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: /proc/thread-self/root/proc/self/root/usr/share/perl5/vendor_perl/Monitoring/Plugin/ [ drwxr-xr-x ]
package Monitoring::Plugin::Performance;
use 5.006;
use strict;
use warnings;
use Carp;
use base qw(Class::Accessor::Fast);
__PACKAGE__->mk_ro_accessors(
qw(label value uom warning critical min max)
);
use Monitoring::Plugin::Functions;
use Monitoring::Plugin::Threshold;
use Monitoring::Plugin::Range;
our ($VERSION) = $Monitoring::Plugin::Functions::VERSION;
sub import {
my ($class, %attr) = @_;
$_ = $attr{use_die} || 0;
Monitoring::Plugin::Functions::_use_die($_);
}
# This is NOT the same as N::P::Functions::value_re. We leave that to be the strict
# version. This one allows commas to be part of the numeric value.
my $value = qr/[-+]?[\d\.,]+/;
my $value_re = qr/$value(?:e$value)?/;
my $value_with_negative_infinity = qr/$value_re|~/;
sub _parse {
my $class = shift;
my $string = shift;
$string =~ /^'?([^'=]+)'?=($value_re)([\w%]*);?($value_with_negative_infinity\:?$value_re?)?;?($value_with_negative_infinity\:?$value_re?)?;?($value_re)?;?($value_re)?/o;
return undef unless ((defined $1 && $1 ne "") && (defined $2 && $2 ne ""));
my @info = ($1, $2, $3, $4, $5, $6, $7);
# We convert any commas to periods, in the value fields
map { defined $info[$_] && $info[$_] =~ s/,/./go } (1, 3, 4, 5, 6);
# Check that $info[1] is an actual value
# We do this by returning undef if a warning appears
my $performance_value;
{
my $not_value;
local $SIG{__WARN__} = sub { $not_value++ };
$performance_value = $info[1]+0;
return undef if $not_value;
}
my $p = $class->new(
label => $info[0], value => $performance_value, uom => $info[2], warning => $info[3], critical => $info[4],
min => $info[5], max => $info[6]
);
return $p;
}
# Map undef to ''
sub _nvl {
my ($self, $value) = @_;
defined $value ? $value : ''
}
sub perfoutput {
my $self = shift;
# Add quotes if label contains a space character
my $label = $self->label;
if ($label =~ / /) {
$label = "'$label'";
}
my $value = $self->value;
# To prevent invalid output, we change empty value to value "U"
if ($value eq '') {
$value = 'U';
}
my $out = sprintf "%s=%s%s;%s;%s;%s;%s",
$label,
$value,
$self->_nvl($self->uom),
$self->_nvl($self->warning),
$self->_nvl($self->critical),
$self->_nvl($self->min),
$self->_nvl($self->max);
# Previous implementation omitted trailing ;; - do we need this?
$out =~ s/;;$//;
return $out;
}
sub parse_perfstring {
my ($class, $perfstring) = @_;
my @perfs = ();
my $obj;
while ($perfstring) {
$perfstring =~ s/^\s*//;
# If there is more than 1 equals sign, split it out and parse individually
if (@{[$perfstring =~ /=/g]} > 1) {
$perfstring =~ s/^(.*?=.*?)\s//;
if (defined $1) {
$obj = $class->_parse($1);
} else {
# This could occur if perfdata was soemthing=value=
# Since this is invalid, we reset the string and continue
$perfstring = "";
$obj = $class->_parse($perfstring);
}
} else {
$obj = $class->_parse($perfstring);
$perfstring = "";
}
push @perfs, $obj if $obj;
}
return @perfs;
}
sub rrdlabel {
my $self = shift;
my $name = $self->clean_label;
# Shorten
return substr( $name, 0, 19 );
}
sub clean_label {
my $self = shift;
my $name = $self->label;
if ($name eq "/") {
$name = "root";
} elsif ( $name =~ s/^\/// ) {
$name =~ s/\//_/g;
}
# Convert all other characters
$name =~ s/\W/_/g;
return $name;
}
# Backward compatibility: create a threshold object on the fly as requested
sub threshold
{
my $self = shift;
return Monitoring::Plugin::Threshold->set_thresholds(
warning => $self->warning, critical => $self->critical
);
}
# Constructor - unpack thresholds, map args to hashref
sub new
{
my $class = shift;
my %arg = @_;
# Convert thresholds
if (my $threshold = delete $arg{threshold}) {
$arg{warning} ||= $threshold->warning . "";
$arg{critical} ||= $threshold->critical . "";
}
$class->SUPER::new(\%arg);
}
1;
__END__
=head1 NAME
Monitoring::Plugin::Performance - class for handling Monitoring::Plugin
performance data.
=head1 SYNOPSIS
use Monitoring::Plugin::Performance use_die => 1;
# Constructor (also accepts a 'threshold' obj instead of warning/critical)
$p = Monitoring::Plugin::Performance->new(
label => 'size',
value => $value,
uom => "kB",
warning => $warning,
critical => $critical,
min => $min,
max => $max,
);
# Parser
@perf = Monitoring::Plugin::Performance->parse_perfstring(
"/=382MB;15264;15269;; /var=218MB;9443;9448"
)
or warn("Failed to parse perfstring");
# Accessors
for $p (@perf) {
printf "label: %s\n", $p->label;
printf "value: %s\n", $p->value;
printf "uom: %s\n", $p->uom;
printf "warning: %s\n", $p->warning;
printf "critical: %s\n", $p->critical;
printf "min: %s\n", $p->min;
printf "max: %s\n", $p->max;
# Special accessor returning a threshold obj containing warning/critical
$threshold = $p->threshold;
}
# Perfdata output format i.e. label=value[uom];[warn];[crit];[min];[max]
print $p->perfoutput;
=head1 DESCRIPTION
Monitoring::Plugin class for handling performance data. This is a public
interface because it could be used by performance graphing routines,
such as nagiostat (http://nagiostat.sourceforge.net), perfparse
(http://perfparse.sourceforge.net), nagiosgraph
(http://nagiosgraph.sourceforge.net) or NagiosGrapher
(http://www.nagiosexchange.org/NagiosGrapher.84.0.html).
Monitoring::Plugin::Performance offers both a parsing interface (via
parse_perfstring), for turning nagios performance output strings into
their components, and a composition interface (via new), for turning
components into perfdata strings.
=head1 USE'ING THE MODULE
If you are using this module for the purposes of parsing perf data, you
will probably want to set use_die => 1 at use time. This forces
&Monitoring::Plugin::Functions::plugin_exit to call die() - rather than exit() -
when an error occurs. This is then trappable by an eval. If you don't set use_die,
then an error in these modules will cause your script to exit
=head1 CLASS METHODS
=over 4
=item Monitoring::Plugin::Performance->new(%attributes)
Instantiates a new Monitoring::Plugin::Performance object with the given
attributes.
=item Monitoring::Plugin::Performance->parse_perfstring($string)
Returns an array of Monitoring::Plugin::Performance objects based on the string
entered. If there is an error parsing the string - which may consists of several
sets of data - will return an array with all the successfully parsed sets.
If values are input with commas instead of periods, due to different locale settings,
then it will still be parsed, but the commas will be converted to periods.
=back
=head1 OBJECT METHODS (ACCESSORS)
=over 4
=item label, value, uom, warning, critical, min, max
These all return scalars. min and max are not well supported yet.
=item threshold
Returns a Monitoring::Plugin::Threshold object holding the warning and critical
ranges for this performance data (if any).
=item rrdlabel
Returns a string based on 'label' that is suitable for use as dataset name of
an RRD i.e. munges label to be 1-19 characters long with only characters
[a-zA-Z0-9_].
This calls $self->clean_label and then truncates to 19 characters.
There is no guarantee that multiple N:P:Performance objects will have unique
rrdlabels.
=item clean_label
Returns a "clean" label for use as a dataset name in RRD, ie, it converts
characters that are not [a-zA-Z0-9_] to _.
It also converts "/" to "root" and "/{name}" to "{name}".
=item perfoutput
Outputs the data in Monitoring::Plugin perfdata format i.e.
label=value[uom];[warn];[crit];[min];[max].
=back
=head1 SEE ALSO
Monitoring::Plugin, Monitoring::Plugin::Threshold, https://www.monitoring-plugins.org/doc/guidelines.html
=head1 AUTHOR
This code is maintained by the Monitoring Plugin Development Team: see
https://monitoring-plugins.org
=head1 COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
Copyright (C) 2014 by Monitoring Plugin Team
Copyright (C) 2006-2014 by Nagios Plugin Development Team
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
it under the same terms as Perl itself.
=cut