pmdumplog(1)


NAME

   pmdumplog - dump internal details of a performance metrics archive log

SYNOPSIS

   pmdumplog [-adilLmMrstxz] [-n pmnsfile] [-S starttime] [-T endtime] [-Z
   timezone] archive [metricname ...]
   pmdumplog [-v file]

DESCRIPTION

   pmdumplog dumps assorted control, metadata, index and state information
   from  the  files  of  a  Performance  Co-Pilot  (PCP) archive log.  The
   archive log has the base name archive and  must  have  been  previously
   created using pmlogger(1).

   Normally pmdumplog operates on the distributed Performance Metrics Name
   Space (PMNS), however if the -n  option  is  specified  an  alternative
   local PMNS is loaded from the file pmnsfile.

   If  any  metricname  arguments appear, the report will be restricted to
   information relevant to the named performance metrics.   If  metricname
   is  a non-leaf node in the namespace (see pmns(5)), then pmdumplog will
   recursively descend the archive's namespace  and  report  on  all  leaf
   nodes.

   The options control the specific information to be reported.

   -a   Report everything, i.e. the flags -d, -i, -l, -m, -s and -t.

   -d   Display  the  metadata  and  descriptions  for  those  performance
        metrics  that  appear  at  least  once   in   the   archive:   see
        pmLookupDesc(3)  for  more  details  on  the  metadata  describing
        metrics.

   -i   Display the instance domains, and any variations in their instance
        members  over  the  duration of the archive: see pmGetInDom(3) for
        more details on instance domains.

   -l   Dump the archive label, showing the log format version,  the  time
        and  date  for the start and (current) end of the archive, and the
        host from which the performance metrics values were collected.

   -L   Like -l, just a little more verbose.

   -m   Print the values for the performance  metrics  from  the  archive.
        This is the default display option.

        Metrics without an instance domain are reported as:
          [timestamp] metric-id (metric-name): value1 value2

        Metrics with an instance domain are reported as:
          [timestamp] metric-id (metric-name):
              inst [internal-id or "external-id"] value1 value2

        The  timestamp is only reported for the first metric in a group of
        metrics sharing the same timestamp.

   -M   If no metricname is specified then  <mark>  records  are  reported
        when  they  are found in the archive.  If metricname arguments are
        specified, then <mark> records are not reported by  default.   The
        -M  option  forces  <mark>  records  to  be  reported,  even  when
        metricname arguments are specified.

        <mark> records are inserted into a PCP archive log by pmlogger(1),
        pmlogextract(1),   and   similar  tools  to  indicate  a  temporal
        discontinuity in the time-series of metric values.

   -r   Process the archive in reverse order, from most recent  to  oldest
        recorded metric values.

   -S   When  using  the -m option, the report will be restricted to those
        records logged at or after starttime.  Refer to PCPIntro(1) for  a
        complete description of the syntax for starttime.

   -s   Report the size in bytes of each physical record in the archive.

   -T   When  using  the -m option, the report will be restricted to those
        records logged before or at endtime.  Refer to PCPIntro(1)  for  a
        complete description of the syntax for endtime.

   -t   Dump the temporal index that is used to provide accelerated access
        to large archive files.

        The integrity of the index will also be checked.  If the index  is
        found  to  be  corrupted,  the  ``*.index'' file can be renamed or
        removed  and  the  archive  will  still  be  accessible,   however
        retrievals may take longer without the index.  Note however that a
        corrupted temporal index is usually indicative of a deeper malaise
        that may infect all files in a PCP archive.

   -v   Verbose  mode.   Dump  the records from a physical archive file in
        hexadecimal format.  In this case file is the  name  of  a  single
        file, usually a basename (as would otherwise appear as the archive
        command line argument), concatenated with ``.'' followed by one of
        meta  (the  metadata), index (the temporal index), or a digit (one
        of the volumes of metric values).

        Use of -v precludes the use of all other options and arguments.

   -x   Extended timestamp reporting format that includes the day  of  the
        week,  day  of  the  month,  month  and  year  in  addition to the
        (default) hours, minutes and seconds time.   This  is  useful  for
        archives that span multiple days.

        A  second  -x  option  will also report the timestamp as an offset
        from the start of the archive in units of seconds.  This is useful
        in  conjunction  with  debug diagnostics from the archive handling
        routines in libpcp.

   By default, pmdumplog reports the time of day according  to  the  local
   timezone  on  the system where pmdumplog is run.  The -Z option changes
   the timezone to timezone in the format of the environment  variable  TZ
   as  described in environ(7).  The -z option changes the timezone to the
   local timezone at the host  that  is  the  source  of  the  performance
   metrics, as specified in the label record of the archive log.

FILES

   $PCP_VAR_DIR/pmns/*
             default local PMNS specification files
   $PCP_LOG_DIR/pmlogger/hostname
             Default  directory  for  PCP  archives containing performance
             metric values collected from the host hostname.

PCP ENVIRONMENT

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

SEE ALSO

   PCPIntro(1),     pmlogcheck(1),     pmlogger(1),     pmlogger_check(1),
   pmlogger_daily(1),     pmloglabel(1),     pmlogextract(1),    PMAPI(3),
   pmGetInDom(3), pmLookupDesc(3), pcp.conf(5), pcp.env(5) and pmns(5).





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