System statistics collector for statsd on linux written in Go .
Usage:
system-stats
[--statsd-address addr]
[--memory-interval i]
[--disk-interval i]
[--cpu-interval i]
[--extended]
[--name name]
system-stats -h | --help
system-stats --version
Options:
--statsd-address addr statsd address [default: :8125]
--memory-interval i memory reporting interval [default: 10s]
--disk-interval i disk reporting interval [default: 1m]
--cpu-interval i cpu reporting interval [default: 2s]
--name name node name defaulting to hostname [default: hostname]
--extended output additional extended metrics
-h, --help output help information
-v, --version output version
Via go-get:
$ go get github.com/statsd/system
Via binaries:
Coming soon!
Metrics are prefixed with the hostname (or --name
), and
namespaced by the resource, for example:
api-2.cpu.blocked:7|c
api-2.cpu.running:4|c
api-2.cpu.interrupts:19695796035|c
api-2.cpu.percent:26|g
api-2.cpu.switches:25195265352|c
api-2.cpu.processes:20027|c
api-2.cpu.blocked:7|c
api-2.cpu.running:4|c
api-2.cpu.interrupts:19695796035|c
api-2.cpu.percent:26|g
...
Depending on the statd implementation that you use this
may result in different outputs. For example with the
armon/statsite implementation
this would result in gauges.api-2.memory.free
.
The --extended
flag enables extended metrics per resource
and are listed as extended below.
cpu.percent
gaugecpu.switches
counter extendedcpu.interrupts
counter extendedcpu.blocked
counter extended
Memory values are represented in bytes.
memory.percent
gaugememory.used
gaugememory.active
gauge extendedmemory.total
gauge extendedmemory.free
gauge extendedmemory.swap.percent
gaugememory.swap.total
gauge extendedmemory.swap.free
gauge extended
Disk values are represented in bytes. <volume>
is the
path the fs is mounted on (/, /data, etc).
disk.<volume>.percent
gaugedisk.<volume>.free
gaugedisk.<volume>.used
gauge
Coming soon!
system-stats(1) doesn't support running as a daemon natively, you'll want to use upstart or similar for this. Add the following example upstart script to /etc/init/system-stats.conf:
respawn
start on runlevel [2345]
stop on runlevel [016]
exec system-stats --statsd-address 10.0.0.214:5000
Then run sudo start system-stats
and you're good to go!
Run with DEBUG=stats
to view the go-debug output:
2014-08-13 22:04:36 INFO - cpu: reporting
22:04:36.098 2s 2s statsd - vagrant-ubuntu-precise-64.cpu.switches:20384|c
22:04:36.098 4us 4us statsd - vagrant-ubuntu-precise-64.cpu.processes:0|c
22:04:36.098 3us 3us statsd - vagrant-ubuntu-precise-64.cpu.running:0|c
22:04:36.098 3us 3us statsd - vagrant-ubuntu-precise-64.cpu.interrupts:656|c
22:04:36.098 3us 3us statsd - vagrant-ubuntu-precise-64.cpu.percent:100|g
2014-08-13 22:04:38 INFO - cpu: reporting
22:04:38.098 2s 2s statsd - vagrant-ubuntu-precise-64.cpu.switches:24074|c
22:04:38.098 23us 13us statsd - vagrant-ubuntu-precise-64.cpu.processes:0|c
22:04:38.098 15us 8us statsd - vagrant-ubuntu-precise-64.cpu.running:1|c
22:04:38.098 12us 7us statsd - vagrant-ubuntu-precise-64.cpu.interrupts:638|c
22:04:38.099 11us 7us statsd - vagrant-ubuntu-precise-64.cpu.percent:100|g
MIT