Hi Brad:

On 11/27/07, Brad Nicholes <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> > BTW, shouldn't I see multicpu entries when I click on Gmetrics?
> > Currently there is nothing.
> >
>
> No, you should see CPU utilization graphs for each cpu on the system.  By 
> default the multicpu.conf file only enables cpu0.  If gmond is running on a 
> multicpu box, you will need to enable the metrics for the additional CPUs.  
> If you invoke gmond -m, you will seen the metric names for each additional 
> CPU.  Just add the extra Metric{} blocks to the multicpu.conf file just like 
> you would any other metric on the system.  The multidisk module works the 
> same way.  Just enable the module, invoke gmond -m to discover the metric 
> names for the individual disks and then enable the new metrics in the .conf 
> file.

I am not sure whether you understood what I meant -- multicpu is
working, it's just not showing up in the Gmetrics list (I believe it
used to be, prior to the XDR refactoring).

Specifically, I am talking about the Gmetrics link in the hostview,
the URL looks something like:

http://server01/ganglia/host_gmetrics.php?c=Servers&h=server01

> Not sure if that is a bug or not.  The output is just following the previous 
> format for debug output.

Okay.

P.S. I did a diff of old gmond.conf and new gmond.conf, and here's
what I came up with:

+  send_metadata_interval = 0
+include ('/etc/ganglia/conf.d/*.conf')

Can you please update the manpages for gmond as well when you update the code?

Thanks,

Bernard

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