RRDGRAPH_GRAPH(1) rrdtool RRDGRAPH_GRAPH(1)
NAME
rrdgraph_graph - rrdtool graph command reference
SYNOPSIS
PRINT:vname:format
GPRINT:vname:format
COMMENT:text
VRULE:time#color[:legend][:dashes[=on_s[,off_s[,on_s,off_s]...]][:dash-offset=offset]]
HRULE:value#color[:legend][:dashes[=on_s[,off_s[,on_s,off_s]...]][:dash-offset=offset]]
LINE[width]:value[#color][:[legend][:STACK][:skipscale][:dashes[=on_s[,off_s[,on_s,off_s]...]][:dash-offset=offset]]
AREA:value[#color][:[legend][:STACK][:skipscale]]
TICK:vname#rrggbb[aa][:fraction[:legend]]
SHIFT:vname:offset
TEXTALIGN:{left|right|justified|center}
PRINT:vname:CF:format (deprecated)
GPRINT:vname:CF:format (deprecated)
STACK:vname#color[:legend] (deprecated)
DESCRIPTION
These instructions allow you to generate your image or report. If you
don't use any graph elements, no graph is generated. Similarly, no
report is generated if you don't use print options.
PRINT
PRINT:vname:format[:strftime]
Depending on the context, either the value component or the time
component of a VDEF is printed using format. It is an error to specify
a vname generated by a DEF or CDEF.
Any text in format is printed literally with one exception: The percent
character introduces a formatter string. This string can be:
For printing values:
%% just prints a literal '%' character
%#.#le
prints numbers like 1.2346e+04. The optional integers # denote
field width and decimal precision.
%#.#lf
prints numbers like 12345.6789, with optional field width and
precision.
%s place this after %le, %lf or %lg. This will be replaced by the
appropriate SI magnitude unit and the value will be scaled
accordingly (123456 -> 123.456 k).
%S is similar to %s. It does, however, use a previously defined
magnitude unit. If there is no such unit yet, it tries to define
one (just like %s) unless the value is zero, in which case the
magnitude unit stays undefined. Thus, formatter strings using %S
and no %s will all use the same magnitude unit except for zero
values.
If you PRINT a VDEF value, you can also print the time associated with
it by appending the string :strftime to the format. Note that RRDtool
uses the strftime function of your OSs C library. This means that the
conversion specifier may vary. Check the manual page if you are
uncertain. The following is a list of conversion specifiers usually
supported across the board.
%a The abbreviated weekday name according to the current locale.
%A The full weekday name according to the current locale.
%b The abbreviated month name according to the current locale.
%B The full month name according to the current locale.
%c The preferred date and time representation for the current locale.
%d The day of the month as a decimal number (range 01 to 31).
%H The hour as a decimal number using a 24-hour clock (range 00 to
23).
%I The hour as a decimal number using a 12-hour clock (range 01 to
12).
%j The day of the year as a decimal number (range 001 to 366).
%m The month as a decimal number (range 01 to 12).
%M The minute as a decimal number (range 00 to 59).
%p Either `AM' or `PM' according to the given time value, or the
corresponding strings for the current locale. Noon is treated as
`pm' and midnight as `am'. Note that in many locales and `pm'
notation is unsupported and in such cases %p will return an empty
string.
%s The second as a decimal number (range 00 to 61).
%S The seconds since the epoch (1.1.1970) (libc dependent non
standard!)
%U The week number of the current year as a decimal number, range
00 to 53, starting with the first Sunday as the first day of week
01. See also %V and %W.
%V The ISO 8601:1988 week number of the current year as a decimal
number, range 01 to 53, where week 1 is the first week that has
at least 4 days in the current year, and with Monday as the first
day of the week. See also %U and %W.
%w The day of the week as a decimal, range 0 to 6, Sunday being 0.
See also %u.
%W The week number of the current year as a decimal number, range 00
to 53, starting with the first Monday as the first day of week
01.
%x The preferred date representation for the current locale without
the time.
%X The preferred time representation for the current locale without
the date.
%y The year as a decimal number without a century (range 00 to 99).
%Y The year as a decimal number including the century.
%Z The time zone or name or abbreviation.
%% A literal `%' character.
PRINT:vname:CF:format
Deprecated. Use the new form of this command in new scripts. The first
form of this command is to be used with CDEF vnames.
GRAPH
GPRINT:vname:format
This is the same as "PRINT", but printed inside the graph.
GPRINT:vname:CF:format
Deprecated. Use the new form of this command in new scripts. This is
the same as "PRINT", but printed inside the graph.
COMMENT:text
Text is printed literally in the legend section of the graph. Note that
in RRDtool 1.2 you have to escape colons in COMMENT text in the same
way you have to escape them in *PRINT commands by writing '\:'.
VRULE:time#color[:legend][:dashes[=on_s[,off_s[,on_s,off_s]...]][:dash-offset=offset]]
Draw a vertical line at time. Its color is composed from three
hexadecimal numbers specifying the rgb color components (00 is off, FF
is maximum) red, green and blue followed by an optional alpha.
Optionally, a legend box and string is printed in the legend section.
time may be a number or a variable from a VDEF. It is an error to use
vnames from DEF or CDEF here. Dashed lines can be drawn using the
dashes modifier. See LINE for more details.
HRULE:value#color[:legend][:dashes[=on_s[,off_s[,on_s,off_s]...]][:dash-offset=offset]]
Draw a horizontal line at value. HRULE acts much like LINE except that
will have no effect on the scale of the graph. If a HRULE is outside
the graphing area it will just not be visible.
LINE[width]:value[#color][:[legend][:STACK][:skipscale]][:dashes[=on_s[,off_s[,on_s,off_s]...]][:dash-offset=offset]]
Draw a line of the specified width onto the graph. width can be a
floating point number. If the color is not specified, the drawing is
done 'invisibly'. This is useful when stacking something else on top of
this line. Also optional is the legend box and string which will be
printed in the legend section if specified. The value can be generated
by DEF, VDEF, and CDEF. If the optional STACK modifier is used, this
line is stacked on top of the previous element which can be a LINE or
an AREA.
Normally the graphing function makes sure that the entire LINE or AREA
is visible in the chart. The scaling of the chart will be modified
accordingly if necessary. Any LINE or AREA can be excluded from this
process by adding the option skipscale.
The dashes modifier enables dashed line style. Without any further
options a symmetric dashed line with a segment length of 5 pixels will
be drawn. The dash pattern can be changed if the dashes= parameter is
followed by either one value or an even number (1, 2, 4, 6, ...) of
positive values. Each value provides the length of alternate on_s and
off_s portions of the stroke. The dash-offset parameter specifies an
offset into the pattern at which the stroke begins.
When you do not specify a color, you cannot specify a legend. Should
you want to use STACK, use the "LINEx:<value>::STACK" form.
AREA:value[#color][:[legend][:STACK][:skipscale]]
See LINE, however the area between the x-axis and the line will be
filled.
TICK:vname#rrggbb[aa][:fraction[:legend]]
Plot a tick mark (a vertical line) for each value of vname that is non-
zero and not *UNKNOWN*. The fraction argument specifies the length of
the tick mark as a fraction of the y-axis; the default value is 0.1
(10% of the axis). Note that the color specification is not optional.
The TICK marks normally start at the lower edge of the graphing area.
If the fraction is negative they start at the upper border of the
graphing area.
SHIFT:vname:offset
Using this command RRDtool will graph the following elements with the
specified offset. For instance, you can specify an offset of
( 7*24*60*60 = ) 604'800 seconds to "look back" one week. Make sure to
tell the viewer of your graph you did this ... As with the other
graphing elements, you can specify a number or a variable here.
TEXTALIGN:{left|right|justified|center}
Labels are placed below the graph. When they overflow to the left, they
wrap to the next line. By default, lines are justified left and right.
The TEXTALIGN function lets you change this default. This is a command
and not an option, so that you can change the default several times in
your argument list.
STACK:vname#color[:legend]
Deprecated. Use the STACK modifiers on the other commands instead!
Some notes on stacking
When stacking, an element is not placed above the X-axis but rather on
top of the previous element. There must be something to stack upon.
You can use an invisible LINE or AREA to stacked upon.
An unknown value makes the entire stack unknown from that moment on.
You don't know where to begin (the unknown value) and therefore do not
know where to end.
If you want to make sure you will be displaying a certain variable,
make sure never to stack upon the unknown value. Use a CDEF
instruction with IF and UN to do so.
NOTES on legend arguments
Escaping the colon
A colon ':' in a legend argument will mark the end of the legend. To
enter a ':' as part of a legend, the colon must be escaped with a
backslash '\:'. Beware that many environments process backslashes
themselves, so it may be necessary to write two backslashes in order to
one being passed onto rrd_graph.
String Formatting
The text printed below the actual graph can be formatted by appending
special escape characters at the end of a text. When ever such a
character occurs, all pending text is pushed onto the graph according
to the character specified.
Valid markers are: \j for justified, \l for left aligned, \r for right
aligned, and \c for centered. In the next section there is an example
showing how to use centered formatting.
\n is a valid alias for \l since incomplete parsing in earlier versions
of RRDtool lead to this behavior and a number of people has been using
it.
Normally there are two space characters inserted between every two
items printed into the graph. The space following a string can be
suppressed by putting a \g at the end of the string. The \g also
ignores any space inside the string if it is at the very end of the
string. This can be used in connection with %s to suppress empty unit
strings.
GPRINT:a:MAX:%lf%s\g
A special case is COMMENT:\s which inserts some additional vertical
space before placing the next row of legends.
If you want to have left and right aligned legends on the same line use
COMMENT:\u to go one line back like this:
COMMENT:left\l
COMMENT:\u
COMMENT:right\r
There is also a 'nop' control for situations where you want a string to
actually end in a backslash character sequence \.
COMMENT:OS\2\.
When using a proportional font in your graph, the tab characters or the
sequence \t will line-up legend elements. Note that the tabs inserted
are relative to the start of the current legend element!
Since RRDtool 1.3 is using Pango for rending text, you can use Pango
markup. Pango uses the xml span tags for inline formatting
instructions.:
A simple example of a marked-up string might be:
<span foreground="blue" size="x-large">Blue text</span> is <i>cool</i>!
The complete list of attributes for the span tag (taken from the pango
documentation):
font_desc
A font description string, such as "Sans Italic 12"; note that any
other span attributes will override this description. So if you
have "Sans Italic" and also a style="normal" attribute, you will
get Sans normal, not italic.
font_family
A font family name
face
Synonym for font_family
size
Font size in 1024ths of a point, or one of the absolute sizes
'xx-small', 'x-small', 'small', 'medium', 'large', 'x-large',
'xx-large', or one of the relative sizes 'smaller' or 'larger'. If
you want to specify a absolute size, it's usually easier to take
advantage of the ability to specify a partial font description
using 'font_desc'; you can use font_desc='12.5' rather than
size='12800'.
style
One of 'normal', 'oblique', 'italic'
weight
One of 'ultralight', 'light', 'normal', 'bold', 'ultrabold',
'heavy', or a numeric weight
variant
'normal' or 'smallcaps'
stretch
One of 'ultracondensed', 'extracondensed', 'condensed',
'semicondensed', 'normal', 'semiexpanded', 'expanded',
'extraexpanded', 'ultraexpanded'
foreground
An RGB color specification such as '#00FF00' or a color name such
as 'red'
background
An RGB color specification such as '#00FF00' or a color name such
as 'red'
underline
One of 'none', 'single', 'double', 'low', 'error'
underline_color
The color of underlines; an RGB color specification such as
'#00FF00' or a color name such as 'red'
rise
Vertical displacement, in 10000ths of an em. Can be negative for
subscript, positive for superscript.
strikethrough
'true' or 'false' whether to strike through the text
strikethrough_color
The color of crossed out lines; an RGB color specification such as
'#00FF00' or a color name such as 'red'
fallback
'true' or 'false' whether to enable fallback. If disabled, then
characters will only be used from the closest matching font on the
system. No fallback will be done to other fonts on the system that
might contain the characters in the text. Fallback is enabled by
default. Most applications should not disable fallback.
lang
A language code, indicating the text language
letter_spacing
Inter-letter spacing in 1024ths of a point.
gravity
One of 'south', 'east', 'north', 'west', 'auto'.
gravity_hint
One of 'natural', 'strong', 'line'.
To save you some typing, there are also some shortcuts:
b Bold
big Makes font relatively larger, equivalent to <span size="larger">
i Italic
s Strike through
sub Subscript
sup Superscript
small
Makes font relatively smaller, equivalent to <span size="smaller">
tt Monospace font
u Underline
SEE ALSO
rrdgraph gives an overview of how rrdtool graph works. rrdgraph_data
describes DEF,CDEF and VDEF in detail. rrdgraph_rpn describes the RPN
language used in the ?DEF statements. rrdgraph_graph page describes
all of the graph and print functions.
Make sure to read rrdgraph_examples for tips&tricks.
AUTHOR
Program by Tobias Oetiker <tobi AT oetiker.ch>
This manual page by Alex van den Bogaerdt <alex AT vandenbogaerdt.nl> with
corrections and/or additions by several people
1.4.8 2013-05-23 RRDGRAPH_GRAPH(1)