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README
Stripchart version 2.0 ---------------------- Author: Matt Lebofsky BOINC/SETI@home - University of California, Berkeley mattl@ssl.berkeley.edu Date of recent version: November 4, 2002 Requirements: * a gnuplot with the ability to generate gifs * perl * apache or other cgi-enabled web browser Send all thoughts and queries to: mattl@ssl.berkeley.edu This software is free to edit, distribute and use by anybody, as long as I get credit for it in some form or another. Thanks. ---------------------- Contents: I. Some questions and answers II. So how does it work? III. Known bugs, things to do, etc. ---------------------- I. Some questions and answers Q: What is stripchart? A: Well, it's actually two relatively small perl programs: 1. stripchart stripchart reads in time-based user data and, depending on a flurry of command line options, generates a web-friendly .gif plotting the data. The user can supply the time range, the y axis range, even the color scheme, and more. 2. stripchart.cgi stripchart.cgi is a web-based GUI interface that allows users to easily select multiple data sources and various parameters to plot, allowing fast comparisons without having to deal with a command line interface. Q: Why do you bother writing this program? A: Working as a systems administrator (amongst other things) for SETI@home, we kept finding ourselves in dire problem-solving situations, i.e. Why did the database stop working? Why is load on our web server so high? So we started collecting data in flat files, keeping track of server loads, database checkpoint times, even CPU temperatures. When these files grew too large and unwieldy, I found myself writing (and rewriting) simple scripts to generate plots on this data. Sick of constant revision whenever a new problem arose, I wrote stripchart version 1.0. Its usefulness became immediately apparent when I added on stripchart.cgi. I couldn't bear to teach everybody the many command line options to stripchart, so I wrote this CGI to do all the dirty work. Suddenly we were able to line up several plots, look for causes and effects, or just enjoy watching the counts in our database tables grow to impossibly high numbers. The SETI@home network has proven to be a delicate system, and keeping track of all the data server, user, and web statistics has proven to be quite a life saver. So when BOINC came around we felt that any project aiming to embark on a similar project may need this tool. So I rewrote stripchart to be a bit more friendly and general. Q: Why don't you make .pngs or .jpgs instead of .gifs? The latest gnuplot doesn't support .gifs. A: Basically gnuplot support for other graphic file formats isn't as good. For example, you cannot control exact window size, font size, and colors unless you make .gifs. I'm not exactly sure why this is the case, but there you have it. Anywho, you can find older gnuplot distributions out there - you'll need to get the gd libs first, by the way. ---------------------- II. So how does it work? You can use stripchart as a stand alone command-line program to produce plots whenever you like, but we highly recommend using it in conjunction with the stripchart.cgi for ease of use. But here's how to do it both ways. stripchart (stand alone) Before anything, look at the section GLOBAL/DEFAULT VARS in the program stripchart and see if you need to edit anything (usually pathnames to executables and such). Let's just start with the usage (obtained by typing "stripchart -h"): stripchart: creates stripchart .gif graphic based on data in flat files options: -i: input FILE - name of input data file (mandatory) -o: output FILE - name of output .gif file (default: STDOUT) -O: output FILE - name of output .gif file and dump to STDOUT as well -f: from TIME - stripchart with data starting at TIME (default: 24 hours ago) -t: to TIME - stripchart with data ending at TIME (default: now) -r: range RANGE - stripchart data centered around "from" time the size of RANGE (overrides -t) -l: last LINES - stripchart last number of LINES in data file (overrides -f and -t and -r) -T: title TITLE - title to put on graphic (default: FILE RANGE) -x: column X - time or "x" column (default: 2) -y: column Y - value or "y" column (default: 3) -Y: column Y' - overplot second "y" column (default: none) -b: baseline VALUE - overplot baseline of arbitrary value VALUE -B: baseline-avg - overrides -b, it plots baseline of computed average -d: dump low VALUE - ignore data less than VALUE -D: dump high VALUE - ignore data higher than VALUE -v: verbose - puts verbose runtime output to STDERR -L: log - makes y axis log scale -c: colors "COLORS" - set gnuplot colors for graph/axis/fonts/data (default: "xffffff x000000 xc0c0c0 x00a000 x0000a0 x2020c0" in order: bground, axis/fonts, grids, pointcolor1,2,3) -C: cgi - output CGI header to STDOUT if being called as CGI -s: stats - turn extra plot stats on (current, avg, min, max) -j: julian times - time columns is in local julian date (legacy stuff) notes: * TIME either unix date, julian date, or civil date in the form: YYYY:MM:DD:HH:MM (year, month, day, hour, minute) If you enter something with colons, it assumes it is civil date If you have a decimal point, it assumes it is julian date If it is an integer, it assumes it is unix date (epoch seconds) If it is a negative number, it is in decimal days from current time (i.e. -2.5 = two and a half days ago) * All times on command line are assumed to be "local" times * All times in the data file must be in unix date (epoch seconds) * RANGE is given in decimal days (i.e. 1.25 = 1 day, 6 hours) * if LINES == 0, (i.e. -l 0) then the whole data file is read in * columns (given with -x, -y, -Y flags) start at 1 * titles given with -T can contain the following key words which will be converted: FILE - basename of input file RANGE - pretty civil date range (in local time zone) the default title is: FILE RANGE ...okay that's a lot to ingest, but it's really simple. Let's take a look at an example (you'll find in the samples directory two files get_load and crontab). You have a machine that you want to monitor it's load. Here's a script that will output a single line containing two fields for time and the third with the actual data. For example: 2002:11:05:12:51 1036529480 0.25 The first field is time in an arbitrary human readable format (year:month:day:hour:minute), the second in epoch seconds (standard unix time format - the number of seconds since 00:00 1/1/1970 GMT), and the third is the load at this time. And we'll start collecting data every five minutes on this particular machine by add such a line to the crontab: 0,5,10,15,20,25,30,35,40,45,50,55 * * * * /usr/local/stripchart/samples/get_load >> /disks/matt/data/machine_load So the file "machine_load" will quickly fill with lines such as the above. Now you may ask yourself - why two columns representing time in two different formats? Well sometime you just want to look at the data file itself, in which case the human-readable first column is quite handy to have around, but when making linear time plots, having time in epoch seconds is much faster to manipulate. So generally, we like to have at least the two time fields first, and the actual data in the third column. That's what stripchart expects by default. Note: stripchart will understand time in both epoch seconds and julian date. If the second time field is in julian date, you should supply the command line flag "-j" to warn stripchart so it knows how to handle it. Okay. So you have this data file now. A very common thing to plot would be the data over the past 24 hours. Turns out that's the default! If you type on the command line: stripchart -i machine_load -o machine_load.gif you will quickly get a new file "machine_load.gif" with all the goods. Note: you always have to supply an input file via -i. If you don't supply an output file via "-o" it .gif gets dumped to stdout. If you supply an output file via "-O" the output is stored in both the file and to stdout. Now let's play with the time ranges. You can supply times in a variety of formats on the command line: "civil date" i.e. 2002:11:05:12:51 (YYYY:MM:DD:hh:mm) "epoch seconds" i.e. 1036529480 "julian date" i.e. 2452583.52345 You can supply a date range using the -f and -t flags (from and to): stripchart -i machine_load -f 2002:11:01:00:00 -t 2002:11:04:00:00 Usually the "to" time is right now, so you can quickly tell stripchart to plot starting at some arbitrary time "ago." This is done also via the "-f" flag - if it's negative it will assume you mean that many decimal days from now as a starting point. So "-f -3.5" will plot from 3 and a half days ago until now. You can also supply a "range" centered around the from time. For example, to plot the 24 hours centered around 2002:11:01:13:40: stripchart -i machine_load -f 2002:11:01:13:40 -r 1 On some rare occasions you might want to plot the last number of lines in a file, regardless of what time they were. If you supply the number of lines via the "-l" flag, it overrides any time ranges you may have supplied. Moving on to some other useful flags in no particular order: To change the default title (which is the basename of the file and the time range being plotted), you can do so via the "-T" command. Make sure to put the title in quotes. Within the title string the all-uppercase string "FILE" will be replaced with the file basename, and the string "RANGE" will be replaced by the time range. So in essence, the default title string is "FILE RANGE". If you have data files in different formats, you can specify the data columns using the "-x" and "-y" flags. By default -x is 2 and -y is 3. Sometimes we have datafiles with many columns so we actively have to tell stripchart which is the correct data column. However, you might want to overplot one column on top of another. If your data file has a second data column, you can specify what that is via the -Y flag, and this data will be overplotted onto the data from the first data column. Sometime you want to plot a horizontal rule or a "baseline". You can turn this feature on by specifying the value with the "-b" flag. If you use the "-B" flag (without any values) it automatically computes the average over the time range and plots that as the baseline. Simple! If you want to excise certain y values, you can do so with the dump flags, i.e. "-d" and "-D". In particular, any values lower than the one supplied with "-d" will be dumped, and any values higher supplied by "-D" will be dumped. To log the y axis, use the "-L" flag. Quite straightforward. A very useful flag is "-s" which outputs a line of stats underneath the plot title. It shows the current value, and the minimum, maximum and average values during the plot range. For verbose output to stderr, use the "-v" flag. It may not make much sense, but it's useful for debugging. Using the "-C" flag causes stripchart to spit out the "Content-type" lines necessary for incorporating stripchart plots into CGIs. This doesn't work so well now, but there it is. Okay. That's enough about the flags, and hopefully enough to get you playing around with stripchart and plotting some stuff. Now onto: stripchart.cgi First and foremost, you need to do the following before running the CGI version of stripchart: 1. Put stripchart.cgi in a cgi-enabled web-accessible directory 2. Make a "lib" directory somewhere that the web server can read/write to 3. Edit stripchart.cgi GLOBAL/DEFAULT VARS to point to proper paths, including the files "querylist" and "datafiles" in the aforementioned "lib" directory. 4. Edit the "lib/datafiles" file to contain entries for all your data files. You can find an example datafiles in the samples directory. Follow the instructions in the comment lines, adding your entries below the header. That should be it, I think. Now go to the URL wherever your stripchart.cgi is sitting. If all is well.. You will be immediately presented with a web form. Ignore the "select query" pulldown menu for now. Underneath that you will see a line: Number of stripcharts: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 By default stripchart.cgi presents you with the ability to plot 4 simultaneous stripcharts, but you can select any number 1-20 by clicking on those numbers. The less plots, the faster a web page gets generated. For each plot, you get a pull down menu which should contain all the entries you already put in "datafiles". Here you are selecting your data source. Then you can select the time of time range: last x hours, last x days, or an arbitrary date range. By default the last x hours radio button is selected - to pick another type of time range make sure you select the radio button before it. Then enter the range via the pull down menus. Then you get a simple list of checkbox/input options. You can check to log the y axis, baseline the average, baseline an arbitrary value (which you enter in the window, enter a y minimum, or enter a maximum. When everything is selected, click on the "click here" button to plot. Depending on the speed of your machine, you should soon be presented with all the plots your desired, and the form underneath the plots which can edit to your heart's content. If you want to reset the form values, click on the "reset form" link. Note the "save images in /tmp" checkbox. If that is checked and you plot the stripcharts, numbered .gif files will be placed in /tmp on the web server machine so you can copy them elsewhere (files will be named: stripchart_plot_1.gif, etc.). On the topmost "click here" button you will note an "enter name to save query" balloon. If you enter a name here (any old string) this exact query will be saved into the "querylist" file which will then later appear in the pulldown menu at the top. That way if you have a favorite set of diagnostic plots which you check every morning, you don't have to enter the entire form every time. If you want to delete a query, enter the name in that same field but click the "delete" checkbox next to it. Next time you "click here" the query will be deleted. ---------------------- III. Known bugs, things to do, etc. * stripchart -C flag is kind of pointless and doesn't work in practice. * plots on data collected over small time ranges (points every few seconds, for example) hasn't been tested. * plots that don't work via stripchart.cgi either show ugly broken image icons or nothing at all - either way it's ungraceful. * pulldown menus and various plots sometimes need to be refreshed via a hard refresh (i.e. shift-refresh). * this readme kinda stinks. * and many many other issues I'm failing to detail now! If you have any problems using the product, feel free to e-mail me at: mattl@ssl.berkeley.edu