rrdinfo - extract header information from an RRD
rrdtool info filename
[--daemon|-d address [--noflush|-F]]
The info function prints the header information from an RRD in a parsing
friendly format.
Check rrdcreate if you are uncertain about the meaning of the
individual keys.
- filename
- The name of the RRD you want to examine.
- --daemon|-d address
- Address of the rrdcached daemon. If specified, a
"flush" command is sent to the server
before reading the RRD files. This allows rrdtool to return fresh
data even if the daemon is configured to cache values for a long time. For
a list of accepted formats, see the -l option in the rrdcached
manual.
rrdtool info --daemon unix:/var/run/rrdcached.sock /var/lib/rrd/foo.rrd
- --noflush|-F
- Omit the "flush" command usually sent to
the daemon prior to retrieving the data. If all you are interested in is
the RRD structure, and not the last update time or current values, then
this will improve efficiency.
This is the output generated by running info on a simple RRD which
contains two data sources and one RRA. Note that the number after the
last_update keyword is in seconds since 1970. The string NaN
stands for *UNKNOWN* data. In the example it means that this RRD has
neither minimum nor maximum values defined for either of its data sources.
filename = "random.rrd"
rrd_version = "0001"
step = 300
last_update = 955892996
header_size = 2872
ds[a].type = "GAUGE"
ds[a].minimal_heartbeat = 600
ds[a].min = NaN
ds[a].max = NaN
ds[a].last_ds = "UNKN"
ds[a].value = 2.1824421548e+04
ds[a].unknown_sec = 0
ds[b].type = "GAUGE"
ds[b].minimal_heartbeat = 600
ds[b].min = NaN
ds[b].max = NaN
ds[b].last_ds = "UNKN"
ds[b].value = 3.9620838224e+03
ds[b].unknown_sec = 0
rra[0].cf = "AVERAGE"
rra[0].pdp_per_row = 1
rra[0].cdp_prep[0].value = nan
rra[0].cdp_prep[0].unknown_datapoints = 0
rra[0].cdp_prep[1].value = nan
rra[0].cdp_prep[1].unknown_datapoints = 0
The following environment variables may be used to change the behavior of
"rrdtool info":
- RRDCACHED_ADDRESS
- If this environment variable is set it will have the same effect as
specifying the "--daemon" option on the
command line. If both are present, the command line argument takes
precedence.
Tobias Oetiker <tobi@oetiker.ch>