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PMSERIES(1) General Commands Manual PMSERIES(1)

NAME

pmseries - display information about performance metric timeseries

SYNOPSIS

pmseries [-adFiIlLmMnqsSV] [-c config] [-g pattern] [-h host] [-p port] [query | series ... | source ... ]

DESCRIPTION

pmseries displays various types of information about performance metrics available through the scalable timeseries facilities of the Performance Co-Pilot (PCP) and the Redis distributed data store.

By default pmseries communicates with a local redis-server(1), however the -h/--host and -p/--port options can be used to specify an alternate Redis instance. If this instance is a node of a Redis cluster, all other instances in the cluster will be discovered and used automatically.

pmseries runs in several different modes - either querying timeseries identifiers, metadata or values (already stored in Redis), or manually loading timeseries into Redis. The latter mode is seldom used, however, since pmproxy(1) will automatically perform this function when it is started with the -t/--timeseries option. In time, this option will become enabled by default.

Without command line options specifying otherwise, pmseries will issue a timeseries query to find matching timeseries and values. All timeseries are identified using a unique SHA-1 hash which is always displayed in a 40-hexdigit human readable form. These hashes are formed using the metadata associated with every metric.

Importantly, this includes all metric metadata (labels, names, descriptors). Metric labels in particular are (as far as possible) unique for every machine - on Linux for example the labels associated with every metric include the unique /etc/machine-id, the hostname, domainname, and other automatically generated machine labels, as well as any administrator-defined labels from /etc/pcp/labels. These labels can be reported with pminfo(1) and the pmcd.labels metric.

See pmLookupLabels(3), pmLookupInDom(3), pmLookupName(3) and pmLookupDesc(3) for detailed information about metric labels and other metric metadata used in each timeseries identifier hash calculation.

The timeseries identifiers provide a higher level (and machine independent) identifier than the traditional PCP performance metric identifiers (pmID), instance domain identifiers (pmInDom) and metric names. See PCPIntro(1) for more details about these traditional identifiers. However, pmseries uses timeseries identifiers in much the same way that pminfo(1) uses the lower level indom, metric identifiers and metric names.

The default mode of pmseries operation (i.e. with no command line options) depends on the arguments it is presented. If all non-option arguments appear to be timeseries identifiers (in 40 hex digit form) pmseries will report metadata for these timeseries - refer to the -a/--all option for details. Otherwise, the parameters will be treated as a timeseries query.

TIMESERIES QUERIES

Query expressions are formed using the pmseries query language described below, but can be as simple as a metric name.

The following is an example of querying timeseries from all hosts that match a metric name pattern (globbed):

$ pmseries kernel.all.cpu*
1d7b0bb3f6aec0f49c54f5210885464a53629b60
379db729afd63fb9eff436625bd6c55a7adc5cfd
3dd3b45bb05f96636043e5d58b52b441ce542285
[...]
ed2bf325ff6dc7589ec966698e5404b67252306a
dcb2a032a308b5717bf605ba8f8737e9c6e1ed19

To identify timeseries, the query language uses the general syntax:

[metric.name] '{metadata qualifiers}' '[time specification]'

The metric.name component restricts the timeseries query to any matching PCP metric name (the list of metric names for a PCP archive or live host is reported by pminfo(1) with no arguments beyond --host or --archive). The pmseries syntax extends on that of pminfo and allows for glob(7) based pattern matching within the metric name.

METADATA QUALIFIERS AND OPERATORS

Metadata qualifiers are enclosed by ``curly'' braces ({}), and further restrict the query results to timeseries with various metadata properties. These qualifiers are based on metric or instance names, and metric label values, and take the general form metadata.name OPERATOR value, such as:

instance.name == "cpu0"
metric.name != "kernel.all.pswitch"

When using label names, the metadata qualifier is optional and can be dropped, such as:

label.hostname == "www.acme.com"
hostname == "www.acme.com"

For metric and instance names only the string operators apply, but for metric label values all operators are available. The set of available operators is:

Boolean operators

All string (label, metrics and instances) and numeric (label) values can be tested for equality ("==") or inequality ("!=").

String operators

Strings can be subject to pattern matching in the form of glob matching ("~~"), regular expression matching ("=~"), and regular expression non-matching ("!~"). The ":" operator is equivalent to "~~" - i.e., regular expression matching.

Relational operators (numeric label values only)

Numeric label values can be subject to the less than ("<"), greater than (">"), less than or equal ("<="), greater than or equal (">="), equal ("==") and not equal ("!=") operators.

Logical operators

Multiple metadata qualifiers can be combined with the logical operators for AND ("&&") and OR ("||") as in many programming languages. The comma (",") character is equivalent to logical AND ("&&").

TIME SPECIFICATION

The final (optional) component of a query allows the user to specify a specific time window of interest. Any time specification will result in values being returned for all matching timeseries only for the time window specified.

The specification is ``square'' bracket ([]) enclosed, and consists of one or more comma-separated components. Each component specifies some aspect related to time, taking the general form: keyword: value, such as:

samples: 10

Sample count

The number of samples to return, specified via either the samples or (equivalent) count keyword. The value provided must be a positive integer. If no end time is explicitly set (see ``Time window'' later) then the most recent samples will be returned.

Sample interval

An interval between successive samples can be requested using the interval or (equivalent) delta keyword. The value provided should be either a numeric or string value that will be parsed by pmParseTimeInterval(3), such as 5 (seconds) or 2min (minutes).

Time window

Start and end times, and alignments, affecting the returned values. The keywords match the parameters to the pmParseTimeWindow(3) function which will be used to parse them, and are: start or (equivalent) begin, finish or (equivalent) end, align and offset.

Time zones

The resulting timestamps can be returned having been evaluated for a specific timezone, using the timezone or hostzone keywords. The value associated with timezone will be interpreted by pmNewZone(3). A true or false value should be associated with hostzone, and when set to true this has the same effect as described by pmNewContextZone(3).

TIMESERIES METADATA

Using command line options, pmseries can be requested to provide metadata (metric names, instance names, labels, descriptors) associated with either individual timeseries or a group of timeseries, for example:

$ pmseries -a dcb2a032a308b5717bf605ba8f8737e9c6e1ed19
dcb2a032a308b5717bf605ba8f8737e9c6e1ed19

PMID: 60.0.21
Data Type: 64-bit unsigned int InDom: PM_INDOM_NULL 0xffffffff
Semantics: counter Units: millisec
Source: f5ca7481da8c038325d15612bb1c6473ce1ef16f
Metric: kernel.all.cpu.nice
labels {"agent":"linux","domainname":"localdomain",\
"groupid":1000,"hostname":"shard",\
"latitude":-25.28496,"longitude":152.87886,\
"machineid":"295b16e3b6074cc8bdbda8bf96f6930a",\
"userid":1000}

The complete set of pmseries metadata reporting options are:

Convenience option to report all metadata for the given timeseries, equivalent to -dilms.
Metric descriptions detailing the PMID, data type, data semantics, units, scale and associated instance domain. This option has a direct pminfo(1) equivalent.
Provide a glob(7) pattern to restrict the report provided by the -i, -l, -m, and -S.
Metric descriptions detailing the PMID, data type, data semantics, units, scale and associated instance domain.
Print the InDom in verbose mode. This option has a direct pminfo(1) equivalent.
Print label sets associated with metrics and instances. Labels are optional metric metadata described in detail in pmLookupLabels(3). This option has a direct pminfo(1) equivalent.
Print metric names.
Print the PMID in verbose mode. This option has a direct pminfo(1) equivalent.
Print comma-separated label names only (not values) for the labels associated with metrics and instances.
Print timeseries identifiers associated with metrics, instances and sources. These unique identifiers are calculated from intrinsic (non-optional) labels and other metric metadata associated with each PMAPI context (sources), metrics and instances. Archive, local context or pmcd(1) connections for the same host all produce the same source identifier. This option has a direct pminfo(1) equivalent. See also pmLookupLabels(3) and the -l/--labels option.

TIMESERIES SOURCES

A source is a unique identifier (represented externally as a 40-byte hexadecimal SHA-1 hash) that represents both the live host and/or archives from which each timeseries originated. The context for a source identifier (obtained with -s) can be reported with:

Print names for timeseries sources. These names are either hostnames or fully qualified archive paths.

It is important to note that live and archived sources can and will generate the same SHA-1 source identifier hash, provided that the context labels remain the same for that host (labels are stored in PCP archives and can also be fetched live from pmcd(1)).

TIMESERIES LOADING

Timeseries metadata and data are loaded either automatically by a local pmproxy(1), or manually using a specially crafted pmseries query and the -L/--load option:

$ pmseries --load "{source.path: \"$PCP_LOG_DIR/pmlogger/acme\"}"
pmseries: [Info] processed 2275 archive records from [...]

This query must specify a source archive path, but can also restrict the import to specific timeseries (using metric names, labels, etc) and to a specific time window using the time specification component of the query language.

OPTIONS

The available command line options, in addition to timeseries metadata and sources options described above, are:

Specify the config file to use.
Connect Redis server at host, rather than the one the localhost.
Load timeseries metadata and data into the Redis cluster.
Connect Redis server at port, rather than the default 6379.
Perform a timeseries query. This is the default action.
Display version number and exit.
-?, --help
Display usage message and exit.

EXAMPLES

The following sample query shows several fundamental aspects of the pmseries query language:

$ pmseries 'kernel.all.load{hostname:toium}[count:2]'
eb713a9cf472f775aa59ae90c43cd7f960f7870f

[1545346764128.128] 1.0e-01 b84040ffccd54f839b65140cf139bab51cbbcf62
[1545346764128.128] 6.8e-01 a60b5b3bf25e71071c41934fa4d7d251f765f30c
[1545346764128.128] 6.4e-01 e1974a062375e6e62370ffadf5b0650dad739480
[1545346774112.112] 1.6e-01 b84040ffccd54f839b65140cf139bab51cbbcf62
[1545346774112.112] 6.7e-01 a60b5b3bf25e71071c41934fa4d7d251f765f30c
[1545346774112.112] 6.4e-01 e1974a062375e6e62370ffadf5b0650dad739480

This query returns the two most recent values for all instances of the kernel.all.load metric with a label.hostname matching the regular expression "toium". This is a set-valued metric (i.e., a metric with an ``instance domain'' which in this case consists of three instances: 1, 5 and 15 minute averages). The first column returned is a timestamp, then a floating point value, and finally an instance identifier timeseries hash (two values returned for three instances, so six rows are returned). The metadata for these timeseries can then be further examined:

$ pmseries -a eb713a9cf472f775aa59ae90c43cd7f960f7870f
eb713a9cf472f775aa59ae90c43cd7f960f7870f

PMID: 60.2.0
Data Type: float InDom: 60.2 0xf000002
Semantics: instant Units: none
Source: 0e89c1192db79326900d82131c31399524f0b3ee
Metric: kernel.all.load
inst [1 or "1 minute"] series b84040ffccd54f839b65140cf139bab51cbbcf62
inst [5 or "5 minute"] series a60b5b3bf25e71071c41934fa4d7d251f765f30c
inst [15 or "15 minute"] series e1974a062375e6e62370ffadf5b0650dad739480
inst [1 or "1 minute"] labels {"agent":"linux","hostname":"toium"}
inst [5 or "5 minute"] labels {"agent":"linux","hostname":"toium"}
inst [15 or "15 minute"] labels {"agent":"linux","hostname":"toium"}

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

PCPIntro(1), pmcd(1), pminfo(1), pmproxy(1), redis-server(1), PMAPI(3), PMWEBAPI(3), pmLookupDesc(3), pmLookupInDom(3), pmLookupLabels(3), pmLookupName(3), pmNewContextZone(3), pmNewZone(3), pmParseTimeInterval(3), pmParseTimeWindow(3), pcp.conf(5), glob(7) and regex(7).

PCP Performance Co-Pilot