Provided by: pcp_6.0.5-1_amd64 bug

NAME

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

SYNOPSIS

       $PCP_BINADM_DIR/pmie_check [-CNPpsTV?]  [-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.

       -p, --skip-primary
            If this option is specified for pmie_check then any line from the control  files  for
            the  primary  pmie  will  be ignored.  This option is intended for environments where
            some system daemon,  like  systemd(1),  is  responsible  for  controlling  (starting,
            stopping, restarting, etc.) the primary pmie.

       -P, --only-primary
            If  this  option  is specified for pmie_check then only the primary pmie entry in the
            control files will be processed.  This is the  logical  opposite  of  the  -p  option
            described  above  and  is  intended for use by RC scripts that start only the primary
            pmie, such as the pmie.service unit.   The  -p  and  -P  options  to  pmie_check  are
            mutually exclusive.

       -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.

       The pmiectl(1) utility may invoke pmie_check using the sudo(1) command to run it under the
       $PCP_USER  ``pcp''  account.  If sudo is configured with the non-default requiretty option
       (see below), pmie_check may fail to run due to not having a tty  configured.   This  issue
       can  be  resolved  by  adding  a  second  line  (expand  $PCP_BINADM_DIR according to your
       platform) to the /etc/sudoers configuration file as follows:

            Defaults requiretty
            Defaults!$PCP_BINADM_DIR/pmie_check !requiretty

       Note that the unprivileged PCP account under which these commands run  uses  /sbin/nologin
       as  the  shell,  so  the requiretty option is ineffective here and safe to disable in this
       way.

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 pmie configuration file location for a localhost inference engine,  typically
            generated automatically by pmieconf(1).

       $PCP_LOG_DIR/pmie/pmie_check.log
            default  location  for the pmie_check log file.  When run as a daemon service, if the
            pmie process failed to start or exited early, there may be  error  messages  in  this
            file, particularly if the daemon could not open it's own log file.

       $PCP_LOG_DIR/pmie/pmie_daily.log
            default  location  for  error  messages  generated  during  the  daily  pmie  service
            maintenance operations.

       $PCP_LOG_DIR/pmie/<hostname>
            default directory 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).