sw-collectd-threshold(category21-suse.html) - phpMan

COLLECTD-THRESHOLD(5)              collectd              COLLECTD-THRESHOLD(5)

NAME
       collectd-threshold - Documentation of collectd's Threshold plugin
SYNOPSIS
        LoadPlugin "threshold"
        <Plugin "threshold">
          <Type "foo">
            WarningMin    0.00
            WarningMax 1000.00
            FailureMin    0.00
            FailureMax 1200.00
            Invert false
            Instance "bar"
          </Type>
        </Plugin>
DESCRIPTION
       Starting with version 4.3.0 collectd has support for monitoring. By
       that we mean that the values are not only stored or sent somewhere, but
       that they are judged and, if a problem is recognized, acted upon. The
       only action the Threshold plugin takes itself is to generate and
       dispatch a notification. Other plugins can register to receive
       notifications and perform appropriate further actions.
       Since systems and what you expect them to do differ a lot, you can
       configure thresholds for your values freely. This gives you a lot of
       flexibility but also a lot of responsibility.
       Every time a value is out of range, a notification is dispatched. This
       means that the idle percentage of your CPU needs to be less then the
       configured threshold only once for a notification to be generated.
       There's no such thing as a moving average or similar - at least not
       now.
       Also, all values that match a threshold are considered to be relevant
       or "interesting". As a consequence collectd will issue a notification
       if they are not received for Timeout iterations. The Timeout
       configuration option is explained in section "GLOBAL OPTIONS" in
       collectd.conf(5). If, for example, Timeout is set to "2" (the default)
       and some hosts sends its CPU statistics to the server every 60 seconds,
       a notification will be dispatched after about 120 seconds. It may take
       a little longer because the timeout is checked only once each Interval
       on the server.
       When a value comes within range again or is received after it was
       missing, an "OKAY-notification" is dispatched.
CONFIGURATION
       Here is a configuration example to get you started. Read below for more
       information.
        LoadPlugin "threshold"
        <Plugin "threshold">
          <Type "foo">
            WarningMin    0.00
            WarningMax 1000.00
            FailureMin    0.00
            FailureMax 1200.00
            Invert false
            Instance "bar"
          </Type>
          <Plugin "interface">
            Instance "eth0"
            <Type "if_octets">
              FailureMax 10000000
              DataSource "rx"
            </Type>
          </Plugin>
          <Host "hostname">
            <Type "cpu">
              Instance "idle"
              FailureMin 10
            </Type>
            <Plugin "memory">
              <Type "memory">
                Instance "cached"
                WarningMin 100000000
              </Type>
            </Plugin>
            <Type "load">
               DataSource "midterm"
               FailureMax 4
               Hits 3
               Hysteresis 3
            </Type>
          </Host>
        </Plugin>
       There are basically two types of configuration statements: The "Host",
       "Plugin", and "Type" blocks select the value for which a threshold
       should be configured. The "Plugin" and "Type" blocks may be specified
       further using the "Instance" option. You can combine the block by
       nesting the blocks, though they must be nested in the above order, i.e.
       "Host" may contain either "Plugin" and "Type" blocks, "Plugin" may only
       contain "Type" blocks and "Type" may not contain other blocks. If
       multiple blocks apply to the same value the most specific block is
       used.
       The other statements specify the threshold to configure. They must be
       included in a "Type" block. Currently the following statements are
       recognized:
       FailureMax Value
       WarningMax Value
           Sets the upper bound of acceptable values. If unset defaults to
           positive infinity. If a value is greater than FailureMax a FAILURE
           notification will be created. If the value is greater than
           WarningMax but less than (or equal to) FailureMax a WARNING
           notification will be created.
       FailureMin Value
       WarningMin Value
           Sets the lower bound of acceptable values. If unset defaults to
           negative infinity. If a value is less than FailureMin a FAILURE
           notification will be created. If the value is less than WarningMin
           but greater than (or equal to) FailureMin a WARNING notification
           will be created.
       DataSource DSName
           Some data sets have more than one "data source". Interesting
           examples are the "if_octets" data set, which has received ("rx")
           and sent ("tx") bytes and the "disk_ops" data set, which holds
           "read" and "write" operations. The system load data set, "load",
           even has three data sources: "shortterm", "midterm", and
           "longterm".
           Normally, all data sources are checked against a configured
           threshold. If this is undesirable, or if you want to specify
           different limits for each data source, you can use the DataSource
           option to have a threshold apply only to one data source.
       Invert true|false
           If set to true the range of acceptable values is inverted, i.e.
           values between FailureMin and FailureMax (WarningMin and
           WarningMax) are not okay. Defaults to false.
       Persist true|false
           Sets how often notifications are generated. If set to true one
           notification will be generated for each value that is out of the
           acceptable range. If set to false (the default) then a notification
           is only generated if a value is out of range but the previous value
           was okay.
           This applies to missing values, too: If set to true a notification
           about a missing value is generated once every Interval seconds. If
           set to false only one such notification is generated until the
           value appears again.
       PersistOK true|false
           Sets how OKAY notifications act. If set to true one notification
           will be generated for each value that is in the acceptable range.
           If set to false (the default) then a notification is only generated
           if a value is in range but the previous value was not.
       Percentage true|false
           If set to true, the minimum and maximum values given are
           interpreted as percentage value, relative to the other data
           sources. This is helpful for example for the "df" type, where you
           may want to issue a warning when less than 5 % of the total space
           is available. Defaults to false.
       Hits Value
           Sets the number of occurrences which the threshold must be raised
           before to dispatch any notification or, in other words, the number
           of Intervals that the threshold must be match before dispatch any
           notification.
       Hysteresis Value
           Sets the hysteresis value for threshold. The hysteresis is a method
           to prevent flapping between states, until a new received value for
           a previously matched threshold down below the threshold condition
           (WarningMax, FailureMin or everything else) minus the hysteresis
           value, the failure (respectively warning) state will be keep.
       Interesting true|false
           If set to true (the default), a notification with severity
           "FAILURE" will be created when a matching value list is no longer
           updated and purged from the internal cache. When this happens
           depends on the interval of the value list and the global Timeout
           setting. See the Interval and Timeout settings in collectd.conf(5)
           for details. If set to false, this event will be ignored.
SEE ALSO
       collectd(1), collectd.conf(5)
AUTHOR
       Florian Forster <octo at collectd.org>

5.11.0.94.g41b1e33                2020-07-20             COLLECTD-THRESHOLD(5)