librrd man page on DragonFly

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librrd(3)			    rrdtool			     librrd(3)

NAME
       librrd - RRD library functions

DESCRIPTION
       librrd contains most of the functionality in RRDTool.  The command line
       utilities and language bindings are often just wrappers around the code
       contained in librrd.

       This manual page documents the librrd API.

       NOTE: This document is a work in progress, and should be considered
       incomplete as long as this warning persists.  For more information
       about the librrd functions, always consult the source code.

CORE FUNCTIONS
       rrd_dump_cb_r(char *filename, int opt_header, rrd_output_callback_t cb,
       void *user)
	   In some situations it is necessary to get the output of "rrd_dump"
	   without writing it to a file or the standard output. In such cases
	   an application can ask rrd_dump_cb_r to call an user-defined
	   function each time there is output to be stored somewhere. This can
	   be used, to e.g. directly feed an XML parser with the dumped output
	   or transfer the resulting string in memory.

	   The arguments for rrd_dump_cb_r are the same as for rrd_dump_opt_r
	   except that the output filename parameter is replaced by the user-
	   defined callback function and an additional parameter for the
	   callback function that is passed untouched, i.e. to store
	   information about the callback state needed for the user-defined
	   callback to function properly.

	   Recent versions of rrd_dump_opt_r internally use this callback
	   mechanism to write their output to the file provided by the user.

	       size_t rrd_dump_opt_cb_fileout(
		   const void *data,
		   size_t len,
		   void *user)
	       {
		   return fwrite(data, 1, len, (FILE *)user);
	       }

	   The associated call for rrd_dump_cb_r looks like

	       res = rrd_dump_cb_r(filename, opt_header,
		   rrd_dump_opt_cb_fileout, (void *)out_file);

	   where the last parameter specifies the file handle
	   rrd_dump_opt_cb_fileout should write to. There's no specific
	   condition for the callback to detect when it is called for the
	   first time, nor for the last time. If you require this for
	   initialization and cleanup you should do those tasks before and
	   after calling rrd_dump_cr_r respectively.

       rrd_fetch_cb_register(rrd_fetch_cb_t c)
	   If your data does not reside in rrd files, but you would like to
	   draw charts using the rrd_graph functionality, you can supply your
	   own rrd_fetch function and register it using the
	   rrd_fetch_cb_register function.

	   The argument signature and api must be the same of the callback
	   function must be aequivalent to the on of rrd_fetch_fn in
	   rrd_fetch.c.

	   To activate the callback function you can use the pseudo filename
	   cb//free_form_text.

	   Note that rrdtool graph will not ask the same rrd for data twice.
	   It determines this by building a key out of the values supplied to
	   the fetch function. If the values are the same, the previous answer
	   will be used.

UTILITY FUNCTIONS
       rrd_random()
	   Generates random numbers just like random().	 This further ensures
	   that the random number generator is seeded exactly once per
	   process.

       rrd_strtodbl
	   an rrd aware string to double converter which sets rrd_error in if
	   there is a problem and uses the return code exclusively for
	   conversion status reporting.

       rrd_strtod
	   works like normal strtod, but it is locale independent (and thread
	   safe)

       rrd_snprintf
	   works  like normal snprintf but it is locale independent (and
	   thread safe)

       rrd_add_ptr(void ***dest, size_t *dest_size, void *src)
	   Dynamically resize the array pointed to by "dest".  "dest_size" is
	   a pointer to the current size of "dest".  Upon successful
	   realloc(), the "dest_size" is incremented by 1 and the "src"
	   pointer is stored at the end of the new "dest".  Returns 1 on
	   success, 0 on failure.

	       type **arr = NULL;
	       type *elem = "whatever";
	       size_t arr_size = 0;
	       if (!rrd_add_ptr(&arr, &arr_size, elem))
		   handle_failure();

       rrd_add_ptr_chunk(void ***dest, size_t *dest_size, void *src, size_t
       *alloc, size_t chunk)
	   Like "rrd_add_ptr", except the destination is allocated in chunks
	   of "chunk".	"alloc" points to the number of entries allocated,
	   whereas "dest_size" points to the number of valid pointers.	If
	   more pointers are needed, "chunk" pointers are allocated and
	   "alloc" is increased accordingly.  "alloc" must be >= "dest_size".

	   This method improves performance on hosts with expensive
	   "realloc()".

       rrd_add_strdup(char ***dest, size_t *dest_size, char *src)
	   Like "rrd_add_ptr", except adds a "strdup" of the source string.

	       char **arr = NULL;
	       size_t arr_size = NULL;
	       char *str  = "example text";
	       if (!rrd_add_strdup(&arr, &arr_size, str))
		   handle_failure();

       rrd_add_strdup_chunk(char ***dest, size_t *dest_size, char *src, size_t
       *alloc, size_t chunk)
	   Like "rrd_add_strdup", except the destination is allocated in
	   chunks of "chunk".  "alloc" points to the number of entries
	   allocated, whereas "dest_size" points to the number of valid
	   pointers.  If more pointers are needed, "chunk" pointers are
	   allocated and "alloc" is increased accordingly.  "alloc" must be >=
	   "dest_size".

       rrd_free_ptrs(void ***src, size_t *cnt)
	   Free an array of pointers allocated by "rrd_add_ptr" or
	   "rrd_add_strdup".  Also frees the array pointer itself.  On return,
	   the source pointer will be NULL and the count will be zero.

	       /* created as above */
	       rrd_free_ptrs(&arr, &arr_size);
	       /* here, arr == NULL && arr_size == 0 */

       rrd_mkdir_p(const char *pathname, mode_t mode)
	   Create the directory named "pathname" including all of its parent
	   directories (similar to "mkdir -p" on the command line - see
	   mkdir(1) for more information). The argument "mode" specifies the
	   permissions to use. It is modified by the process's "umask". See
	   mkdir(2) for more details.

	   The function returns 0 on success, a negative value else. In case
	   of an error, "errno" is set accordingly. Aside from the errors
	   documented in mkdir(2), the function may fail with the following
	   errors:

	   EINVAL
	       "pathname" is "NULL" or the empty string.

	   ENOMEM
	       Insufficient memory was available.

	   any error returned by stat(2)

	   In contrast to mkdir(2), the function does not fail if "pathname"
	   already exists and is a directory.

       rrd_scaled_duration (const char * token, unsigned long divisor,
       unsigned long * valuep)
	   Parse a token in a context where it contains a count (of seconds or
	   PDP instances), or a duration that can be converted to a count by
	   representing the duration in seconds and dividing by some scaling
	   factor.  For example, if a user would natively express a 3 day
	   archive of samples collected every 2 minutes, the sample interval
	   can be represented by "2m" instead of 120, and the archive duration
	   by "3d" (to be divided by 120) instead of 2160 (3*24*60*60 / 120).
	   See more examples in "STEP, HEARTBEAT, and Rows As Durations" in
	   rrdcreate.

	   "token" must be a number with an optional single-character suffix
	   encoding the scaling factor:

	   "s" indicates seconds

	   "m" indicates minutes.  The value is multipled by 60.

	   "h" indicates hours.	 The value is multipled by 3600 (or "60m").

	   "d" indicates days.	The value is multipled by 86400 (or "24h").

	   "w" indicates weeks.	 The value is multipled by 604800 (or "7d").

	   "M" indicates months.  The value is multipled by 2678400 (or
	       "31d").	(Note this factor accommodates the maximum number of
	       days in a month.)

	   "y" indicates years.	 The value is multipled by 31622400 (or
	       "366d").	 (Note this factor accommodates leap years.)

	   "divisor" is a positive value representing the duration in seconds
	   of an interval that the desired result counts.

	   "valuep" is a pointer to where the decoded value will be stored if
	   the conversion is successful.

	   The initial characters of "token" must be the base-10
	   representation of a positive integer, or the conversion fails.

	   If the remainder "token" is empty (no suffix), it is a count and no
	   scaling is performed.

	   If "token" has one of the suffixes above, the count is multipled to
	   convert it to a duration in seconds.	 The resulting number of
	   seconds is divided by "divisor" to produce a count of intervals
	   each of duration "divisor" seconds.	If division would produce a
	   remainder (e.g., "5m" (300 seconds) divided by "90s"), the
	   conversion is invalid.

	   If "token" has unrecognized trailing characters the conversion
	   fails.

	   The function returns a null pointer if the conversion was
	   successful and "valuep" has been updated to the scaled value.  On
	   failure, it returns a text diagnostic suitable for use in user
	   error messages.

AUTHOR
       RRD Contributors <rrd-developers@lists.oetiker.ch>

1.5.5				  2015-11-10			     librrd(3)
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