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15 collectd-python - Documentation of collectd's C<python plugin>
22 ModulePath "/path/to/your/python/modules"
28 spam "wonderful" "lovely"
34 The C<python plugin> embeds a Python-interpreter into collectd and provides an
35 interface to collectd's plugin system. This makes it possible to write plugins
36 for collectd in Python. This is a lot more efficient than executing a
37 Python-script every time you want to read a value with the C<exec plugin> (see
38 L<collectd-exec(5)>) and provides a lot more functionality, too.
40 The minimum required Python version is I<2.6>.
46 =item B<LoadPlugin> I<Plugin>
48 Loads the Python plugin I<Plugin>.
50 =item B<Encoding> I<Name>
52 The default encoding for Unicode objects you pass to collectd. If you omit this
53 option it will default to B<ascii> on I<Python 2>. On I<Python 3> it will
54 always be B<utf-8>, as this function was removed, so this will be silently
56 These defaults are hardcoded in Python and will ignore everything else,
57 including your locale.
59 =item B<ModulePath> I<Name>
61 Prepends I<Name> to B<sys.path>. You won't be able to import any scripts you
62 wrote unless they are located in one of the directories in this list. Please
63 note that it only has effect on plugins loaded after this option. You can
64 use multiple B<ModulePath> lines to add more than one directory.
66 =item B<LogTraces> I<bool>
68 If a Python script throws an exception it will be logged by collectd with the
69 name of the exception and the message. If you set this option to true it will
70 also log the full stacktrace just like the default output of an interactive
71 Python interpreter. This should probably be set to false most of the time but
72 is very useful for development and debugging of new modules.
74 =item B<Interactive> I<bool>
76 This option will cause the module to launch an interactive Python interpreter
77 that reads from and writes to the terminal. Note that collectd will terminate
78 right after starting up if you try to run it as a daemon while this option is
79 enabled so make sure to start collectd with the B<-f> option.
81 The B<collectd> module is I<not> imported into the interpreter's globals. You
82 have to do it manually. Be sure to read the help text of the module, it can be
83 used as a reference guide during coding.
85 This interactive session will behave slightly differently from a daemonized
86 collectd script as well as from a normal Python interpreter:
92 B<1.> collectd will try to import the B<readline> module to give you a decent
93 way of entering your commands. The daemonized collectd won't do that.
97 B<2.> Python will be handling I<SIGINT>. Pressing I<Ctrl+C> will usually cause
98 collectd to shut down. This would be problematic in an interactive session,
99 therefore Python will be handling it in interactive sessions. This allows you
100 to use I<Ctrl+C> to interrupt Python code without killing collectd. This also
101 means you can catch I<KeyboardInterrupt> exceptions which does not work during
104 To quit collectd send I<EOF> (press I<Ctrl+D> at the beginning of a new line).
108 B<3.> collectd handles I<SIGCHLD>. This means that Python won't be able to
109 determine the return code of spawned processes with system(), popen() and
110 subprocess. This will result in Python not using external programs like less
111 to display help texts. You can override this behavior with the B<PAGER>
112 environment variable, e.g. I<export PAGER=less> before starting collectd.
113 Depending on your version of Python this might or might not result in an
114 B<OSError> exception which can be ignored.
116 If you really need to spawn new processes from Python you can register an init
117 callback and reset the action for SIGCHLD to the default behavior. Please note
118 that this I<will> break the exec plugin. Do not even load the exec plugin if
119 you intend to do this!
121 There is an example script located in B<contrib/python/getsigchld.py> to do
122 this. If you import this from I<collectd.conf> SIGCHLD will be handled
123 normally and spawning processes from Python will work as intended.
127 =item E<lt>B<Module> I<Name>E<gt> block
129 This block may be used to pass on configuration settings to a Python module.
130 The configuration is converted into an instance of the B<Config> class which is
131 passed to the registered configuration callback. See below for details about
132 the B<Config> class and how to register callbacks.
134 The I<name> identifies the callback.
140 There are a lot of places where strings are sent from collectd to Python and
141 from Python to collectd. How exactly this works depends on whether byte or
142 unicode strings or Python2 or Python3 are used.
144 Python2 has I<str>, which is just bytes, and I<unicode>. Python3 has I<str>,
145 which is a unicode object, and I<bytes>.
147 When passing strings from Python to collectd all of these object are supported
148 in all places, however I<str> should be used if possible. These strings must
149 not contain a NUL byte. Ignoring this will result in a I<TypeError> exception.
150 If a byte string was used it will be used as is by collectd. If a unicode
151 object was used it will be encoded using the default encoding (see above). If
152 this is not possible Python will raise a I<UnicodeEncodeError> exception.
154 When passing strings from collectd to Python the behavior depends on the
155 Python version used. Python2 will always receive a I<str> object. Python3 will
156 usually receive a I<str> object as well, however the original string will be
157 decoded to unicode using the default encoding. If this fails because the
158 string is not a valid sequence for this encoding a I<bytes> object will be
161 =head1 WRITING YOUR OWN PLUGINS
163 Writing your own plugins is quite simple. collectd manages plugins by means of
164 B<dispatch functions> which call the appropriate B<callback functions>
165 registered by the plugins. Any plugin basically consists of the implementation
166 of these callback functions and initializing code which registers the
167 functions with collectd. See the section "EXAMPLES" below for a really basic
168 example. The following types of B<callback functions> are known to collectd
169 (all of them are optional):
173 =item configuration functions
175 These are called during configuration if an appropriate
176 B<Module> block has been encountered. It is called once for each B<Module>
177 block which matches the name of the callback as provided with the
178 B<register_config> method - see below.
180 Python thread support has not been initialized at this point so do not use any
181 threading functions here!
185 These are called once after loading the module and before any
186 calls to the read and write functions. It should be used to initialize the
187 internal state of the plugin (e.E<nbsp>g. open sockets, ...). This is the
188 earliest point where you may use threads.
192 These are used to collect the actual data. It is called once
193 per interval (see the B<Interval> configuration option of collectd). Usually
194 it will call B<plugin_dispatch_values> to dispatch the values to collectd
195 which will pass them on to all registered B<write functions>. If this function
196 throws any kind of exception the plugin will be skipped for an increasing
197 amount of time until it returns normally again.
199 =item write functions
201 These are used to write the dispatched values. It is called
202 once for every value that was dispatched by any plugin.
204 =item flush functions
206 These are used to flush internal caches of plugins. It is
207 usually triggered by the user only. Any plugin which caches data before
208 writing it to disk should provide this kind of callback function.
212 These are used to pass messages of plugins or the daemon itself
215 =item notification function
217 These are used to act upon notifications. In general, a
218 notification is a status message that may be associated with a data instance.
219 Usually, a notification is generated by the daemon if a configured threshold
220 has been exceeded (see the section "THRESHOLD CONFIGURATION" in
221 L<collectd.conf(5)> for more details), but any plugin may dispatch
222 notifications as well.
224 =item shutdown functions
226 These are called once before the daemon shuts down. It should
227 be used to clean up the plugin (e.g. close sockets, ...).
231 Any function (except log functions) may throw an exception in case of
232 errors. The exception will be passed on to the user using collectd's logging
233 mechanism. If a log callback throws an exception it will be printed to standard
236 See the documentation of the various B<register_> methods in the section
237 "FUNCTIONS" below for the number and types of arguments passed to each
238 B<callback function>. This section also explains how to register B<callback
239 functions> with collectd.
241 To enable a module, copy it to a place where Python can find it (i.E<nbsp>e. a
242 directory listed in B<sys.path>) just as any other Python plugin and add
243 an appropriate B<Import> option to the configuration file. After restarting
244 collectd you're done.
248 The following complex types are used to pass values between the Python plugin
253 The Signed class is just a long. It has all its methods and behaves exactly
254 like any other long object. It is used to indicate if an integer was or should
255 be stored as a signed or unsigned integer object.
259 This is a long by another name. Use it in meta data dicts
260 to choose the way it is stored in the meta data.
264 The Unsigned class is just a long. It has all its methods and behaves exactly
265 like any other long object. It is used to indicate if an integer was or should
266 be stored as a signed or unsigned integer object.
270 This is a long by another name. Use it in meta data dicts
271 to choose the way it is stored in the meta data.
275 The Config class is an object which keeps the information provided in the
276 configuration file. The sequence of children keeps one entry for each
277 configuration option. Each such entry is another Config instance, which
278 may nest further if nested blocks are used.
282 This represents a piece of collectd's config file. It is passed to scripts with
283 config callbacks (see B<register_config>) and is of little use if created
286 It has no methods beyond the bare minimum and only exists for its data members.
288 Data descriptors defined here:
294 This represents the parent of this node. On the root node
295 of the config tree it will be None.
299 This is the keyword of this item, i.e. the first word of any given line in the
300 config file. It will always be a string.
304 This is a tuple (which might be empty) of all value, i.e. words following the
305 keyword in any given line in the config file.
307 Every item in this tuple will be either a string, a float or a boolean,
308 depending on the contents of the configuration file.
312 This is a tuple of child nodes. For most nodes this will be empty. If this node
313 represents a block instead of a single line of the config file it will contain
314 all nodes in this block.
320 This should not be used directly but it is the base class for both Values and
321 Notification. It is used to identify the source of a value or notification.
323 class PluginData(object)
325 This is an internal class that is the base for Values and Notification. It is
326 pretty useless by itself and was therefore not exported to the collectd module.
328 Data descriptors defined here:
334 The hostname of the host this value was read from. For dispatching this can be
335 set to an empty string which means the local hostname as defined in
340 The name of the plugin that read the data. Setting this member to an empty
341 string will insert "python" upon dispatching.
343 =item plugin_instance
345 Plugin instance string. May be empty.
349 This is the Unix timestamp of the time this value was read. For dispatching
350 values this can be set to zero which means "now". This means the time the value
351 is actually dispatched, not the time it was set to 0.
355 The type of this value. This type has to be defined in your I<types.db>.
356 Attempting to set it to any other value will raise a I<TypeError> exception.
357 Assigning a type is mandatory, calling dispatch without doing so will raise a
358 I<RuntimeError> exception.
362 Type instance string. May be empty.
368 A Value is an object which features a sequence of values. It is based on the
369 I<PluginData> type and uses its members to identify the values.
371 class Values(PluginData)
373 A Values object used for dispatching values to collectd and receiving values
374 from write callbacks.
376 Method resolution order:
388 Methods defined here:
392 =item B<dispatch>([type][, values][, plugin_instance][, type_instance][, plugin][, host][, time][, interval]) -> None.
394 Dispatch this instance to the collectd process. The object has members for each
395 of the possible arguments for this method. For a detailed explanation of these
396 parameters see the member of the same same.
398 If you do not submit a parameter the value saved in its member will be
399 submitted. If you do provide a parameter it will be used instead, without
402 =item B<write>([destination][, type][, values][, plugin_instance][, type_instance][, plugin][, host][, time][, interval]) -> None.
404 Write this instance to a single plugin or all plugins if "destination" is
405 omitted. This will bypass the main collectd process and all filtering and
406 caching. Other than that it works similar to "dispatch". In most cases
407 "dispatch" should be used instead of "write".
411 Data descriptors defined here:
417 The interval is the timespan in seconds between two submits for the same data
418 source. This value has to be a positive integer, so you can't submit more than
419 one value per second. If this member is set to a non-positive value, the
420 default value as specified in the config file will be used (default: 10).
422 If you submit values more often than the specified interval, the average will
423 be used. If you submit less values, your graphs will have gaps.
427 These are the actual values that get dispatched to collectd. It has to be a
428 sequence (a tuple or list) of numbers. The size of the sequence and the type of
429 its content depend on the type member your I<types.db> file. For more
430 information on this read the L<types.db(5)> manual page.
432 If the sequence does not have the correct size upon dispatch a I<RuntimeError>
433 exception will be raised. If the content of the sequence is not a number, a
434 I<TypeError> exception will be raised.
438 These are the meta data for this Value object.
439 It has to be a dictionary of numbers, strings or bools. All keys must be
440 strings. I<int> and <long> objects will be dispatched as signed integers unless
441 they are between 2**63 and 2**64-1, which will result in a unsigned integer.
442 You can force one of these storage classes by using the classes
443 B<collectd.Signed> and B<collectd.Unsigned>. A meta object received by a write
444 callback will always contain B<Signed> or B<Unsigned> objects.
450 A notification is an object defining the severity and message of the status
451 message as well as an identification of a data instance by means of the members
452 of I<PluginData> on which it is based.
454 class Notification(PluginData)
455 The Notification class is a wrapper around the collectd notification.
456 It can be used to notify other plugins about bad stuff happening. It works
457 similar to Values but has a severity and a message instead of interval
459 Notifications can be dispatched at any time and can be received with
460 register_notification.
462 Method resolution order:
474 Methods defined here:
478 =item B<dispatch>([type][, values][, plugin_instance][, type_instance][, plugin][, host][, time][, interval]) -> None. Dispatch a value list.
480 Dispatch this instance to the collectd process. The object has members for each
481 of the possible arguments for this method. For a detailed explanation of these
482 parameters see the member of the same same.
484 If you do not submit a parameter the value saved in its member will be
485 submitted. If you do provide a parameter it will be used instead, without
490 Data descriptors defined here:
496 Some kind of description of what's going on and why this Notification was
501 The severity of this notification. Assign or compare to I<NOTIF_FAILURE>,
502 I<NOTIF_WARNING> or I<NOTIF_OKAY>.
508 The following functions provide the C-interface to Python-modules.
512 =item B<register_*>(I<callback>[, I<data>][, I<name>]) -> identifier
514 There are eight different register functions to get callback for eight
515 different events. With one exception all of them are called as shown above.
521 I<callback> is a callable object that will be called every time the event is
526 I<data> is an optional object that will be passed back to the callback function
527 every time it is called. If you omit this parameter no object is passed back to
528 your callback, not even None.
532 I<name> is an optional identifier for this callback. The default name is
533 B<python>.I<module>. I<module> is taken from the B<__module__> attribute of
534 your callback function. Every callback needs a unique identifier, so if you
535 want to register the same callback multiple times in the same module you need to
536 specify a name here. Otherwise it's safe to ignore this parameter.
540 I<identifier> is the full identifier assigned to this callback.
544 These functions are called in the various stages of the daemon (see the section
545 L<"WRITING YOUR OWN PLUGINS"> above) and are passed the following arguments:
549 =item register_config
551 The only argument passed is a I<Config> object. See above for the layout of this
553 Note that you cannot receive the whole config files this way, only B<Module>
554 blocks inside the Python configuration block. Additionally you will only
555 receive blocks where your callback identifier matches B<python.>I<blockname>.
559 The callback will be called without arguments.
561 =item register_read(callback[, interval][, data][, name]) -> I<identifier>
563 This function takes an additional parameter: I<interval>. It specifies the
564 time between calls to the callback function.
566 The callback will be called without arguments.
568 =item register_shutdown
570 The callback will be called without arguments.
574 The callback function will be called with one argument passed, which will be a
575 I<Values> object. For the layout of I<Values> see above.
576 If this callback function throws an exception the next call will be delayed by
577 an increasing interval.
581 Like B<register_config> is important for this callback because it determines
582 what flush requests the plugin will receive.
584 The arguments passed are I<timeout> and I<identifier>. I<timeout> indicates
585 that only data older than I<timeout> seconds is to be flushed. I<identifier>
586 specifies which values are to be flushed.
590 The arguments are I<severity> and I<message>. The severity is an integer and
591 small for important messages and high for less important messages. The least
592 important level is B<LOG_DEBUG>, the most important level is B<LOG_ERR>. In
593 between there are (from least to most important): B<LOG_INFO>, B<LOG_NOTICE>,
594 and B<LOG_WARNING>. I<message> is simply a string B<without> a newline at the
597 If this callback throws an exception it will B<not> be logged. It will just be
598 printed to B<sys.stderr> which usually means silently ignored.
600 =item register_notification
602 The only argument passed is a I<Notification> object. See above for the layout of this
607 =item B<unregister_*>(I<identifier>) -> None
609 Removes a callback or data-set from collectd's internal list of callback
610 functions. Every I<register_*> function has an I<unregister_*> function.
611 I<identifier> is either the string that was returned by the register function
612 or a callback function. The identifier will be constructed in the same way as
613 for the register functions.
615 =item B<get_dataset>(I<name>) -> I<definition>
617 Returns the definition of a dataset specified by I<name>. I<definition> is a list
618 of tuples, each representing one data source. Each tuple has 4 values:
624 A string, the name of the data source.
628 A string that is equal to either of the variables B<DS_TYPE_COUNTER>,
629 B<DS_TYPE_GAUGE>, B<DS_TYPE_DERIVE> or B<DS_TYPE_ABSOLUTE>.
633 A float or None, the minimum value.
637 A float or None, the maximum value.
641 =item B<flush>(I<plugin[, timeout][, identifier]) -> None
643 Flush one or all plugins. I<timeout> and the specified I<identifiers> are
644 passed on to the registered flush-callbacks. If omitted, the timeout defaults
645 to C<-1>. The identifier defaults to None. If the B<plugin> argument has been
646 specified, only named plugin will be flushed.
648 =item B<error>, B<warning>, B<notice>, B<info>, B<debug>(I<message>)
650 Log a message with the specified severity.
656 Any Python module will start similar to:
660 A very simple read function might look like:
665 vl = collectd.Values(type='gauge')
666 vl.plugin='python.spam'
667 vl.dispatch(values=[random.random() * 100])
669 A very simple write function might look like:
671 def write(vl, data=None):
673 print "%s (%s): %f" % (vl.plugin, vl.type, i)
675 To register those functions with collectd:
677 collectd.register_read(read)
678 collectd.register_write(write)
680 See the section L<"CLASSES"> above for a complete documentation of the data
681 types used by the read, write and match functions.
689 collectd is heavily multi-threaded. Each collectd thread accessing the Python
690 plugin will be mapped to a Python interpreter thread. Any such thread will be
691 created and destroyed transparently and on-the-fly.
693 Hence, any plugin has to be thread-safe if it provides several entry points
694 from collectd (i.E<nbsp>e. if it registers more than one callback or if a
695 registered callback may be called more than once in parallel).
699 The Python thread module is initialized just before calling the init callbacks.
700 This means you must not use Python's threading module prior to this point. This
701 includes all config and possibly other callback as well.
705 The python plugin exports the internal API of collectd which is considered
706 unstable and subject to change at any time. We try hard to not break backwards
707 compatibility in the Python API during the life cycle of one major release.
708 However, this cannot be guaranteed at all times. Watch out for warnings
709 dispatched by the python plugin after upgrades.
719 Not all aspects of the collectd API are accessible from Python. This includes
720 but is not limited to filters.
735 The C<python plugin> has been written by
736 Sven Trenkel E<lt>collectdE<nbsp>atE<nbsp>semidefinite.deE<gt>.
738 This manpage has been written by Sven Trenkel
739 E<lt>collectdE<nbsp>atE<nbsp>semidefinite.deE<gt>.
740 It is based on the L<collectd-perl(5)> manual page by
741 Florian Forster E<lt>octoE<nbsp>atE<nbsp>collectd.orgE<gt> and
742 Sebastian Harl E<lt>shE<nbsp>atE<nbsp>tokkee.orgE<gt>.