PMCD(1)PMCD(1)NAMEpmcd - performance metrics collector daemon
SYNOPSISpmcd [-AfS] [-c config] [-C dirname] [-H hostname] [-i ipaddress] [-l
logfile] [-L bytes] [-[n|N] pmnsfile] [-p port[,port ...] [-P pass‐
file] [-q timeout] [-s sockname] [-T traceflag] [-t timeout] [-U user‐
name] [-x file]
DESCRIPTIONpmcd is the collector used by the Performance Co-Pilot (see PCPIn‐
tro(1)) to gather performance metrics on a system. As a rule, there
must be an instance of pmcd running on a system for any performance
metrics to be available to the PCP.
pmcd accepts connections from client applications running either on the
same machine or remotely and provides them with metrics and other
related information from the machine that pmcd is executing on. pmcd
delegates most of this request servicing to a collection of Performance
Metrics Domain Agents (or just agents), where each agent is responsible
for a particular group of metrics, known as the domain of the agent.
For example the postgresql agent is responsible for reporting informa‐
tion relating to the PostgreSQL database, such as the transaction and
query counts, indexing and replication statistics, and so on.
The agents may be processes started by pmcd, independent processes or
Dynamic Shared Objects (DSOs, see dlopen(3)) attached to pmcd's address
space. The configuration section below describes how connections to
agents are specified.
The options to pmcd are as follows.
-A Disable service advertisement. By default, pmcd will advertise
its presence on the network using any available mechanisms (such
as Avahi/DNS-SD), assisting remote monitoring tools with finding
it. These mechanisms are disabled with this option.
-c config
On startup pmcd uses a configuration file from either the
$PCP_PMCDCONF_PATH, configuration variable in /etc/pcp.conf, or
an environment variable of the same name. However, these values
may be overridden with config using this option. The format of
this configuration file is described below.
-C dirname
Specify the path to the Network Security Services certificate
database, for (optional) secure connections. The default is
/etc/pki/nssdb. Refer also to the -P option. If it does not
already exist, this database can be created using the certutil
utility. This process and other certificate database mainte‐
nance information is provided in the PCPIntro(1) manual page and
the online PCP tutorials.
-f By default pmcd is started as a daemon. The -f option indicates
that it should run in the foreground. This is most useful when
trying to diagnose problems with misbehaving agents.
-H hostname
This option can be used to set the hostname that pmcd will use
to represent this instance of itself. This is used by client
tools like pmlogger(1) when reporting on the (possibly remote)
host. If this option is not set, the pmcd.hostname metric will
match that returned by pmhostname(1). Refer to the manual page
for that tool for full details on how the hostname is evaluated.
-i ipaddress
This option is usually only used on hosts with more than one
network interface. If no -i options are specified pmcd accepts
connections made to any of its host's IP (Internet Protocol)
addresses. The -i option is used to specify explicitly an IP
address that connections should be accepted on. ipaddress
should be in the standard dotted form (e.g. 100.23.45.6). The
-i option may be used multiple times to define a list of IP
addresses. Connections made to any other IP addresses the host
has will be refused. This can be used to limit connections to
one network interface if the host is a network gateway. It is
also useful if the host takes over the IP address of another
host that has failed. In such a situation only the standard IP
addresses of the host should be given (not the ones inherited
from the failed host). This allows PCP applications to deter‐
mine that a host has failed, rather than connecting to the host
that has assumed the identity of the failed host.
-l logfile
By default a log file named pmcd.log is written in the directory
$PCP_LOG_DIR/pmcd. The -l option causes the log file to be
written to logfile instead of the default. If the log file can‐
not be created or is not writable, output is written to the
standard error instead.
-L bytes
PDUs received by pmcd from monitoring clients are restricted to
a maximum size of 65536 bytes by default to defend against
Denial of Service attacks. The -L option may be used to change
the maximum incoming PDU size.
-n pmnsfile
Normally pmcd loads the default Performance Metrics Name Space
(PMNS) from $PCP_VAR_DIR/pmns/root, however if the -n option is
specified an alternative namespace is loaded from the file pmns‐
file.
-N pmnsfile
Same function as -n, except for the handling of duplicate Per‐
formance Metric Identifiers (PMIDs) in pmnsfile - duplicates are
allowed with -N they are not allowed with -n.
-P passfile
Specify the path to a file containing the Network Security Ser‐
vices certificate database password for (optional) secure con‐
nections, and for databases that are password protected. Refer
also to the -C option. When using this option, great care
should be exercised to ensure appropriate ownership ("pcp" user,
typically) and permissions on this file (0400, so as to be
unreadable by any user other than the user running the pmcd
process).
-q timeout
The pmcd to agent version exchange protocol (new in PCP 2.0 -
introduced to provide backward compatibility) uses this timeout
to specify how long pmcd should wait before assuming that no
version response is coming from an agent. If this timeout is
reached, the agent is assumed to be an agent which does not
understand the PCP 2.0 protocol. The default timeout interval
is five seconds, but the -q option allows an alternative timeout
interval (which must be greater than zero) to be specified. The
unit of time is seconds.
-S Require that all client connections provide user credentials.
This means that only unix domain sockets, or authenticated con‐
nections are permitted (requires secure sockets support). If
any user or group access control requirements are specified in
the pmcd configuration file, then this mode of operation is
automatically entered, whether the -S flag is specified or not.
-s sockname
Specify the path to a local unix domain socket (for platforms
supporting this socket family only). The default value is
$PCP_RUN_DIR/pmcd.socket.
-t timeout
To prevent misbehaving clients or agents from hanging the entire
Performance Metrics Collection System (PMCS), pmcd uses timeouts
on PDU exchanges with clients and agents running as processes.
By default the timeout interval is five seconds. The -t option
allows an alternative timeout interval in seconds to be speci‐
fied. If timeout is zero, timeouts are turned off. It is
almost impossible to use the debugger interactively on an agent
unless timeouts have been turned off for its "parent" pmcd.
Once pmcd is running, the timeout may be dynamically modified by
storing an integer value (the timeout in seconds) into the met‐
ric pmcd.control.timeout via pmstore(1).
-T traceflag
To assist with error diagnosis for agents and/or clients of pmcd
that are not behaving correctly, an internal event tracing mech‐
anism is supported within pmcd. The value of traceflag is
interpreted as a bit field with the following control functions:
1 enable client connection tracing
2 enable PDU tracing
256 unbuffered event tracing
By default, event tracing is buffered using a circular buffer
that is over-written as new events are recorded. The default
buffer size holds the last 20 events, although this number may
be over-ridden by using pmstore(1) to modify the metric
pmcd.control.tracebufs.
Similarly once pmcd is running, the event tracing control may be
dynamically modified by storing 1 (enable) or 0 (disable) into
the metrics pmcd.control.traceconn, pmcd.control.tracepdu and
pmcd.control.tracenobuf. These metrics map to the bit fields
associated with the traceflag argument for the -T option.
When operating in buffered mode, the event trace buffer will be
dumped whenever an agent connection is terminated by pmcd, or
when any value is stored into the metric pmcd.control.dumptrace
via pmstore(1).
In unbuffered mode, every event will be reported when it occurs.
-U username
User account under which to run pmcd. The default is the
unprivileged "pcp" account in current versions of PCP, but in
older versions the superuser account ("root") was used by
default.
-x file
Before the pmcd logfile can be opened, pmcd may encounter a
fatal error which prevents it from starting. By default, the
output describing this error is sent to /dev/tty but it may
redirected to file.
If a PDU exchange with an agent times out, the agent has violated the
requirement that it delivers metrics with little or no delay. This is
deemed a protocol failure and the agent is disconnected from pmcd. Any
subsequent requests for information from the agent will fail with a
status indicating that there is no agent to provide it.
It is possible to specify access control to pmcd based on users, groups
and hosts. This allows one to prevent users, groups of users, and cer‐
tain hosts from accessing the metrics provided by pmcd and is described
in more detail in the Section on ACCESS CONTROL below.
CONFIGURATION
On startup pmcd looks for a configuration file named $PCP_PMCD‐
CONF_PATH. This file specifies which agents cover which performance
metrics domains and how pmcd should make contact with the agents. An
optional section specifying access controls may follow the agent con‐
figuration data.
Warning: pmcd is usually started as part of the boot sequence and runs
initially as root. The configuration file may contain shell commands
to create agents, which will be executed by root. To prevent security
breaches the configuration file should be writable only by root. The
use of absolute path names is also recommended.
The case of the reserved words in the configuration file is unimpor‐
tant, but elsewhere, the case is preserved.
Blank lines and comments are permitted (even encouraged) in the config‐
uration file. A comment begins with a ``#'' character and finishes at
the end of the line. A line may be continued by ensuring that the last
character on the line is a ``\'' (backslash). A comment on a continued
line ends at the end of the continued line. Spaces may be included in
lexical elements by enclosing the entire element in double quotes
(there must be whitespace before the opening and after the closing
quote). A double quote preceded by a backslash is always a literal
double quote. A ``#'' in double quotes or preceded by a backslash is
treated literally rather than as a comment delimiter. Lexical elements
and separators are described further in the following sections.
AGENT CONFIGURATION
Each line of the agent configuration section of the configuration file
contains details of how to connect pmcd to one of its agents and speci‐
fies which metrics domain the agent deals with. An agent may be
attached as a DSO, or via a socket, or a pair of pipes.
Each line of the agent configuration section of the configuration file
must be either an agent specification, a comment, or a blank line.
Lexical elements are separated by whitespace characters, however a sin‐
gle agent specification may not be broken across lines unless a \
(backslash) is used to continue the line.
Each agent specification must start with a textual label (string) fol‐
lowed by an integer in the range 1 to 510. The label is a tag used to
refer to the agent and the integer specifies the domain for which the
agent supplies data. This domain identifier corresponds to the domain
portion of the PMIDs handled by the agent. Each agent must have a
unique label and domain identifier.
For DSO agents a line of the form:
label domain-no dso entry-point path
should appear. Where,
label is a string identifying the agent
domain-no is an unsigned integer specifying the agent's domain in
the range 1 to 510
entry-point is the name of an initialization function which will be
called when the DSO is loaded
path designates the location of the DSO and this is expected
to be an absolute pathname. pmcd is only able to load
DSO agents that have the same simabi (Subprogram Inter‐
face Model ABI, or calling conventions) as it does (i.e.
only one of the simabi versions will be applicable). The
simabi version of a running pmcd may be determined by
fetching pmcd.simabi. Alternatively, the file(1) command
may be used to determine the simabi version from the pmcd
executable.
For a relative path the environment variable PMCD_PATH
defines a colon (:) separated list of directories to
search when trying to locate the agent DSO. The default
search path is $PCP_SHARE_DIR/lib:/usr/pcp/lib.
For agents providing socket connections, a line of the form
label domain-no socket addr-family address [ command ]
should appear. Where,
label is a string identifying the agent
domain-no is an unsigned integer specifying the agent's domain in
the range 1 to 510
addr-family designates whether the socket is in the AF_INET, AF_INET6
or AF_UNIX domain, and the corresponding values for this
parameter are inet, ipv6 and unix respectively.
address specifies the address of the socket within the previously
specified addr-family. For unix sockets, the address
should be the name of an agent's socket on the local host
(a valid address for the UNIX domain). For inet and ipv6
sockets, the address may be either a port number or a
port name which may be used to connect to an agent on the
local host. There is no syntax for specifying an agent
on a remote host as a pmcd deals only with agents on the
same machine.
command is an optional parameter used to specify a command line
to start the agent when pmcd initializes. If command is
not present, pmcd assumes that the specified agent has
already been created. The command is considered to start
from the first non-white character after the socket
address and finish at the next newline that isn't pre‐
ceded by a backslash. After a fork(2) the command is
passed unmodified to execve(2) to instantiate the agent.
For agents interacting with the pmcd via stdin/stdout, a line of the
form:
label domain-no pipe protocol command
should appear. Where,
label is a string identifying the agent
domain-no is an unsigned integer specifying the agent's domain
protocol The value for this parameter should be binary.
Additionally, the protocol can include the notready key‐
word to indicate that the agent must be marked as not
being ready to process requests from pmcd. The agent will
explictily notify the pmcd when it is ready to process
the requests by sending PM_ERR_PMDAREADY PDU.
command specifies a command line to start the agent when pmcd
initializes. Note that command is mandatory for pipe-
based agents. The command is considered to start from
the first non-white character after the protocol parame‐
ter and finish at the next newline that isn't preceded by
a backslash. After a fork(2) the command is passed
unmodified to execve(2) to instantiate the agent.
ACCESS CONTROL CONFIGURATION
The access control section of the configuration file is optional, but
if present it must follow the agent configuration data. The case of
reserved words is ignored, but elsewhere case is preserved. Lexical
elements in the access control section are separated by whitespace or
the special delimiter characters: square brackets (``['' and ``]''),
braces (``{'' and ``}''), colon (``:''), semicolon (``;'') and comma
(``,''). The special characters are not treated as special in the
agent configuration section. Lexical elements may be quoted (double
quotes) as necessary.
The access control section of the file must start with a line of the
form:
[access]
Leading and trailing whitespace may appear around and within the brack‐
ets and the case of the access keyword is ignored. No other text may
appear on the line except a trailing comment.
Following this line, the remainder of the configuration file should
contain lines that allow or disallow operations from particular hosts
or groups of hosts.
There are two kinds of operations that occur via pmcd:
fetch allows retrieval of information from pmcd. This may be
information about a metric (e.g. its description,
instance domain or help text) or a value for a metric.
store allows pmcd to be used to store metric values in agents
that permit store operations. This may be the actual
value of the metric (e.g. resetting a counter to zero).
Alternatively, it may be a value used by the PMDA to
introduce a change to some aspect of monitoring of that
metric (e.g. server side event filtering) - possibly
even only for the active client tool performing the
store operation, and not others.
Access to pmcd can be granted in three ways - by user, group of users,
or at a host level. In the latter, all users on a host are granted the
same level of access, unless the user or group access control mechanism
is also in use.
User names and group names will be verified using the local /etc/passwd
and /etc/groups files (or an alternative directory service), using the
getpwent(3) and getgrent(3) routines.
Hosts may be identified by name, IP address, IPv6 address or by the
special host specifications ``"unix:"'' or ``"local:"''. ``"unix:"''
refers to pmcd's unix domain socket, on supported platforms.
``"local:"'' is equivalent to specifying ``"unix:"'' and ``localhost``.
Wildcards may also be specified by ending the host identifier with the
single wildcard character ``*'' as the last-given component of an
address. The wildcard ``".*"'' refers to all inet (IPv4) addresses.
The wildcard ``":*"'' refers to all IPv6 addresses. If an IPv6 wild‐
card contains a ``::'' component, then the final ``*'' refers to the
final 16 bits of the address only, otherwise it refers to the remaining
unspecified bits of the address.
The wildcard ``*'' refers to all users, groups or host addresses,
including ``"unix:"''. Names of users, groups or hosts may not be
wildcarded.
The following are all valid host identifiers:
boing
localhost
giggle.melbourne.sgi.com
129.127.112.2
129.127.114.*
129.*
.*
fe80::223:14ff:feaf:b62c
fe80::223:14ff:feaf:*
fe80:*
:*
"unix:"
"local:"
*
The following are not valid host identifiers:
*.melbourne
129.127.*.*
129.*.114.9
129.127*
fe80::223:14ff:*:*
fe80::223:14ff:*:b62c
fe80*
The first example is not allowed because only (numeric) IP addresses
may contain a wildcard. The second and fifth examples are not valid
because there is more than one wildcard character. The third and sixth
contain an embedded wildcard, the fourth and seventh have a wildcard
character that is not the last component of the address (the last com‐
ponents are 127* and fe80* respectively).
The name localhost is given special treatment to make the behavior of
host wildcarding consistent. Rather than being 127.0.0.1 and ::1, it
is mapped to the primary inet and IPv6 addresses associated with the
name of the host on which pmcd is running. Beware of this when running
pmcd on multi-homed hosts.
Access for users, groups or hosts are allowed or disallowed by specify‐
ing statements of the form:
allow users userlist : operations ;
disallow users userlist : operations ;
allow groups grouplist : operations ;
disallow groups grouplist : operations ;
allow hosts hostlist : operations ;
disallow hosts hostlist : operations ;
list userlist, grouplist and hostlist are comma separated
lists of one or more users, groups or host identifiers.
operations is a comma separated list of the operation types
described above, all (which allows/disallows all opera‐
tions), or all except operations (which allows/disallows
all operations except those listed).
Either plural or singular forms of users, groups, and hosts keywords
are allowed. If this keyword is omitted, a default of hosts will be
used. This behaviour is for backward-compatibility only, it is prefer‐
able to be explicit.
Where no specific allow or disallow statement applies to an operation,
the default is to allow the operation from all users, groups and hosts.
In the trivial case when there is no access control section in the con‐
figuration file, all operations from all users, groups, and hosts are
permitted.
If a new connection to pmcd is attempted by a user, group or host that
is not permitted to perform any operations, the connection will be
closed immediately after an error response PM_ERR_PERMISSION has been
sent to the client attempting the connection.
Statements with the same level of wildcarding specifying identical
hosts may not contradict each other. For example if a host named clank
had an IP address of 129.127.112.2, specifying the following two rules
would be erroneous:
allow host clank : fetch, store;
disallow host 129.127.112.2 : all except fetch;
because they both refer to the same host, but disagree as to whether
the fetch operation is permitted from that host.
Statements containing more specific host specifications override less
specific ones according to the level of wildcarding. For example a
rule of the form
allow host clank : all;
overrides
disallow host 129.127.112.* : all except fetch;
because the former contains a specific host name (equivalent to a fully
specified IP address), whereas the latter has a wildcard. In turn, the
latter would override
disallow host * : all;
It is possible to limit the number of connections from a user, group or
host to pmcd. This may be done by adding a clause of the form
maximum n connections
to the operations list of an allow statement. Such a clause may not be
used in a disallow statement. Here, n is the maximum number of connec‐
tions that will be accepted from the user, group or host matching the
identifier(s) used in the statement.
An access control statement with a list of user, group or host identi‐
fiers is equivalent to a set of access control statements, with each
specifying one of the identifiers in the list and all with the same
access controls (both permissions and connection limits). A group
should be used if you want users to contribute to a shared connection
limit. A wildcard should be used if you want hosts to contribute to a
shared connection limit.
When a new client requests a connection, and pmcd has determined that
the client has permission to connect, it searches the matching list of
access control statements for the most specific match containing a con‐
nection limit. For brevity, this will be called the limiting state‐
ment. If there is no limiting statement, the client is granted a con‐
nection. If there is a limiting statement and the number of pmcd
clients with user ID, group ID, or IP addresses that match the identi‐
fier in the limiting statement is less than the connection limit in the
statement, the connection is allowed. Otherwise the connection limit
has been reached and the client is refused a connection.
Group access controls and the wildcarding in host identifiers means
that once pmcd actually accepts a connection from a client, the connec‐
tion may contribute to the current connection count of more than one
access control statement - the client's host may match more than one
access control statement, and similarly the user ID may be in more than
one group. This may be significant for subsequent connection requests.
Note that pmcd enters a mode where it runs effectively with a higher-
level of security as soon as a user or group access control section is
added to the configuration. In this mode only authenticated connec‐
tions are allowed - either from a SASL authenticated connection, or a
Unix domain socket (which implicitly passes client credentials). This
is the same mode that is entered explicitly using the -S option.
Assuming permission is allowed, one can determine whether pmcd is run‐
ning in this mode by querying the value of the pmcd.fea‐
ture.creds_required metric.
Note also that because most specific match semantics are used when
checking the connection limit, for the host-based access control case,
priority is given to clients with more specific host identifiers. It
is also possible to exceed connection limits in some situations. Con‐
sider the following:
allow host clank : all, maximum 5 connections;
allow host * : all except store, maximum 2 connections;
This says that only 2 client connections at a time are permitted for
all hosts other than "clank", which is permitted 5. If a client from
host "boing" is the first to connect to pmcd, its connection is checked
against the second statement (that is the most specific match with a
connection limit). As there are no other clients, the connection is
accepted and contributes towards the limit for only the second state‐
ment above. If the next client connects from "clank", its connection
is checked against the limit for the first statement. There are no
other connections from "clank", so the connection is accepted. Once
this connection is accepted, it counts towards both statements' limits
because "clank" matches the host identifier in both statements. Remem‐
ber that the decision to accept a new connection is made using only the
most specific matching access control statement with a connection
limit. Now, the connection limit for the second statement has been
reached. Any connections from hosts other than "clank" will be
refused.
If instead, pmcd with no clients saw three successive connections
arrived from "boing", the first two would be accepted and the third
refused. After that, if a connection was requested from "clank" it
would be accepted. It matches the first statement, which is more spe‐
cific than the second, so the connection limit in the first is used to
determine that the client has the right to connect. Now there are 3
connections contributing to the second statement's connection limit.
Even though the connection limit for the second statement has been
exceeded, the earlier connections from "boing" are maintained. The
connection limit is only checked at the time a client attempts a con‐
nection rather than being re-evaluated every time a new client connects
to pmcd.
This gentle scheme is designed to allow reasonable limits to be imposed
on a first come first served basis, with specific exceptions.
As illustrated by the example above, a client's connection is honored
once it has been accepted. However, pmcd reconfiguration (see the next
section) re-evaluates all the connection counts and will cause client
connections to be dropped where connection limits have been exceeded.
RECONFIGURING PMCD
If the configuration file has been changed or if an agent is not
responding because it has terminated or the PMNS has been changed, pmcd
may be reconfigured by sending it a SIGHUP, as in
# pmsignal -a -s HUP pmcd
When pmcd receives a SIGHUP, it checks the configuration file for
changes. If the file has been modified, it is reparsed and the con‐
tents become the new configuration. If there are errors in the config‐
uration file, the existing configuration is retained and the contents
of the file are ignored. Errors are reported in the pmcd log file.
It also checks the PMNS file for changes. If the PMNS file has been
modified, then it is reloaded. Use of tail(1) on the log file is rec‐
ommended while reconfiguring pmcd.
If the configuration for an agent has changed (any parameter except the
agent's label is different), the agent is restarted. Agents whose con‐
figurations do not change are not restarted. Any existing agents not
present in the new configuration are terminated. Any deceased agents
are that are still listed are restarted.
Sometimes it is necessary to restart an agent that is still running,
but malfunctioning. Simply stop the agent (e.g. using SIGTERM from
pmsignal(1)), then send pmcd a SIGHUP, which will cause the agent to be
restarted.
STARTING AND STOPPING PMCD
Normally, pmcd is started automatically at boot time and stopped when
the system is being brought down (see rc2(1M) and rc0(1M)). Under cer‐
tain circumstances it is necessary to start or stop pmcd manually. To
do this one must become superuser and type
# $PCP_RC_DIR/pcp start
to start pmcd, or
# $PCP_RC_DIR/pcp stop
to stop pmcd. Starting pmcd when it is already running is the same as
stopping it and then starting it again.
Sometimes it may be necessary to restart pmcd during another phase of
the boot process. Time-consuming parts of the boot process are often
put into the background to allow the system to become available sooner
(e.g. mounting huge databases). If an agent run by pmcd requires such
a task to complete before it can run properly, it is necessary to
restart or reconfigure pmcd after the task completes. Consider, for
example, the case of mounting a database in the background while boot‐
ing. If the PMDA which provides the metrics about the database cannot
function until the database is mounted and available but pmcd is
started before the database is ready, the PMDA will fail (however pmcd
will still service requests for metrics from other domains). If the
database is initialized by running a shell script, adding a line to the
end of the script to reconfigure pmcd (by sending it a SIGHUP) will
restart the PMDA (if it exited because it couldn't connect to the data‐
base). If the PMDA didn't exit in such a situation it would be neces‐
sary to restart pmcd because if the PMDA was still running pmcd would
not restart it.
Normally pmcd listens for client connections on TCP/IP port number
44321 (registered at http://www.iana.org/). Either the environment
variable PMCD_PORT or the -p command line option may be used to specify
alternative port number(s) when pmcd is started; in each case, the
specification is a comma-separated list of one or more numerical port
numbers. Should both methods be used or multiple -p options appear on
the command line, pmcd will listen on the union of the set of ports
specified via all -p options and the PMCD_PORT environment variable.
If non-default ports are used with pmcd care should be taken to ensure
that PMCD_PORT is also set in the environment of any client application
that will connect to pmcd, or that the extended host specification syn‐
tax is used (see PCPIntro(1) for details).
FILES
$PCP_PMCDCONF_PATH
default configuration file
$PCP_PMCDOPTIONS_PATH
command line options to pmcd when launched from
$PCP_RC_DIR/pcp All the command line option lines should
start with a hyphen as the first character. This file can
also contain environment variable settings of the form "VARI‐
ABLE=value".
./pmcd.log
(or $PCP_LOG_DIR/pmcd/pmcd.log when started automatically)
$PCP_RUN_DIR/pmcd.pid
contains an ascii decimal representation of the process ID of
pmcd , when it's running.
All messages and diagnostics are directed here
/etc/pki/nssdb
default Network Security Services (NSS) certificate database
directory, used for optional Secure Socket Layer connections.
This database can be created and queried using the NSS certu‐
til tool, amongst others.
/etc/passwd
user names, user identifiers and primary group identifiers,
used for access control specifications
/etc/groups
group names, group identifiers and group members, used for
access control specifications
ENVIRONMENT
In addition to the PCP environment variables described in the PCP ENVI‐
RONMENT section below, the PMCD_PORT variable is also recognised as the
TCP/IP port for incoming connections (default 44321), and the
PMCD_SOCKET variable is also recognised as the path to be used for the
Unix domain socket.
PCP ENVIRONMENT
Environment variables with the prefix PCP_ are used to parameterize the
file and directory names used by PCP. On each installation, the file
/etc/pcp.conf contains the local values for these variables. The
$PCP_CONF variable may be used to specify an alternative configuration
file, as described in pcp.conf(5).
DIAGNOSTICS
If pmcd is already running the message "Error: OpenRequestSocket bind:
Address may already be in use" will appear. This may also appear if
pmcd was shutdown with an outstanding request from a client. In this
case, a request socket has been left in the TIME_WAIT state and until
the system closes it down (after some timeout period) it will not be
possible to run pmcd.
In addition to the standard PCP debugging flags, see pmdbg(1), pmcd
currently uses DBG_TRACE_APPL0 for tracing I/O and termination of
agents, DBG_TRACE_APPL1 for tracing access control and DBG_TRACE_APPL2
for tracing the configuration file scanner and parser.
CAVEATSpmcd does not explicitly terminate its children (agents), it only
closes their pipes. If an agent never checks for a closed pipe it may
not terminate.
The configuration file parser will only read lines of less than 1200
characters. This is intended to prevent accidents with binary files.
The timeouts controlled by the -t option apply to IPC between pmcd and
the PMDAs it spawns. This is independent of settings of the environ‐
ment variables PMCD_CONNECT_TIMEOUT and PMCD_REQUEST_TIMEOUT (see
PCPIntro(1)) which may be used respectively to control timeouts for
client applications trying to connect to pmcd and trying to receive
information from pmcd.
SEE ALSOPCPIntro(1), pmdbg(1), pmerr(1), pmgenmap(1), pminfo(1), pmstat(1),
pmstore(1), pmval(1), getpwent(3), getgrent(3), pcp.conf(5), and
pcp.env(5).
Performance Co-Pilot PCP PMCD(1)