Alexei, Richard seems to be closer to the solution. The problem is the definition of the funtion "load_color" in "functions.php". Everything above a load of 1.0 is considered to be a problem case. Same with the function "load_image". It would likely make sense to introduce a scaling variable in conf.php (default 1.0) and work that into the two functions. Can you play a bit around and show us the code that makes you happy?
The problem is that the threshold for high load is very subjective. On a HPC Machine everything above 1 (per CPU or core) is likely bad. For a web/file/database server, this might be totally different. Cheers Martin --- [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > Of you could hack the load value itself by dividing by 5 in > cluster_view.php. > > regards, > richard > > p.s. > this is a bit yuk, but is certainly easy. > > -----Original Message----- > From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of > Alexei > Rodriguez > Sent: 04 January 2006 07:05 > To: ganglia-general@lists.sourceforge.net > Subject: [Ganglia-general] PHP front end: has anyone modified > the load metric color / computation? > > > Greetings. First off, I want to say that ganglia rocks. It has > been a very valuable tool in the short time we have had it deployed, > and > we are only using the very basic things. > > The load on our systems tends to be "high" (5.0 and above), on > Solaris 10 systems (on AMD Opteron servers). The problem is that the > graphs being generated are all of the same color (bright, bloody > red). > Given that all the systems have such high (relative) loads, I wanted > to > see what the best way of changing the PHP front end to reflect my > local > "colors and load" scheme. > > If I change $load_colors in php.conf, such that the number > ranges are multiplied by 5x, would that work or is there a better > way? > > I just want to make sure that the solution I implement does not > make upgrades difficult :) > > > thanks! > > > Alexei > > > > > > ------------------------------------------------------------------------ > For more information about Barclays Capital, please > visit our web site at http://www.barcap.com. > > > Internet communications are not secure and therefore the Barclays > Group does not accept legal responsibility for the contents of this > message. Although the Barclays Group operates anti-virus programmes, > > it does not accept responsibility for any damage whatsoever that is > caused by viruses being passed. Any views or opinions presented are > solely those of the author and do not necessarily represent those of > the > Barclays Group. Replies to this email may be monitored by the > Barclays > Group for operational or business reasons. > > ------------------------------------------------------------------------ > > ------------------------------------------------------ Martin Knoblauch email: k n o b i AT knobisoft DOT de www: http://www.knobisoft.de