3 collectd-perl - Documentation of collectd's C<perl plugin>
10 IncludeDir "/path/to/perl/plugins"
11 BaseName "Collectd::Plugin"
18 The C<perl plugin> embeds a Perl-interpreter into collectd and provides an
19 interface to collectd's plugin system. This makes it possible to write plugins
20 for collectd in Perl. This is a lot more efficient than executing a
21 Perl-script every time you want to read a value with the C<exec plugin> (see
22 L<collectd-exec(5)>) and provides a lot more functionality, too.
28 =item B<LoadPlugin> I<Plugin>
30 Loads the Perl plugin I<Plugin>. This does basically the same as B<use> would
31 do in a Perl program. As a side effect, the first occurrence of this option
32 causes the Perl-interpreter to be initialized.
34 =item B<BaseName> I<Name>
36 Prepends I<Name>B<::> to all plugin names loaded after this option. This is
37 provided for convenience to keep plugin names short.
39 =item B<EnableDebugger> I<Package>[=I<option>,...]
41 Run collectd under the control of the Perl source debugger. If I<Package> is
42 not the empty string, control is passed to the debugging, profiling, or
43 tracing module installed as Devel::I<Package>. A comma-separated list of
44 options may be specified after the "=" character. Please note that you may not
45 leave out the I<Package> option even if you specify B<"">. This is the same as
46 using the B<-d:Package> command line option.
48 See L<perldebug> for detailed documentation about debugging Perl.
50 This option does not prevent collectd from daemonizing, so you should start
51 collectd with the B<-f> command line option. Else you will not be able to use
52 the command line driven interface of the debugger.
54 =item B<IncludeDir> I<Dir>
56 Adds I<Dir> to the B<@INC> array. This is the same as using the B<-IDir>
57 command line option or B<use lib Dir> in the source code. Please note that it
58 only has effect on plugins loaded after this option.
62 =head1 WRITING YOUR OWN PLUGINS
64 Writing your own plugins is quite simple. collectd manages plugins by means of
65 B<dispatch functions> which call the appropriate B<callback functions>
66 registered by the plugins. Any plugin basically consists of the implementation
67 of these callback functions and initializing code which registers the
68 functions with collectd. See the section "EXAMPLES" below for a really basic
69 example. The following types of B<callback functions> are known to collectd
70 (all of these are optional):
76 This type of functions is called once after loading the module and before any
77 calls to the read and write functions. It should be used to initialize the
78 internal state of the plugin (e.E<nbsp>g. open sockets, ...). If the return
79 value evaluates to B<false>, the plugin will be disabled.
83 This type of function is used to collect the actual data. It is called once
84 per interval (see the B<Interval> configuration option of collectd). Usually
85 it will call B<plugin_dispatch_values> to dispatch the values to collectd
86 which will pass them on to all registered B<write functions>. If the return
87 value evaluates to B<false> the plugin will be skipped for an increasing
88 amount of time until it returns B<true> again.
92 This type of function is used to write the dispatched values. It is called
93 once for each call to B<plugin_dispatch_values>.
97 This type of function is used to pass messages of plugins or the daemon itself
100 =item shutdown functions
102 This type of function is called once before the daemon shuts down. It should
103 be used to clean up the plugin (e.g. close sockets, ...).
107 Any function may set the B<$@> variable to describe errors in more detail. The
108 message will be passed on to the user using collectd's logging mechanism.
110 See the documentation of the B<plugin_register> method in the section
111 "METHODS" below for the number and types of arguments passed to each
112 B<callback function>. This section also explains how to register B<callback
113 functions> with collectd.
115 To enable a plugin, copy it to a place where Perl can find it (i.E<nbsp>e. a
116 directory listed in the B<@INC> array) just as any other Perl plugin and add
117 an appropriate B<LoadPlugin> option to the configuration file. After
118 restarting collectd you're done.
122 The following complex types are used to pass values between the Perl plugin
129 A data-set is a list of one or more data-sources. Each data-source defines a
130 name, type, min- and max-value and the data-set wraps them up into one
131 structure. The general layout looks like this:
134 name => 'data_source_name',
135 type => DS_TYPE_COUNTER || DS_TYPE_GAUGE
136 min => value || undef,
137 max => value || undef
142 A value-list is one structure which features an array of values and fields to
143 identify the values, i.E<nbsp>e. time and host, plugin name and
144 plugin-instance as well as a type and type-instance. Since the "type" is not
145 included in the value-list but is passed as an extra argument, the general
146 layout looks like this:
149 values => [123, 0.5],
152 plugin => 'myplugin',
153 plugin_instance => '',
161 The following functions provide the C-interface to Perl-modules. They are
162 exported by the ":plugin" export tag (see the section "EXPORTS" below).
166 =item B<plugin_register> (I<type>, I<name>, I<data>)
168 Registers a callback-function or data-set.
170 I<type> can be one of:
188 I<name> is the name of the callback-function or the type of the data-set,
189 depending on the value of I<type>. (Please note that the type of the data-set
190 is the value passed as I<name> here and has nothing to do with the I<type>
191 argument which simply tells B<plugin_register> what is being registered.)
193 The last argument, I<data>, is either a function name or an array-reference.
194 If I<type> is B<TYPE_DATASET>, then the I<data> argument must be an
195 array-reference which points to an array of hashes. Each hash describes one
196 data-source. For the exact layout see B<Data-Set> above. Please note that
197 there is a large number of predefined data-sets available in the B<types.db>
198 file which are automatically registered with collectd.
200 If the I<type> argument is any of the other types (B<TYPE_INIT>, B<TYPE_READ>,
201 ...) then I<data> is expected to be a function name. If the name is not
202 prefixed with the plugin's package name collectd will add it automatically.
203 The interface slightly differs from the C interface (which expects a function
204 pointer instead) because Perl does not support to share references to
205 subroutines between threads.
207 These functions are called in the various stages of the daemon (see the
208 section "WRITING YOUR OWN PLUGINS" above) and are passed the following
219 No arguments are passed
223 The arguments passed are I<type>, I<data-set>, and I<value-list>. I<type> is a
224 string. For the layout of I<data-set> and I<value-list> see above.
228 The arguments are I<log-level> and I<message>. The log level is small for
229 important messages and high for less important messages. The least important
230 level is B<LOG_DEBUG>, the most important level is B<LOG_ERR>. In between there
231 are (from least to most important): B<LOG_INFO>, B<LOG_NOTICE>, and
232 B<LOG_WARNING>. I<message> is simply a string B<without> a newline at the end.
236 =item B<plugin_unregister> (I<type>, I<plugin>)
238 Removes a callback or data-set from collectd's internal list of
239 functionsE<nbsp>/ datasets.
241 =item B<plugin_dispatch_values> (I<type>, I<value-list>)
243 Submits a I<value-list> of type I<type> to the daemon. If the data-set I<type>
244 is found (and the number of values matches the number of data-sources) then the
245 type, data-set and value-list is passed to all write-callbacks that are
246 registered with the daemon.
248 =item B<plugin_log> (I<log-level>, I<message>)
250 Submits a I<message> of level I<log-level> to collectd's logging mechanism.
251 The message is passed to all log-callbacks that are registered with collectd.
253 =item B<ERROR>, B<WARNING>, B<NOTICE>, B<INFO>, B<DEBUG> (I<message>)
255 Wrappers around B<plugin_log>, using B<LOG_ERR>, B<LOG_WARNING>,
256 B<LOG_NOTICE>, B<LOG_INFO> and B<LOG_DEBUG> respectively as I<log-level>.
260 =head1 GLOBAL VARIABLES
266 As the name suggests this variable keeps the hostname of the system collectd
267 is running on. The value might be influenced by the B<Hostname> or
268 B<FQDNLookup> configuration options (see L<collectd.conf(5)> for details).
272 This variable keeps the interval in seconds in which the read functions are
273 queried (see the B<Interval> configuration option).
277 Any changes to these variables will be globally visible in collectd.
281 By default no symbols are exported. However, the following export tags are
282 available (B<:all> will export all of them):
290 =item B<plugin_register> ()
292 =item B<plugin_unregister> ()
294 =item B<plugin_dispatch_values> ()
296 =item B<plugin_log> ()
310 =item B<TYPE_SHUTDOWN>
320 =item B<DS_TYPE_COUNTER>
322 =item B<DS_TYPE_GAUGE>
366 Any Perl plugin will start similar to:
368 package Collectd::Plugins::FooBar;
373 use Collectd qw( :all );
375 A very simple read function will look like:
379 my $vl = { plugin => 'foobar' };
380 $vl->{'values'} = [ rand(42) ];
381 plugin_dispatch_values ('gauge', $vl);
385 A very simple write function will look like:
389 my ($type, $ds, $vl) = @_;
390 for (my $i = 0; $i < scalar (@$ds); ++$i) {
391 print "$vl->{'plugin'} ($vl->{'type'}): $vl->{'values'}->[$i]\n";
396 To register those functions with collectd:
398 plugin_register (TYPE_READ, "foobar", "foobar_read");
399 plugin_register (TYPE_WRITE, "foobar", "foobar_write");
401 See the section "DATA TYPES" above for a complete documentation of the data
402 types used by the read and write functions.
410 collectd is heavily multi-threaded. Each collectd thread accessing the perl
411 plugin will be mapped to a Perl interpreter thread (see L<threads(3perl)>).
412 Any such thread will be created and destroyed transparently and on-the-fly.
414 Hence, any plugin has to be thread-safe if it provides several entry points
415 from collectd (i.E<nbsp>e. if it registers more than one callback). Please
416 note that no data is shared between threads by default. You have to use the
417 B<threads::shared> module to do so.
421 Each function name registered with collectd has to be available before the
422 first thread has been created (i.E<nbsp>e. basically at compile time). This
423 basically means that hacks (yes, I really consider this to be a hack) like
424 C<*foo = \&bar; plugin_register (TYPE_READ, "plugin", "foo");> most likely
425 will not work. This is due to the fact that the symbol table is not shared
426 across different threads.
430 Each plugin is usually only loaded once and kept in memory for performance
431 reasons. Therefore, END blocks are only executed once when collectd shuts
432 down. You should not rely on END blocks anyway - use B<shutdown functions>
444 L<threads::shared(3perl)>,
449 The C<perl plugin> has been written by Sebastian Harl
450 E<lt>shE<nbsp>atE<nbsp>tokkee.orgE<gt>.
452 This manpage has been written by Florian Forster
453 E<lt>octoE<nbsp>atE<nbsp>verplant.orgE<gt> and Sebastian Harl
454 E<lt>shE<nbsp>atE<nbsp>tokkee.orgE<gt>.