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root/i-scream/projects/cms/source/host/generic/statgrab.pl
Revision: 1.27
Committed: Mon Feb 5 17:21:04 2001 UTC (23 years, 9 months ago) by tdb
Content type: text/plain
Branch: MAIN
Changes since 1.26: +53 -9 lines
Log Message:
The uptimes section now works, and accounts for every permutation. The only one
we have been unable to verify is if the uptime is < 1min.
There is some debugging code at the top, this allows each permutation to easily
be checked.
This is not efficient, it needs to be reordered to make the most common case
come first.

File Contents

# Content
1 #!/usr/bin/perl -w
2
3 #-----------------------------------------------------------------
4 # Machine statistics grabber
5 # $Author: pjm2 $
6 # $Id: statgrab.pl,v 1.26 2001/02/05 17:13:26 pjm2 Exp $
7 #
8 # A Perl script to return various information about a host machine
9 # by examining the output of some common Unix/Linux commands.
10 # This is a stopgap to act as a generic way of collecting the
11 # data. It is perhaps more reliable than the current Java host
12 # at doing this and it can obviously be used by a C++ program as
13 # well until the C++ host is ready to find the information out
14 # itself.
15 #-----------------------------------------------------------------
16
17
18 $| = 1;
19
20
21 # You'd be silly not to use this ;)
22 use strict;
23
24 # Paths
25 my($topbin) = "/usr/local/sbin/top";
26 my($dfbin) = "/usr/bin/df";
27 my($usersbin) = "/usr/ucb/users";
28 my($unamebin) = "/usr/bin/uname";
29 my($uptimebin) = "/usr/bin/uptime";
30
31 # Run the following components: -
32 &print_ident();
33 &include_osver();
34 &include_uptime();
35 &include_users();
36 &include_top();
37 &include_disk();
38
39 # End the program normally.
40 exit(0);
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49 # prints out an identifier for this version of statgrab.pl
50 # the host should check this when reading data
51 # means the host must be checked and updated to work with newer versions.
52 sub print_ident() {
53 print 'version statgrab.pl $Revision: 1.26 $';
54 print "\n";
55 }
56
57 # sub to print pairs of data, separated by a single space character.
58 # If the second argument is undefined, then the pair is still printed,
59 # however, the value shall be displayed as the the 'default' value
60 # if the passed value was undefined.
61 sub print_pair($$$) {
62 my($default, $name, $value) = @_;
63
64 if (!defined $value) {
65 $value = $default;
66 }
67
68 # Remove the trailing linefeed if we've not already done so.
69 chomp($value);
70
71 # print the pair of data with a space inbetween.
72 print "$name $value\n";
73 }
74
75
76 # sub to find out disk partition information, if it exists.
77 sub include_disk() {
78
79 # Run the df program.
80 my(@df) = `$dfbin -ak`;
81
82 # Go through each line of the program, looking for each thing we want.
83 my($partition_no) = 0;
84 for (my($i) = 0; $i < $#df; $i++) {
85 my($line) = $df[$i];
86 $line =~ /^(\/[^\s]*)\s*([0-9]*)\s*([0-9]*)\s*([0-9]*)\s*[^\s]*\s*(\/[^\s]*)\s*/;
87 # $4 will not match unless everything before it does...
88 if (defined $5) {
89 my ($filesystem, $kbytes, $used, $avail, $mount) = ($1, $2, $3, $4, $5);
90 &print_pair("unknown", "packet.disk.p$partition_no.attributes.name", $filesystem);
91 &print_pair(0, "packet.disk.p$partition_no.attributes.kbytes", $kbytes);
92 &print_pair(0, "packet.disk.p$partition_no.attributes.used", $used);
93 &print_pair(0, "packet.disk.p$partition_no.attributes.avail", $avail);
94 &print_pair("unknown", "packet.disk.p$partition_no.attributes.mount", $mount);
95 ++$partition_no;
96 }
97 }
98
99 }
100
101 # sub to find out the list of all (non-unique) usernames logged
102 # in to the machine and how many their are. (not
103 sub include_users() {
104
105 # Find out all users on this machine.
106 my($users) = `$usersbin`;
107 $users = "\n" unless defined $users;
108 chop $users;
109 my($users_count) = 0;
110 $users_count++ while $users =~ /\w+/g;
111 my($users_list) = $users." ";
112
113 &print_pair(0, "packet.users.count", $users_count);
114 &print_pair("unknown", "packet.users.list", $users_list);
115 }
116
117
118 # sub to run a series of regexps on the output of 'top' to
119 # gather various machine statistics.
120 sub include_top() {
121
122 # Find out some numbers from top.
123 my(@top) = `$topbin -d2 -s1 0`;
124 my($top) = join(" ", @top);
125 $top =~ s/\n//g;
126
127 &print_pair(0, "packet.load.load1", $top =~ /load averages:\s*([^\s]+?),/);
128 &print_pair(0, "packet.load.load5", $top =~ /load averages:\s*.+?,\s*([^\s]+?),/);
129 &print_pair(0, "packet.load.load15", $top =~ /load averages:\s*.+?,\s*.+?,\s*([^\s]+?)\s/);
130 &print_pair(0, "packet.processes.total", $top =~ /([^\s]+?) processes:/);
131 &print_pair(0, "packet.processes.sleeping", $top =~ / ([^\s]+?) sleeping/);
132 &print_pair(0, "packet.processes.zombie", $top =~ / ([^\s]+?) zombie/);
133 &print_pair(0, "packet.processes.stopped", $top =~ / ([^\s]+?) stopped/);
134 &print_pair(0, "packet.processes.cpu", $top =~ /([^\s]+?)\s*on cpu/);
135 &print_pair(0, "packet.cpu.idle", $top =~ /([^\s]+?)% idle/);
136 &print_pair(0, "packet.cpu.user", $top =~ /([^\s]+?)% user/);
137 &print_pair(0, "packet.cpu.kernel", $top =~ /([^\s]+?)% kernel/);
138 &print_pair(0, "packet.cpu.iowait", $top =~ /([^\s]+?)% iowait/);
139 &print_pair(0, "packet.cpu.swap", $top =~ /([^\s]+?)% swap/);
140
141 # The following need to be specified in megabytes.
142 # If they are preceeded by a G, then multiply by 1024.
143
144 $top =~ /([^\s]+?)([MG]) real/;
145 my($real) = $1;
146 $real*=1024 if $2 eq "G";
147 &print_pair(0, "packet.memory.total", $real);
148
149 $top =~ /([^\s]+?)([MG]) free/;
150 my($free) = $1;
151 $free*=1024 if $2 eq "G";
152 &print_pair(0, "packet.memory.free", $free);
153
154 $top =~ /([^\s]+?)([MG]) swap in use/;
155 my($swap_in_use) = $1;
156 $swap_in_use*=1024 if $2 eq "G";
157 # DO NOT print this one out... save it for in a moment...
158
159 $top =~ /([^\s]+?)([MG]) swap free/;
160 my($swap_free) = $1;
161 $swap_free*=1024 if $2 eq "G";
162 &print_pair(0, "packet.swap.free", $swap_free);
163
164 # AJ requested total swap instead of swap_in_use, so here we go!
165 &print_pair(0, "packet.swap.total", $swap_free + $swap_in_use);
166 }
167
168 # sub to get details of the machine's operating system.
169 sub include_osver() {
170
171 # Find out details about the operating system
172 # If these values remain undefined, then the print_pair
173 # function shall show the value to be the string "unknown".
174 my($os_name) = `$unamebin -s`;
175 my($os_release) = `$unamebin -r`;
176 my($os_platform) = `$unamebin -m`;
177 my($os_sysname) = `$unamebin -n`;
178 my($os_version) = `$unamebin -v`;
179
180 &print_pair("unknown", "packet.os.name", $os_name);
181 &print_pair("unknown", "packet.os.release", $os_release);
182 &print_pair("unknown", "packet.os.platform", $os_platform);
183 &print_pair("unknown", "packet.os.sysname", $os_sysname);
184 &print_pair("unknown", "packet.os.version", $os_version);
185
186 }
187
188 # sub to get system uptime.
189 sub include_uptime() {
190
191 # debug stuff, all the different cases
192
193 # normal
194 #my($uptime) = " 4:48pm up 49 day(s), 6:30, 201 users, load average: 0.33, 0.35, 0.38\n";
195 # 0 days
196 #my($uptime) = " 4:48pm up 6:30, 201 users, load average: 0.33, 0.35, 0.38\n";
197 # 0 hours
198 #my($uptime) = " 4:48pm up 49 day(s), 30 min(s), 201 users, load average: 0.33, 0.35, 0.38\n";
199 # 0 mins
200 #my($uptime) = " 4:48pm up 49 day(s), 6 hr(s), 201 users, load average: 0.33, 0.35, 0.38\n";
201 # 0 days and 0 mins
202 #my($uptime) = " 4:48pm up 6 hr(s), 201 users, load average: 0.33, 0.35, 0.38\n";
203 # 0 days and 0 hours
204 #my($uptime) = " 4:48pm up 30 min(s), 201 users, load average: 0.33, 0.35, 0.38\n";
205 # 0 hours and 0 mins
206 #my($uptime) = " 4:48pm up 49 day(s), 201 users, load average: 0.33, 0.35, 0.38\n";
207
208 # grab the uptime
209 my($uptime) = `$uptimebin`;
210
211 # work out the days, hours, and minutes
212 if ($uptime =~ /hr/) {
213 # two possible cases here
214 if($uptime =~ /day/) {
215 # 0 minutes
216 $uptime =~ /up\s+([0-9]+)\s+.*,\s+([0-9]+)\s+.*,/;
217 $uptime = "$1:$2:0";
218 }
219 else {
220 # 0 days and 0 minutes
221 $uptime =~ /up\s+([0-9]+)\s+/;
222 $uptime = "0:$1:0";
223 }
224 }
225 elsif ($uptime =~ /min/) {
226 # two possible cases here
227 if($uptime =~ /day/) {
228 # 0 hours
229 $uptime =~ /up\s+([0-9]+)\s+.*,\s+([0-9]+)\s+.*,/;
230 $uptime = "$1:0:$2";
231 }
232 else {
233 # 0 days and 0 hours
234 $uptime =~ /up\s+([0-9]+)\s+/;
235 $uptime = "0:0:$1";
236 }
237 }
238 elsif ($uptime =~ /day/) {
239 if ($uptime =~ /day.*,\s+([0-9]+):([0-9]+)/) {
240 # normal
241 $uptime =~ /up\s+([0-9]+)\s+.*,\s+([0-9]+):([0-9]+)/;
242 $uptime = "$1:$2:$3";
243 }
244 else {
245 # 0 hours and 0 mins
246 $uptime =~ /up\s+([0-9]+)/;
247 $uptime = "$1:0:0";
248 }
249 }
250 else {
251 # 0 days
252 $uptime =~ /up\s+([0-9]+):([0-9]+)/;
253 $uptime = "0:$1:$2";
254 }
255
256 # turn into minutes
257
258 $uptime =~ /([0-9]+):([0-9]+):([0-9]+)/;
259 $uptime = $3 + ($2 + $1*24)*60;
260
261 &print_pair("unknown", "packet.os.uptime", $uptime);
262
263 }