package RRDs; use strict; use vars qw(@ISA $VERSION); @ISA = qw(DynaLoader); require DynaLoader; $VERSION = 1.000501; bootstrap RRDs $VERSION; 1; __END__ =head1 NAME RRDs - Access rrdtool as a shared module =head1 SYNOPSIS use RRDs; RRDs::error RRDs::last ... RRDs::info ... RRDs::create ... RRDs::update ... RRDs::graph ... RRDs::fetch ... RRDs::tune ... RRDs::times(start, end) =head1 DESCRIPTION =head2 Calling Sequence This module accesses rrdtool functionality directly from within perl. The arguments to the functions listed in the SYNOPSIS are explained in the regular rrdtool documentation. The commandline call rrdtool update mydemo.rrd --template in:out N:12:13 gets turned into RRDs::update ("mydemo.rrd", "--template", "in:out", "N:12:13"); Note that --template=in:out is also valid. The RRDs::times function takes two parameters: a "start" and "end" time. These should be specified in the B format used by rrdtool. See the B documentation for a detailed explanation on how to specify time. =head2 Error Handling The RRD functions will not abort your program even when they can not make sense out of the arguments you fed them. The function RRDs::error should be called to get the error status after each function call. If RRDs::error does not return anything then the previous function has completed its task successfully. use RRDs; RRDs::update ("mydemo.rrd","N:12:13"); my $ERR=RRDs::error; die "ERROR while updating mydemo.rrd: $ERR\n" if $ERR; =head2 Return Values The functions RRDs::last, RRDs::graph, RRDs::info, RRDs::fetch and RRDs::times return their findings. B returns a single INTEGER representing the last update time. $lastupdate = RRDs::last ... B returns an pointer to an ARRAY containing the x-size and y-size of the created gif and results of the PRINT arguments. ($averages,$xsize,$ysize) = RRDs::graph ... print "Gifsize: ${xsize}x${ysize}\n"; print "Averages: ", (join ", ", @$averages); B returns a pointer to a hash. The keys of the hash represent the property names of the rrd and the values of the hash are the values of the properties. $hash = RRDs::info "example.rrd"; foreach my $key (keys %$hash){ print "$key = $$hash{$key}\n"; } B is the most complex of the pack regarding return values. There are 4 values. Two normal integers, a pointer to an array and a pointer to a array of pointers. my ($start,$step,$names,$data) = RRDs::fetch ... print "Start: ", scalar localtime($start), " ($start)\n"; print "Step size: $step seconds\n"; print "DS names: ", join (", ", @$names)."\n"; print "Data points: ", $#$data + 1, "\n"; print "Data:\n"; foreach my $line (@$data) { print " ", scalar localtime($start), " ($start) "; $start += $step; foreach my $val (@$line) { printf "%12.1f ", $val; } print "\n"; } B returns two integers which are the number of seconds since epoch (1970-01-01) for the supplied "start" and "end" arguments, respectively. See the examples directory for more ways to use this extension. =head1 NOTE If you are manipulating the TZ variable you should also call the posixs function tzset to initialize all internal state of the library for properly operating in the timezone of your choice. use POSIX qw(tzset); $ENV{TZ} = 'CET'; POSIX::tzset(); =head1 AUTHOR Tobias Oetiker Eoetiker@ee.ethz.chE =cut