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 ------------------------------------------------------------------------- SF.Net email is sponsored by: The Future of Linux Business White Paper from Novell. From the desktop to the data center, Linux is going mainstream. Let it simplify your IT future. http://altfarm.mediaplex.com/ad/ck/8857-50307-18918-4 _______________________________________________ Ganglia-developers mailing list Ganglia-developers@lists.sourceforge.net https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/ganglia-developers