1PMPROBE(1)                  General Commands Manual                 PMPROBE(1)
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NAME

6       pmprobe - lightweight probe for performance metrics
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SYNOPSIS

9       pmprobe  [-fIiLVvz]  [-a archive] [-h hostname] [-K spec] [-n pmnsfile]
10       [-O time] [-Z timezone] [metricname ...]
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DESCRIPTION

13       pmprobe determines the availability  of  performance  metrics  exported
14       through the facilities of the Performance Co-Pilot (PCP).
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16       The metrics of interest are named in the metricname arguments.  If met‐
17       ricname is a non-leaf  node  in  the  Performance  Metrics  Name  Space
18       (pmns(5)), then pmprobe will recursively descend the PMNS and report on
19       all leaf nodes.  If no metricname argument is given, the  root  of  the
20       namespace is used.
21
22       The  output  format  is spartan and intended for use in wrapper scripts
23       creating configuration files for other PCP tools.  By default, there is
24       one line of output per metric, with the metric name followed by a count
25       of the number of available values.  Error conditions are encoded  as  a
26       negative value count (as per the PMAPI(3) protocols, but may be decoded
27       using pmerr(1)) and followed by a textual description of the error.
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29       Unless directed to another host by the -h option, pmprobe will  contact
30       the Performance Metrics Collector Daemon (PMCD) on the local host.
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32       The  -a  option causes pmprobe to use the specified archive rather than
33       connecting to a PMCD.  The -a and -h options are mutually exclusive.
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35       The -L option causes pmprobe to use a local context to collect  metrics
36       from  PMDAs  on  the  local  host  without PMCD.  Only some metrics are
37       available in this mode.  The -a,-h and -L options are  mutually  exclu‐
38       sive.
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40       Normally  pmprobe  operates on the distributed Performance Metrics Name
41       Space (PMNS), however, if the -n option  is  specified  an  alternative
42       local PMNS file is loaded from the file pmnsfile.
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44       Other  options control the output of additional information when one or
45       more values is available.
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47       -f   When used with -i or -I the set of instances reported will be  all
48            of  those known at the source of the performance data.  By default
49            the set of reported instances are those for which values are  cur‐
50            rently  available, which may be smaller than the set reported with
51            -f.
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53       -I   Report the external identifiers for each  instance.   The  literal
54            string PM_IN_NULL is reported for singular metrics.
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56       -i   Report the internal identifiers for each instance.  The values are
57            in decimal and prefixed by ``?''.  As a special case, the  literal
58            string PM_IN_NULL is reported for singular metrics.
59
60       -K   When  using  the  -L option to fetch metrics from a local context,
61            the -K option may be used to control the DSO PMDAs that should  be
62            made  accessible.   The  spec  argument  conforms  to  the  syntax
63            described in __pmSpecLocalPMDA(3).  More than one -K option may be
64            used.
65
66       -O   When used in conjunction with an archive source of metrics and the
67            -v option the time argument defines a time  origin  at  which  the
68            metrics  should be fetched from the archive.  Refer to PCPIntro(1)
69            for a complete description of this option, and the syntax for  the
70            time argument.
71
72            When  the  ``ctime''  format is used for the time argument in a -O
73            option, the timezone becomes an issue.  The default is to use  the
74            local  timezone on the system where pmprobe is run.  The -Z option
75            changes the timezone to timezone in the format of the  environment
76            variable TZ as described in environ(7).  The -z option changes the
77            timezone to the local timezone at the host that is the  source  of
78            the performance metrics, as identified via the -a option.
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80       -v   Report the value for each instance, as per the formatting rules of
81            pmPrintValue(3).   When  fetching  from  an  archive,  only  those
82            instances present in the first archive record for a metric will be
83            displayed; see also the -O option.
84
85       The -v option is mutually exclusive with either the -I or -i options.
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87       The -V option provides a cryptic summary of the number of messages sent
88       and received across the PMAPI interface.
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EXAMPLES

91       $ pmprobe disk.dev
92       disk.dev.read 2
93       disk.dev.write 2
94       disk.dev.total 2
95       disk.dev.blkread 2
96       disk.dev.blkwrite 2
97       disk.dev.blktotal 2
98       disk.dev.active 2
99       disk.dev.response 2
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101       $ pmprobe -I disk.dev.read disk.dev.write disk.all.total
102       disk.dev.read 2 "dks0d1" "dks0d2"
103       disk.dev.write 2 "dks0d1" "dks0d2"
104       disk.all.total 1 PM_IN_NULL
105
106       $ pmprobe -v pmcd.numagents pmcd.version pmcd.control.timeout
107       pmcd.numagents 1 9
108       pmcd.version 1 "2.0 beta-1"
109       pmcd.control.timeout 1 5
110
111       $ pmprobe -v disk.dev.total disk.all.total
112       disk.dev.total -1012 Unknown metric name
113       disk.all.total 1 4992466
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FILES

116       $PCP_VAR_DIR/pmns/*
117                 default PMNS specification files
118

PCP ENVIRONMENT

120       Environment variables with the prefix PCP_ are used to parameterize the
121       file and directory names used by PCP.  On each installation,  the  file
122       /etc/pcp.conf  contains  the  local  values  for  these variables.  The
123       $PCP_CONF variable may be used to specify an alternative  configuration
124       file, as described in pcp.conf(5).
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SEE ALSO

127       PCPIntro(1),  pmcd(1),  pmdumplog(1), pminfo(1), PMAPI(3), pmErrStr(3),
128       __pmSpecLocalPMDA(3), pcp.conf(5), pcp.env(5) and pmns(5).
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132Performance Co-Pilot                  PCP                           PMPROBE(1)
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