Provided by: pcp_5.0.3-1_amd64 bug

NAME

       pmie_check, pmie_daily - administration of the Performance Co-Pilot inference engine

SYNOPSIS

       $PCP_BINADM_DIR/pmie_check [-CNsTV?]  [-c control] [-l logfile]
       $PCP_BINADM_DIR/pmie_daily  [-NV?]   [-c  control] [-k discard] [-l logfile] [-m addresses] [-x compress]
       [-X program] [-Y regex]

DESCRIPTION

       This series of shell scripts and associated control files may be used to create a  customized  regime  of
       administration and management for the Performance Co-Pilot (see PCPIntro(1)) inference engine, pmie(1).

       pmie_check  may  be  run  at  any  time  of  the day and verifies that a desired set of pmie processes is
       running.  If not, it (re-)starts any missing inference engine processes.

       pmie_daily is intended to be run once per day, preferably in the early morning, as soon after midnight as
       practicable.   Its  task is to rotate the log files for the running pmie processes - these files may grow
       without bound if the ``print'' action is used, or any other  pmie  action  writes  to  its  stdout/stderr
       streams.  After some period, old pmie log files are discarded.

OPTIONS

       The available command line options are:

       -c control, --control=control
            Both  pmie_check  and pmie_daily are controlled by PCP inference engine control file(s) that specify
            the pmie instances to be  managed.   The  default  control  file  is  $PCP_PMIECONTROL_PATH  but  an
            alternate  may  be  specified using the -c option.  If the directory $PCP_PMLOGGERCONTROL_PATH.d (or
            control.d from the -c option) exists, then the contents of any additional control files therein will
            be appended to the main control file (which must exist).

       -C   This  option  causes  pmie_check  to query the system service runlevel information for pmie, and use
            that to determine whether to start processes or not.

       -k period, --discard=period
            The log retention period is 14 days by default, but this may be  changed  using  this  option.   Two
            special  values  are  recognized  for  the  discard period, namely 0 to keep no log files beyond the
            current one, and forever to prevent any log files being discarded.

       -l file, --logfile=file
            In order to ensure that mail is not unintentionally sent when these scripts  are  run  from  cron(8)
            diagnostics    are    always    sent    to    log    files.     By    default,   these   files   are
            $PCP_LOG_DIR/pmie/pmie_daily.log and $PCP_LOG_DIR/pmie/pmie_check.log but this can be changed  using
            the  -l  option.   If this log file already exists when the script starts, it will be renamed with a
            .prev suffix (overwriting any log file saved earlier) before diagnostics are generated  to  the  new
            log file.

       -m addresses, --mail=addresses
            Use  of  this  option  causes  pmie_daily  to construct a summary of the log files generated for all
            monitored hosts in the last 24 hours (lines matching `` OK '' are culled), and e-mail  that  summary
            to the set of space-separated addresses.

       -N, --showme
            This  option enables a ``show me'' mode, where the programs actions are echoed, but not executed, in
            the style of ``make -n''.  Using -N in conjunction with -V maximizes the diagnostic capabilities for
            debugging.

       -s, --stop
            Use of this option provides the reverse pmie_check functionality, allowing the set of pmie processes
            to be cleanly shutdown.

       -T, --terse
            This option to pmie_check produces less verbose output than the default.  This is most suitable  for
            a pmie ``farm'' where many instances of pmie are expected to be running.

       -V, --verbose
            The output from the cron execution of the scripts may be extended using the -V option to the scripts
            which will enable verbose tracing of their activity.  By default  the  scripts  generate  no  output
            unless  some  error  or warning condition is encountered.  Using -N in conjunction with -V maximizes
            the diagnostic capabilities for debugging.

       -x period, --compress-after=period
            Log files can optionally  be  compressed  after  some  period  to  conserve  disk  space.   This  is
            particularly  useful  for  large  numbers of pmie processes under the control of pmie_check.  The -x
            option specifies the number of days after which to compress archive data files.

       -X program, --compressor=program
            This option specifies the program to use for compression - by default this is xz(1).

       -Y regex, --regex=regex
            This option allows a regular expression to be specified causing files in the set  of  files  matched
            for  compression  to be omitted - this allows only the data file to be compressed, and also prevents
            the  program  from  attempting  to  compress  it   more   than   once.    The   default   regex   is
            ".(meta|index|Z|gz|bz2|zip|xz|lzma|lzo|lz4)$"  -  such  files  are  filtered  using the -v option to
            egrep(1).

       -?, --help
            Display usage message and exit.

CONFIGURATION

       Warning: The $PCP_PMIECONTROL_PATH and $PCP_PMIECONTROL_PATH.d files must not be  writable  by  any  user
       other than root.

       The  control  file(s)  should  be customized according to the following rules that define for the current
       version (1.1) of the control file format.

       1.  Lines beginning with a ``#'' are comments.
       2.  Lines beginning with a ``$'' are assumed to be assignments to environment variables in the  style  of
           sh(1),  and  all text following the ``$'' will be eval'ed by the script reading the control file, and
           the corresponding variable exported into the environment.  This is particularly  useful  to  set  and
           export variables into the environment of the administrative script, e.g.
               $ PMCD_CONNECT_TIMEOUT=20
       3.  There must be a version line in the initial control file of the form:
               $ version=1.1
       4.  There should be one line in the control file(s) for each pmie instance of the form:

               host y|n y|n logfile args

       5.  Fields within a line of the control file(s) are separated by one or more spaces or tabs.
       6.  The  first  field  is  the name of the host that is the default source of the performance metrics for
           this pmie instance.
       7.  The second field indicates if this is a primary pmie instance (y) or  not  (n).   Since  the  primary
           inference  engine  must  run on the local host, and there may be at most one primary for a particular
           host, this field can be y for at most one pmie instance, in which case the host name must be the name
           of  the  local  host.   When  generating  pmie configuration files, the primary clause indicates that
           pmieconf(1) should enable all rules in the primary group, in addition to all other default rules.
       8.  The third field indicates whether this pmie instance  needs  to  be  started  under  the  control  of
           pmsocks(1) to connect to a pmcd through a firewall (y or n).
       9.  The  fourth  field  is  the  name  of  the  pmie activity log file.  A useful convention is that pmie
           instances  monitoring  the  local  host  with  hostname  myhost  are  maintained  in  the   directory
           $PCP_LOG_DIR/pmie/myhost,  while  activity  logs  for  the  remote  host  mumble  are  maintained  in
           $PCP_LOG_DIR/pmie/mumble.  This is consistent with the way pmlogger(1) maintains  its  activity  logs
           and archive files.
       10. All  other fields are interpreted as arguments to be passed to pmie(1).  Most typically this would be
           the -c option.

       The following sample control lines specify one pmie instance monitoring  the  local  host  (wobbly),  and
       another monitoring performance metrics from the host splat.

       wobbly  n  PCP_LOG_DIR/pmie/wobbly  -c config.default
       splat   n  PCP_LOG_DIR/pmie/splat   -c splat/cpu.conf

       Typical   crontab(5)   entries  for  periodic  execution  of  pmie_daily  and  pmie_check  are  given  in
       $PCP_SYSCONF_DIR/pmie/crontab (unless installed by default in /etc/cron.d already) and shown below.

       # daily processing of pmie logs
       08      0       *       *       *       $PCP_BINADM_DIR/pmie_daily
       # every 30 minutes, check pmie instances are running
       28,58   *       *       *       *       $PCP_BINADM_DIR/pmie_check
       When using systemd(1) on Linux, no crontab entries are needed as the timer mechanism provided by  systemd
       is used instead.

FILES

       $PCP_PMIECONTROL_PATH
            the default PCP inference engine control file
            Warning: this file must not be writable by any user other than root.

       $PCP_PMIECONTROL_PATH.d
            optional directory containing additional PCP inference engine control files, typically one per host
            Warning: this files herein must not be writable by any user other than root.

       $PCP_SYSCONF_DIR/pmie/crontab
            sample  crontab  for automated script execution by $PCP_USER (or root) - exists only if the platform
            does not support the /etc/cron.d mechanism.

       $PCP_VAR_DIR/config/pmie/config.default
            default pmlogger configuration file location for a localhost inference engine,  typically  generated
            automatically by pmieconf(1).

       $PCP_LOG_DIR/pmie/<hostname>
            default location for the pmie log file for the host hostname

       $PCP_LOG_DIR/pmie/<hostname>/lock
            transient lock file to guarantee mutual exclusion during pmie administration for the host hostname -
            if present, can be safely removed if neither pmie_daily nor pmie_check are running

       $PCP_LOG_DIR/NOTICES
            PCP ``notices'' file used by pmie(1) and friends

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

       egrep(1), PCPIntro(1), pmie(1), pmieconf(1), systemd(1), xz(1) and cron(8).