COLLECTD-UNIXSOCK(5) | collectd | COLLECTD-UNIXSOCK(5) |
collectd-unixsock - Documentation of collectd's "unixsock plugin"
# See collectd.conf(5) LoadPlugin unixsock # ... <Plugin unixsock> SocketFile "/path/to/socket" SocketGroup "collectd" SocketPerms "0770" DeleteSocket false </Plugin>
The "unixsock plugin" opens an UNIX-socket over which one can interact with the daemon. This can be used to use the values collected by collectd in other applications, such as monitoring solutions, or submit externally collected values to collectd.
For example, this plugin is used by collectd-nagios(1) to check if some value is in a certain range and exit with a Nagios-compatible exit code.
Upon start the "unixsock plugin" opens a UNIX-socket and waits for connections. Once a connection is established the client can send commands to the daemon which it will answer, if it understand them.
In general the plugin answers with a status line of the following form:
Status Message
If Status is greater than or equal to zero the message indicates success, if Status is less than zero the message indicates failure. Message is a human-readable string that further describes the return value.
On success, Status furthermore indicates the number of subsequent lines of output (not including the status line). Each such lines usually contains a single return value. See the description of each command for details.
The following commands are implemented:
Example:
-> | GETVAL myhost/cpu-0/cpu-user
<- | 1 Value found
<- | value=1.260000e+00
Example:
-> | LISTVAL
<- | 69 Values found
<- | 1182204284 myhost/cpu-0/cpu-idle
<- | 1182204284 myhost/cpu-0/cpu-nice
<- | 1182204284 myhost/cpu-0/cpu-system
<- | 1182204284 myhost/cpu-0/cpu-user
...
An Identifier is of the form "host/plugin-instance/type-instance" with both instance-parts being optional. If they're omitted the hyphen must be omitted, too. plugin and each instance-part may be chosen freely as long as the tuple (plugin, plugin instance, type instance) uniquely identifies the plugin within collectd. type identifies the type and number of values (i. e. data-set) passed to collectd. A large list of predefined data-sets is available in the types.db file.
The OptionList is an optional list of Options, where each option is a key-value-pair. A list of currently understood options can be found below, all other options will be ignored. Values that contain spaces must be quoted with double quotes.
Valuelist is a colon-separated list of the time and the values, each either an integer if the data-source is a counter, or a double if the data-source is of type "gauge". You can submit an undefined gauge-value by using U. When submitting U to a counter the behavior is undefined. The time is given as epoch (i. e. standard UNIX time).
You can mix options and values, but the order is important: Options only effect following values, so specifying an option as last field is allowed, but useless. Also, an option applies to all following values, so you don't need to re-set an option over and over again.
The currently defined Options are:
Please note that this is the same format as used in the exec plugin, see collectd-exec(5).
Example:
-> | PUTVAL testhost/interface/if_octets-test0 interval=10
1179574444:123:456
<- | 0 Success
The PUTNOTIF command is followed by a list of options which further describe the notification. The message option is special in that it will consume the rest of the line as its value. The message, severity, and time options are mandatory.
Valid options are:
The current supported types are:
Please note that this is the same format as used in the exec plugin, see collectd-exec(5).
Example:
-> | PUTNOTIF type=temperature severity=warning time=1201094702
message=The roof is on fire!
<- | 0 Success
If the plugin option has been specified, only the Plugin plugin will be flushed. You can have multiple plugin options to flush multiple plugins in one go. If the plugin option is not given all plugins providing a flush callback will be flushed.
If the identifier option is given only the specified values will be flushed. This is meant to be used by graphing or displaying frontends which want to have the latest values for a specific graph. Again, you can specify the identifier option multiple times to flush several values. If this option is not specified at all, all values will be flushed.
Example:
-> | FLUSH plugin=rrdtool identifier=localhost/df/df-root
identifier=localhost/df/df-var
<- | 0 Done: 2 successful, 0 errors
Value or value-lists are identified in a uniform fashion:
Hostname/Plugin/Type
Where Plugin and Type are both either of type "Name" or "Name-Instance". If the identifier includes spaces, it must be quoted using double quotes. This sounds more complicated than it is, so here are some examples:
myhost/cpu-0/cpu-user myhost/load/load myhost/memory/memory-used myhost/disk-sda/disk_octets "myups/snmp/temperature-Outlet 1"
collectd ships the Perl-Module Collectd::Unixsock which provides an abstraction layer over the actual socket connection. It can be found in the directory bindings/perl/ in the source distribution or (usually) somewhere near /usr/share/perl5/ if you're using a package. If you want to use Perl to communicate with the daemon, you're encouraged to use and expand this module.
collectd(1), collectd.conf(5), collectd-nagios(1), unix(7)
Florian Forster <octo@collectd.org>
2024-03-31 | 5.12.0.git |