RRDCACHED
Section: rrdtool (1)
Updated: 2019-02-04
Page Index
NAME
rrdcached - Data caching daemon for rrdtool
SYNOPSIS
rrdcached
[
-a alloc_size]
[
-b base_dir [
-B]]
[
-F]
[
-f timeout]
[
-G group]]
[
-g]
[
-j journal_dir]
[
-L]
[
-l address]
[
-m mode]
[
-O]
[
-o log_file]
[
-P permissions]
[
-p pid_file]
[
-R]
[
-s group]
[
-t write_threads]
[
-U user]]
[
-V log_level]
[
-w timeout]
[
-z delay]
DESCRIPTION
rrdcached is a daemon that receives updates to existing
RRD files,
accumulates them and, if enough have been received or a defined time has
passed, writes the updates to the
RRD file. A
flush command may be used to
force writing of values to disk, so that graphing facilities and similar can
work with up-to-date data.
The daemon was written with big setups in mind. Those setups usually run into
IO related problems sooner or later for reasons that are beyond the scope
of this document. Check the wiki at the RRDtool homepage for details. Also
check ``SECURITY CONSIDERATIONS'' below before using this daemon! A detailed
description of how the daemon operates can be found in the ``HOW IT WORKS''
section below.
OPTIONS
- -l address
-
Tells the daemon to bind to address and accept incoming TCP connections on that
socket. If address begins with "unix:", everything following that prefix is
interpreted as the path to a UNIX domain socket. Otherwise the address or node
name are resolved using "getaddrinfo()".
For network sockets, a port may be specified by using the form
"[address]:port". If the address is an IPv4 address or a fully
qualified domain name (i. e. the address contains at least one dot
(".")), the square brackets can be omitted, resulting in the (simpler)
"address:port" pattern. The default port is 42217. If you
specify a network socket, it is mandatory to read the
``SECURITY CONSIDERATIONS'' section.
The following formats are accepted. Please note that the address of the UNIX
domain socket must start with a slash in the second case!
unix:</path/to/unix.sock>
/<path/to/unix.sock>
<hostname-or-ip>
[<hostname-or-ip>]:<port>
<hostname-or-ipv4>:<port>
Given a port without a host (e.g. "-l :42217") the daemon will listen
on that port on all network interfaces. Use "-L" to avoid the need
to explicitly provide the port if the default port is desired.
If no -l option is not specified the default address,
"unix:/tmp/rrdcached.sock", will be used.
Multiple -l options may be provided.
- -L
-
Tells the daemon to bind to the default TCP port on all available
interfaces. It is equivalent to "-l ''" without the confusion of the
empty string parameter.
- -s group_name|gid
-
Set the group permissions of a UNIX domain socket. The option accepts either
a numeric group id or group name. That group will then have both read and write
permissions (the socket will have file permissions 0760) for the socket and,
therefore, is able to send commands to the daemon. This
may be useful in cases where you cannot easily run all RRD processes with the same
user privileges (e.g. graph generating CGI scripts that typically run in the
permission context of the web server).
This option affects the following UNIX socket addresses (the following
-l options) or the default socket (if no -l options have been
specified), i.e., you may specify different settings for different
sockets.
The default is not to change ownership or permissions of the socket and, thus,
use the system default.
- -m mode
-
Set the file permissions of a UNIX domain socket. The option accepts an octal
number representing the bit pattern for the mode (see chmod(1) for
details).
Please note that not all systems honor this setting. On Linux, read/write
permissions are required to connect to a UNIX socket. However, many
BSD-derived systems ignore permissions for UNIX sockets. See unix(7) for
details.
This option affects the following UNIX socket addresses (the following
-l options) or the default socket (if no -l options have been
specified), i.e., you may specify different settings for different
sockets.
The default is not to change ownership or permissions of the socket and, thus,
use the system default.
- -P command[,command[,...]]
-
Specifies the commands accepted via both a network and a UNIX socket. This allows
administrators of RRDCacheD to control the actions accepted from various
sources.
The arguments given to the -P option is a comma separated list of commands.
For example, to allow one the "FLUSH" and "PENDING" commands one could specify:
rrdcached -P FLUSH,PENDING $MORE_ARGUMENTS
The -P option affects the following socket addresses (the following -l
options) or the default socket (if no -l options have been
specified). In the following example, only the IPv4 network socket (address
10.0.0.1) will be restricted to the "FLUSH" and "PENDING" commands:
rrdcached -l unix:/some/path -P FLUSH,PENDING -l 10.0.0.1
A complete list of available commands can be found in the section
``Valid Commands'' below. There are two minor special exceptions:
-
- •
-
The "HELP" and "QUIT" commands are always allowed.
- •
-
If the "BATCH" command is accepted, the . command will automatically
be accepted, too.
-
Please also read ``SECURITY CONSIDERATIONS'' below.
- -V log_level
-
rrdcached under load can severely flood the logs. This command line option
specifies the maximum log_level to be used, meaning that a message with
verbosity higher than log_level is muted (LOG_EMERG being the lowest and
LOG_DEBUG highest).
Accepted values for ``log_level'' (lowest to highest verbosity):
LOG_EMERG, LOG_ALERT, LOG_CRIT, LOG_ERR, LOG_WARNING, LOG_NOTICE, LOG_INFO, LOG_DEBUG
Default log level when this flag is NOT present: LOG_ERR
See also: syslog.h
- -o log_file
-
Log to the given file instead of syslog.
- -w timeout
-
Data is written to disk every timeout seconds.
An optional suffix may be used
(e.g. "5m" instead of 300 seconds).
If this option is not
specified the default interval of 300 seconds will be used.
- -z delay
-
If specified, rrdcached will delay writing of each RRD for a random number
of seconds in the range [0,delay). This will avoid too many
writes being queued simultaneously. This value should be no greater than
the value specified in -w.
An optional suffix may be used
(e.g. "3m" instead of 180 seconds).
By default, there is no delay.
- -f timeout
-
Every timeout seconds the entire cache is searched for old values which are
written to disk. This only concerns files to which updates have stopped, so
setting this to a high value, such as 3600 seconds, is acceptable in most
cases.
An optional suffix may be used
(e.g. "1h" instead of 3600 seconds).
This timeout defaults to 3600 seconds.
- -p file
-
Sets the name and location of the PID-file. If not specified, the default,
"$localstatedir/run/rrdcached.pid" will be used.
- -t write_threads
-
Specifies the number of threads used for writing RRD files. The default
is 4. Increasing this number will allow rrdcached to have more
simultaneous I/O requests into the kernel. This may allow the kernel to
re-order disk writes, resulting in better disk throughput.
- -j dir
-
Write updates to a journal in dir. In the event of a program or system
crash, this will allow the daemon to write any updates that were pending
at the time of the crash.
On startup, the daemon will check for journal files in this directory. If
found, all updates therein will be read into memory before the daemon
starts accepting new connections.
The journal will be rotated with the same frequency as the flush timer
given by -f.
When journaling is enabled, the daemon will use a fast shutdown procedure.
Rather than flushing all files to disk, it will make sure the journal is
properly written and exit immediately. Although the RRD data files are
not fully up-to-date, no information is lost; all pending updates will be
replayed from the journal next time the daemon starts up.
To disable fast shutdown, use the -F option.
- -F
-
ALWAYS flush all updates to the RRD data files when the daemon is shut
down, regardless of journal setting.
- -g
-
Run in the foreground. The daemon will not fork().
- -b dir
-
The daemon will change into a specific directory at startup. All files passed
to the daemon, that are specified by a relative path, will be interpreted
to be relative to this directory. If not given the default, "/tmp", will be
used.
+------------------------+------------------------+
! Command line ! File updated !
+------------------------+------------------------+
! foo.rrd ! /tmp/foo.rrd !
! foo/bar.rrd ! /tmp/foo/bar.rrd !
! /var/lib/rrd/foo.rrd ! /var/lib/rrd/foo.rrd !
+------------------------+------------------------+
Paths given on the command line and paths actually
updated by the daemon, assuming the base directory
"/tmp".
WARNING: The paths up to and including the base directory MUST NOT BE
symbolic links. In other words, if the base directory is
specified as:
-b /base/dir/somewhere
... then NONE of the following should be symbolic links:
/base
/base/dir
/base/dir/somewhere
- -B
-
Only permit writes into the base directory specified in -b (and any
sub-directories). This does NOT detect symbolic links. Paths
containing "../" will also be blocked.
- -R
-
Permit recursive subdirectory creation in the base directory specified in -b
(and any sub-directories). Can only be used when -B is also set.
- -a alloc_size
-
Allocate value pointers in chunks of alloc_size. This may improve CPU
utilization on machines with slow "realloc()" implementations, in
exchange for slightly higher memory utilization. The default is 1.
Do not set this more than the -w value divided by your average RRD step
size.
- -O
-
Prevent the CREATE command from overwriting existing files, even when it is
instructed to do so. This is for added security.
- -G -group
-
When running as daemon and invoked from a privileged account, reset
group privileges to those of group. The group may be specified as
a name or as a group ID. The daemon will exit with a diagnostic if
it cannot successfully transition to the specified group.
- -U -user
-
When running as daemon and invoked from a privileged account, reset
user privileges to those of user. The user may be specified as
a name or as a user ID. The daemon will exit with a diagnostic if
it cannot successfully transition to the specified user.
AFFECTED RRDTOOL COMMANDS
The following commands may be made aware of the
rrdcached using the command
line argument
--daemon or the environment variable
RRDCACHED_ADDRESS:
- •
-
dump
- •
-
fetch
- •
-
flush
- •
-
graph
- •
-
graphv
- •
-
info
- •
-
first
- •
-
last
- •
-
lastupdate
- •
-
update
- •
-
xport
- •
-
create
- •
-
list
The update command can send values to the daemon instead of writing them to
the disk itself. All other commands can send a FLUSH command (see below) to
the daemon before accessing the files, so they work with up-to-date data even
if the cache timeout is large.
ERROR REPORTING
The daemon reports errors in one of two ways: During startup, error messages
are printed to
"STDERR". One of the steps when starting up is to fork to the
background and closing
"STDERR" - after this writing directly to the user is
no longer possible. Once this has happened, the daemon will send log messages
to the system logging daemon using
syslog(3). The facility used is
"LOG_DAEMON".
HOW IT WORKS
When receiving an update,
rrdcached does not write to disk but looks for an
entry for that file in its internal tree. If not found, an entry is created
including the current time (called ``First'' in the diagram below). This time is
not the time specified on the command line but the time the operating system
considers to be ``now''. The value and time of the value (called ``Time'' in the
diagram below) are appended to the tree node.
When appending a value to a tree node, it is checked whether it's time to write
the values to disk. Values are written to disk if
"now() - First >= timeout", where "timeout" is the timeout specified
using the -w option, see ``OPTIONS''. If the values are ``old enough'' they
will be enqueued in the ``update queue'', i. e. they will be appended to
the linked list shown below. Because the tree nodes and the elements of the
linked list are the same data structures in memory, any update to a file that
has already been enqueued will be written with the next write to the RRD file,
too.
A separate ``update thread'' constantly dequeues the first element in the update
queue and writes all its values to the appropriate file. So as long as the
update queue is not empty files are written at the highest possible rate.
Since the timeout of files is checked only when new values are added to the
file, ``dead'' files, i. e. files that are not updated anymore, would never
be written to disk. Therefore, every now and then, controlled by the -f
option, the entire tree is walked and all ``old'' values are enqueued. Since this
only affects ``dead'' files and walking the tree is relatively expensive, you
should set the ``flush interval'' to a reasonably high value. The default is
3600 seconds (one hour).
The downside of caching values is that they won't show up in graphs generated
from the RRD files. To get around this, the daemon provides the ``flush
command'' to flush specific files. This means that the file is inserted at the
head of the update queue or moved there if it is already enqueued. The flush
command will return only after the file's pending updates have been written
to disk.
+------+ +------+ +------+
! head ! ! root ! ! tail !
+---+--+ +---+--+ +---+--+
! /\ !
! / \ !
! /\ /\ !
! /\/\ \ `----------------- ... --------, !
V / `-------, ! V
+---+----+---+ +------+-----+ +---+----+---+
! File: foo ! ! File: bar ! ! File: qux !
! First: 101 ! ! First: 119 ! ! First: 180 !
! Next:&bar -+--->! Next:&... -+---> ... --->! Next:NULL !
| Prev:NULL !<---+-Prev:&foo !<--- ... ----+-Prev: &... !
+============+ +============+ +============+
! Time: 100 ! ! Time: 120 ! ! Time: 180 !
! Value: 10 ! ! Value: 0.1 ! ! Value: 2,2 !
+------------+ +------------+ +------------+
! Time: 110 ! ! Time: 130 ! ! Time: 190 !
! Value: 26 ! ! Value: 0.1 ! ! Value: 7,3 !
+------------+ +------------+ +------------+
: : : : : :
+------------+ +------------+ +------------+
! Time: 230 ! ! Time: 250 ! ! Time: 310 !
! Value: 42 ! ! Value: 0.2 ! ! Value: 1,2 !
+------------+ +------------+ +------------+
The above diagram demonstrates:
- •
-
Files/values are stored in a (balanced) tree.
- •
-
Tree nodes and entries in the update queue are the same data structure.
- •
-
The local time (``First'') and the time specified in updates (``Time'') may differ.
- •
-
Timed out values are inserted at the ``tail''.
- •
-
Explicitly flushed values are inserted at the ``head''.
- •
-
ASCII art rocks.
SECURITY CONSIDERATIONS
Authentication
If your rrdtool installation was built without libwrap there is no form of
authentication for clients connecting to the rrdcache daemon!
If your rrdtool installation was built with libwrap then you can use
hosts_access to restrict client access to the rrdcache daemon (rrdcached). For more
information on how to use hosts_access to restrict access to the rrdcache
daemon you should read the hosts_access(5) man pages.
It is still highly recommended to install a packet filter or similar mechanism to
prevent unauthorized connections. Unless you have a dedicated VLAN or VPN for
this, using network sockets is probably a bad idea!
Authorization
There is minimal per-socket authorization.
Authorization is currently done on a per-socket basis. That means each socket
has a list of commands it will accept and it will accept. It will accept only
those commands explicitly listed but it will (currently) accept these commands
from anyone reaching the socket.
If the networking sockets are to be used, it is necessary to restrict the
accepted commands to those needed by external clients. If, for example,
external clients want to draw graphs of the cached data, they should only be
allowed to use the "FLUSH" command.
Authorization does not work when rrdcached is socket-activated by systemd.
Encryption
There is no encryption.
Again, this may be added in the future, but for the time being it is your job
to keep your private data private. Install a VPN or an encrypted tunnel if you
statistics are confidential!
Sanity checking
There is no sanity checking.
The daemon will blindly write to any file it gets told, so you really should
create a separate user just for this daemon. Also it does not do any sanity
checks, so if it gets told to write values for a time far in the future, your
files will be messed up good!
Conclusion
- •
-
Security is the job of the administrator.
- •
-
We recommend to allow write access via UNIX domain sockets only.
- •
-
You have been warned.
PROTOCOL
The daemon communicates with clients using a line based
ASCII protocol which is
easy to read and easy to type. This makes it easy for scripts to implement the
protocol and possible for users to use telnet to connect to the daemon
and test stuff ``by hand''.
The protocol is line based, this means that each record consists of one or more
lines. A line is terminated by the line feed character 0x0A, commonly
written as "\n". In the examples below, this character will be written as
"<LF>" (``line feed'').
After the connection has been established, the client is expected to send a
``command''. A command consists of the command keyword, possibly some arguments,
and a terminating newline character. For a list of commands, see
``Valid Commands'' below.
Example:
FLUSH /tmp/foo.rrd<LF>
The daemon answers with a line consisting of a status code and a short status
message, separated by one or more space characters. A negative status code
signals an error, a positive status code or zero signal success. If the status
code is greater than zero, it indicates the number of lines that follow the
status line.
Examples:
0 Success<LF>
2 Two lines follow<LF>
This is the first line<LF>
And this is the second line<LF>
Valid Commands
The following commands are understood by the daemon:
- FLUSH filename
-
Causes the daemon to put filename to the head of the update queue
(possibly moving it there if the node is already enqueued). The answer will be
sent after the node has been dequeued.
- FLUSHALL
-
Causes the daemon to start flushing ALL pending values to disk. This
returns immediately, even though the writes may take a long time.
- PENDING filename
-
Shows any ``pending'' updates for a file, in order. The updates shown have
not yet been written to the underlying RRD file.
- FETCH filename CF [start [end] [ds ...]]
-
Calls "rrd_fetch" with the specified arguments and returns the result in text
form. If necessary, the file is flushed to disk first. The client side function
"rrdc_fetch" (declared in "rrd_client.h") parses the output and behaves just
like "rrd_fetch_r" for easy integration of remote queries.
ds defines the columns to dump - if none are given then all are returned
- FETCHBIN filename CF [start [end] [ds ...]]
-
Calls "rrd_fetch" with the specified arguments and returns the result in
text/binary form to avoid unnecessary un/marshalling overhead.
If necessary, the file is flushed to disk first. The client side function
"rrdc_fetch" (declared in "rrd_client.h") parses the output and behaves just
like "rrd_fetch_r" for easy integration of remote queries.
ds defines the columns to dump - if none are given then all are returned
- FORGET filename
-
Removes filename from the cache. Any pending updates WILL BE LOST.
- QUEUE
-
Shows the files that are on the output queue. Returns zero or more lines
in the following format, where <num_vals> is the number of values
to be written for the <file>:
<num_vals> <file>
- HELP [command]
-
Returns a short usage message. If no command is given, or command is
HELP, a list of commands supported by the daemon is returned. Otherwise a
short description, possibly containing a pointer to a manual page, is returned.
Obviously, this is meant for interactive usage and the format in which the
commands and usage summaries are returned is not well defined.
- STATS
-
Returns a list of metrics which can be used to measure the daemons performance
and check its status. For a description of the values returned, see
``Performance Values'' below.
The format in which the values are returned is similar to many other line based
protocols: Each value is printed on a separate line, each consisting of the
name of the value, a colon, one or more spaces and the actual value.
Example:
9 Statistics follow
QueueLength: 0
UpdatesReceived: 30
FlushesReceived: 2
UpdatesWritten: 13
DataSetsWritten: 390
TreeNodesNumber: 13
TreeDepth: 4
JournalBytes: 190
JournalRotate: 0
- PING
-
PING-PONG, this is very useful when using connection pool between user client and RRDCACHED.
Example:
0 PONG
- UPDATE filename values [values ...]
-
Adds more data to a filename. This is the operation the daemon was designed
for, so describing the mechanism again is unnecessary. Read ``HOW IT WORKS''
above for a detailed explanation.
Note that rrdcached only accepts absolute timestamps in the update values.
Updates strings like ``N:1:2:3'' are automatically converted to absolute
time by the RRD client library before sending to rrdcached.
- WROTE filename
-
This command is written to the journal after a file is successfully
written out to disk. It is used during journal replay to determine which
updates have already been applied. It is only valid in the journal; it
is not accepted from the other command channels.
- FIRST filename [rranum]
-
Return the timestamp for the first CDP in the specified RRA. Default is to
use RRA zero if none is specified.
- LAST filename
-
Return the timestamp for the last update to the specified RRD. Note that the
cache is not flushed before checking, as the client is expected to request
this separately if it is required.
- INFO filename
-
Return the configuration information for the specified RRD. Note that the
cache is not flushed before checking, as the client is expected to request
this separately if it is required.
The information is returned, one item per line, with the format:
I<keyname> I<type> I<value>
- CREATE filename [-s stepsize] [-b begintime] [-r sourcefile ...] [-t templatefile] [-O] DSdefinitions ... RRAdefinitions ...
-
This will create the RRD file according to the supplied parameters, provided
the parameters are valid, and (if the -O option is given or if the rrdcached
was started with the -O flag) the specified filename does not already
exist.
- BATCH
-
This command initiates the bulk load of multiple commands. This is
designed for installations with extremely high update rates, since it
permits more than one command to be issued per read() and write().
All commands are executed just as they would be if given individually,
except for output to the user. Messages indicating success are
suppressed, and error messages are delayed until the client is finished.
Command processing is finished when the client sends a dot (``.'') on its
own line. After the client has finished, the server responds with an
error count and the list of error messages (if any). Each error messages
indicates the number of the command to which it corresponds, and the error
message itself. The first user command after BATCH is command number one.
client: BATCH
server: 0 Go ahead. End with dot '.' on its own line.
client: UPDATE x.rrd 1223661439:1:2:3 <--- command #1
client: UPDATE y.rrd 1223661440:3:4:5 <--- command #2
client: and so on...
client: .
server: 2 Errors
server: 1 message for command 1
server: 12 message for command 12
- LIST [RECURSIVE] I/<path>
-
This command allows to list directories and rrd databases as seen by the daemon.
The root ``directory'' is the base_dir (see '-b dir'). When invoked with 'LIST RECURSIVE /<path>' it will behave similarly to 'ls -R' but limited to rrd files (listing all the rrd bases in the subtree of <path>, skipping empty directories).
- SUSPEND filename
-
Suspend writing to an RRD file. While a file is suspended, all metrics for it
are cached in memory until RESUME is called for that file or RESUMEALL is
called.
- RESUME filename
-
Resume writing to an RRD file previously suspended by SUSPEND or SUSPENDALL.
- SUSPENDALL
-
Suspend writing to all RRD files. While a file is suspended, all metrics for it
are cached in memory until RESUME is called for that file or RESUMEALL is
called.
- RESUMEALL
-
Resume writing to all RRD files previously suspended by SUSPEND or SUSPENDALL.
- QUIT
-
Disconnect from rrdcached.
Performance Values
The following counters are returned by the
STATS command:
- QueueLength (unsigned 64bit integer)
-
Number of nodes currently enqueued in the update queue.
- UpdatesReceived (unsigned 64bit integer)
-
Number of UPDATE commands received.
- FlushesReceived (unsigned 64bit integer)
-
Number of FLUSH commands received.
- UpdatesWritten (unsigned 64bit integer)
-
Total number of updates, i. e. calls to "rrd_update_r", since the
daemon was started.
- DataSetsWritten (unsigned 64bit integer)
-
Total number of ``data sets'' written to disk since the daemon was
started. A data set is one or more values passed to the UPDATE
command. For example: "1223661439:123:456" is one data set with two
values. The term ``data set'' is used to prevent confusion whether
individual values or groups of values are counted.
- TreeNodesNumber (unsigned 64bit integer)
-
Number of nodes in the cache.
- TreeDepth (unsigned 64bit integer)
-
Depth of the tree used for fast key lookup.
- JournalBytes (unsigned 64bit integer)
-
Total number of bytes written to the journal since startup.
- JournalRotate (unsigned 64bit integer)
-
Number of times the journal has been rotated since startup.
SIGNALS
- SIGINT and SIGTERM
-
The daemon exits normally on receipt of either of these signals. Pending
updates are handled in accordance with the -j and -F options.
- SIGUSR1
-
The daemon exits AFTER flushing all updates out to disk. This may take a
while.
- SIGUSR2
-
The daemon exits immediately, without flushing updates out to disk.
Pending updates will be replayed from the journal when the daemon starts
up again. WARNING: if journaling (-j) is NOT enabled, any pending
updates WILL BE LOST.
BUGS
No known bugs at the moment.
SEE ALSO
rrdtool, rrdgraph
AUTHOR
Florian Forster <octo at verplant.org>
Both rrdcached and this manual page have been written by Florian.
CONTRIBUTORS
kevin brintnall <
kbrint@rufus.net>
Steve Shipway <
steve@steveshipway.org>
Martin Sperl <
rrdtool@martin.sperl.org>