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#!/usr/bin/perl -w # -*- perl -*- # vim: sts=4 sw=4 ts=8 =head1 NAME diskstat_ - Munin wildcard plugin to monitor various values provided via C</proc/diskstats> =head1 APPLICABLE SYSTEMS Linux 2.6 systems with extended block device statistics enabled. =head1 CONFIGURATION None needed. This plugin displays nicer device-mapper device names if it is run as root, but it functions as needed without root privilege. To configure for running as root enter this in a plugin configuration file: [diskstat_*] user root =head1 INTERPRETATION Among the more self-describing or well-known values like C<throughput> (Bytes per second) there are a few which might need further introduction. =head2 Device Utilization Linux provides a counter which increments in a millisecond-interval for as long as there are outstanding I/O requests. If this counter is close to 1000msec in a given 1 second timeframe the device is nearly 100% saturated. This plugin provides values averaged over a 5 minute time frame per default, so it can't catch short-lived saturations, but it'll give a nice trend for semi-uniform load patterns as they're expected in most server or multi-user environments. =head2 Device IO Time The C<Device IO Time> takes the counter described under C<Device Utilization> and divides it by the number of I/Os that happened in the given time frame, resulting in an average time per I/O on the block-device level. This value can give you a good comparison base amongst different controllers, storage subsystems and disks for similiar workloads. =head2 Syscall Wait Time These values describe the average time it takes between an application issuing a syscall resulting in a hit to a blockdevice to the syscall returning to the application. The values are bound to be higher (at least for read requests) than the time it takes the device itself to fulfill the requests, since calling overhead, queuing times and probably a dozen other things are included in those times. These are the values to watch out for when an user complains that C<the disks are too slow!>. =head3 What causes a block device hit? A non-exhaustive list: =over =item * Reads from files when the given range is not in the page cache or the O_DIRECT flag is set. =item * Writes to files if O_DIRECT or O_SYNC is set or sys.vm.dirty_(background_)ratio is exceeded. =item * Filesystem metadata operations (stat(2), getdents(2), file creation, modification of any of the values returned by stat(2), etc.) =item * The pdflush daemon writing out dirtied pages =item * (f)sync =item * Swapping =item * raw device I/O (mkfs, dd, etc.) =back =head1 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS The core logic of this script is based on the B<iostat> tool of the B<sysstat> package written and maintained by Sebastien Godard. =head1 SEE ALSO See C<Documentation/iostats.txt> in your Linux source tree for further information about the C<numbers> involved in this module. L<http://www.westnet.com/~gsmith/content/linux-pdflush.htm> has a nice writeup about the pdflush daemon. =head1 VERSION $Id$ =head1 MAGIC MARKERS #%# family=manual #%# capabilities=autoconf suggest =head1 BUGS Does not work correctly with multiple Munin masters as it calculates averages between each time it is run. In such a case it can be run twice in the same second, this causes "division by zero" errors. If it is run two seconds apart the average it reports is over 2 seconds, not 5 minutes. =head1 AUTHOR Michael Renner <michael.renner@amd.co.at> =head1 LICENSE GPLv2 =cut use strict; use File::Basename; use Carp; use POSIX; # We load our own version of save/restore_state if Munin::Plugin is unavailable. # Don't try this at home eval { require Munin::Plugin; Munin::Plugin->import; }; if ($@) { die "Munin::Plugin is required for this plugin to run"; } # Sanity check to ensure that the script is called the correct name. if ( basename($0) !~ /^diskstat_/ ) { die qq(Please ensure that the name of the script and it's symlinks starts with "diskstat_"\n); } ############ # autoconf # ############ if ( defined $ARGV[0] && $ARGV[0] eq 'autoconf' ) { my %stats; # Capture any croaks on the way eval { %stats = parse_diskstats() }; if ( !$@ && keys %stats ) { print "yes\n"; exit 0; } else { print "no\n"; exit 1; } } ########### # suggest # ########### if ( defined $ARGV[0] && $ARGV[0] eq 'suggest' ) { my %diskstats = parse_diskstats(); my %suggested_devices; DEVICE: for my $devname ( sort keys %diskstats ) { # Skip devices without traffic next if ( $diskstats{$devname}->{'rd_ios'} == 0 && $diskstats{$devname}->{'wr_ios'} == 0 ); for my $existing_device ( @{ $suggested_devices{'iops'} } ) { # Filter out devices (partitions) which are matched by existing ones # e.g. sda1 -> sda, c0d0p1 -> c0d0 next DEVICE if ( $devname =~ m/$existing_device/ ); } push @{ $suggested_devices{'iops'} }, $devname; push @{ $suggested_devices{'throughput'} }, $devname; # Only suggest latency graphs if the device supports it if ( $diskstats{$devname}->{'rd_ticks'} > 0 || $diskstats{$devname}->{'wr_ticks'} > 0 ) { push @{ $suggested_devices{'latency'} }, $devname; } } for my $mode ( keys %suggested_devices ) { for my $device ( sort @{ $suggested_devices{$mode} } ) { my $printdev = translate_device_name( $device, 'TO_FS' ); print "${mode}_$printdev\n"; } } exit 0; } # Reading the scripts invocation name and setting some parameters, # needed from here on my $basename = basename($0); my ( $mode, $device ) = $basename =~ m/diskstat_(\w+)_([-+:\w]+)$/; if ( not defined $device ) { croak qq(Didn't get a device name. Please put this script into munin's plugin directory and run the commands suggested by "munin-node-configure --shell".\n); } $device = translate_device_name( $device, 'FROM_FS' ); ########## # config # ########## if ( defined $ARGV[0] && $ARGV[0] eq 'config' ) { my $pretty_device = $device; if ( $device =~ /^dm-\d+$/ ) { $pretty_device = translate_devicemapper_name($device); } if ( $mode eq 'latency' ) { print <<EOF; graph_title Disk latency for /dev/$pretty_device graph_args --base 1000 graph_category disk util.label Device utilization (percent) util.type GAUGE util.info Utilization of the device. If the time spent for I/O is close to 1000msec for a given second, the device is nearly 100% saturated. util.min 0 svctm.label Average device IO time (ms) svctm.type GAUGE svctm.info Average time an I/O takes on the block device svctm.min 0 avgwait.label Average IO Wait time (ms) avgwait.type GAUGE avgwait.info Average wait time for an I/O from request start to finish (includes queue times et al) avgwait.min 0 avgrdwait.label Average Read IO Wait time (ms) avgrdwait.type GAUGE avgrdwait.info Average wait time for a read I/O from request start to finish (includes queue times et al) avgrdwait.min 0 avgwrwait.label Average Write IO Wait time (ms) avgwrwait.type GAUGE avgwrwait.info Average wait time for a write I/O from request start to finish (includes queue times et al) avgwrwait.min 0 EOF } elsif ( $mode eq 'throughput' ) { print <<EOF; graph_title Disk throughput for /dev/$pretty_device graph_args --base 1024 graph_vlabel Bytes/second graph_category disk rdbytes.label Read Bytes rdbytes.type GAUGE rdbytes.min 0 wrbytes.label Write Bytes wrbytes.type GAUGE wrbytes.min 0 EOF } elsif ( $mode eq 'iops' ) { print <<EOF; graph_title Disk IOs for /dev/$pretty_device graph_args --base 1000 graph_vlabel Units/second graph_category disk rdio.label Read IO/sec rdio.type GAUGE rdio.min 0 wrio.label Write IO/sec wrio.type GAUGE wrio.min 0 avgrqsz.label Average Request Size (KiB) avgrqsz.type GAUGE avgrqsz.min 0 avgrdrqsz.label Average Read Request Size (KiB) avgrdrqsz.type GAUGE avgrdrqsz.min 0 avgwrrqsz.label Average Write Request Size (KiB) avgwrrqsz.type GAUGE avgwrrqsz.min 0 EOF } else { croak "Unknown mode $mode\n"; } exit 0; } ######## # MAIN # ######## my %cur_diskstat = fetch_device_counters($device); my ( $prev_time, %prev_diskstat ) = restore_state(); save_state( time(), %cur_diskstat ); # Probably the first run for the given device, we need state to do our job, # so let's wait for the next run. exit if ( not defined $prev_time or not %prev_diskstat ); calculate_and_print_values( $prev_time, \%prev_diskstat, \%cur_diskstat ); ######## # SUBS # ######## sub calculate_and_print_values { my ( $prev_time, $prev_stats, $cur_stats ) = @_; my $bytes_per_sector = 512; my $interval = time() - $prev_time; my $read_ios = $cur_stats->{'rd_ios'} - $prev_stats->{'rd_ios'}; my $write_ios = $cur_stats->{'wr_ios'} - $prev_stats->{'wr_ios'}; my $rd_ticks = $cur_stats->{'rd_ticks'} - $prev_stats->{'rd_ticks'}; my $wr_ticks = $cur_stats->{'wr_ticks'} - $prev_stats->{'wr_ticks'}; my $rd_sectors = $cur_stats->{'rd_sectors'} - $prev_stats->{'rd_sectors'}; my $wr_sectors = $cur_stats->{'wr_sectors'} - $prev_stats->{'wr_sectors'}; my $tot_ticks = $cur_stats->{'tot_ticks'} - $prev_stats->{'tot_ticks'}; my $read_io_per_sec = $read_ios / $interval; my $write_io_per_sec = $write_ios / $interval; my $read_bytes_per_sec = $rd_sectors / $interval * $bytes_per_sector; my $write_bytes_per_sec = $wr_sectors / $interval * $bytes_per_sector; my $total_ios = $read_ios + $write_ios; my $total_ios_per_sec = $total_ios / $interval; # Utilization - or "how busy is the device"? # If the time spent for I/O was close to 1000msec for # a given second, the device is nearly 100% saturated. my $utilization = $tot_ticks / $interval; # Average time an I/O takes on the block device my $servicetime = $total_ios_per_sec ? $utilization / $total_ios_per_sec : 0; # Average wait time for an I/O from start to finish # (includes queue times et al) my $average_wait = $total_ios ? ( $rd_ticks + $wr_ticks ) / $total_ios : 0; my $average_rd_wait = $read_ios ? $rd_ticks / $read_ios : 0; my $average_wr_wait = $write_ios ? $wr_ticks / $write_ios : 0; my $average_rq_size_in_kb = $total_ios ? ( $rd_sectors + $wr_sectors ) * $bytes_per_sector / 1024 / $total_ios : 0; my $average_rd_rq_size_in_kb = $read_ios ? $rd_sectors * $bytes_per_sector / 1024 / $read_ios : 0; my $average_wr_rq_size_in_kb = $write_ios ? $wr_sectors * $bytes_per_sector / 1024 / $write_ios : 0; my $util_print = $utilization / 10; if ( $mode eq 'latency' ) { print <<EOF; util.value $util_print svctm.value $servicetime avgwait.value $average_wait avgrdwait.value $average_rd_wait avgwrwait.value $average_wr_wait EOF } elsif ( $mode eq 'throughput' ) { print <<EOF; rdbytes.value $read_bytes_per_sec wrbytes.value $write_bytes_per_sec EOF } elsif ( $mode eq 'iops' ) { print <<EOF; rdio.value $read_io_per_sec wrio.value $write_io_per_sec avgrqsz.value $average_rq_size_in_kb avgrdrqsz.value $average_rd_rq_size_in_kb avgwrrqsz.value $average_wr_rq_size_in_kb EOF } else { croak "Unknown mode $mode\n"; } } sub read_diskstats { open STAT, '< /proc/diskstats' or croak "Failed to open '/proc/diskstats': $!\n"; my @lines; for my $line (<STAT>) { # Strip trailing newline and leading whitespace chomp $line; $line =~ s/^\s+//; my @elems = split /\s+/, $line; # We explicitly don't support old-style diskstats # There are situations where only _some_ lines (e.g. # partitions on older 2.6 kernels) have fewer stats # numbers, therefore we'll skip them silently if ( @elems != 14 ) { next; } push @lines, \@elems; } close STAT or croak "Failed to close '/proc/diskstats': $!"; return @lines; } sub read_sysfs { my ($want_device) = @_; my @devices; my @lines; if ( defined $want_device ) { # sysfs uses '!' as replacement for '/', e.g. cciss!c0d0 $want_device =~ tr#/#!#; @devices = $want_device; } else { @devices = glob "/sys/block/*/stat"; @devices = map {m!/sys/block/([^/]+)/stat!} @devices; } for my $cur_device (@devices) { my $stats_file = "/sys/block/$cur_device/stat"; open STAT, "< $stats_file" or croak "Failed to open '$stats_file': $!\n"; my $line = <STAT>; # Trimming whitespace $line =~ s/^\s+//; chomp $line; my @elems = split /\s+/, $line; croak "'$stats_file' contains less than 11 values. Aborting" if ( @elems < 11 ); # Translate the devicename back before storing the information $cur_device =~ tr#!#/#; # Faking missing diskstats values unshift @elems, ( '', '', $cur_device ); push @lines, \@elems; close STAT or croak "Failed to close '$stats_file': $!\n"; } return @lines; } sub parse_diskstats { my ($want_device) = @_; my @stats; if ( glob "/sys/block/*/stat" ) { @stats = read_sysfs($want_device); } else { @stats = read_diskstats(); } my %diskstats; for my $entry (@stats) { my %devstat; # Hash-Slicing for fun and profit @devstat{ qw(major minor devname rd_ios rd_merges rd_sectors rd_ticks wr_ios wr_merges wr_sectors wr_ticks ios_in_prog tot_ticks rq_ticks) } = @{$entry}; $diskstats{ $devstat{'devname'} } = \%devstat; } return %diskstats; } sub fetch_device_counters { my ($want_device) = @_; my %diskstats = parse_diskstats($want_device); for my $devname ( keys %diskstats ) { if ( $want_device eq $devname ) { return %{ $diskstats{$devname} }; } } return undef; } # We use ':' (and formerly '+' and '-') as placeholder for '/' in device-names # used as calling name for the script. sub translate_device_name { my ( $device, $mode ) = @_; if ( $mode eq 'FROM_FS' ) { # Hackaround to mitigate issues with unwisely chosen former separator if ( not( $device =~ m/dm-\d+/ ) ) { $device =~ tr#-+:#///#; } } elsif ( $mode eq 'TO_FS' ) { $device =~ tr#/#:#; } else { croak "translate_device_name: Unknown mode\n"; } return $device; } sub translate_devicemapper_name { my ($device) = @_; my ($want_minor) = $device =~ m/^dm-(\d+)$/; croak "Failed to extract devicemapper id" unless defined($want_minor); my $dm_major = find_devicemapper_major(); croak "Failed to get device-mapper major number\n" unless defined $dm_major; for my $entry ( glob "/dev/mapper/\*" ) { my $rdev = ( stat($entry) )[6]; my $major = floor( $rdev / 256 ); my $minor = $rdev % 256; if ( $major == $dm_major && $minor == $want_minor ) { my $pretty_name = translate_lvm_name($entry); $entry =~ s|/dev/||; return defined $pretty_name ? $pretty_name : $entry; } } # Return original string if the device can't be found. return $device; } sub translate_lvm_name { my ($entry) = @_; my $device_name = basename($entry); # Check for single-dash-occurence to see if this could be a lvm devicemapper device. if ( $device_name =~ m/(?<!-)-(?!-)/ ) { # split device name into vg and lv parts my ( $vg, $lv ) = split /(?<!-)-(?!-)/, $device_name, 2; return undef unless ( defined($vg) && defined($lv) ); # remove extraneous dashes from vg and lv names $vg =~ s/--/-/g; $lv =~ s/--/-/g; $device_name = "$vg/$lv"; # Sanity check - does the constructed device name exist? # Breaks unless we are root. if ( stat("/dev/$device_name") ) { return "$device_name"; } } return undef; } sub find_devicemapper_major { open( FH, '< /proc/devices' ) or croak "Failed to open '/proc/devices': $!"; my $dm_major; for my $line (<FH>) { chomp $line; my ( $major, $name ) = split /\s+/, $line, 2; next unless defined $name; if ( $name eq 'device-mapper' ) { $dm_major = $major; last; } } close(FH); return $dm_major; }