DataBot User Manual: Difference between revisions
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Complete any of [[#Target-Specific_Configuration_Procedures|target-specific configuration procedures]], if they apply. | Complete any of [[#Target-Specific_Configuration_Procedures|target-specific configuration procedures]], if they apply. | ||
=Usage= | |||
os-stats is a low-overhead monitoring program designed to run in the background, indefinitely. | |||
Only one os-stats instance per VM is necessary. os-stats reads O/S level metrics in a loop and | |||
writes them in a CSV file. If an os-stats process is already running in the background, an attempt | |||
to start another os-stats instance will fail. The program reads its configuration from the default | |||
location $OS_STATS_CONFIG_DIR/os-stats.conf or, if configured at startup with -c|--configuration=, | |||
from the file specified by the configuration option. If no OS_STATS_CONFIG_DIR environment | |||
variable is declared and no configuration file is specified at startup with -c|--configuration=, | |||
the program will fail to start. More details on the syntax of configuration file are available | |||
under the "Configuration" section. | |||
To start an instance that runs in foreground, use --foreground command line option. In foreground | |||
mode, the output is switched automatically from the configured file destination to /dev/stdout and | |||
the output.file configuration, as described below, is ignored. | |||
os-stats attempts to use the java installation indicated by the OS_STATS_JAVA_HOME environment | |||
variable, is set. If the OS_STATS_JAVA_HOME environment variable is not set, os-stats uses the | |||
standard way of locating java (JAVA_HOME, PATH, etc.) | |||
os-stats can also be used as a command line manager of the os-stats process running in the | |||
background. The commands that can be used are: | |||
help - display this content and exits. | |||
version - display the version and exit. | |||
status - display whether a background os-stats process already runs on the system. If a process | |||
is found running, the command provides more information about it (such as the PID). | |||
stop - stop the background os-stats process, if running. | |||
Command line options: | |||
--foreground, -fg - run the command in foreground and automatically switch the output from the | |||
configured file destination to /dev/stdout. | |||
-v - verbose, turns on DEBUG logging at stdout. | |||
--debug - start the JVM in debug mode, so it can be accessed by a debugger. It also turns on | |||
DEBUG logging. | |||
Configuration: | |||
sampling.interval - the sampling interval, in seconds. If not specified, the default is 10 seconds. | |||
output.file - the name of the output file. If not specified, the default value is | |||
/tmp/os-stats.csv. Note that if --foreground (or -fg) option is used, the output will forcibly | |||
send to /dev/stdout, regardless of the value of 'output.file' configuration parameter. | |||
output.file.append - true/false. Indicates whether to append to an already existing output file or | |||
to overwrite the existing file. The default value is "true" (append); this configuration will | |||
allow accumulation of historical data. Every time os-stats is restarted in "append" mode, a | |||
new header line will be inserted in the file. | |||
metrics - comma-separated list of the definitions for the metrics to be collected from the system. | |||
Example: | |||
metrics=PhysicalMemoryUsed,CpuUserTime,jboss:/subsystem=web/connector=http/bytesReceived | |||
For a complete list of supported metrics, syntax details and extensive documentation, see | |||
https://kb.novaordis.com/index.php/Os-stats_Metric_Reference | |||
jboss.home - the path to a locally accessible JBoss instance. If it needs to monitor JBoss CLI | |||
metrics, os-stats must be configured to detect and use the libraries from a JBoss instance it | |||
has access to (it does not ship with the required JARs, as those may be different depending on | |||
the version of the target JBoss instance. In order to enable os-stats to build the classpath | |||
fragment, jboss_home must be specified in the configuration file. | |||
=Target-Specific Configuration Procedures= | =Target-Specific Configuration Procedures= |
Revision as of 14:04, 1 June 2017
Internal
Overview
A low-overhead O/S level event collector that generates events-compatible events. It is designed to run in background, collect times events and channel them to various destinations, such as files, network, etc. It is capable of collecting memory, CPU, etc. usage statistics, as well as WildFly management domain model and JMX metrics.
Installation
Download the stable release from
The release consists in a ZIP file with a name matching "os-stats-<version>.zip".
Unzip the release file in a conventional binary directory, such as /opt or /usr/local. An "os-stats-<version>" sub-directory will be created.
Add .../os-stats-<version>/bin to PATH.
os-stats needs a Java VM to run. It will attempt to use, in this order:
- Value of "OS_STATS_JAVA_HOME" environment variable, if set.
- Value of "JAVA_HOME" environment variable, if set.
- The "java" executable found in path.
Choose a directory to store the configuration file. If the configuration will be shared by multiple users and there will be used by just one os-stats instance on the system, we recommend /etc/os-stats. Otherwise, each user could maintain an individual configuration file in ~/.os-stats (recommended) or a directory of their choosing. The location of the configuration file should be exposed as the value of the OS_STATS_CONF environment variable in the environment of the user who will execute os-stats. If no OS_STATS_CONF environment variable is defined, os-stats will attempt to read ~/.os-stats/os-stats.yaml. Regardless of how the configuration file is declared, os-stats will fail if the file is not found. For details on the configuration file syntax see Configuration section below.
Complete any of target-specific configuration procedures, if they apply.
Usage
os-stats is a low-overhead monitoring program designed to run in the background, indefinitely. Only one os-stats instance per VM is necessary. os-stats reads O/S level metrics in a loop and writes them in a CSV file. If an os-stats process is already running in the background, an attempt to start another os-stats instance will fail. The program reads its configuration from the default location $OS_STATS_CONFIG_DIR/os-stats.conf or, if configured at startup with -c|--configuration=, from the file specified by the configuration option. If no OS_STATS_CONFIG_DIR environment variable is declared and no configuration file is specified at startup with -c|--configuration=, the program will fail to start. More details on the syntax of configuration file are available under the "Configuration" section.
To start an instance that runs in foreground, use --foreground command line option. In foreground mode, the output is switched automatically from the configured file destination to /dev/stdout and the output.file configuration, as described below, is ignored.
os-stats attempts to use the java installation indicated by the OS_STATS_JAVA_HOME environment variable, is set. If the OS_STATS_JAVA_HOME environment variable is not set, os-stats uses the standard way of locating java (JAVA_HOME, PATH, etc.)
os-stats can also be used as a command line manager of the os-stats process running in the background. The commands that can be used are:
help - display this content and exits.
version - display the version and exit.
status - display whether a background os-stats process already runs on the system. If a process is found running, the command provides more information about it (such as the PID).
stop - stop the background os-stats process, if running.
Command line options:
--foreground, -fg - run the command in foreground and automatically switch the output from the configured file destination to /dev/stdout.
-v - verbose, turns on DEBUG logging at stdout.
--debug - start the JVM in debug mode, so it can be accessed by a debugger. It also turns on DEBUG logging.
Configuration:
sampling.interval - the sampling interval, in seconds. If not specified, the default is 10 seconds.
output.file - the name of the output file. If not specified, the default value is
/tmp/os-stats.csv. Note that if --foreground (or -fg) option is used, the output will forcibly send to /dev/stdout, regardless of the value of 'output.file' configuration parameter.
output.file.append - true/false. Indicates whether to append to an already existing output file or
to overwrite the existing file. The default value is "true" (append); this configuration will allow accumulation of historical data. Every time os-stats is restarted in "append" mode, a new header line will be inserted in the file.
metrics - comma-separated list of the definitions for the metrics to be collected from the system.
Example:
metrics=PhysicalMemoryUsed,CpuUserTime,jboss:/subsystem=web/connector=http/bytesReceived
For a complete list of supported metrics, syntax details and extensive documentation, see https://kb.novaordis.com/index.php/Os-stats_Metric_Reference
jboss.home - the path to a locally accessible JBoss instance. If it needs to monitor JBoss CLI
metrics, os-stats must be configured to detect and use the libraries from a JBoss instance it has access to (it does not ship with the required JARs, as those may be different depending on the version of the target JBoss instance. In order to enable os-stats to build the classpath fragment, jboss_home must be specified in the configuration file.
Target-Specific Configuration Procedures
JBoss
In-Line Help
os-stats --help
Configuration
Example
# # os-stats configuration file # # # sampling interval (in seconds) # sampling.interval: 20 # # output configuration # output: file: /home/vagrant/tmp/os-stats.csv append: true # # metrics # metrics: - PhysicalMemoryTotal