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ApMon is an API that can be used by any application to send monitoring information to MonALISA services
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ApMon - Application Monitoring API for C version 2.2.2 ****************************************** *************************************** May 2011 California Institute of Technology *************************************** 1. Introduction 2. What's new in version 2.x? 3. Installation 4. Using ApMon 5. xApMon - Monitoring information 6. Logging 7. Bug reports 1. Introduction **************** ApMon is an API that can be used by any application to send monitoring information to MonALISA services (http://monalisa.caltech.edu). The monitoring data is sent as UDP datagrams to one or more hosts running MonALISA. The MonALISA host may require a password enclosed in each datagram, for authentication purposes. ApMon can also send datagrams that contain monitoring information regarding the system or the application. The C version of ApMon only works on Linux systems. 2. What's new in version 2.x? **************************** ApMon 2.0 was extended with xApMon, a feature that allows it to send to the MonALISA service datagrams with monitoring information regarding the system or the application. In this ApMon version there is also the possibility to associate the datagrams with timestamps set by the user. 3. Installation **************** To compile the ApMon routines and all the examples, type: ./configure [options] make make install (where "options" are the typical configure options) If you have Doxygen, you can get the API docs by issuing make doc. The lib will be installed in $prefix/lib and the ApMon.h include file into the $prefix/include directory. 4. Using ApMon ******************* We defined a structure called ApMon, which holds the parameters that the user wants to include in the datagram, until the datagram is sent. The datagram sent to the MonaLisa module has the following structure: - a header which has the following syntax: v:<ApMon_version>p:<password> (the password is sent in plaintext; if the MonALISA host does not require a password, a 0-length string should be sent instead of the password). - (since v2.2.0) an ID for the ApMon instance, which is a randomly generated number - (since v2.2.0) a sequence number for the datagram. This field and the previous one can be used by the MonALISA service to detect the loss of datagrams - cluster name (string) - the name of the monitored cluster - node name (string) - the name of the monitored nodes - number of parameters (int) - for each parameter: name (string), value type (int), value (can be double, int or string) - optionally a timestamp (int) if the user wants to specify the time associated with the data; if the timestamp is not given, the current time on the destination host which runs MonALISA will be used. Either he/she uses one method or the other, the user should call first the function apMon_init() (or the variants apMon_arrayInit(), apMon_stringInit()), which initializes an ApMon structure. The function apMon_init() has a parameter which is the name of a configuration file. The configuration file specifies the IP addresses or DNS names of the hosts running MonALISA, to which the data is sent, and also specifies the ports on which the MonALISA service listens, on the destination hosts. The configuration file contains a line of the following form for each destination host: IP_address|DNS_name[:port] [password] Example: rb.rogrid.pub.ro:8884 mypassword rb.rogrid.pub.ro:8884 ui.rogrid.pub.ro mypassword ui.rogrid.pub.ro If the port is not given, the default value 8884 will be assumed. If the password is not specified, an empty string will be sent as password to the MonALISA host (and the host will only accept the datagram if it does not require a password) The configuration file may contain blank lines and comment lines (starting with "#"); these lines are ignored, and so are the leading and the trailing white spaces from the other lines. ApMon can be also initialized from a list of strings; the list may contain hostnames and ports as explained above, but also URLs from where the names of the destination hosts and the corresponding ports are to be read; the URLs are associated with plain text configuration files which have the format described above. The URLs can also represent requests to a servlet or a CGI script which can automatically provide the best configuration, taking into account the geographical zone in which the machine which runs ApMon is situated, and the application for which ApMon is used (see example_confgen.cpp). The geographical zone is determined from the machine's IP and the applicaiton name is given by the user as the value of the "appName" parameter included in the URL. There are two ways in which the user can send parameter values to MonALISA: a) a single parameter in a datagram b) multiple parameters in a datagram For sending a datagram with a single parameter, the user should call the function sendParameter() or the specialized variants sendIntParameter(), sendDoubleParameter() etc., which have a simplified syntax. For sending multiple parameters in a datagram the user should call the function sendParameters which receives as arguments arrays with the parameter names and values. After sending all the parameters, the user should call the apMon_free() function in order to clean up the memory used by the ApMon structure and to close the socket descriptor. It is important that this function be called when the structure is no longer necessary. Since version 2.0 there are two additional functions, sendTimedParameter() and sendTimedParameters(), which allow the user to specify a timestamp for the parameters. ApMon does not send parameters whose names are NULL strings or string parameters that have NULL value (these parameters are "skipped"). The configuration file and/or URLs can be periodically checked for changes, but this option is disabled by default. In order to enable it, the user should call apMon_setConfCheck(); the value of the time interval at which the recheck operatins are performed, can be set with the function apMon_setRecheckInterval().The way in which the configuration file or URLs are checked for changes can be also specified in the configuration file: - to enable/disable the periodical checking of the configuration file or URLs: xApMon_conf_recheck = on/off - to set the time interval at which the file/URLs are checked for changes: xApMon_recheck_interval = <number_of_seconds> For a better understanding of how to use the functions mentioned above, see the Doxygen documentation and the examples. 5. xApMon - Monitoring information *********************************** ApMon can be configured to send to the MonALISA service monitoring information regarding the application or the system. The system monitoring information is obtained from the proc/ filesystem and the job monitoring information is obtained by parsing the output of the ps command. If job monitoring for a process is requested, all its sub-processes will be taken into consideration (i.e., the resources consumed by the process and all the subprocesses will be summed). There are three categories of monitoring datagrams that ApMon can send: a) job monitoring information - contains the following parameters: run_time - elapsed time from the start of this job cpu_time - processor time spent running this job cpu_usage - percent of the processor used for this job, as reported by ps virtualmem - virtual memory occupied by the job (in KB) rss - resident image size of the job (in KB) mem_usage - percent of the memory occupied by the job, as reported by ps workdir_size - size in MB of the working directory of the job disk_total - size in MB of the disk partition containing the working directory disk_used - size in MB of the used disk space on the partition containing the working directory disk_free - size in MB of the free disk space on the partition containing the working directory disk_usage - percent of the used disk partition containing the working directory open_files - number of opened file descriptors b) system monitoring information - contains the following parameters: cpu_usr - percent of the time spent by the CPU in user mode cpu_sys - percent of the time spent by the CPU in system mode cpu_nice - percent of the time spent by the CPU in nice mode cpu_idle - percent of the time spent by the CPU in idle mode cpu_usage - CPU usage percent pages_in - the number of pages paged in per second (average for the last time interval) pages_out - the number of pages paged out per second (average for the last time interval) swap_in - the number of swap pages brought in per second (average for the last time interval) swap_out - the number of swap pages brought out per second (average for the last time interval) load1 - average system load over the last minute load5 - average system load over the last 5 min load15 - average system load over the last 15 min mem_used - amount of currently used memory, in MB mem_free - amount of free memory, in MB mem_usage - used system memory in percent swap_used - amount of currently used swap, in MB swap_free - amount of free swap, in MB swap_usage - swap usage in percent net_in - network (input) transfer in kBps net_out - network (input) transfer in kBps net_errs - number of network errors (these will produce params called sys_ethX_in, sys_ethX_out, sys_ethX_errs, corresponding to each network interface) processes - curent number of processes (this will also produce parameters called processes_{D,R,T,S,Z}- number of processes in the D (uninterruptible sleep),R (running), T (traced/stopped), S (sleeping),Z (zombie) states) uptime - system uptime in days net_sockets - the number of open TCP, UDP, ICM, Unix sockets. (this will produce parameters called sockets_tcp, sockets_udp, ...) net_tcp_details - the number of TCP sockets in each possible state (this will produce parameters called sockets_tcp_ESTABLISHED, sockets_TCP_LISTEN, ...) c) general system information - contains the following parameters: hostname - ip - will produce ethX_ip params for each interface cpu_MHz - CPU frequency no_CPUs - number of CPUs total_mem - total amount of memory, in MB total_swap - total amount of swap, in MB cpu_vendor_id - the CPU's vendor ID cpu_family cpu_model cpu_model_name bogomips - number of bogomips for the CPU The parameters from a) and b) can be enabled/disabled from the configuration file (if they are disabled, they will not be included in the datagrams). In order to enable/disable a parameter, the user should write in the configuration file lines of the following form: xApMon_job_parametername = on/off (for job parameters) or: xApMon_sys_parametername = on/off (for job parameters) Example: xApMon_job_run_time = on xApMon_sys_load1 = off By default, all the parameters are enabled. The job/system monitoring can be enabled/disabled by including the following lines in the configuration file: xApMon_job_monitoring = on/off xApMon_sys_monitoring = on/off The datagrams with general system information are only sent if system monitoring is enabled, at greater time intervals (2 datagrams with general system information for each 100 system monitoring datagrams). To enable/ disable the sending of general system information datagrams, the following line should be written in the configuration file: xApMon_general_info = on/off The time interval at which job/system monitoring datagrams are sent can be set with: xApMon_job_interval = <number_of_seconds> xApMon_sys_interval = <number_of_seconds> To enable/disable the job/system monitoring, and also to set the time intervals, the functions setJobMonitoring() and setSysMonitoring() can be used (see the API docs for more details). To monitor jobs, you have to specify the PID of the parent process for the tree of processes that you want to monitor, the working directory, the cluster and the node names that will be registered in MonALISA (and also the job monitoring must be enabled). If work directory is "", no information will be retrieved about disk: apMon_addJobToMonitor(ApMon *apm, long pid, char *workdir, char *clusterName, char *nodeName); To stop monitoring a job, the apMon_removeJobToMonitor() should be called. LIMITATIONS: The following values are limited to some constants defined in ApMon.h: - the maximum number of destinations to which the datagrams can be sent (specified by the constant MAX_N_DESTINATIONS; by default it is 30) - the maximum size of a datagram (specified by the constant MAX_DGRAM_SIZE; by default it is 8192B and the user should not modify this value) - the password can have at most 20 characters - the maximum number of jobs that can be monitored is 30 - the maximum number of messages that can be sent per second, on average, is limited, in order to avoid the accidental growth of the network load (which may happen, for example, if the user places the sendParameters() calls in a loop, without pauses between them). To set the maxim number of messages that can be sent per second by ApMon, you can use the following function: apMon_setMaxMsgRate(ApMon *apm, int rate); Another way to set the maximum number of messages is to specify it in the configuration file: xApMon_maxMsgRate = 30 By default, the maximum number of messages per second is 50. 6. Logging *********** ApMon prints its messages to the standard output, with the aid of the logger() function from utils.c (see the API documentation). The user may print its own messages with this function (see example_1.cpp, example_2.cpp). Each message has a level which represent its importance. The possible levels are FATAL, WARNING, INFO, FINE, DEBUG. Only the messages which have a level with greater or equal importance than the current ApMon loglevel are printed. The ApMon loglevel can be set from the configuration file (by default it is INFO): xApMon_loglevel = <level> e.g., xApMon_loglevel = FINE The loglevel can also be set with the aid of the setLogLevel() method, e.g.: setLogLevel("WARNING"); 7. Bug reports *************** For bug reports, suggestions and comments please write to MonALISA-CIT@cern.ch
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