CACHE_LOAD, PMDA_CACHE_SAVE or PMDA_CACHE_SYNC operation, the entire cache  is
              written  to  the external file as a bulk operation.  This operation is similar to PMDA_CACHE_SAVE,
              but will save the instance domain more frequently so the  timestamps  more  accurately  match  the
              semantics expected by pmdaCachePurge.

              Returns  the  number  of  instances  saved  to  the external file, else 0 if the external file was
              already synchronized.

       PMDA_CACHE_CHECK
              Returns 1 if a cache exists for the specified instance domain, else 0.

       PMDA_CACHE_REUSE
              When a new instance is added to the cache, the default strategy is to assign instance  identifiers
              in  a  monotonic  increasing manner.  Once the maximum possible instance identifier value has been
              assigned, the strategy changes to one where starting from 0, the next  available  unused  instance
              identifier  will be used.  Calling pmdaCacheOp with PMDA_CACHE_REUSE forces an irreversible change
              to a second (reuse) strategy where the next unallocated instance identifier will  be  used.   This
              may  be  useful in cases where there is a desire to restrict the allocated instance identifiers to
              smaller values.  The prevailing strategy will be saved and  restored  across  PMDA_CACHE_SAVE  and
              PMDA_CACHE_LOAD  operations.   If  pmdaCacheStoreKey  is ever used, the associated instance domain
              will be changed to PMDA_CACHE_REUSE mode.

       PMDA_CACHE_REORG
              Reorganize the cache to allow faster retrieval of active entries, at the cost of slower  retrieval
              for inactive entries, and reclaim any culled entries.  The cache may be internally re-organized as
              entries are added, so this operation is not required for most PMDAs.

       PMDA_CACHE_WALK_REWIND
              Prepares for a traversal of the cache in ascending instance identifier sequence.

       PMDA_CACHE_WALK_NEXT
              Fetch the  next  active  instance  identifier  from  the  cache.   Requires  a  prior  call  using
              PMDA_CACHE_WALK_REWIND and will return -1 when all instances have been processed.

              Only  one  cache  walk  can  be  active  at  any  given time, nesting calls to PMDA_CACHE_WALK and
              PMDA_CACHE_REWIND will interfere with each other.

       PMDA_CACHE_ACTIVE
              Changes every inactive entry in the cache to be marked active.

       PMDA_CACHE_INACTIVE
              Changes every active entry in the cache to be marked inactive.

       PMDA_CACHE_CULL
              Remove every entry from the cache.

       PMDA_CACHE_SIZE
              Return the number of entries in the cache (includes active, inactive and any culled  entries  that
              have not yet been reclaimed).

       PMDA_CACHE_SIZE_ACTIVE
              Return the number of active entries in the cache.

       PMDA_CACHE_SIZE_INACTIVE
              Return the number of inactive entries in the cache.

       PMDA_CACHE_DUMP
              Dump the current state of the cache on stderr.

       PMDA_CACHE_DUMP_ALL
              Like  PMDA_CACHE_DUMP,  but  also  dump  the internal hashing structures used to support lookup by
              instance name, lookup by instance identifier and the collision  statistics  for  ``hint''  hashing
              from pmdaCacheStoreKey.

       pmdaCacheOp  returns a non-negative value on success, and failure is indicated by a negative return value
       (suitable for decoding with pmErrStr(3)).

OTHER CONSIDERATIONS

       When the pmdaCache routines are used for particular instance domain,  pmdaInstance(3)  and  the  instance
       domain  enumeration  behind  pmdaFetch(3)  will  attempt  to extract instance domain information from the
       cache, thereby avoiding reference to the pmdaIndom data structures that have historically  been  used  to
       define  instance domains and service instance requests.  A PMDA can adopt a hybrid approach and choose to
       implement some instance domains via the traditional  pmdaIndom  method,  and  others  via  the  pmdaCache
       approach,  however  attempts  to  manage  the  same  instance  domain  by both methods will result in the
       pmdaCache method silently prevailing.

       If all instances in a PMDA are to be serviced from a pmdaCache then a pmdaIndom is not required, and  the
       pmdaInit(3) call becomes

             pmdaInit(dp, NULL, 0, metrictab, nmetrics);

       However,  the  PMDA  will  need  to  explicitly initialize the indom field of the pmDesc in the metrictab
       entries, as this cannot be done by pmdaInit(3) if indomtab is missing entries for  the  instance  domains
       maintained in the cache.

       Independent  of  how  the  instance  domain is being maintained, to refresh an instance domain prior to a
       fetch or an instance domain operation, the standard methods of a ``wrapper'' to the  pmdaInstance(3)  and
       pmdaFetch(3) methods should be used.

       Refer to the simple PMDA source code for an example use of the pmdaCache routines.

       When  using  pmdaCacheStoreKey,  if  there  is  a  desire to ensure the given ``hint'' generates the same
       initial instance identifier across all platforms, then the caller should ensure the endian and  word-size
       issues  are  considered,  e.g.  if  the  natural  data  structure  used for the key is an array of 32-bit
       integers, then htonl(3) should be used on each element of the array before calling  pmdaCacheStoreKey  or
       pmdaCacheLookupKey.

INSTANCE NAME MATCHING

       The following table summarizes the ``short name'' matching semantics for an instance domain (caches other
       than PMDA_CACHE_STRINGS style).

                        ┌────────┬─────────────────┬───────────────────────────────────────────┐
                        │name in │ pmdaCacheLookup │ result                                    │
                        │cache   │ name            │                                           │
                        ├────────┼─────────────────┼───────────────────────────────────────────┤
                        │foodle  │ foo             │ no match (PM_ERR_INST)                    │
                        │foo     │ foodle          │ no match (PM_ERR_INST)                    │
                        │foo     │ foo             │ match                                     │
                        │foo bar │ foo             │ match on short name (instance identifier) │
                        │foo bar │ foo bar         │ match on full name (instance identifier)  │
                        │foo     │ foo bar         │ bad match (-EDOM)                         │
                        │foo bar │ foo blah        │ bad match (-EDOM)                         │
                        └────────┴─────────────────┴───────────────────────────────────────────┘

FILES

       Cache persistence uses files with names constructed from the indom  within  the  $PCP_VAR_DIR/config/pmda
       directory.

SEE ALSO

       BYTEORDER(3),  PMAPI(3),  PMDA(3),  pmdaInit(3), pmdaInstance(3), pmdaFetch(3), pmdaLabel(3), pmErrStr(3)
       and pmGetInDom(3).