A friend suggested I take a look at RRDTools for a problem I'm dealing with. 
We're monitoring a number of custom devices in the agricultural world. We did a 
naive "just store the telemetry in a database" thing originally. It was a quick 
prototype that was contracted out. We quickly ran out of room. Even telemetry 
at a trickle adds up fast. Since it was a Smalltalk database, I built a custom 
edge triggered data collector that radically reduced the data, since we mostly 
care about changes and when the occur. But that's not a long term solution for 
us. So I'm looking at RRD. After a couple hours reading/growsing/playing, I'm 
left with the following questions:

1) Each device we keep track of telemetry for, has a couple of different 
measures. I've concluded that we shouldn't try to store dissimilar data types 
in the same rrd file, even with separate RRAs. For example, we keep track of 
battery voltage, and an hour's average is plenty high enough resolution for us, 
but we also keep track of hydraulic pressures, and we'd really like to have 
these at a minute resolution. It seems I'd be best served by having different 
rrd's for these, one with a battery voltage DS, and the other with pressure 
DS's.

2) While some of our data is scalar data (pressure, voltage, signal strength), 
others is just binary status. Is it on or off? I'm not convinced that binary 
status is easy to do with RRD, without playing some pretending games. For most 
of the binary values, we tend to want to record any change in them at a minutes 
resolution (that's how often the telemetry can come in). But we don't ever want 
to "average them away" or anything. Changes are usually infrequent (at most 
once per every couple of hours), but we want to know exactly when they happened 
and not "lose" any of them, at least for a given backwards time interval, such 
as a growing season (e.g. ~5 months). Should I be looking at doing an 
alternative storage scheme for these, rrd's for the scalar info, and something 
different for the edge triggered binaries?

Thanks for any help/direction/feedback/tips.

--
Travis Griggs
"A vital ingredient of success is not knowing that what you're attempting can't 
be done." -Terry Pratchett

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