NAME | C SYNOPSIS | DESCRIPTION | SEE ALSO | DIAGNOSTICS | ENVIRONMENT | COLOPHON

PMFETCH(3)                Library Functions Manual                PMFETCH(3)

NAME         top

       pmFetch - get performance metric values

C SYNOPSIS         top

       #include <pcp/pmapi.h>
       int pmFetch(int numpmid, pmID *pmidlist, pmResult **result);
       cc ... -lpcp

DESCRIPTION         top

       Given a list of Performance Metric Identifiers (PMID)s, e.g. as
       constructed by pmLookupName(3), via pmidlist and numpmid, fetch the
       values for these performance metrics.
       The call to pmFetch is executed in the context of a source of
       metrics, instance profile and collection time, previously established
       by calls to the appropriate context and profile functions, namely
       some of pmNewContext(3), pmDupContext(3), pmUseContext(3),
       pmAddProfile(3), pmDelProfile(3) and pmSetMode(3).
       The principal result from pmFetch is returned in the argument result
       as a tree, using the following component data structures;
            typedef struct {
                  unsigned int vtype : 8;        /* value type (same as pmDesc.type) */
                  unsigned int vlen : 24;        /* bytes for vtype/vlen + vbuf */
                  char         vbuf[1];          /* one or more values */
            } pmValueBlock;
            typedef struct {
                  int      inst;                 /* instance identifier */
                  union {
                        pmValueBlock *pval;      /* pointer to value-block */
                        int          lval;       /* integer value insitu */
                  } value;
            } pmValue;
            typedef struct {
                  pmID      pmid;                /* metric identifier */
                  int       numval;              /* number of values or error code */
                  int       valfmt;              /* value style, insitu or ptr */
                  pmValue   vlist[1];            /* set of instances/values */
            } pmValueSet;
            /* Result returned by pmFetch() */
            typedef struct {
                  struct timeval timestamp;      /* time stamped by collector */
                  int            numpmid;        /* number of PMIDs */
                  pmValueSet     *vset[1];       /* set of value sets */
            } pmResult;
       To accommodate metrics with multiple value instances, the numval
       field indicates how many values are returned for each requested PMID.
       The field valfmt in the pmValueSet structure indicates if the values
       for this metric are stored insitu in the lval field, i.e. a 32-bit
       integer quantity (either int, unsigned int, long or unsigned long) or
       if the values are held in associated pmValueBlock structures.  The
       pmValueBlock structure is always used for floating point values
       (float or double) and also accommodates arbitrary sized binary data
       such as `string-valued' metrics and metrics with aggregated or
       complex data types.  The maximum length of a pmValueBlock buffer is
       PM_VAL_VLEN_MAX bytes.  If the pmValueBlock format is used, the vtype
       field indicates the data type of the value.  This field has the same
       interpretation as the type field in the pmDesc structure, see
       pmLookupDesc(3).
       Note that the insitu value may be a signed or unsigned 32 bit
       integer, signed or unsigned 32 bit long value (on 32 bit platforms),
       In the special cases described below, it may also be a 32 bit
       floating point value.  If the application needs to know the type of
       an insitu value, which is almost always the case, it is necessary to
       fetch the descriptor for the metric and interpret the type field, as
       described in detail in pmLookupDesc(3).  When the pmResult is
       received from a PCP1.x pmcd, insitu values may also be 32 bit
       floating point values (of type PM_TYPE_FLOAT).  In all cases, it is
       good practice to use pmLookupDesc(3) to fetch the descriptor for the
       metric and interpret the type field therein.  Note also that the
       PMAPI(3) will automatically translate from the PCP2.0 format to the
       PCP1.x format when a PCP1.x client requests 32 bit floating point
       values from a PCP2.0 pmcd, but the reverse translation does not occur
       (because the PCP2.0 pmcd cannot automatically distinguish between
       arbitrary 32 bit floating point values and 32 bit integers).
       If one value (i.e. associated with a particular instance) for a
       requested metric is `unavailable' (at the requested time), then there
       is no associated pmValue structure in the result.  If there are no
       available values for a metric, then numval will be zero and the
       associated pmValue[] instance will be empty (valfmt is undefined in
       these circumstances, however pmid will be correctly set to the PMID
       of the metric with no values).
       As an extension of this protocol, if the Performance Metrics
       Collection System (PMCS) is able to provide a reason why no values
       are available for a particular metric, this is encoded as a standard
       error code in the corresponding numval.  Since the error codes are
       all negative, values for a requested metric are `unavailable' if
       numval is less than, or equal to, zero.  A performance metric's value
       may be `unavailable' for a number of reasons; the following list is
       illustrative but not exhaustive: of the software for the associated
       Performance Metric Domain
       +      Collection is not currently activated in the software for the
              associated Performance Metric Domain
       +      The associated PMID is not known
       +      The current system configuration does not include the
              associated hardware component and/or the associated software
              module, e.g. a disk is not installed, or off-line, or Oracle
              is not installed
       +      The metric is one for which an instance profile is required,
              and none was provided (there are a small number of metrics in
              this category, typically ones with very large, and/or very
              dynamic instance domains, and/or expensive metric
              instantiation methods).
       +      If the current context involves fetching metrics from an
              archive log, values may be unavailable in the region around a
              <mark> record (see pmlogextract(1)) that indicate a temporal
              discontinuity in the time-series of metric values.
       In general, we may not be able to differentiate between the various
       cases, and if differentiation is not possible, numval will simply be
       zero.
       The argument definition and the result specifications have been
       constructed to ensure that for each PMID in the requested pmidlist
       there is exactly one pmValueSet in the result, and further the PMIDs
       appear in exactly the same sequence in both pmidlist and result.
       This makes the number and order of entries in result completely
       deterministic, and greatly simplifies the application programming
       logic after the call to pmFetch.
       The result structure returned by pmFetch is dynamically allocated
       using a combination of malloc(3) calls and specialized allocation
       strategies, and should be released when no longer required by calling
       pmFreeResult(3) - under no circumstances should free(3) be called
       directly to release this space.
       As common error conditions are encoded in the result data structure,
       we'd expect only cataclysmic events to cause an error value to be
       returned.  One example would be if the metrics source context was a
       remote host, and that host or the PMCS on that host became
       unreachable.  Otherwise the value returned by the pmFetch function
       will be non-negative.
       If the current context involves fetching metrics from a Performance
       Metrics Collector Daemon (PMCD), then the return value may be used to
       encode out-of-band changes in the state of the PMCD and the
       associated Performance Metrics Daemon Agents (PMDAs), as a bit-wise
       ``or'' of the following values:
       PMCD_RESTART_AGENT  An attempt has been made to restart at least one
                           failed PMDA.
       PMCD_ADD_AGENT      At least one PMDA has been started.
       PMCD_DROP_AGENT     PMCD has noticed the termination of at least one
                           PMDA.
       The default is to return zero to indicate no change in state, however
       the pmResult returned by pmFetch has the same interpretation
       independent of the return value being zero or greater than zero.

SEE ALSO         top

       pmcd(1), pmAddProfile(3), PMAPI(3), pmDelProfile(3), pmDupContext(3),
       pmExtractValue(3), pmFetchArchive(3), pmFreeResult(3), pmGetInDom(3),
       pmLookupDesc(3), pmLookupName(3), pmNewContext(3), pmSetMode(3),
       pmUseContext(3) and pmWhichContext(3).
       Note that pmFetch is the most primitive method of fetching metric
       values from the PMCS.  See the pmFetchGroup(3) API for a higher level
       method that insulates the user from the intricacies of looking up
       metric names and metadata, setting up instance profiles, pmResult
       traversal, conversions, and scaling.

DIAGNOSTICS         top

       As mentioned above, pmFetch returns error codes insitu in the
       argument result.  If no result is returned, e.g. due to IPC failure
       using the current PMAPI context, or end of file on an archive log,
       then pmFetch will return a negative error code which may be examined
       using pmErrStr(3).
       PM_ERR_EOL
              When fetching records from an archive log, pmFetch returns
              this error code to indicate the end of the log has been passed
              (or the start of the log has been passed, if the direction of
              traversal is backwards in time).  If the ``mode'' for the
              current PMAPI context (see pmSetMode(3)) is PM_MODE_INTERP
              then the time origin is advanced, even when this error code is
              returned.  In this way applications that position the time
              outside the range defined by the records in the archive, and
              then commence to pmFetch will eventually see valid results
              once the time origin moves inside the temporal span of the
              archive.

ENVIRONMENT         top

       Many of the performance metrics exported from PCP agents have the
       semantics of counter meaning they are expected to be monotonically
       increasing.  Under some circumstances, one value of these metrics may
       be smaller than the previously fetched value.  This can happen when a
       counter of finite precision overflows, or when the PCP agent has been
       reset or restarted, or when the PCP agent is exporting values from
       some underlying instrumentation that is subject to some asynchronous
       discontinuity.
       The environment variable PCP_COUNTER_WRAP may be set to indicate that
       all such cases of a decreasing ``counter'' should be treated as a
       counter overflow, and hence the values are assumed to have wrapped
       once in the interval between consecutive samples.  This ``wrapping''
       behavior was the default in earlier PCP versions, but by default has
       been disabled in PCP version 1.3 and later.

COLOPHON         top

       This page is part of the PCP (Performance Co-Pilot) project.
       Information about the project can be found at ⟨http://www.pcp.io/⟩.
       If you have a bug report for this manual page, send it to
       pcp@oss.sgi.com.  This page was obtained from the project's upstream
       Git repository ⟨git://git.pcp.io/pcp⟩ on 2017-07-05.  If you discover
       any rendering problems in this HTML version of the page, or you
       believe there is a better or more up-to-date source for the page, or
       you have corrections or improvements to the information in this
       COLOPHON (which is not part of the original manual page), send a mail
       to man-pages@man7.org
Performance Co-Pilot                 PCP                          PMFETCH(3)

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