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Manpage of RRDs

RRDs

Section: User Contributed Perl Documentation (3)
Updated: 2002-03-20
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NAME

RRDs - Access rrdtool as a shared module  

SYNOPSIS

  use RRDs;
  RRDs::error
  RRDs::last ...
  RRDs::info ...
  RRDs::create ...
  RRDs::update ...
  RRDs::graph ...
  RRDs::fetch ...
  RRDs::tune ...


 

DESCRIPTION

 

Calling Sequence

This module accesses rrdtool functionality directly from within perl. The arguments to the functions listed in the SYNOPSIS are explained in the regular rrdtool documentation. The commandline call

 rrdtool update mydemo.rrd --template in:out N:12:13


gets turned into

 RRDs::update ("mydemo.rrd", "--template", "in:out", "N:12:13");


Note that

 --template=in:out


is also valid.  

Error Handling

The RRD functions will not abort your program even when they can not make sense out of the arguments you fed them.

The function RRDs::error should be called to get the error status after each function call. If RRDs::error does not return anything then the previous function has completed its task successfully.

 use RRDs;
 RRDs::update ("mydemo.rrd","N:12:13");
 my $ERR=RRDs::error;
 die "ERROR while updating mydemo.rrd: $ERR\n" if $ERR;


 

Return Values

The functions RRDs::last, RRDs::graph, RRDs::info and RRDs::fetch return their findings.

RRDs::last returns a single INTEGER representing the last update time.

 $lastupdate = RRDs::last ...


RRDs::graph returns an pointer to an ARRAY containing the x-size and y-size of the created gif and results of the PRINT arguments.

 ($averages,$xsize,$ysize) = RRDs::graph ...
 print "Gifsize: ${xsize}x${ysize}\n";
 print "Averages: ", (join ", ", @$averages);


RRDs::info returns a pointer to a hash. The keys of the hash represent the property names of the rrd and the values of the hash are the values of the properties.

 $hash = RRDs::info "example.rrd";
 foreach my $key (keys %$hash){
   print "$key = $$hash{$key}\n";
 }


RRDs::fetch is the most complex of the pack regarding return values. There are 4 values. Two normal integers, a pointer to an array and a pointer to a array of pointers.

  my ($start,$step,$names,$data) = RRDs::fetch ... 
  print "Start:       ", scalar localtime($start), " ($start)\n";
  print "Step size:   $step seconds\n";
  print "DS names:    ", join (", ", @$names)."\n";
  print "Data points: ", $#$data + 1, "\n";
  print "Data:\n";
  foreach my $line (@$data) {
    print "  ", scalar localtime($start), " ($start) ";
    $start += $step;
    foreach my $val (@$line) {
      printf "%12.1f ", $val;
    }
    print "\n";
  }


See the examples directory for more ways to use this extension.  

AUTHOR

Tobias Oetiker <oetiker@ee.ethz.ch>


 

Index

NAME
SYNOPSIS
DESCRIPTION
Calling Sequence
Error Handling
Return Values
AUTHOR

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