collectd-perl - Documentation of collectd's "perl plugin"
LoadPlugin perl
# ...
<Plugin perl>
IncludeDir "/path/to/perl/plugins"
BaseName "Collectd::Plugins"
EnableDebugger ""
LoadPlugin "FooBar"
<Plugin FooBar>
Foo "Bar"
</Plugin>
</Plugin>
The "perl plugin" embeds a Perl-interpreter into collectd and provides
an interface to collectd's plugin system. This makes it possible to write
plugins for collectd in Perl. This is a lot more efficient than executing a
Perl-script every time you want to read a value with the "exec
plugin" (see
collectd-exec(5)) and provides a lot more
functionality, too.
-
LoadPlugin Plugin
- Loads the Perl plugin Plugin. This does basically
the same as use would do in a Perl program. As a side effect, the
first occurrence of this option causes the Perl-interpreter to be
initialized.
-
BaseName Name
- Prepends Name:: to all plugin names loaded
after this option. This is provided for convenience to keep plugin names
short. All Perl-based plugins provided with the collectd
distributions reside in the "Collectd::Plugins" namespace.
- <Plugin Name> block
- This block may be used to pass on configuration settings to
a Perl plugin. The configuration is converted into a config-item data type
which is passed to the registered configuration callback. See below for
details about the config-item data type and how to register callbacks.
The name identifies the callback. It is used literally and
independent of the BaseName setting.
-
EnableDebugger
Package[=option,...]
- Run collectd under the control of the Perl source debugger.
If Package is not the empty string, control is passed to the
debugging, profiling, or tracing module installed as Devel::
Package. A comma-separated list of options may be specified after
the "=" character. Please note that you may not leave out the
Package option even if you specify "". This is the
same as using the -d:Package command line option.
See perldebug for detailed documentation about debugging Perl.
This option does not prevent collectd from daemonizing, so you should start
collectd with the -f command line option. Else you will not be able
to use the command line driven interface of the debugger.
-
IncludeDir Dir
- Adds Dir to the @INC array.
This is the same as using the -IDir command line option or use
lib Dir in the source code. Please note that it only has effect on
plugins loaded after this option.
-
RegisterLegacyFlush true|false
- The "Perl plugin" used to register one flush
callback (called "perl") and call all Perl-based flush
handlers when this callback was called. Newer versions of the plugin wrap
the Perl flush handlers and register them directly with the daemon in
addition to the legacy "perl" callback. This allows
to call specific Perl flush handlers, but has the downside that flushing
all plugins now calls the Perl flush handlers twice (once directly
and once via the legacy callback). Unfortunately, removing the
"perl" callback would break backwards compatibility.
This option allows you to disable the legacy "perl" flush
callback if you care about the double call and don't call the
"perl" callback in your setup.
Writing your own plugins is quite simple. collectd manages plugins by means of
dispatch functions which call the appropriate
callback functions
registered by the plugins. Any plugin basically consists of the implementation
of these callback functions and initializing code which registers the
functions with collectd. See the section "EXAMPLES" below for a
really basic example. The following types of
callback functions are
known to collectd (all of them are optional):
- configuration functions
- This type of functions is called during configuration if an
appropriate Plugin block has been encountered. It is called once
for each Plugin block which matches the name of the callback as
provided with the plugin_register method - see below.
- init functions
- This type of functions is called once after loading the
module and before any calls to the read and write functions. It should be
used to initialize the internal state of the plugin (e. g. open
sockets, ...). If the return value evaluates to false, the plugin
will be disabled.
- read functions
- This type of function is used to collect the actual data.
It is called once per interval (see the Interval configuration
option of collectd). Usually it will call plugin_dispatch_values to
dispatch the values to collectd which will pass them on to all registered
write functions. If the return value evaluates to false the
plugin will be skipped for an increasing amount of time until it returns
true again.
- write functions
- This type of function is used to write the dispatched
values. It is called once for each call to
plugin_dispatch_values.
- flush functions
- This type of function is used to flush internal caches of
plugins. It is usually triggered by the user only. Any plugin which caches
data before writing it to disk should provide this kind of callback
function.
- log functions
- This type of function is used to pass messages of plugins
or the daemon itself to the user.
- notification function
- This type of function is used to act upon notifications. In
general, a notification is a status message that may be associated with a
data instance. Usually, a notification is generated by the daemon if a
configured threshold has been exceeded (see the section "THRESHOLD
CONFIGURATION" in collectd.conf(5) for more details), but any
plugin may dispatch notifications as well.
- shutdown functions
- This type of function is called once before the daemon
shuts down. It should be used to clean up the plugin (e.g. close sockets,
...).
Any function (except log functions) may set the
$@ variable to describe
errors in more detail. The message will be passed on to the user using
collectd's logging mechanism.
See the documentation of the
plugin_register method in the section
"METHODS" below for the number and types of arguments passed to each
callback function. This section also explains how to register
callback functions with collectd.
To enable a plugin, copy it to a place where Perl can find it (i. e. a
directory listed in the
@INC array) just as any other
Perl plugin and add an appropriate
LoadPlugin option to the
configuration file. After restarting collectd you're done.
The following complex types are used to pass values between the Perl plugin and
collectd:
- Config-Item
- A config-item is one structure which keeps the information
provided in the configuration file. The array of children keeps one entry
for each configuration option. Each such entry is another config-item
structure, which may nest further if nested blocks are used.
{
key => key,
values => [ val1, val2, ... ],
children => [ { ... }, { ... }, ... ]
}
- Data-Set
- A data-set is a list of one or more data-sources. Each
data-source defines a name, type, min- and max-value and the data-set
wraps them up into one structure. The general layout looks like this:
[{
name => 'data_source_name',
type => DS_TYPE_COUNTER || DS_TYPE_GAUGE || DS_TYPE_DERIVE || DS_TYPE_ABSOLUTE,
min => value || undef,
max => value || undef
}, ...]
- Value-List
- A value-list is one structure which features an array of
values and fields to identify the values, i. e. time and host,
plugin name and plugin-instance as well as a type and type-instance. Since
the "type" is not included in the value-list but is passed as an
extra argument, the general layout looks like this:
{
values => [123, 0.5],
time => time (),
interval => plugin_get_interval (),
host => $hostname_g,
plugin => 'myplugin',
type => 'myplugin',
plugin_instance => '',
type_instance => ''
}
- Notification
- A notification is one structure defining the severity, time
and message of the status message as well as an identification of a data
instance. Also, it includes an optional list of user-defined meta
information represented as (name, value) pairs:
{
severity => NOTIF_FAILURE || NOTIF_WARNING || NOTIF_OKAY,
time => time (),
message => 'status message',
host => $hostname_g,
plugin => 'myplugin',
type => 'mytype',
plugin_instance => '',
type_instance => '',
meta => [ { name => <name>, value => <value> }, ... ]
}
- Match-Proc
- A match-proc is one structure storing the callbacks of a
"match" of the filter chain infrastructure. The general layout
looks like this:
{
create => 'my_create',
destroy => 'my_destroy',
match => 'my_match'
}
- Target-Proc
- A target-proc is one structure storing the callbacks of a
"target" of the filter chain infrastructure. The general layout
looks like this:
{
create => 'my_create',
destroy => 'my_destroy',
invoke => 'my_invoke'
}
The following functions provide the C-interface to Perl-modules. They are
exported by the ":plugin" export tag (see the section
"EXPORTS" below).
-
plugin_register (type, name,
data)
- Registers a callback-function or data-set.
type can be one of:
- TYPE_CONFIG
- TYPE_INIT
- TYPE_READ
- TYPE_WRITE
- TYPE_FLUSH
- TYPE_LOG
- TYPE_NOTIF
- TYPE_SHUTDOWN
- TYPE_DATASET
name is the name of the callback-function or the type of the data-set,
depending on the value of
type. (Please note that the type of the
data-set is the value passed as
name here and has nothing to do with
the
type argument which simply tells
plugin_register what is
being registered.)
The last argument,
data, is either a function name or an array-reference.
If
type is
TYPE_DATASET, then the
data argument must be
an array-reference which points to an array of hashes. Each hash describes one
data-set. For the exact layout see
Data-Set above. Please note that
there is a large number of predefined data-sets available in the
types.db file which are automatically registered with collectd - see
types.db(5) for a description of the format of this file.
Note: Using
plugin_register to register a data-set is deprecated.
Add the new type to a custom
types.db(5) file instead. This
functionality might be removed in a future version of collectd.
If the
type argument is any of the other types (
TYPE_INIT,
TYPE_READ, ...) then
data is expected to be a function name. If
the name is not prefixed with the plugin's package name collectd will add it
automatically. The interface slightly differs from the C interface (which
expects a function pointer instead) because Perl does not support to share
references to subroutines between threads.
These functions are called in the various stages of the daemon (see the section
"WRITING YOUR OWN PLUGINS" above) and are passed the following
arguments:
- TYPE_CONFIG
- The only argument passed is config-item. See above
for the layout of this data type.
- TYPE_INIT
- TYPE_READ
- TYPE_SHUTDOWN
- No arguments are passed.
- TYPE_WRITE
- The arguments passed are type, data-set, and
value-list. type is a string. For the layout of
data-set and value-list see above.
- TYPE_FLUSH
- The arguments passed are timeout and
identifier. timeout indicates that only data older than
timeout seconds is to be flushed. identifier specifies which
values are to be flushed.
- TYPE_LOG
- The arguments are log-level and message. The
log level is small for important messages and high for less important
messages. The least important level is LOG_DEBUG, the most
important level is LOG_ERR. In between there are (from least to
most important): LOG_INFO, LOG_NOTICE, and
LOG_WARNING. message is simply a string without a
newline at the end.
- TYPE_NOTIF
- The only argument passed is notification. See above
for the layout of this data type.
-
plugin_unregister (type, plugin)
- Removes a callback or data-set from collectd's internal
list of functions / datasets.
-
plugin_dispatch_values (value-list)
- Submits a value-list to the daemon. If the data-set
identified by value-list->{type} is found (and the number
of values matches the number of data-sources) then the type, data-set and
value-list is passed to all write-callbacks that are registered with the
daemon.
-
plugin_write ([plugins => ...][,
datasets => ...], valuelists => ...)
- Calls the write function of the given plugins with
the provided data sets and value lists. In contrast
to plugin_dispatch_values, it does not update collectd's internal
cache and bypasses the filter mechanism (see collectd.conf(5) for
details). If the plugins argument has been omitted, the values will
be dispatched to all registered write plugins. If the datasets
argument has been omitted, the required data sets are looked up according
to the "type" member in the appropriate value list. The value of
all three arguments may either be a single scalar or a reference to an
array. If the datasets argument has been specified, the number of
data sets has to equal the number of specified value lists.
-
plugin_flush ([timeout =>
timeout][, plugins => ...][, identifiers
=> ...])
- Flush one or more plugins. timeout and the specified
identifiers are passed on to the registered flush-callbacks. If
omitted, the timeout defaults to "-1". The identifier defaults
to the undefined value. If the plugins argument has been specified,
only named plugins will be flushed. The value of the plugins and
identifiers arguments may either be a string or a reference to an
array of strings.
-
plugin_dispatch_notification
(notification)
- Submits a notification to the daemon which will then
pass it to all notification-callbacks that are registered.
-
plugin_log (log-level, message)
- Submits a message of level log-level to
collectd's logging mechanism. The message is passed to all log-callbacks
that are registered with collectd.
-
ERROR, WARNING, NOTICE, INFO,
DEBUG (message)
- Wrappers around plugin_log, using LOG_ERR,
LOG_WARNING, LOG_NOTICE, LOG_INFO and
LOG_DEBUG respectively as log-level.
-
plugin_get_interval ()
- Returns the interval of the current plugin as a floating
point number in seconds. This value depends on the interval configured
within the "LoadPlugin perl" block or the global interval (see
collectd.conf(5) for details).
The following function provides the filter chain C-interface to Perl-modules. It
is exported by the ":filter_chain" export tag (see the section
"EXPORTS" below).
-
fc_register (type, name,
proc)
- Registers filter chain callbacks with collectd.
type may be any of:
name is the name of the match or target. By this name, the callbacks are
identified in the configuration file when specifying a
Match or
Target block (see
collectd.conf(5) for details).
proc is a hash reference. The hash includes up to three callbacks: an
optional constructor (
create) and destructor (
destroy) and a
mandatory
match or
invoke callback.
match is called
whenever processing an appropriate match, while
invoke is called
whenever processing an appropriate target (see the section "FILTER
CONFIGURATION" in
collectd.conf(5) for details). Just like any
other callbacks, filter chain callbacks are identified by the function name
rather than a function pointer because Perl does not support to share
references to subroutines between threads. The following arguments are passed
to the callbacks:
- create
- The arguments passed are config-item and
user-data. See above for the layout of the config-item data-type.
user-data is a reference to a scalar value that may be used to
store any information specific to this particular instance. The daemon
does not care about this information at all. It's for the plugin's use
only.
- destroy
- The only argument passed is user-data which is a
reference to the user data initialized in the create callback. This
callback may be used to cleanup instance-specific information and
settings.
- match, invoke
- The arguments passed are data-set,
value-list, meta and user-data. See above for the
layout of the data-set and value-list data-types. meta is a pointer
to an array of meta information, just like the meta member of the
notification data-type (see above). user-data is a reference to the
user data initialized in the create callback.
-
$hostname_g
- As the name suggests this variable keeps the hostname of
the system collectd is running on. The value might be influenced by the
Hostname or FQDNLookup configuration options (see
collectd.conf(5) for details).
-
$interval_g
- This variable keeps the interval in seconds in which the
read functions are queried (see the Interval configuration option).
Note: This variable should no longer be used in favor of
"plugin_get_interval()" (see above). This function takes any
plugin-specific interval settings into account (see the
"Interval" option of "LoadPlugin" in
collectd.conf(5) for details).
Any changes to these variables will be globally visible in collectd.
By default no symbols are exported. However, the following export tags are
available (
:all will export all of them):
- :plugin
-
plugin_register ()
-
plugin_unregister ()
-
plugin_dispatch_values ()
-
plugin_flush ()
-
plugin_flush_one ()
-
plugin_flush_all ()
-
plugin_dispatch_notification ()
-
plugin_log ()
- :types
- TYPE_CONFIG
- TYPE_INIT
- TYPE_READ
- TYPE_WRITE
- TYPE_FLUSH
- TYPE_SHUTDOWN
- TYPE_LOG
- TYPE_DATASET
- :ds_types
- DS_TYPE_COUNTER
- DS_TYPE_GAUGE
- DS_TYPE_DERIVE
- DS_TYPE_ABSOLUTE
- :log
-
ERROR ()
-
WARNING ()
-
NOTICE ()
-
INFO ()
-
DEBUG ()
- LOG_ERR
- LOG_WARNING
- LOG_NOTICE
- LOG_INFO
- LOG_DEBUG
- :filter_chain
- fc_register
- FC_MATCH_NO_MATCH
- FC_MATCH_MATCHES
- FC_TARGET_CONTINUE
- FC_TARGET_STOP
- FC_TARGET_RETURN
- :fc_types
- :notif
- NOTIF_FAILURE
- NOTIF_WARNING
- NOTIF_OKAY
- :globals
Any Perl plugin will start similar to:
package Collectd::Plugins::FooBar;
use strict;
use warnings;
use Collectd qw( :all );
A very simple read function might look like:
sub foobar_read
{
my $vl = { plugin => 'foobar', type => 'gauge' };
$vl->{'values'} = [ rand(42) ];
plugin_dispatch_values ($vl);
return 1;
}
A very simple write function might look like:
sub foobar_write
{
my ($type, $ds, $vl) = @_;
for (my $i = 0; $i < scalar (@$ds); ++$i) {
print "$vl->{'plugin'} ($vl->{'type'}): $vl->{'values'}->[$i]\n";
}
return 1;
}
A very simple match callback might look like:
sub foobar_match
{
my ($ds, $vl, $meta, $user_data) = @_;
if (matches($ds, $vl)) {
return FC_MATCH_MATCHES;
} else {
return FC_MATCH_NO_MATCH;
}
}
To register those functions with collectd:
plugin_register (TYPE_READ, "foobar", "foobar_read");
plugin_register (TYPE_WRITE, "foobar", "foobar_write");
fc_register (FC_MATCH, "foobar", "foobar_match");
See the section "DATA TYPES" above for a complete documentation of the
data types used by the read, write and match functions.
- •
- Please feel free to send in new plugins to collectd's
mailing list at <collectd at collectd.org> for review
and, possibly, inclusion in the main distribution. In the latter case, we
will take care of keeping the plugin up to date and adapting it to new
versions of collectd.
Before submitting your plugin, please take a look at
<http://collectd.org/dev-info.shtml>.
- •
- collectd is heavily multi-threaded. Each collectd thread
accessing the perl plugin will be mapped to a Perl interpreter thread (see
threads(3perl)). Any such thread will be created and destroyed
transparently and on-the-fly.
Hence, any plugin has to be thread-safe if it provides several entry points
from collectd (i. e. if it registers more than one callback or if a
registered callback may be called more than once in parallel). Please note
that no data is shared between threads by default. You have to use the
threads::shared module to do so.
- •
- Each function name registered with collectd has to be
available before the first thread has been created (i. e. basically
at compile time). This basically means that hacks (yes, I really consider
this to be a hack) like "*foo = \&bar; plugin_register
(TYPE_READ, "plugin", "foo");" most likely will
not work. This is due to the fact that the symbol table is not shared
across different threads.
- •
- Each plugin is usually only loaded once and kept in memory
for performance reasons. Therefore, END blocks are only executed once when
collectd shuts down. You should not rely on END blocks anyway - use
shutdown functions instead.
- •
- The perl plugin exports the internal API of collectd which
is considered unstable and subject to change at any time. We try hard to
not break backwards compatibility in the Perl API during the life cycle of
one major release. However, this cannot be guaranteed at all times. Watch
out for warnings dispatched by the perl plugin after upgrades.
collectd(1),
collectd.conf(5),
collectd-exec(5),
types.db(5),
perl(1),
threads(3perl),
threads::shared(3perl),
perldebug(1)
The "perl plugin" has been written by Sebastian Harl
<sh at tokkee.org>.
This manpage has been written by Florian Forster
<octo at collectd.org> and Sebastian Harl
<sh at tokkee.org>.