C SYNOPSIS
#include <pcp/pmapi.h>#include <pcp/impl.h>
int __pmLocalPMDA(int op, int domain, const char *name, constĀ charĀ *init);
cc ... -lpcp
DESCRIPTION
PCP contexts of type PM_CONTEXT_LOCAL are used by clients that wish to fetch metrics directly from one or more PMDAs on the local host without involving pmcd(1). A PMDA that is to be used in this way must have been built as a Dynamic Shared Object (DSO).Historically the table of PMDAs available for use with PM_CONTEXT_LOCAL was hardcoded to the following:
- *
- The PMDA (or PMDAs) that export the operating system performance data and data about process activity.
- *
- The mmv PMDA.
- *
- The sample PMDA provided $PCP_LITE_SAMPLE or $PMDA_LOCAL_SAMPLE is set in the environment - used mostly for QA and testing.
The initial table of PMDAs available for use with PM_CONTEXT_LOCAL is now generated dynamically from all those PMDAs that have been installed as DSOs on the local host. The one exception is the ``pmcd'' PMDA which only operates correctly in the address space of a running pmcd(1) process and so is not available to an application using a PM_CONTEXT_LOCAL context.
__pmLocalPMDA provides a number of services to amend the table of PMDAs available for use with PM_CONTEXT_LOCAL.
The op argument specifies the what should be done and takes one of the following values and actions:
- PM_LOCAL_ADD
- Append an entry to the table for the PMDA with a Performance Metrics Domain (PMD) of domain, the path to the DSO PMDA is given by path and the PMDA's initialization routine is init.
- PM_LOCAL_DEL
- Removes all entries in the table where the domain matches, or the path matches. Setting the arguments domain to -1 or path to NULL to force matching on the other argument. The init argument is ignored.
- PM_LOCAL_CLEAR
- Remove all entries from the table. All the other arguments are ignored in this case.
The domain, name and init arguments have similar syntax and semantics to the associated fields in the pmcd(1) configuration file. The one difference is the path argument which is used by __pmLocalPMDA to find a likely looking DSO by searching in this order: $PCP_PMDAS_DIR/path, path, $PCP_PMDAS_DIR/path.dso-suffix and finally path.dso-suffix (dso-suffix is the local platform specific default file name suffix for a DSO, e.g. so for Linux, dylib for Mac OS X, dll for Windows, etc.).