|
RRDtool
rrdgraphSYNOPSISrrdtool graph|graphv filename [option ...] [data definition ...] [data calculation ...] [variable definition ...] [graph element ...] [print element ...] DESCRIPTIONThe graph function of RRDtool is used to present the data from an RRD to a human viewer. Its main purpose is to create a nice graphical representation, but it can also generate a numerical report. OVERVIEWrrdtool graph needs data to work with, so you must use one or more data definition statements to collect this data. You are not limited to one database, it's perfectly legal to collect data from two or more databases (one per statement, though). If you want to display averages, maxima, percentiles, etcetera it is best to collect them now using the variable definition statement. Currently this makes no difference, but in a future version of rrdtool you may want to collect these values before consolidation. The data fetched from the RRA is then consolidated so that there is exactly one datapoint per pixel in the graph. If you do not take care yourself, RRDtool will expand the range slightly if necessary. Note, in that case the first and/or last pixel may very well become unknown! Sometimes data is not exactly in the format you would like to display it. For instance, you might be collecting bytes per second, but want to display bits per second. This is what the data calculation command is designed for. After consolidating the data, a copy is made and this copy is modified using a rather powerful RPN command set. When you are done fetching and processing the data, it is time to graph it (or print it). This ends the rrdtool graph sequence. OPTIONSgraphvThis alternate version of graph takes the same arguments and performs the same function. The v stands for verbose, which describes the output returned. graphv will return a lot of information about the graph using the same format as rrdtool info (key = value). See the bottom of the document for more information.
filenameThe name and path of the graph to generate. It is recommended to end this in filename can be ' Time range[-s|--start time] [-e|--end time] [-S|--step seconds] The start and end of the time series you would like to display, and which RRA the data should come from. Defaults are: 1 day ago until now, with the best possible resolution. Start and end can be specified in several formats, see AT-STYLE TIME SPECIFICATION and rrdgraph_examples. By default, rrdtool graph calculates the width of one pixel in the time domain and tries to get data from an RRA with that resolution. With the step option you can alter this behaviour. If you want rrdtool graph to get data at a one-hour resolution from the RRD, set step to 3'600. Note: a step smaller than one pixel will silently be ignored. Labels[-t|--title string] [-v|--vertical-label string] A horizontal string at the top of the graph and/or a vertically placed string at the left hand side of the graph. Size[-w|--width pixels] [-h|--height pixels] [-j|--only-graph] [-D|--full-size-mode] By default, the width and height of the canvas (the part with the actual data and such). This defaults to 400 pixels by 100 pixels. If you specify the --full-size-mode option, the width and height specify the final dimensions of the output image and the canvas is automatically resized to fit. If you specify the --only-graph option and set the height < 32 pixels you will get a tiny graph image (thumbnail) to use as an icon for use in an overview, for example. All labeling will be stripped off the graph. Limits[-u|--upper-limit value] [-l|--lower-limit value] [-r|--rigid] By default the graph will be autoscaling so that it will adjust the y-axis to the range of the data. You can change this behaviour by explicitly setting the limits. The displayed y-axis will then range at least from lower-limit to upper-limit. Autoscaling will still permit those boundaries to be stretched unless the rigid option is set. [-A|--alt-autoscale] Sometimes the default algorithm for selecting the y-axis scale is not satisfactory. Normally the scale is selected from a predefined set of ranges and this fails miserably when you need to graph something like [-J|--alt-autoscale-min] Where [-M|--alt-autoscale-max] Where [-N|--no-gridfit] In order to avoid anti-aliasing blurring effects rrdtool snaps points to device resolution pixels, this results in a crisper aperance. If this is not to your liking, you can use this switch to turn this behaviour off. Gridfitting is turned off for PDF, EPS, SVG output by default. Grid
Miscellaneous[-z|--lazy] Only generate the graph if the current graph is out of date or not existent. Note, that only the image size will be returned, if you run with lazy even when using graphv and even when using PRINT. [-f|--imginfo printfstr] After the image has been created, the graph function uses printf together with this format string to create output similar to the PRINT function, only that the printf function is supplied with the parameters filename, xsize and ysize. In order to generate an IMG tag suitable for including the graph into a web page, the command line would look like this: --imginfo '<IMG SRC="/img/%s" WIDTH="%lu" HEIGHT="%lu" ALT="Demo">' [-c|--color COLORTAG#rrggbb[aa]] Override the default colors for the standard elements of the graph. The COLORTAG is one of A green arrow is made by: [--zoom factor] Zoom the graphics by the given amount. The factor must be > 0 [-n|--font FONTTAG:size:[font]] This lets you customize which font to use for the various text elements on the RRD graphs. Use Times for the title: If you do not give a font string you can modify just the sice of the default font: If you specify the size 0 then you can modify just the font without touching the size. This is especially usefull for altering the default font without resetting the default fontsizes: RRDtool comes with a preset default font. You can set the environment variable RRDtool uses Pango for its font handling. This means you can to use the full Pango syntax when selecting your font: The font name has the form "[FAMILY-LIST] [STYLE-OPTIONS] [SIZE]", where FAMILY-LIST is a comma separated list of families optionally terminated by a comma, STYLE_OPTIONS is a whitespace separated list of words where each WORD describes one of style, variant, weight, stretch, or gravity, and SIZE is a decimal number (size in points) or optionally followed by the unit modifier "px" for absolute size. Any one of the options may be absent. [-R|--font-render-mode {normal,light,mono}] There are 3 font render modes: normal: Full Hinting and Antialiasing (default) light: Slight Hinting and Antialiasing mono: Full Hinting and NO Antialiasing [-B|--font-smoothing-threshold size] (this gets ignored in 1.3 for now!) This specifies the largest font size which will be rendered bitmapped, that is, without any font smoothing. By default, no text is rendered bitmapped. [-P|--pango-markup] All text in rrdtool is rendered using Pango. With the --pango-markup option, all text will be processed by pango markup. This allows to embed some simple html like markup tags using <span key="value">text</span> Apart from the verbose syntax, there are also the following short tags available. b Bold big Makes font relatively larger, equivalent to <span size="larger"> i Italic s Strikethrough sub Subscript sup Superscript small Makes font relatively smaller, equivalent to <span size="smaller"> tt Monospace font u Underline More details on http://developer.gnome.org/doc/API/2.0/pango/PangoMarkupFormat.html. [-G|--graph-render-mode {normal,mono}] There are 2 render modes: normal: Graphs are fully Antialiased (default) mono: No Antialiasing [-E|--slope-mode] RRDtool graphs are composed of stair case curves by default. This is in line with the way RRDtool calculates its data. Some people favor a more 'organic' look for their graphs even though it is not all that true. [-a|--imgformat PNG|SVG|EPS|PDF] Image format for the generated graph. For the vector formats you can choose among the standard Postscript fonts Courier-Bold, Courier-BoldOblique, Courier-Oblique, Courier, Helvetica-Bold, Helvetica-BoldOblique, Helvetica-Oblique, Helvetica, Symbol, Times-Bold, Times-BoldItalic, Times-Italic, Times-Roman, and ZapfDingbats. [-i|--interlaced] (this gets ignored in 1.3 for now!) If images are interlaced they become visible on browsers more quickly. [-g|--no-legend] Suppress generation of the legend; only render the graph. [-F|--force-rules-legend] Force the generation of HRULE and VRULE legends even if those HRULE or VRULE will not be drawn because out of graph boundaries (mimics behaviour of pre 1.0.42 versions). [-T|--tabwidth value] By default the tab-width is 40 pixels, use this option to change it. [-b|--base value] If you are graphing memory (and NOT network traffic) this switch should be set to 1024 so that one Kb is 1024 byte. For traffic measurement, 1 kb/s is 1000 b/s. [-W|--watermark string] Adds the given string as a watermark, horizontally centred, at the bottom of the graph. Data and variablesDEF:vname=rrdfile:ds-name:CF[:step=step][:start=time][:end=time] CDEF:vname=RPN expression VDEF:vname=RPN expression You need at least one DEF statement to generate anything. The other statements are useful but optional. See rrdgraph_data and rrdgraph_rpn for the exact format. NOTE: Graph and print elements You need at least one graph element to generate an image and/or at least one print statement to generate a report. See rrdgraph_graph for the exact format. graphvCalling rrdtool with the graphv option will return information in the rrdtool info format. On the command line this means that all output will be in key=value format. When used from the perl and ruby bindings a hash pointer will be returned from the call. When the filename '-' is given, the contents of the graph itself will also be returned through this interface (hash key 'image'). On the command line the output will look like this: print[0] = "0.020833" print[1] = "0.0440833" graph_left = 51 graph_top = 22 graph_width = 400 graph_height = 100 image_width = 481 image_height = 154 value_min = 0.0000000000e+00 value_max = 4.0000000000e-02 image = BLOB_SIZE:8196 [... 8196 bytes of image data ...] There is more information returned than in the standard interface. Especially the 'graph_*' keys are new. They help applications that want to know what is where on the graph. SEE ALSOrrdgraph gives an overview of how rrdtool graph works. rrdgraph_data describes DEF,CDEF and VDEF in detail. rrdgraph_rpn describes the RPN language used in the ?DEF statements. rrdgraph_graph page describes all of the graph and print functions. Make sure to read rrdgraph_examples for tips&tricks. AUTHORProgram by Tobias Oetiker <tobi@oetiker.ch> This manual page by Alex van den Bogaerdt <alex@ergens.op.het.net> |
|
|
10/30/08 | Program by Tobias Oetiker | OETIKER+PARTNER AG
|
NOTE: The content of this website is accessible with any browser. The graphical design though relies completely on CSS2 styles. If you see this text, this means that your browser does not support CSS2. Consider upgrading to a standard conformant browser like Mozilla Firefox or Opera but also Apple's Safari or KDE's Konqueror for example. It may also be that you are looking at a mirror page which did not copy the CSS for this page. Or if some pictu res are missing, then the mirror may not have picked up the contents of the inc directory.