1RRDUPDATE(1)                        rrdtool                       RRDUPDATE(1)
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NAME

6       rrdupdate - Store a new set of values into the RRD
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SYNOPSIS

9       rrdtool {update | updatev} filename [--template|-t ds-name[:ds-
10       name]...]  [--daemon|-d address] [--] N|timestamp:value[:value...]  at-
11       timestamp@value[:value...]  [timestamp:value[:value...] ...]
12

DESCRIPTION

14       The update function feeds new data values into an RRD. The data is time
15       aligned (interpolated) according to the properties of the RRD to which
16       the data is written.
17
18       updatev This alternate version of update takes the same arguments and
19               performs the same function. The v stands for verbose, which
20               describes the output returned. updatev returns a list of any
21               and all consolidated data points (CDPs) written to disk as a
22               result of the invocation of update. The values are indexed by
23               timestamp (time_t), RRA (consolidation function and PDPs per
24               CDP), and data source (name).  Note that depending on the
25               arguments of the current and previous call to update, the list
26               may have no entries or a large number of entries.
27
28               Since updatev requires direct disk access, the --daemon option
29               cannot be used with this command.
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31       filename
32               The name of the RRD you want to update.
33
34       --template|-t ds-name[:ds-name]...
35               By default, the update function expects its data input in the
36               order the data sources are defined in the RRD, excluding any
37               COMPUTE data sources (i.e. if the third data source DST is
38               COMPUTE, the third input value will be mapped to the fourth
39               data source in the RRD and so on). This is not very error
40               resistant, as you might be sending the wrong data into an RRD.
41
42               The template switch allows you to specify which data sources
43               you are going to update and in which order. If the data sources
44               specified in the template are not available in the RRD file,
45               the update process will abort with an error message.
46
47               While it appears possible with the template switch to update
48               data sources asynchronously, RRDtool implicitly assigns non-
49               COMPUTE data sources missing from the template the *UNKNOWN*
50               value.
51
52               Do not specify a value for a COMPUTE DST in the update
53               function. If this is done accidentally (and this can only be
54               done using the template switch), RRDtool will ignore the value
55               specified for the COMPUTE DST.
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57       --daemon|-d address
58               If given, RRDTool will try to connect to the caching daemon
59               rrdcached at address and will fail if the connection cannot be
60               established. If the connection is successfully established the
61               values will be sent to the daemon instead of accessing the
62               files directly.
63
64               For a list of accepted formats, see the -l option in the
65               rrdcached manual.
66
67       N|timestamp:value[:value...]
68               The data used for updating the RRD was acquired at a certain
69               time. This time can either be defined in seconds since
70               1970-01-01 or by using the letter 'N', in which case the update
71               time is set to be the current time. Negative time values are
72               subtracted from the current time. An AT_STYLE TIME
73               SPECIFICATION (see the rrdfetch documentation) may also be used
74               by delimiting the end of the time specification with the '@'
75               character instead of a ':'. Getting the timing right to the
76               second is especially important when you are working with data-
77               sources of type COUNTER, DERIVE or ABSOLUTE.
78
79               When using negative time values, options and data have to be
80               separated by two dashes (--), else the time value would be
81               parsed as an option.  See below for an example.
82
83               When using negative time values, options and data have to be
84               separated by two dashes (--), else the time value would be
85               parsed as an option.  See below for an example.
86
87               The remaining elements of the argument are DS updates. The
88               order of this list is the same as the order the data sources
89               were defined in the RRA. If there is no data for a certain
90               data-source, the letter U (e.g., N:0.1:U:1) can be specified.
91
92               The format of the value acquired from the data source is
93               dependent on the data source type chosen. Normally it will be
94               numeric, but the data acquisition modules may impose their very
95               own parsing of this parameter as long as the colon (:) remains
96               the data source value separator.
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ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES

99       The following environment variables may be used to change the behavior
100       of "rrdtool update":
101
102       RRDCACHED_ADDRESS
103           If this environment variable is set it will have the same effect as
104           specifying the "--daemon" option on the command line. If both are
105           present, the command line argument takes precedence.
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EXAMPLES

108       ·   "rrdtool update demo1.rrd N:3.44:3.15:U:23"
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110           Update the database file demo1.rrd with 3 known and one *UNKNOWN*
111           value. Use the current time as the update time.
112
113       ·   "rrdtool update demo2.rrd 887457267:U 887457521:22 887457903:2.7"
114
115           Update the database file demo2.rrd which expects data from a single
116           data-source, three times. First with an *UNKNOWN* value then with
117           two regular readings. The update interval seems to be around 300
118           seconds.
119
120       ·   "rrdtool update demo3.rrd -- -5:21 N:42"
121
122           Update the database file demo3.rrd two times, using five seconds in
123           the past and the current time as the update times.
124
125       ·   "rrdtool update --cache /var/lib/rrd/demo3.rrd N:42"
126
127           Update the file "/var/lib/rrd/demo3.rrd" with a single data source,
128           using the current time. If the caching daemon cannot be reached, do
129           not fall back to direct file access.
130
131       ·   "rrdtool update --daemon unix:/tmp/rrdd.sock demo4.rrd N:23"
132
133           Use the UNIX domain socket "/tmp/rrdd.sock" to contact the caching
134           daemon. If the caching daemon is not available, update the file
135           "demo4.rrd" directly.  WARNING: Since a relative path is specified,
136           the following disturbing effect may occur: If the daemon is
137           available, the file relative to the working directory of the daemon
138           is used. If the daemon is not available, the file relative to the
139           current working directory of the invoking process is used.  This
140           may update two different files depending on whether the daemon
141           could be reached or not. Don't do relative paths, kids!
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AUTHORS

144       Tobias Oetiker <tobi@oetiker.ch>, Florian Forster
145       <octo at verplant.org>
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1491.4.8                             2013-05-23                      RRDUPDATE(1)
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