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snap collector plugin - psutil

This plugin collects metrics from psutil which gathers information on running processes and system utilization (CPU, memory, disks, network).

It's used in the snap framework.

  1. Getting Started
  1. Documentation
  1. Community Support
  2. Contributing
  3. License
  4. Acknowledgements

Getting Started

System Requirements

Note: This plugin does not require Python rather it depends on the go library gopsutil.

Operating systems

All OSs currently supported by snap:

  • Linux/amd64
  • Darwin/amd64

Installation

Download psutil plugin binary:

You can get the pre-built binaries for your OS and architecture at snap's GitHub Releases page.

To build the plugin binary:

Fork https://github.com/intelsdi-x/snap-plugin-collector-psutil
Clone repo into $GOPATH/src/github.com/intelsdi-x/:

$ git clone https://github.com/<yourGithubID>/snap-plugin-collector-psutil.git

Build the plugin by running make within the cloned repo:

$ make

This builds the plugin in /build/rootfs/

Configuration and Usage

  • Set up the snap framework
  • Ensure $SNAP_PATH is exported
    export SNAP_PATH=$GOPATH/src/github.com/intelsdi-x/snap/build

Some metrics are platform specific (see gopsutil's current status).

Documentation

There are a number of other resources you can review to learn to use this plugin:

Collected Metrics

This plugin has the ability to gather the following metrics:

Namespace Description (optional)
/intel/psutil/[CPU]/guest time spent in guest mode
/intel/psutil/[CPU]/guest_nice time spent running a niced guest (virtual CPU for guest operating systems under the control of the Linux kernel)
/intel/psutil/[CPU]/idle time spent in the idle task. This value should be USER_HZ times the second entry in the /proc/uptime pseudo-file
/intel/psutil/[CPU]/iowait time waiting for I/O to complete
/intel/psutil/[CPU]/irq time servicing interrupts
/intel/psutil/[CPU]/nice time spent in user mode with low priority (nice)
/intel/psutil/[CPU]/softirq time spent servicing softirqs
/intel/psutil/[CPU]/steal stolen time, which is the time spent in other operating systems when running in a virtualized environment
/intel/psutil/[CPU]/stolen
/intel/psutil/[CPU]/system time spent in system mode
/intel/psutil/[CPU]/user time spent in user mode

| /intel/psutil/load/load1 | load average over the last 1 minute /intel/psutil/load/load15 | load average over the last 15 minutes /intel/psutil/load/load5 | load average over the last 5 minutes | /intel/psutil/net/all/bytes_recv | number of bytes sent /intel/psutil/net/all/bytes_sent | number of bytes received /intel/psutil/net/all/dropin | total number of incoming packets which were dropped /intel/psutil/net/all/dropout | total number of outgoing packets which were dropped (always 0 on OSX and BSD) /intel/psutil/net/all/errin | total number of errors while receiving /intel/psutil/net/all/errout | total number of errors while sending /intel/psutil/net/all/packets_recv | number of packets received /intel/psutil/net/all/packets_sent | number of packets sent /intel/psutil/net/[INTERFACE]/bytes_recv | /intel/psutil/net/[INTERFACE]/bytes_sent | /intel/psutil/net/[INTERFACE]/dropin | /intel/psutil/net/[INTERFACE]/dropout | /intel/psutil/net/[INTERFACE]/errin | /intel/psutil/net/[INTERFACE]/errout | /intel/psutil/net/[INTERFACE]/packets_recv | /intel/psutil/net/[INTERFACE]/packets_sent | | /intel/psutil/vm/active | memory currently in use or very recently used, and so it is in RAM /intel/psutil/vm/available | the actual amount of available memory that can be given instantly to processes that request more memory in bytes; this is calculated by summing different memory values depending on the platform (e.g. free + buffers + cached on Linux) and it is supposed to be used to monitor actual memory usage in a cross platform fashion /intel/psutil/vm/buffers | cache for things like file system metadata /intel/psutil/vm/cached | cache for various things /intel/psutil/vm/free | memory not being used at all (zeroed) that is readily available; note that this doesn't reflect the actual memory available (use 'available' instead). /intel/psutil/vm/inactive | memory that is marked as not used /intel/psutil/vm/shared | memory that may be simultaneously accessed by multiple processes /intel/psutil/vm/total | total physical memory available /intel/psutil/vm/used | memory used, calculated differently depending on the platform and designed for informational purposes only. /intel/psutil/vm/used_percent | percent memory used /intel/psutil/vm/wired | memory that is marked to always stay in RAM. It is never moved to disk

Examples

Example running psutil, passthru processor, and writing data to a file.

This is done from the snap directory.

In one terminal window, open the snap daemon (in this case with logging set to 1 and trust disabled):

$ $SNAP_PATH/bin/snapd -l 1 -t 0

In another terminal window: Load psutil plugin

$ $SNAP_PATH/bin/snapctl plugin load 

See available metrics for your system

$ $SNAP_PATH/bin/snapctl metric list

Create a task manifest file (e.g. task-psutil.json):

{
    "version": 1,
    "schedule": {
        "type": "simple",
        "interval": "1s"
    },
    "workflow": {
        "collect": {
            "metrics": {
                "/intel/psutil/load/load1": {},
                "/intel/psutil/load/load5": {},
                "/intel/psutil/load/load15": {},
                "/intel/psutil/vm/available": {},
                "/intel/psutil/vm/free": {},
                "/intel/psutil/vm/used": {}
            },
            "config": {
                "/intel/mock": {
                    "password": "secret",
                    "user": "root"
                }
            },
            "process": [
                {
                    "plugin_name": "passthru",
                    "process": null,
                    "publish": [
                        {                         
                            "plugin_name": "file",
                            "config": {
                                "file": "/tmp/published_psutil"
                            }
                        }
                    ],
                    "config": null
                }
            ],
            "publish": null
        }
    }
}

Load passthru plugin for processing:

$ $SNAP_PATH/bin/snapctl plugin load build/plugin/snap-processor-passthru
Plugin loaded
Name: passthru
Version: 1
Type: processor
Signed: false
Loaded Time: Fri, 20 Nov 2015 11:44:03 PST

Load file plugin for publishing:

$ $SNAP_PATH/bin/snapctl plugin load build/plugin/snap-publisher-file
Plugin loaded
Name: file
Version: 3
Type: publisher
Signed: false
Loaded Time: Fri, 20 Nov 2015 11:41:39 PST

Create task:

$ $SNAP_PATH/bin/snapctl task create -t examples/tasks/psutil-file.json
Using task manifest to create task
Task created
ID: 02dd7ff4-8106-47e9-8b86-70067cd0a850
Name: Task-02dd7ff4-8106-47e9-8b86-70067cd0a850
State: Running

See file output (this is just part of the file):

2015-11-20 11:46:03.637390565 -0800 PST|[intel psutil load load1]|1.82|username-mac01.jf.intel.com
2015-11-20 11:46:03.641160359 -0800 PST|[intel psutil load load15]|2.09|username-mac01.jf.intel.com
2015-11-20 11:46:03.643858208 -0800 PST|[intel psutil load load5]|2.08|username-mac01.jf.intel.com
2015-11-20 11:46:03.661173851 -0800 PST|[intel psutil vm available]|168882176|username-mac01.jf.intel.com
2015-11-20 11:46:03.67167664 -0800 PST|[intel psutil vm free]|168943616|username-mac01.jf.intel.com
2015-11-20 11:46:03.681965105 -0800 PST|[intel psutil vm used]|17010798592|username-mac01.jf.intel.com
2015-11-20 11:46:04.641244629 -0800 PST|[intel psutil load load1]|1.82|username-mac01.jf.intel.com
2015-11-20 11:46:04.644420189 -0800 PST|[intel psutil load load15]|2.09|username-mac01.jf.intel.com
2015-11-20 11:46:04.647166418 -0800 PST|[intel psutil load load5]|2.08|username-mac01.jf.intel.com
2015-11-20 11:46:04.657065347 -0800 PST|[intel psutil vm available]|168984576|username-mac01.jf.intel.com
2015-11-20 11:46:04.666346721 -0800 PST|[intel psutil vm free]|169054208|username-mac01.jf.intel.com
2015-11-20 11:46:04.676683476 -0800 PST|[intel psutil vm used]|17010716672|username-mac01.jf.intel.com

Stop task:

$ $SNAP_PATH/bin/snapctl task stop 02dd7ff4-8106-47e9-8b86-70067cd0a850
Task stopped:
ID: 02dd7ff4-8106-47e9-8b86-70067cd0a850

Roadmap

There isn't a current roadmap for this plugin, but it is in active development. As we launch this plugin, we do not have any outstanding requirements for the next release. If you have a feature request, please add it as an issue and/or submit a pull request.

Community Support

This repository is one of many plugins in snap, a powerful telemetry framework. See the full project at http://github.com/intelsdi-x/snap To reach out to other users, head to the main framework

Contributing

We love contributions!

There's more than one way to give back, from examples to blogs to code updates. See our recommended process in CONTRIBUTING.md.

License

snap, along with this plugin, is an Open Source software released under the Apache 2.0 License.

Acknowledgements

And thank you! Your contribution, through code and participation, is incredibly important to us.

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Collects Linux psutil metrics

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