updated by the daemon, assuming the base directory
"/tmp".
+B<WARNING:> The paths up to and including the base directory B<MUST NOT BE>
+symbolic links. In other words, if the base directory is
+specified as:
+
+ -b /base/dir/somewhere
+
+... then B<NONE> of the following should be symbolic links:
+
+ /base
+ /base/dir
+ /base/dir/somewhere
+
=item B<-B>
Only permit writes into the base directory specified in B<-b> (and any
for, so describing the mechanism again is unnecessary. Read L<HOW IT WORKS>
above for a detailed explanation.
+Note that rrdcached only accepts absolute timestamps in the update values.
+Updates strings like "N:1:2:3" are automatically converted to absolute
+time by the RRD client library before sending to rrdcached.
+
=item B<WROTE> I<filename>
This command is written to the journal after a file is successfully
client: BATCH
server: 0 Go ahead. End with dot '.' on its own line.
- client: UPDATE x.rrd N:1:2:3 <--- command #1
- client: UPDATE y.rrd N:3:4:5 <--- command #2
+ client: UPDATE x.rrd 1223661439:1:2:3 <--- command #1
+ client: UPDATE y.rrd 1223661440:3:4:5 <--- command #2
client: and so on...
client: .
server: 2 Errors
=item B<DataSetsWritten> I<(unsigned 64bit integer)>
-Total number of "data sets" written to disk since the daemon was started. A
-data set is one or more values passed to the B<UPDATE> command. For example:
-C<N:123:456> is one data set with two values. The term "data set" is used to
-prevent confusion whether individual values or groups of values are counted.
+Total number of "data sets" written to disk since the daemon was
+started. A data set is one or more values passed to the B<UPDATE>
+command. For example: C<1223661439:123:456> is one data set with two
+values. The term "data set" is used to prevent confusion whether
+individual values or groups of values are counted.
=item B<TreeNodesNumber> I<(unsigned 64bit integer)>