* Implement commonalities and linux support for ARP collection
* Add ARP collector to fixtures and run as part of e2e tests
* Bubble up scanner errors
* Use single return values where it makes sense
* Add missing annotation
* Move arp_common into arp_linux
* Add license header to arp_linux.go
* Address initial feedback
* Use strings.Fields instead of strings.Split
* Deal with scanner.Err() rather than throwing away errors
* Check for scan errors in-line before interacting with the entries map
* Don't interact with potentially empty text from scan
* Check for scan errors outside the scan loop
* Add comment about moving procfs parsing
* Add more direct comment
* Update initialism style to match go style guide
* Put function args on the same line
* Add TODO in front of comment about procfs extraction
* Guard against strings.Fields returning an empty slice
* Be more defensive about ARP table format and use upcase more broadly
* Enable the ARP collector by default
* Add ARP collector to the README
* Remove 'entry'
This patch makes stylistic changes to error strings, unexports method names by lower casing them, removes unused dataSetMetric, and adds copyright/licence information.
Signed-Off-By: Corey Stewart <stewa169@purdue.edu>
This collector exposes most of the useful information that can be found
in /proc/drbd. Sizes are normalised to be in bytes, as /proc/drbd uses
kibibytes.
This change adds a new collector called "nfs" that parses the contents
of /proc/net/rpc/nfs and turns it into metrics. It can be used to
inspect the number of operations per type, but also to keep an eye on an
extraneous number of retransmissions, which may indicate connectivity
issues.
I've picked the name "nfs", as most operating systems use "nfs" for the
client component and "nfsd" as the server component. If we want to add
stats for the NFS server as well, we'd better call such a collector
"nfsd".
* Add hwmon support (mainly known from lm-sensors)
This commit adds initial support for linux hardware sensors, exported
through sysfs.
Details of the interface can be found at
https://www.kernel.org/doc/Documentation/hwmon/sysfs-interface
* Add end-to-end test with some real life data
* Cleanup comments on hwmon collector
* Drop raw sensor name from hwmon output
* Let the sensor label be "sensor"
* Add hwmon short description to README.
logind provides a nice interface to find out about the numbers of sessions
on a system; it is used on most Linux distributions, even those which
aren't using systemd.
The exporter exposes the total number of sessions indexed by the following
attributes:
* seat
* type ("tty", "x11", ...)
* class ("user", "greeter", ...)
* remote ("true"/"false")
This puts all collector-specific flags into their own namespace under
"collector.<collector-name>", and moves from camel case to dashes, which
is the standard in Prometheus land now.
Remove special tags necessary for gmond and runit collectors. All
collectors get built. Selection of which collectors to use continues to
happen via parameter.
Last login is disabled by default as it's broken on ubuntu 12.04
Interrupts is disabled by default as it's very granular and we'll have total interrupts from /proc/stat
Allow ignoring devices from diskstats, ignore ram and loop devices by default.
Use glog for logging.
This works by using a global array with references to NewXCollector
functions. Each collector appends to that array in it's init() function.
Which file gets build depends on the build tags:
To build only the ganglia exporter, you can do:
go build -tags nonative,ganglia
By default it will build only the native collector.