Collectd::Unixsock - Abstraction layer for accessing the functionality by
collectd's unixsock plugin.
use Collectd::Unixsock;
my $sock = Collectd::Unixsock->new ($path);
my $value = $sock->getval (%identifier);
$sock->putval (%identifier,
time => time (),
values => [123, 234, 345]);
$sock->destroy ();
collectd's unixsock plugin allows external programs to access the values it has
collected or received and to submit own values. This Perl-module is simply a
little abstraction layer over this interface to make it even easier for
programmers to interact with the daemon.
The values in the collectd are identified using a five-tuple (host, plugin,
plugin-instance, type, type-instance) where only plugin instance and type
instance may be undef. Many functions expect an %identifier hash that has at
least the members host, plugin, and type, possibly completed by
plugin_instance and type_instance.
Usually you can pass this hash as follows:
$self->method (host => $host, plugin => $plugin, type => $type, %other_args);
- $self = Collectd::Unixsock->new ([$path]);
-
Creates a new connection to the daemon. The optional $path argument gives
the path to the UNIX socket of the
unixsock plugin and defaults to
/var/run/collectd-unixsock. Returns the newly created object on success and
false on error.
- $res = $self->getval (%identifier);
-
Requests a value-list from the daemon. On success a hash-ref is returned with
the name of each data-source as the key and the according value as, well, the
value. On error false is returned.
- $res = $self->getthreshold (%identifier);
-
Requests a threshold from the daemon. On success a hash-ref is returned with
the threshold data. On error false is returned.
- $self->putval (%identifier, time => $time, values => [...]);
-
Submits a value-list to the daemon. If the time argument is omitted
time() is used. The required argument values is a reference to an array
of values that is to be submitted. The number of values must match the number
of values expected for the given type (see VALUE IDENTIFIERS), though
this is checked by the daemon, not the Perl module. Also, gauge data-sources
(e. g. system-load) may be undef. Returns true upon success and false
otherwise.
- $res = $self->listval_filter ( %identifier )
-
Queries a list of values from the daemon while restricting the results to
certain hosts, plugins etc. The argument may be anything that passes for an
identifier (cf. VALUE IDENTIFIERS), although all fields are optional.
The returned data is in the same format as from
listval.
- $res = $self->listval ()
-
Queries a list of values from the daemon. The list is returned as an array of
hash references, where each hash reference is a valid identifier. The
time
member of each hash holds the epoch value of the last update of that value.
- $res = $self->putnotif (severity => $severity, message => $message, ...);
-
Submits a notification to the daemon.
Valid options are:
- severity
-
Sets the severity of the notification. The value must be one of the following
strings:
failure, warning, or okay. Case does not matter. This option
is mandatory.
- message
-
Sets the message of the notification. This option is mandatory.
- time
-
Sets the time. If omitted,
time() is used.
- Value identifier
-
All the other fields of the value identifiers, host, plugin,
plugin_instance, type, and type_instance, are optional. When given,
the notification is associated with the performance data of that identifier.
For more details, please see collectd-unixsock(5).
- $self->flush (timeout => $timeout, plugins => [...], identifier => [...]);
-
Flush cached data.
Valid options are:
- timeout
-
If this option is specified, only data older than $timeout seconds is
flushed.
- plugins
-
If this option is specified, only the selected plugins will be flushed. The
argument is a reference to an array of strings.
- identifier
-
If this option is specified, only the given
identifier(s) will be flushed. The
argument is a reference to an array of identifiers. Identifiers, in this case,
are hash references and have the members as outlined in VALUE IDENTIFIERS.
- $self->destroy ();
-
Closes the socket before the object is destroyed. This function is also
automatically called then the object goes out of scope.
collectd(1),
collectd.conf(5),
collectd-unixsock(5)
Florian octo Forster <octo@collectd.org>
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