pmieconf man page on Fedora

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PMIECONF(1)							   PMIECONF(1)

PMIECONF(1)							   PMIECONF(1)

NAME
       pmieconf - display and set configurable pmie rule variables

SYNOPSIS
       pmieconf [-Fv] [-f file] [-r rulepath] [command [args...]]

DESCRIPTION
       pmieconf is a utility for viewing and configuring variables from gener‐
       alized pmie(1) rules.  The set of generalized rules  is	read  in  from
       rulepath,  and  the  output  file produced by pmieconf is a valid input
       file for pmie.

       A brief description of the pmieconf command line options follows:

       -f file Any rule modifications resulting from pmieconf manipulation  of
	       variable	 values will be written to file.  The default value of
	       file is dependent on the user ID - for the root user, the  file
	       $PCP_VAR_DIR/config/pmieconf/config.pmie	 is  used,  for	 other
	       users the default is $HOME/.pcp/pmie/config.pmie.

       -F      Forces the pmieconf output file to  be  created	(or  updated),
	       after which pmieconf immediately exits.

       -r rulepath
	       Allows  the  source  of	generalized pmie rules to be changed -
	       rulepath is a colon-delimited list of  pmieconf(4)  rule	 files
	       and/or  subdirectories.	 The  default  value  for  rulepath is
	       $PCP_VAR_DIR/config/pmieconf.  Use of this option overrides the
	       PMIECONF_PATH  environment  variable  which has a similar func‐
	       tion.

       -v      Verbose mode.  Additional information associated with each rule
	       and  its	 associated  variables will be displayed.  This is the
	       complete list of variables which affects	 any  given  rule  (by
	       default, global variables are not displayed with the rule).

       The  pmieconf  commands	allow information related to the various rules
       and configurable variables to be displayed or modified.	If no pmieconf
       commands	 are  presented on the command line, pmieconf prompts for com‐
       mands interactively.

       The pmieconf command language is described here:

       help  [ { . | all | global | <rule> | <group> } [<variable>] ]
	       Without arguments, the help command displays the syntax for all
	       of  the	available  pmieconf  commands.	 With  one argument, a
	       description of one or more of the  generalized  rules  is  dis‐
	       played.	 With two arguments, a description of a specific vari‐
	       able relating to one or more of the generalized rules  is  dis‐
	       played.

       rules  [ enabled | disabled ]
	       Display	the  name and short summary for all of the generalized
	       rules found on rulepath.	 Each of the rule names can be used in
	       place of the keyword <rule> in this command syntax description.
	       The enabled and disabled options can be used to filter the  set
	       of  rules displayed to just those which are enabled or disabled
	       respectfully.

       groups  Display the name of all of the rule groups that were  found  on
	       rulepath.   Each of the group names can be used in place of the
	       keyword <group>	in  this  command  syntax  description,	 which
	       applies the command to all rules within the rule group.

       status  Display	status	information  relating  to the current pmieconf
	       session, including a list of running pmie processes  which  are
	       currently using file.

       enable  { . | all | <rule> | <group> }
	       Enables	the specified rule or group of rules.  An enabled rule
	       is one which will be included in the  pmie  configuration  file
	       generated  by pmieconf.	Any enabled "actions" will be appended
	       to the rule's "predicate", in a manner conforming to  the  pmie
	       syntax  ("actions" can be viewed using the list global command,
	       described below).

       disable	{ . | all | <rule> | <group> }
	       Disables the specified rule or group of rules.  If the rule was
	       previously enabled, it will be removed from the pmie configura‐
	       tion file generated by pmieconf, and hence no longer  evaluated
	       when  pmie  is  restarted  (using  pmieconf does not affect any
	       existing pmie processes using file).

       list  { . | all | global | <rule> | <group> } [<variable>]
	       Display the values for a specific rule  variable;  or  for  all
	       variables  of  a	 rule,	a rule group, all rules, or the global
	       variables.

       modify  { . | all | global | <rule> | <group> } <variable> <value>
	       Enable, disable, or otherwise change the value for one or  more
	       rule variables.	This value must be consistent with the type of
	       the variable, which can be inferred  from  the  format  of  the
	       printed value - e.g. strings will be enclosed in double-quotes,
	       percentages have the ``%'' symbol  appended,  etc.   Note  that
	       certain	rule  variables	 cannot be modified through pmieconf -
	       "predicate" and "help", for example.

       undo  { . | all | global | <rule> | <group> } [<variable>]
	       Applicable only to a variable whose value has been  modified  -
	       this  command simply reverts to the default value for the given
	       variable.

       quit    Save any changes made to file and then exit pmieconf.

       abort   Exit pmieconf immediately without saving any changes to file.

       Each of the commands above can be shortened by simply using  the	 first
       character of the command name, and also ``?'' for help.

       Use  of	the all keyword causes the command to be applied to all of the
       rules.  The global keyword refers to those variables which are  applied
       to  every  rule.	  Such	variables  can	be  changed either globally or
       locally, for example:

	 pmieconf> modify global delta "5 minutes"
	 pmieconf> modify memory delta "1 minute"

       causes all rules to now be evaluated once every	five  minutes,	except
       for  rules  in  the  "memory"  group which are to be evaluated once per
       minute.

       The ``.'' character is special to pmieconf - it refers to the last suc‐
       cessfully used value of all, global, <rule> or <group>.

EXAMPLES
       Specify	that  all  of the rules in the "memory" group should be evalu‐
       ated:

	 pmieconf> modify memory enabled yes

       Change your mind, and revert to using only  the	"memory"  rules	 which
       were enabled by default:

	 pmieconf> undo memory enabled

       Specify	that  notification  of	rules which evaluate to true should be
       sent to syslogd(1):

	 pmieconf> modify global syslog_action yes

       Specify that rules in the "per_cpu" group should use a different	 hold‐
       off value to other rules:

	 pmieconf> help global holdoff
	   rule: global	 [generic parameters applied to all rules]
	    var: holdoff
	   help: Once the predicate is true and the action is executed,
	      this variable allows suppression of further action
	      execution until the specified interval has elapsed.
	      A value of zero enables execution of the action if
	      the rule predicate is true at the next sample. Default
	      units are seconds and common units are "second", "sec",
	      "minute", "min" and "hour".

	 pmieconf> modify per_cpu holdoff "1 hour"

       Lower  the threshold associated with a particular variable for a speci‐
       fied rule:

	 pmieconf> l cpu.syscall predicate
	   rule: cpu.syscall  [High aggregate system call rate]
	     predicate =
		  some_host (
		   ( kernel.all.syscall $hosts$ )
		     > $threshold$ count/sec * hinv.ncpu $hosts$
		  )

	 pmieconf> m . threshold 7000

	 pmieconf> l . threshold
	   rule: cpu.syscall  [High aggregate system call rate]
		threshold = 7000

ENVIRONMENT
       The environment variable PMIECONF_PATH has a similar function to the -r
       option  described  above, and if set will be used provided no -r option
       is presented.

FILES
       $PCP_VAR_DIR/config/pmieconf/*/*
		 generalized system resource monitoring rules
       $PCP_VAR_DIR/config/pmieconf/config.pmie
		 default super-user settings for  system  resource  monitoring
		 rules
       $HOME/.pcp/pmie/config.pmie
		 default user settings for system resource monitoring rules

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(4).

SEE ALSO
       PCPIntro(1), pmie(1), pmie_check(1) and pmieconf(4).

Performance Co-Pilot		      SGI			   PMIECONF(1)
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